The Development of a Party-Orientated Electorate in England, 1832–1918
- 1 April 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in British Journal of Political Science
- Vol. 16 (2) , 187-216
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0007123400003884
Abstract
Modern British government is government by party leaders in Cabinet. It is still the ‘Crown in Parliament’ which formally takes or authorizes every legislative or administrative action, but of the three major components of the Crown in Parliament – the Commons, the Lords, and the Sovereign – the first is now virtually unchecked. The House of Lords can only minimally delay acts of the Commons, and both the Lords and the Monarch have long since lost their ability to veto (much less initiate) legislation. Since those in the Cabinet control the agenda of the House of Commons, since the Cabinet almost invariably consists solely of the leaders of the party with a majority of seats in the Commons, and since the influence of party on voting in Parliament is very strong, the Commons itself has in essence only retained a veto over the legislative proposals of the majority party's leaders who sit in the Cabinet. As a recent essay on legislation in Britain notes, ‘today's conventional wisdom is that … Parliament has relinquished any capacity for legislative initiative it may once have possessed to the executive in its midst’.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Strategic Electoral Choice in Multi-Member Districts: Approval Voting in Practice?American Journal of Political Science, 1984
- The Decline of Party in the U. S. House of Representatives, 1887-1968Legislative Studies Quarterly, 1979
- The Political Demography of Cambridge 1832-1868Albion, 1977
- Computer Analysis of Poll Books: A Further ReportHistorical Research, 1975
- Cross-Voting and the Dimensionality of Party Conflict in Britain during the Period of Realignment: 1918–31Political Studies, 1971
- The Mid-Victorian VoterJournal of Interdisciplinary History, 1971
- The formation of a two-party alignment in the house of commons between 1832 and 1841The English Historical Review, 1969
- Voting Patterns in the British House of Commons in the 1840sComparative Studies in Society and History, 1963
- The Growth of Ministerial Control in the Nineteenth–Century House of CommonsThe English Historical Review, 1960
- Cohesion of British Parliamentary PartiesAmerican Political Science Review, 1956