A level (PM, Cabinet and the Executive) Governing the UK - 2C Mapa Mental sobre (1) Who has power in the executive, creado por Marcus Danvers el 09/01/2014.
What is the executive (usually
referred to as the government)?
Refers to those who form the centre of government
The PM and Cabinet are the main institutions within the
‘core’ executive – their relative importance forms an
important debate within the module
Network of key institutions and people
Also includes junior ministers & civil servants
including members of the cabinet office
All in a “power network” within Westminster
Power is fluid and can move between individuals at different times
Chief source of political leadership – PM directs
government policy & defines strategic goals from
within core executive
Cabinet
Consists of the leading
members of the government,
chosen by the PM. Major
decisions are made or ratified,
and where disagreements within
government are resolved.
Cabinet government
view that collective government survives and PM is not the
dominant force within government. Decisions taken by a
group after discussions in Cabinet according to this view.
Models of power
The prime Ministerial government - thesis
suggest that the PM is the dominant - Foley
The Cabinet government model -
suggests that the cabinet is still an
important constraint on the PM - Jones
In more recent years, the executive model
has suggested that relationship between
actors are characterised as dependent
The Cabinet role
and functions
Committee
Leading members
of government
20-23 members
MPs or peers
Most secretaries of state – responsible
for running Whitehall departments
Deputy PM, Chancellor of the Exchequer,
Home Secretary and Foreign Secretary seen
as the key posts
Key ministers may meet as an “inner
circle” – known as a “kitchen cabinet”
“kitchen cabinet” meanes - a loose,
informal group of policy advisors
consulted by the prime minister outside
the formal cabinet, including senior
ministers, officials and special advisors
Collective Responsibility
Cabinet and cabinet committee members
are permitted to express their views and
disagree with each other up until the point
at which a formal decision is made
After this point all ministers must
publicly endorse the decision or
policy and keep any doubts private
It’s function is to maintain an image
of unity, and stop ministers publicly
blaming each other for failed policies
Resignations – Robin Cook and
Clare Short over the decision to
send troops to Iraq in 2003
Role of the cabinet in
theory and practice
THEORY
in constitutional theory
the cabinet is the top body
in the UK executive
it is the highest
decision making forum
There is a CONVENTION
of collective ministerial
responsibility
PRACTICE
it is largely believed that
the PM is now more
individually powerful
could all major government decisions be
discussed in cabinet meetings once a week,
lasting less than 2 hours?
Role of Cabin perform
Formal policy approval
Decisions approved by cabinet to become
official government policy. However, PM’s
may make decisions separately.
E.g. Blair made decision in May 1997 to grant
independence to the Bank of England to set
interest rates, and consulted only with Brown
Policy coordination
Key role of modern cabinet
Cabinet ensures ministers know what is
going on in other departments
Stops ministers becoming too
“departmentalised” and see the bigger picture
Helps “join up” government
Resolves disputes
Most differences between ministers and
departments are resolved at a lower level
BUT it is a final court of appeal for disputes
Forum for debate
Can be used by PM and ministers
as a sounding board for issues
BUT there is limited in time for this
Party management
In making decisions it takes account of
the views of the parliamentary party