The PM & The Executive Flashcards
What is Individual Ministerial Responsibility?
- Ministers are responsible for the performance of their department and are expected to resign if there are major failings in their department’s work or conduct.
- Must behave appropriately in personal life.
What is an example of individual ministerial responsibility?
- Patel 2017, resigned as UK international development secretary over her unauthorised meeting with Israeli officials.
What are two advantages of individual ministerial responsibility?
- It holds the gov to account
- There is a strong standard of behaviour maintained by gov officials.
Where does individual ministerial responsibility fail?
- It fails when ministers don’t resign and blame others in their department.
e.g. 2011 Home Secretary May did not resign over weakened border checks, allowing suspected terrorists into the UK. She blamed Clark, head of the UK Border Force.
What is collective ministerial responsibility?
A convention that cabinet members must publicly support the decisions made by the cabinet, otherwise they must resign.
What is an example of collective ministerial responibility?
- Hancock, 2021, quit as health secretary after breaking social distancing guidelines.
What are two advantages of collective ministerial responsibility?
- Ensures the gov appears united and that they support other gov ministers.
- Ensures a strong gov as it means the gov has a clear official position on policies.
What is a disadvantage of collective ministerial responsibility?
Ministers have to defend policies they don’t agree with, meaning policies can be forced upon them by the PM.
What’s an example of the problem with collective ministerial responsibility?
Members of Blair’s cabinet were not asked for their approval on invading Iraq in 2003, until 3 days before, where cabinet ministers claim they were forced to agree.
What’s an example to where a PM relaxed collective ministerial responsibility?
Cameron during EU ref, giving ministers the choice to campaign for staying/leaving the EU.
What are the powers of the PM?
- Patronage
- Chief negotiator
- Chief legislator
- Chief commander
Define Patronage.
Power to promote, demote, appoint and dismiss someone to the cabinet.
The gov introduced 360 statutory instruments under what act for covid?
The Public Health Act 1984
What is another phrase for being prime-ministerial?
First among equals
Why may a PM be seen as presidential?
- If they have signed treaties.
- Has international recognition.
- Media focuses on PM.