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The Prime Minister Of Great Britain Essay

, Research Paper


The Prime Minister of Great Britain


There are a lot of political issues in Great Britain today. United


Kingdom is a large, industrialized democratic society and as such it has to have


politics and therefore political issues. One of those issues how should


executive branch work and whether the Prime Minister has too much power. Right


now in Great Britain there is a great debate on this issue and I am going to


examine it in detail. The facts I have used here are from different writings on


British politics which are all listed in my bibliography, but the opinions are


my own and so are the arguments that I used to support my views.


First let me explain the process through which a person becomes a Prime


Minister. The PM is selected by the sovereign. He (or she) chooses a man who


can command the support of majority of the members of the House of Commons.


Such a man is normally the leader of the largest party in the House. Where two


are rivals in a three party contest such as those which occurred in the 1920s he


is usually selected from the party which wins the greatest number of seats. The


Prime Minister is assumed to be the choice of his party and nowadays, so far as


he can be ascertained, participation of a monarch is a pure formality. Anyone


suggested for this highest political office obviously has to be a very smart and


willing individual, in fact it has been suggested that he be an “uncommon man of


common opinions”(Douglas V. Verney). Not all Prime Ministers fitted this bill


exactly, but every on of them had to pass one important test: day-to-day


scrutiny of their motives and behavior by fellow members of Parliament


before they were ultimately elected to the leadership of their party. Unlike


Presidents of the United States all Prime Ministers have served a long


apprenticeship in the legislature and have been ministers in previous Cabinets.


Many Presidents of our country have been elected and on many occasions they have


never even met some of their future co-workers, such as case of Kissinger and


Nixon who have never even met prior to Nixon’s appointment.


Let’s now examine the statutory duties and responsibilities of the Prime


Minister. Unlike the United States where the President’s duties are


specifically written out in the Constitution, the powers of the Prime Minister


are almost nowhere spelled out in a statute. Unlike his fellow ministers he


does not receive the seals of office: he merely kisses the hands of the monarch


like an ambassador.


The Prime Minister has four areas of responsibilities. He is a head of


the Government; he speaks for the Government in the House of Commons; he is the


link between the Government and the sovereign; he is the leader of the nation.


He is chief executive, chief legislator and chief ambassador. As we can see the


PM has an wide range of powers, maybe too wide. As head of the Government the


Prime Minister has the power to recommend the appointment and dismissal of all


other ministers. Far from being merely first among equals, he is the dominant


figure. Ministers wait in the hall of PMs office on No.10 Dowling Street before


being called into the Cabinet room. He may himself hold other portfolios such


as that of Foreign Secretary(as did Lord Salisbury) or Minister of Defense(as


did Mr. Churchill). He has general supervision over all departments and


appoints both the Permanent Secretary and the Parliamentary Secretary. The


Cabinet office keeps a record of Cabinet decisions to make sure that PM has up


to date information. He controls the agenda which the office prepares for


Cabinet meetings. There is a smaller Prime Minister’s Private Office which


consists of a principal private secretary and a half a dozen other staff drawn


from civil service. Perhaps owing to American influence the two offices are


becoming increasingly popular and there are signs that the Prime Minister is no


longer content to be aided by nonpolitical civil servants. There is little


doubt that if he chooses the PM can be in complete command of his Cabinet.


