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How did the Prime Minister win a vote in Parliament and lose her authority?

It is remarkable that after a series of U-turns on key policy announcements and the resignation of two senior members of her Cabinet, the event which may well have precipitated the Prime Minister’s resignation was a parliamentary vote on an opposition motion which the Government actually won.

To be sure, many would argue that the Prime Minister’s position was already untenable before Wednesday evening but any hopes of retaining office went downhill quickly following the chaotic mismanagement of a vote on a Labour motion on fracking. While the Labour Party may take some pleasure in contributing to PM’s downfall, much of the damage was self-inflicted.

What is an opposition day debate?

Wednesday was one of twenty afternoons set aside in each parliamentary session to debate issues raised by opposition parties. Although so-called opposition days allow the opposition to set the agenda, they rarely cause serious difficulties for a government which can command a majority in the House of Commons. A government with a majority can usually be assured of defeating an opposition motion. Moreover, even if the government loses a vote on an opposition day motion, in most cases these are not considered to be binding and the government is not obliged to make any changes in response. Consequently, government’s may even choose to ignore an opposition motion entirely and not bother voting at all. Opposition days do provide an important opportunity for opposition parties to raise issues of concern and possibly to embarrass the government by forcing its MPs to vote against something which may be popular, such as extending free school meals, but can’t generally be used to force the government to take action.

Labour’s motion on fracking was slightly different in that it included a clause which would set aside the standing orders of the House of Commons, which state that the government has control over parliamentary business. The motion then allowed for the opposition to take control of the parliamentary order paper at a later date (29th November) in order to bring forward a bill which would ban the use of fracking in the UK. This was an unusual tactic but reflects a similar episode during the Brexit debates in 2019, when a group of MPs took control of the parliamentary agenda in order to bring forward a bill to prevent a no-deal Brexit.

This was an interesting tactic by Labour, facilitating a parliamentary vote on the standing orders which can be changed by a vote in the House, rather than seeking to press the government to take action without any real power to compel it to do so. As a result, the opposition sought to turn a non-binding opposition motion into a resolution with real effects. This meant the government could not afford simply to ignore the opposition motion and cede control of the legislative agenda to Labour.

Moreover, Labour’s decision to focus on fracking was also key. The Prime Minister had proposed lifting the ban on fracking, but this is an issue on which Conservative MPs are divided. Not only was a moratorium on fracking included in the party’s 2019 manifesto, but several Conservative MPs  represent constituencies where plans for fracking have been subject to considerable local opposition. In short Labour sought to force Conservative MPs to vote against a key manifesto pledge and in favour of something which many of them oppose. By combining this with an attempt to take control of the parliamentary agenda, Labour effectively forced the government into a position in which it felt the need to whip its MPs to vote against the motion.

Three-line whips and confidence motions

While Labour might be seen to have laid a trap for the government, the chaos which followed was largely self-inflicted. The Conservative response was to issue a three-line whip, effectively compelling Conservative MPs to vote against the opposition motion or be subject to disciplinary action. Given the size of the government’s majority this should have been enough to defeat the motion. It is possible that several Conservative MPs would have abstained, some may even have decided to vote for the Labour motion, although this seems unlikely. Although this is a serious disciplinary matter, as several commentators have since observed, the penalty for abstaining on a three-line whip is unlikely to have extended to having the whip withdrawn and, if the MPs in question had particular constituency concerns, the government would usually have been sympathetic to their predicament.

However, at some point on Wednesday, the Government decided to make this a confidence motion, implying that if the government was defeated it would be forced to resign and call a general election. Although set piece votes, such as those on the Queen’s speech or the budget are generally considered to be confidence issues which the government must win, the government can declare any vote a matter of confidence. It was, however, a considerable escalation of the stakes to make a vote on an opposition motion on such a divisive issue a confidence vote.

Ironically opposition days can be used to table motions of no confidence in the government and unlike most opposition day motions these are considered binding. Given the difficulties facing the Truss government Labour may well have considered this, but perhaps dismissed the idea on the grounds that a confidence motion was more likely to unite Conservative MPs around their leader. By choosing to turn a vote on which its MPs are divided into a confidence vote, the Conservative leadership, however, managed to create a level of disruption which the Labour opposition could not hope to have achieved simply by tabling a confidence motion. MPs who might reasonably be allowed to quietly abstain on an issue which was particularly sensitive in their constituencies, were now being asked to put their own re-election chances on the line to prop up the Prime Minister.

It is not clear why the government chose to do this. One must assume that Conservative whips felt that a three-line whip was not enough to ensure victory and there was a real danger that Labour would win the vote. It is also worth considering the wider implications of a Labour victory. If Labour had been successful in seizing the agenda and bringing forward its own legislation on this issue, it might well have repeated the trick on subsequent opposition days, significantly disrupting the government’s own legislative agenda.

It’s hard to know what intelligence Conservative whips had about the scale of the potential backbench rebellion on the Labour motion but there is very little evidence that a sizeable and damaging rebellion was impending. On Wednesday afternoon less than a handful of Conservative MPs publicly stated that they could not vote with the government on this motion, and most of the dismay on Conservative benches revolved around the fact that the government had chosen to make this a confidence issue.

