Title: Responsible Government Malcolmson
1Responsible Government Malcolmson Myers, Ch. 3
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2Responsible Government Malcolmson Myers, Ch. 3
- Constitutional Basis of Responsible Government
- Constitution (BNA) Act 1867
- Whereas the Provinces of Canada, Nova Scotia
and New Brunswick have expressed their Desire to
be federally united into One Dominion under the
Crown of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and
Ireland, with a constitution similar in principle
to that of the United Kingdom
3Responsible Government Malcolmson Myers, Ch. 3
- Responsible Government establishes parliamentary
government - Parliamentary Government
- Fusion of (executive legislative) power
- Executive (cabinet) is part of legislature
- Cabinet sets policy Crown acts on Cabinets
advice - Cabinet accountable to legislature
-
- Theme Power married to responsibility
4Responsible Government Malcolmson Myers, Ch. 3
- Contrast with US Presidential Government
- Theme separation of power
- Branches check balance one another
- Set ambition against ambition
- President (the executive) not responsible to
Congress (the legislature)
5Responsible Government Malcolmson Myers, Ch. 3
- Conventions of Parliamentary Government
- Constitution Act 1867 provides no specific rules
about parliamentary government. - No written rules!
- Defined by conventions
- Convention a common, longstanding practice or
custom.
6Responsible Government Malcolmson Myers, Ch. 3
- Conventions of Parliamentary Government
- Confidence Convention
- Collective Responsibility
- Ministerial Responsibility
- Parliamentary Supremacy
7Responsible Government Malcolmson Myers, Ch. 3
- Conventions of Parliamentary Government
- Confidence Convention
- Collective Responsibility
- Ministerial Responsibility
- Parliamentary Supremacy
8Responsible Government Malcolmson Myers, Ch. 3
- The Confidence Convention
- Cabinet (government) must have confidence of
the House - Must be able to pass major policies
- Cabinet enjoys a working majority
- Prime Minister (and his/her Cabinet) resigns if
the Cabinet loses confidence of House
9Responsible Government Malcolmson Myers, Ch. 3
- Conventions of Parliamentary Government
- Confidence Convention
- Collective Responsibility
- Ministerial Responsibility
- Parliamentary Supremacy
10Responsible Government Malcolmson Myers, Ch. 3
- Collective (Cabinet) Responsibility
- Cabinet collectively answerable to House for its
policies - Cabinet operates as a single unit
- Ministers speak vote as one
- Logic Power cannot be divided
11Responsible Government Malcolmson Myers, Ch. 3
- Conventions of Parliamentary Government
- Confidence Convention
- Collective Responsibility
- Ministerial Responsibility
- Parliamentary Supremacy
12Responsible Government Malcolmson Myers, Ch. 3
- Ministerial (Individual) Responsibility
- Cabinet ministers head Governments departments
(portfolios) - Accountable to Parliament for department policy
action - Explain
- Rectify
- Accept blame
13Responsible Government Malcolmson Myers, Ch. 3
- Conventions of Parliamentary Government
- Confidence Convention
- Collective Responsibility
- Ministerial Responsibility
- Parliamentary Supremacy
14Responsible Government Malcolmson Myers, Ch. 3
- Parliamentary Sovereignty
- Crown in Parliament is sovereign
- Recognizes no higher power
- Can pass laws it sees fit
- Not bound by courts or past parliamentary
decisions
15Responsible Government Malcolmson Myers, Ch. 3
- Parliamentary Sovereignty
- Notwithstanding clause (Section 33) of Charter of
Rights, Constitution Act (1982) - Parliament or the legislature of a province may
expressly declare in an Act of Parliament or
legislature, as the case may be, that the Act or
provision operate notwithstanding a provision
included in section 2 or section 7 to 15 of this
Charter.
16Responsible Government Malcolmson Myers, Ch. 3
- Conventions of Parliamentary Government are
- Unwritten
- Flexible
- Interpreted through political practice
contestation
17Responsible Government Malcolmson Myers, Ch. 3
- Constitutional Landmarks / Crises
- 1910-11 Peoples Budget Parliament Act 1911
(U.K.) - Can the Lords (Upper House) veto the Commons?
- 1926 King Byng Crisis (Canada)
- Must G-G follow PMs self-interested advice?
- 1974-75 Replacement of the Whitlam Cabinet
(Australia) - Is G-G empowered to sack the PM?
18Responsible Government Malcolmson Myers, Ch. 3
- Responsible Government Elections
- Crown must have a government
- Incumbent cabinet in power until PM resigns
- Cabinet must have confidence of House
- What happens after an election?
- How does Governor-General know who commands
confidence of the House?
19Responsible Government Malcolmson Myers, Ch. 3
- Responsible Government Elections
- Government formation in Canada tends to result
in - Single-party Majority
- Single-party Minority
- issue-by-issue (Martin 2004-2005)
- formal agreement (Ontario 1985-90 Liberal NDP
Accord) - Coalition (cabinet posts shared by 2 parties)
- (Saskatchewan 1999-2003 Liberal NDP
Coalition)
20Responsible Government Malcolmson Myers, Ch. 3
- Responsible Government Elections
- Government formation in Canada tends to result
in - Single-party Majority
- Single-party Minority
- issue-by-issue (Martin 2004-2005)
- formal agreement (Ontario 1985-90 Liberal NDP
Accord) - Coalition (cabinet posts shared by 2 parties)
- (Saskatchewan 1999-2003 Liberal NDP
Coalition)
21Responsible Government Malcolmson Myers, Ch. 3
- Responsible Government Elections
- Government formation in Canada tends to result
in - Single-party Majority
- Single-party Minority
- issue-by-issue (Martin 2004-2005)
- formal agreement (Ontario 1985-90 Liberal NDP
Accord) - Coalition (cabinet posts shared by 2 parties)
- (Saskatchewan 1999-2003 Liberal NDP
Coalition)
22Responsible Government Malcolmson Myers, Ch. 3
- Type Duration of Federal Governments, 1867-2005
23Responsible Government Malcolmson Myers, Ch. 3
- Institutional Logic of Responsible Government
- Key Idea Government must maintain confidence of
the House - Downstream implications
- Parties work to obtain majorities
- Parties are disciplined
- MPs are agents of parties
24Responsible Government Malcolmson Myers, Ch. 3
- Institutional Logic of Responsible Government
- Cannot just alter, import institutions
- Cannot just wish away party discipline
- Representation versus accountability stability
- Cannot impose fixed election dates
- Impartiality versus Responsiveness
- Tensions with an elected Senate
- To which house is Cabinet responsible?