LS7: Executive power Flashcards

1
Q

Who is included in ‘The Executive’?

A

○ Prime Minister
○ Cabinet
○ Also Non-Cabinet ministers
○ Civil Service
- Other bodies that are concerned with implementing government policy

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2
Q

What is a hung Parliament?

A

Where there is no overall majority. The PM will stay in office until they can establish whether they can command the support of the HoC.

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3
Q

What are the duties of a Prime Minister?

A

○ Form a government + preside over Cabinet
○ Making appointments to ministerial office
○ Allocation of the tasks of government to various departments
○ Presiding over Cabinet meetings
○ Representing the government in Parliament
○ Leading the party and keeping control via government whips
○ Keeping monarch informed with weekly audience
○ Supervising security and intelligence matters
○ Making or recommending appointments, including life peers and top civil servants.

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4
Q

What is the Cabinet?

A

The Cabinet is made up of the Prime Minister and up to 23 other senior ministers appointed by the King on the advice of the Prime Minister.

The Cabinet runs the country; it decides where major policy decisions and controls the legislative agenda of Parliament.

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5
Q

What does the Cabinet require in Parliament?

A

A majority to support them - they are therefore accountable to Parliament.

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6
Q

Which 3 ministers are always included in the Cabinet?

A

Home Secretary
Foreign Secretary
Chancellor of the Exchequer

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7
Q

Give an example of a group of non-Cabinet ministers that may attend Cabinet meetings on particular matters?

A

The Law Officers of the Crown

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8
Q

By convention, a Cabinet member must be drawn from where?

A

The House of Commons or the House of Lords (unless seeking election at a by-election or is a life peer)

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9
Q

What is a Minister of the Crown?

A

A member of the majority party in government, appointed by the Crown on advice of the PM, who holds political office in the government.

They can be:
Cabinet Minister
Secretary of State (major department head)

Junior Ministers:
Minister of State (can hold less important department head position)
Parliamentary Undersecretary of State (assist with parliamentary work and administrative responsibility)

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10
Q

Who assists Secretaries of State?

A

Secretaries of State will be assisted by Ministers of State and Parliamentary Undersecretaries of State, as well as Parliamentary Private Secretaries (MPs or Lord who aren’t paid extra for the work)

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11
Q

Who assists a Minister of State?

A

Where a departmental head is a Minister of State, they will be assisted by Parliamentary Undersecretaries of State as well as Parliamentary Private Secretaries (MPs or Lord who aren’t paid extra for the work)

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12
Q

If an PM appoints a minister from outside Parliament, what do they need in order that their functions be fulfilled?

A

A life peerage.

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13
Q

Are Ministers civil servants?

A

No, they are Crown servants, not civil servants.

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14
Q

Are Judges civil servants?

A

No, to protect their independence.

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15
Q

What is the role of a senior civil servant?

A

Senior civil servants advise minsters on policy options, provide them with information (for questions in Parliament) and brief them on how to deal with the media.

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16
Q

What is the rule for civil servants to behave with Ministers?

A

With positive neutrality, civil servants need to be trusted by individual ministers and vice versa.

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17
Q

If a civil servant makes a mistake, will they be sued?

A

No, the Minister will be sued instead.

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18
Q

Who is the Minister for the Civil Service?

A

The Minister for the Civil Service is the Prime Minster, although the PM is not the HEAD of the Civil Service, it is the Cabinet Secretary. They control the day-to-day conduct of the service, although in practice much of the administration is done by the Civil Service Department.

19
Q

Are civil servants officers of the Crown?

A

Yes, they are governed by Orders in Council made by prerogative powers and by regulations issued by the Civil Service Department.

20
Q

Under Constitutional Reform and Governance Act 2010 (CRGA 2010), what is the Minister for the Civil Service is responsible for?

A

The Minister for the Civil Service is responsible under CRGA 2010 for creating a Civil Service Code, Diplomatic Service Code and a Special Advisers’ Code.

21
Q

What are public corporations?

A

Bodies established by central government, but are legally separate from it, in order to carry out a particular task.

Usually created via an Act of Parliament, but other methods are used (e.g. Royal Charter for BBC).

Idea is that it is free from government control, yet it retains control in the public interest.

22
Q

What is an executive agency?

A

A public institution that delivers government services for the UK and for its individual countries.

E.g. Jobcentre Plus is part of the Department for Work and Pensions.

Headed by a chief executive, directly accountable to the responsible minister, who is accountable to Parliament.

23
Q

What are quangos?

A

Acronym for quasi-autonomous non-governmental organisations.

Also referred to as non-departmental public bodies (NDPBs).

Although ministers have key powers of appointment for the board of quangos, in theory, they operate independently of government.

24
Q

What is the Royal Prerogative?

A

The Crown’s residual powers, mainly exercised by government Ministers today.

25
Q

What are the prerogative powers in the legislature?

A

To summon, prorogue (suspend) or dissolve Parliament.