The PM must also give leadership in the House of Commons, though he


usually appoints a colleague as Leader of the House. He speaks for the


Government on important matters-increasingly, questions are directed to him


personally-and controls the business of the House through the Future Legislation


Committee of the Cabinet which he appoints mainly from the senior


nondepartamental ministers. Since the success of his legislative program


depends mainly on support of his party he must as a party leader attend to his


duties and ensure that the machinery of his party is working properly and in the


hands of men he could trust. Basically the PM controls his party and in essence


he controls the Parliament, but that is not all. The PM alone can request the


sovereign to dissolve the Parliament and call a new election, it is open to


debate whether it is this power to allow him the control of the party and the


Parliament. I agree with this argument completely because if the PM doesn’t


like the way it is going with his party he can always announce new election so


the Parliament pretty much backs up whatever the PM proposes. This is my main


argument for this paper. In United Kingdom there is no system of checks and


balances like there is in United States. In UK the PM and the Cabinet make a


decision which is then almost blindly supported by the Parliament. A real


democracy cannot function t

his way where there is one person of power and the


rest can hardly do anything about it. Members of the majority party will not go


against the will of PM because it means going against the will of their own


party and that is unheard of in England, members of the opposing party cannot do


anything because they are a minority. The Queen herself is a figure-head and


does not have any real power. The PM is a link between the monarch and the


Government, he keeps the Queen aware of what goes on with the Cabinet, the


Government and the world at large. Although the Queen is a fictional figure and


has no real power she can damage the reputation of the Government and the entire


country by one careless word. It is the Prime Minister’s responsibilities to


keep the monarch well informed. Other ministers however can only see the


monarch with the PMs permission (the monarch however can see whomever she


chooses). As we can see, here is another illustration of PM having too much


power. He basically has an exclusive relationship with the monarch and controls


who can see the Queen and who cannot. In US this is unthinkable, any


congressman can request an audience with the President if he wants and if let’s


say the Chief of Staff wanted to limit that in any way then he would run into


some serious problems.


Finally the PM is the leader of the nation. In time of crisis the


people expect him to make an announcement and to appear on television.


Increasingly he should be a man who can not only secure the confidence of House


of Commons, but of the man in the street or rather the man in the armchair in


front of the television. Elections are ostensibly fought between two


individual parliamentary candidates, but in practice they are contests between


national parties which offer their own political and economical programs. The


parties convey an “image” to the nation through the voice and appearance of


their leaders. The Prime Minister must outshine his rival, the Leader of the


Opposition. In the 1964 election, when the Liberals doubled their vote, much


importance was attached to the TV performance of the Liberal leader, Jo Grismond.


The Head of State and traditional “symbol of the Nation” may be the


Queen and the Royals, but the chief executive is in reality the PM. It is to


his desk that ultimately all difficult problems come whether these involve


participation in NATO, the balance of payment crisis, the budget-or even the


royals’ love affairs(as in 1936 and again in the 80’s and 90’s). It is the PM


that has to symbolize his country’s policies abroad and it is he who must


personally convince political leaders in other countries that his Government can


be relied upon.


The Prime Minister is also chief legislator. Through the Future


Legislation Committee, he determines which bills the House of Commons will


discuss during the session, and can attach whatever importance he chooses to the


Immigration Bill or Steel Nationalization Bill. With few exceptions bills are


introduced in the House by the Government and if they are important they require


the backing of the Premier.


Also he is the chief administrator. Not only does he supervise the


departments and chair Cabinet meetings but he directs the Cabinet Office and the


Office of Prime Minister. In economic affairs he decides governmental strategy


in conjunction with his Chancellor of the Exchequer and Minister of Economic


Affairs, if there is one, and leaves these ministers to implement his policies.


In defense policy he chairs the Defense Committee of the Cabinet, leaving the


details to the Secretary of Defense(Army, Navy and Air Force) and the Chiefs of


Staff. Foreign Affairs, normally the responsibility of the Foreign Secretary,


require the intervention of the PM when really important decisions have to be


made.


As we can see the PM is potentially a very powerful figure. Everything


depends on how he chooses to use this power and the success with which he


delegates some of his responsibilities.


All PMs have had an inner circle of ministers to which he turns when


quick decisions have to be taken. The more important departmental ministers


tend to be the Foreign Secretary, the Home Secretary and the Chancellor of the


Exchequer; but these may not compose the inner circle of the given PM. Senior


ministers don’t have to be the members of the inner circle. They usually are,


but not all the time. The Cabinet is usually as follows: the PM, three to six


inner circle members and the remainder of the Cabinet which number about fifteen.


I think it is obvious to see why the PM needs an inner circle. In United


States for example the President can approve the appointment of a person to a


high political position without having ever met him/her. In Britain this would


sound ridiculous, all major political figures know each other for years having


probably gone to same schools together. The Brits believe that good friends


make good decision makers which to me sounds very reasonable. This fact can be


viewed from two different perspectives: some people say that when a new PM is


elected he usually appoints all his friends to high positions by doing this he


creates an inner clique with which he governs as an absolute ruler, the


opposing view says that you need to know your colleagues for years in order to


successfully work with them. Both views have a point and this is a very hot


topic in British politics right now. Personally I thin

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