Opposition is rarely a good preparation for government. The only post‐war government to enter office confident, well‐acquainted with the Civil Service and with a fund of administrative experience to draw on was the Attlee administration formed in 1945. The longer a party spends in opposition the more these assets disappear. Labour, by the end of the long period of Conservative rule in 1951–64, was largely unfamiliar with the burdens of office. This formed the background to the formulation of the Douglas‐Home rules, whereby informal contact is permitted between the Civil Service and the Opposition in advance of a general election. Since 1964 this arrangement has gradually become more extensive (especially after Neil Kinnock complained that t...
By 1966 it had become clear that the doctrine of individual ministerial responsibility, which lay at...
Although New Labour has introduced many more constitutional reforms than Old Labour, this apparent r...
This thesis examines the changing nature of opposition within the British political system through a...
Perceived obstruction of the Labour government's legislative programme in the mid-1970s sparked rene...
The 1945-50 Labour Government introduced one of the most extensive legislative programmes of the twe...
It is all too simple to reduce the process of appointing a Conservative leader prior to the reforms ...
Studies examining opposition transition to government processes and planning usually emphasise the r...
The new Labour government elected on May 1 1997 came to power on the basis of a manifesto that commi...
The Parliament Act 1911, limiting the veto power of the house of lords, constitutes a major piece of...
The modern evolution of the Westminster system of government has left Parliament with an ambiguous a...
John Major arrived in power with the aspiration to put a “human face” on the policies of his predece...
The evolution of Labour's territorial strategy in opposition between 1979 and 1997 is important in u...
PhDPerceived obstruction of the Labour government's legislative programme in the mid-1970s sparked ...
One area in which there was a clear divide between the parties in 1997 was that of constitutional re...
The House of Lords has been rising in profile in academic, political, and popular narratives. Whilst...
By 1966 it had become clear that the doctrine of individual ministerial responsibility, which lay at...
Although New Labour has introduced many more constitutional reforms than Old Labour, this apparent r...
This thesis examines the changing nature of opposition within the British political system through a...
Perceived obstruction of the Labour government's legislative programme in the mid-1970s sparked rene...
The 1945-50 Labour Government introduced one of the most extensive legislative programmes of the twe...
It is all too simple to reduce the process of appointing a Conservative leader prior to the reforms ...
Studies examining opposition transition to government processes and planning usually emphasise the r...
The new Labour government elected on May 1 1997 came to power on the basis of a manifesto that commi...
The Parliament Act 1911, limiting the veto power of the house of lords, constitutes a major piece of...
The modern evolution of the Westminster system of government has left Parliament with an ambiguous a...
John Major arrived in power with the aspiration to put a “human face” on the policies of his predece...
The evolution of Labour's territorial strategy in opposition between 1979 and 1997 is important in u...
PhDPerceived obstruction of the Labour government's legislative programme in the mid-1970s sparked ...
One area in which there was a clear divide between the parties in 1997 was that of constitutional re...
The House of Lords has been rising in profile in academic, political, and popular narratives. Whilst...
By 1966 it had become clear that the doctrine of individual ministerial responsibility, which lay at...
Although New Labour has introduced many more constitutional reforms than Old Labour, this apparent r...
This thesis examines the changing nature of opposition within the British political system through a...