To grant Royal Assent to legislation

To legislate by Order in Council

26
Q

What are the prerogative powers in the executive?

A

Appointing and dismissing a Prime Minister and Cabinet

Conferring on honours

Take emergency action at times of emergency

Declaration of war

Deployment of armed forces

Ratification of international treaties

Grant of refusal of passport

27
Q

What are the prerogative powers in the judiciary?

A

Legal system operates in the name of the Crown (R v means Rex)

Appointing of judges

Granting a pardon for criminal offences

Monarch is immune from prosecution

28
Q

WHo exercises the prerogative powers?

A

Most of the powers have been transferred to government ministers, e.g. Secretary of State for Justice who exercises the prerogative for mercy, or Justice to ratify treaties.

Monarch does still retain some personal prerogative powers, e.g. appointing the PM and Cabinet, summoning Parliament, although these are heavily influenced by convention.

29
Q

Why can prerogative powers be ruled over by statute?

A

Because they are derived from common law and like any other common law, the will ultimately be overruled or displaced by statute.

30
Q

Where a statute and prerogative power clash, which will prevail?

A

Statutory power will prevail, in recognition of the doctrine of parliamentary sovereignty.

31
Q

What scrutinises prerogative powers exercised by the executive?

A

Judicial review - they will be scrutinised on the usual grounds of illegality, irrationality and procedural impropriety.

However, some prerogative powers are regarded as not ‘justiciable, meaning they can’t be judged by a court of law. E.g. international treaties, defence, etc.

32
Q

What does non-justiciable mean?

A

When prerogative powers are non-justiciable, it means that they can’t be judged by a court of law.

Examples include:

  • International treaties
  • Defence
  • Declaring war
  • National Security
  • Mercy
  • Honours
  • The dissolution of Parliament
  • The appointment of ministers
33
Q

Which two constitutional conventions and two checks and balances keep the executive held to account?

A

Individual ministerial responsibility
Collective cabinet responsibility

Ministerial Code
Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman

34
Q

What are the two aspects of collective cabinet responsibility?

A

Cabinet solidarity: once a decision is made, all Cabinet ministers are bound to it and must defend and not criticise it. If they disagree, they must resign from the Cabinet.

Cabinet confidentiality: anything discussed in Cabinet meetings stay private, to promote candid and open discussion. Sometimes leaks do happen.

35
Q

What is individual ministerial responsibility?

A

This means that a minister will be personally responsible and accountable for the actions and conduct of their departments.

Ministers must defend decision made in their name in Parliament and defend departmental policy within the House. Ministers may have to defend themselves before a select committee.

36
Q

What are ministers accountable for?

A

Ministers are accountable for their department and civil servants, but aren’t responsible for all wrongdoing by a civil servant.

Minister will be responsible:
○ When the civil servant has carried out the minister’s explicit order
○ When the civil servant acts in accordance with policy laid down by the minister
○ When the civil servant makes a mistake or causes a delay.

The minister is not responsible when the civil servant takes action of which the minster was not aware and could not have been aware and of which the minister disapproves.

37
Q

Which three mechanisms hold ministers to account?

A
  • Select Committees
  • Parliamentary questions
  • Debates
38
Q

What is the Ministerial Code?

A

Conventions are supplemented by the written rules of behaviour set out in the Ministerial Code, most recent version is 2019.

Code is not legally binding, but a breach expects a resignation. The decision sits with PM, who will figure out what is more politically convenient.

39
Q

Apart from individual and collective responsibility, what are the other key principles of the Ministerial Code?

A
  • Be accurate and truthful to Parliament, do not mislead.
  • Disclose info to Parliament and public as possible, subject to public interest and relevant law.
  • Financial interest, avoid acting in favour of themselves or close associates.
  • Gift, official cars and publicly funded travel must be closely monitored.
40
Q

Who is Ministerial Code enforced by?

A

The Independent Advisor on Ministers’ Interest, who investigates complaints about ministers’ behaviour.

They are appointment by the PM.

41
Q

What is the Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman’s (PHSO) function?

A

Function: to safeguard citizens against the abuse or misuse of administrative power.

To investigate complaints by individuals and bodies corporate who claim to have sustained injustice in consequence of maladministration…

The PHSO is permitted only to investigate maladministration, not the merits of a decision (s12 PCA 1967).

42
Q

What is the Crossman Catalogue?

A

A government minister, Richard Crossman, defined maladministration in a statement known as the “Crossman Catalogue” as bias, neglect, inattention, delay, incompetence, ineptitude, perversity, turpitude, arbitrariness and so on, and this definition was accepted in Local Commissioner for Administration, ex parte Bradford Metropolitan City Council [1979].

43
Q

What can a Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman (PHSO) do when they’ve discovered a maladministration?

A

PHSO cannot:

○ Award compensation, but can recommend ex gratia payments

○ Order a governmental department to take corrective action, but can recommend steps that should be taken to improve procedures.

If PHSO’s recommendations are not accepted, the sanction is a special report to the Houses of Parliament.