This is a probing of the realities, as distinct from the theory, of politics in the UK. It concentrates on two main issues. One is the role of Parliament with its theory of "Parliamentary Sovereignty", and the other is that of the function and authority of the Prime Minister. Both issues have been subjects of hot debate since at least the 18th century, when the sovereignty of Parliament was simply a special case of Royal sovereignty (that of the King in Parliament). With the eradication of the monarchy's political power, and the rise of disciplined mass parties, it proved possible for politicians and especially the Prime Minister to annex the powers and prerogatives of the Crown whilst wielding formidable powers of control and manipulation over the legislature. From Asquith to Thatcher development was not linear, but overall it is shown to have been relentless.
The UK, it is argued, is a "penentrated" political system run not by an elective dictator but by a Prime Ministerial absolute monarchy more susceptible to day-to-day influences from abroad that from its subjects, and tempered primarily not by parliamentary checks but by political assassination orchestrated within the policy-making elite.
Sprache
Verlagsort
Zielgruppe
Für höhere Schule und Studium
Für Beruf und Forschung
Maße
Höhe: 115 mm
Breite: 232 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-0-340-49492-9 (9780340494929)
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Schweitzer Klassifikation
Introduction - in the bleak midwinter; whatever happened to checks and balances; the rich rewards of incompetence - Asquith and the saving of the sovereign premiership 1914-16; a crowned but tethered goat - the resistable rise of Lloyd George 1916-19; too little, too late - the reaction against the excessive concentration of power 1919-1923; in safe hands - Baldwin and his fussy alter-ego 1923-25; Baldwin's progress via the steps of the guillotine to political heaven 1924-1931; overkill and aftermath - from Baldwin to elective dictatorship without elections 1931-40; from supreme warlord to headmaster 1940-1951; Churchill's Indian summer, Eden's winter and Supermac's false dawn; 1959-70 "not Amurath an Amurath succeeds but Harold Harold" (with an interlude from baronial usurpation); Humpty Dumpty and the King's men - Heath, Wilson and Callaghan 1970-79; Thatcherite epilogue - reductio ad absurdum or plus ca change?