Zusammenfassung der Ressource
(4) How powerfull is
the Prime Minister
- Functions of the
Prime Minister
- Head of the
governing party
- Represent country on an
international stage e.g. G8 and
European Council
- Decide the date of the
General Election
- Head of the
Executive
- There is some flexibility in the role. Sir William
Harcourt, “the office of Prime Minister is what its
holder chooses, or is able to make of it”.
- Main powers of the
Prime Minister
- Power to hire and fire
- Powers of Patronage – giving people roles e.g. Bishops, peers and the
Chairman of the BBC, as well as the most important perhaps – Cabinet
and Cabinet committee members. Also, can withdraw the whip from party
members – Major did this to a number of Eurosceptics in the mid 1990s.
- This strenghs the PM
- The PM can ensure the appointment and
appointment and promotion of loyal supportes
- The fact that the PM conrols their political careers ensure that
both ministers and the majority of backbenchers remain loyal
- Thatcher consolidated her position between 1979
and 1983 by removing all the wets from her cabinet
- This power has limits
- All ministers must be MP's or peers.
- The vast majority of Ministers
must come from the majority party
- Party unity requires an ideological
and politcal balance within cabinet
- Particular groups shoul dbe
represented for instance women
- Opponents may be less dangerous inside
government than outside
- The advent of the coalition
government means that the hiring and
firing of minsters must take account of
the need to maintain the coalition
- Leadership of the
party
- e.g. deciding the date
of the general election
- Party leadership underpins all other aspects of
PMs power. It gives them leverage across the
wide er governmenttal system
- This strenghts his power
- Party leadership increases the PM's authority within the cabinet
and government, as other ministers recognize that party loyalty
focuses on the person of the PM and not on any other minister.
- It allows the PM to control Parliament through
commanding a disiplined majority in the Commons
- More widely, party
members recognize
that the Party's
fortunes are closely
linked to the PM's
personal standing
- The benefits that flow
from party leadership
are limited
- As the party leader, the PM is meant to deliver electoral success. If the
government becomes unpopular, and especially if the PM is viewed as a
electoral liability, party loyalty can evaporate quickly
- No PM can survice without the support of his or her party.
- The ability to
manage the Cabinet
- e.g. setting the agenda for Cabinet
meetings (what is discussed)
- This enables PMs to harness the decision-making
authority of the cabinet to their own ends and
determin the role and significance of the cabinet
- PM chair cabinet meeting, manage their
agendas and discusions, and sum up decisions
- Convene cabinet meetings and decide how often
they will be called and how long they will last
- Decide the number and nature of cabinet
committees, sub-commitees and ministeial
groups, and appoint their members and chairs
- In the 50s 100 cabinet meetings a year. now
about 40 a years. Under Blair rarely lasted more
than an hour, lengthened under Brown
- Blair tended to adopted a more informal style of
decision-making, sometimes called "sofa
government". This is where Blair would meet
indiviual ministers
- PM's ability to manage and
control the cabinet has its limits
- The cabinet's supports for the
PM is conditional on the PM
being popular and successful
- Cabinet resignations, particularly of senior
figures, can damge politlcal support for
and the public standing of the PM
- Coaltion governments government means that the
process of cabinet management has become
entangled in the process of coalition mangament
- Institutional supports
- e.g. setting the agenda for Cabinet
meetings (what is discussed)
- PM power has grown significantly as
a result of the buil-up of bodies and
advisors who support the PM
- Two important bodies serving the PM
- The PM's Office, which since 2002 has
also inclued the policy unit
- The Cabinet Office, which has developed into
coordinationg hub of the UK executive, helping to "Join
up" the work of the white hall government department
- Blair created new special office
units for the Cabinet Office, such
as the Woman's Unit and the UK
Anti-Drugs Co-orfination Unit
- The number of special adivisors, who responde directly to the PM, have
increased under Major there where only 8, Blair ebentually had 50. He
also gave some formal control over civil servants
- The benefit of these
institutional support is limited
- They are meagre by comparison with the institutional support available to a US president
- Even the expaned Cabinet Office does not amount to a PMs department
- Access to the media
- e.g. control of political image
and managing of information
- The expansion of the "broadcast"
media, and increasingly the "new"
media, has not only increased the flow
of political information to the public
- It strengthens PM power
- The growth of "political celebrity" gives PMs the ability to
appeal "over the heads" of their senior colleagues,
parties and government institutions, direct to the public
- The media's obsession with personality and image
guarantees that media attention focuses primarliy
on political leaders, and especially on the PM
- Control over government communications
means that PMs have been able to structure
the flow of info to the public . Age of "SPIN"
- Thatcher period
-press secretary
Bernard Ingham
- Blair era - press
secretary Alistair
Campbell
- Cameron until 2011 -
Andy Coulson
- Media attention does
not always work to the
benefit of the PM
- "Bad news" stories are often "hyped" by
the media, turing a problem into a crisis
- The emphasis on "spin" and "news management" may
prove to be couter-productive, as it undermines trust in
governement and credibility of the PM
- Sources of the Prime
Minister’s powers
- The media tends to focus on the Prime
Minister more than other political
colleagues, including cabinet members
- PM appear on the world stage and are
seen as the Head of State to many others
- Support of Parliament – Blair did not lose a
vote until November 2005. However, Cameron
lost vote on EU referendum with revolt of
Conservative backbenchers in October 2011.
- How do you
become PM?
- Must be an MP- PMs have
seats in the Commons
- Must be a partly leader
- His or Her party has normally had
majority control of the Commons