This article, on the repeal of the Fixed Term Parliaments Act, raises a question that needs more public discussion: who wields the historic powers of the Crown once the monarchy is no longer politically active? Should there be *any* limit on their use by a prime minister? THREAD
2. Some of the highest powers of the British state still technically belong to the Crown: from declaring war & making treaties to suspending Parliament. Those powers are now exercised "on the advice of the PM". But they do not *belong* to the PM, & might, in theory, be withheld.
3.For example: the 1950 "Lascelles Principles" set out three conditions under which a monarch might refuse to dissolve Parliament (a "Royal Prerogative" pre-2011). Others might include "when the Oppn is in the middle of a leadership contest" or "when electoral fraud is suspected"
4. In effect, the monarchy became the "emergency brake" of the constitution. It could not exercise these powers itself, but it could stop a govt from doing so. It could deny a PM access to the "nuclear weapons" of the constitution: like the power to declare war or suspend Parlt.
5.This was never a very satisfactory brake. It relied on one person with no democratic authority, who might be inept, corrupt or Prince Andrew. And as Britain evolved from a "constitutional" to a "ceremonial" monarchy, it grew ever less likely that a monarch would actually use it
6. The reluctance of the monarchy to interfere in "politics" is obviously welcome. A democracy should not depend on a hereditary institution to protect it from the abuse of power. But it raises an important question: who, if anyone, should take over its constitutional functions?
7. Under the UK system, a PM can take office with no majority in Parlt & no direct electoral mandate, following an internal election among party members. It would be odd if there were no limit on their power to declare war, sign treaties or shut Parlt. So who now holds the brake?
8. In some cases, the Crown's powers have moved to Parliament. The Fixed Term Parlt Act required MPs, not the monarch, to consent to an early dissolution. Both Blair and Cameron sought parliamentary approval for the use of armed force (though Theresa May tried to roll this back).
9. In other areas, the courts have intervened to limit the use of prerogative powers. Most famously, in 2019, the Supreme Court quashed the prorogation of Parliament as an abuse of power. It was now the Courts that were acting as the "emergency brake" of the constitution.
10. The new Dissolution Act reverses both tendencies. It shuts down any role for Parliament in preventing an early dissolution, & forbids the courts from intervening. That leaves only the monarch as a check, and the government makes clear that its role is to be purely ceremonial.
11. The govt's "Dissolution Principles", published alongside the Bill, remind the monarch that they should never be drawn into political controversy. There is no mention of the Lascelles Principles or of any other circumstances in which a dissolution might legitimately be denied.
12. For a democracy to transfer power from Parliament to the Crown is bizarre in itself. And the effect is to remove any check on the ability of a Prime Minister, who might have no majority &no electoral mandate, to access the highest powers of the state. Are we sure that's wise?
13. The FTPA had many flaws, but the principle was sound: prerogative powers should be regulated by statute, not handed wholesale to anyone who can win an internal party election. The return of the Royal Prerogative raises serious const qs. This bill gives the wrong answers. ENDS

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More from @redhistorian

3 Aug
It's often said that Britain relies on a "good chaps theory of government": that the British constitution only works if operated by "good chaps", who choose to obey the rules.

I think that's wrong. Here's why.

My latest for @prospect_uk [Excerpts follow] prospectmagazine.co.uk/politics/has-t…
"Far from trusting politicians to be “good chaps,” British politics was once on a hair-trigger for bad or unconstitutional behaviour". As Lord Acton put it in 1887, “Great men are almost always bad men”. And the presumption of wrongdoing should “increase as the power increases”. Image
"The problem today is not that leaders have ceased to be “good chaps,” but that we no longer seem to care when they behave badly". We have lost our sense that "bad chaps" matter: and that it is our responsibility to police their conduct. Image
Read 6 tweets
26 Jul
"The politics of support have trumped the politics of power to such an extent that the Conservative Party has broken with almost everything it might once have seemed to be its function to defend". Richard Vinen on "The Conservative Nation" since 1974. onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.11…
Lots to think about in this essay. How did the "politics of support" go from being a vehicle for "the politics of power" to subsuming it altogether? A leadership class drawn from PR/the media, with very short careers & little prior experience of govt, must be important here.
Or is it inevitable in democracies - in which "power" depends on the organisation of electoral "support" - that the boundary between them will eventually collapse: that parties will stop thinking of campaigning as a means to power & start regarding govt as a tool for campaigning?
Read 7 tweets
22 Jul
Lying to Parliament was once thought to be among the most serious offences any Member could commit. That's why the *allegation* of lying was treated with such severity.

Now that the sanction against lying has collapsed, punishing the allegation simply protects the offender.
A culture in which ministers can lie with impunity, while MPs are punished for calling them out, is manifestly absurd. If the House will not punish dishonesty - which would be the best solution - it must stop pretending it never happens.
Above all, our democracy needs to stop treating those who lie as roguish scamps, scrumping apples from the orchard. To quote @OborneTweets, "political lying is a form of theft. It means voters make democratic judgments on the basis of falsehoods. Their rights are stripped away".
Read 4 tweets
13 Jul
"No prime minister of modern times has been so deeply rooted in the Establishment. None has been so routinely tipped for greatness. And yet few retain such an enduring air of mystery".

My profile of David Cameron, who left office five years ago today. gladstonediaries.blogspot.com/2016/06/the-ca…
Comparisons between Blair and Cameron were always overblown. Unlike the Labour leader, Cameron was not temperamentally drawn to change.
"Cameron had secured for his party "the right to be heard". But having cleared its throat and stepped up to the microphone, it appeared to have nothing much to say". It was the financial crisis of 2008 that was to give Cameronism the purpose it had previously lacked.
Read 7 tweets
25 Jun
Can "everyday politics" breathe new life into the Left, in an age of populism & popularisation? Really interesting discussion on the @MileEndInst podcast, featuring @colm_m, @mds49 & @ea_robinson, inspired by Marc Stears' recent book: "Out of the Ordinary" anchor.fm/mile-end-insti…
As I argued here last month, "If there is one lesson that Labour desperately needs to relearn, it is its faith in ordinary people". gladstonediaries.blogspot.com/2021/05/starme… Image
As @mds49 noted, one challenge for the Left is that it rightly wants to talk about big ideas & heroic changes; but as soon as it does that, it risks becoming detached from the experience & language of normal life. I wondered whether there's a longer-term reason for that?[cont...]
Read 6 tweets
24 Jun
Fighting breaks out in the House of Commons in 1893. The newly-elected Labour MP, Keir Hardie, describes the scene for the papers.

"As for Mr Gladstone, he was pallid to the lips. To him it must have been as the desecration of the Ark of the Covenant to Moses of old."
Conservative MP Ernest Beckett: "‘I seized one of them [the Irish Members], at which three others threw themselves upon me and by sheer weight of numbers bore me to the floor … A general mêlée began, members striking out wildly at each other". Hardie takes up the tale...
The Unionist Edward Carson thought a Radical had started it, and blamed Gladstone. Conservatives accused the PM of failing to step in and stop the fighting. (Spoiler: he was 83 years old).
Read 6 tweets

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