Confusion in the chamber and in scuffles in the lobby

The government’s problems were compounded by the handling of the issue as the day progressed. Having decided to make this already divisive issue the one on which the Truss government would survive or fall, someone in number 10 got cold feet and decided not to risk it. The minister closing the debate at the despatch box, Graham Stuart, dismayed the House by stating that ‘quite clearly, this is not a confidence vote’, repeating ‘obviously this is not a confidence vote’. Stuart was asked to clarify this by the Conservative MP, Ruth Edwards, who stated ‘many of us have been told today by our Whips that if we vote for, or abstain from voting against, this motion, we will lose the Whip.’ His response, ‘that is a matter for party managers, and I am not a party manager’ was hardly a lesson in clarity.

The effect of this was twofold. There was clearly some confusion as to whether this was a confidence issue. Stuart’s initial statement that it was not a confidence issue was arguably clear, but his follow up did little to settle the matter, particularly for MPs who had been told all day by the whips, presumably in the most robust terms, that they must vote with the government to prevent a general election. Secondly, it is apparent that this last-minute change had not been communicated to the whips, effectively undermining their authority. As Conservative MPs made their way into the division lobbies there were reports that the chief whip and the deputy chief whip had both resigned, and for several hours afterwards the government was unable to confirm if either were still in place.

There were also reports of an unseemly row between Conservative MPs in the division lobby. A groups of Conservative MPs, including cabinet members, were accused of physically manhandling at least one reluctant Conservative MP into the lobby in support of the government, prompting the speaker to launch an investigation into bullying.

To compound the confusion, in the commotion in the division lobbies it is apparent that several MPs failed to record their vote using the electronic card readers when entering the lobbies. For a time it appeared that the Conservative rebellion was even greater than it eventually proved to be, and perhaps most remarkably, that the Prime Minister had not voted.

In the end the Conservatives won the vote with some ease. The Labour motion was defeated, it was later announced that the whips had not resigned, and the record was corrected to show that the Prime Minister had voted with most of the rest of her party. Thirty-two Conservative MPs abstained, although some of these will have had permission to miss the vote and will presumably have been paired with an opposition MP who was also missing.  In a bizarre coda at 1.30 in the morning Downing Street issued a statement that although the vote had not been a confidence issue, it had still been a three-line whip and those who did not have a reasonable excuse for their absence would face ‘proportionate disciplinary action.’ It is not clear if this process had begun by the time the Prime Minister resigned twelve hours later.

With its fracking motion Labour presented the government with a knotty problem, which certainly required careful handling. Instead, the government contrived to alienate its own embattled backbenchers by selecting the nuclear option and making it a confidence vote. It then further alienated them by changing its position only minutes before the vote took place. The melee in the division lobby only added to the sense of confusion and lack of control at the heart of government. That the government won the vote is largely irrelevant, as in the process it lost what remaining credibility it had amongst its own MPs. The episode is a remarkable example of the importance of party management in the House of Commons and that opposition parties do not necessarily need to win a parliamentary vote in order to undermine the government.

Dr Andrew Defty, Associate Professor of Politics at the University of Lincoln 

This post was originally published on the Who Runs Britain Blog and can be found here: https://whorunsbritain.blogs.lincoln.ac.uk/2022/10/21/how-did-the-prime-minister-win-a-vote-in-parliament-and-lose-her-authority/

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Urgent Questions

Dr Alexandra Meakin

ALEXANDRA MEAKIN

Alexandra Meakin is a Lecturer in British Politics at the University of Leeds. She won the 2020 Political Studies Association’s Walter Bagehot Prize for best dissertation in the field of government and public administration for her thesis Understanding the Restoration and Renewal of the Palace of Westminster: A case study of institutional change in the UK Parliament. She is co-editor of the second edition of the Exploring Parliament textbook (Oxford University Press) and is the outgoing co-convenor of PSA Parliaments.

Please tell us a little bit about how you entered academia and your academic career

It was a slightly roundabout journey. I had started working for my local MP during my undergraduate degree, and during a placement in his Westminster office as part of my MA, he offered me a job as a parliamentary researcher. I spent the next ten years working in or around Westminster until in 2015 I left London so my husband and I could move closer to his family in the north. I worked for a while for an MP in Sheffield and then in the Department of Politics at the University of Sheffield before I was lucky enough to be awarded funding for a PhD at the same department. After my viva (and some maternity leave) I had a postdoc year with the brilliant Louise Thompson on her fantastic Small Parties in the UK Parliament ESRC project before being appointed as a lecturer at the University of Leeds in 2021, which is an absolute dream.

Which five books/articles (written by someone else) have been most important to you in your academic career?

This is such a fun question! I’m very worried I’ve missed out something incredibly important, but here you go:

1) Marc Geddes “Dramas at Westminster”. It was actually Marc’s PhD thesis, on which this book was based, which had a huge impact on going into academia. I met Marc when we worked together for the same select committee in the Commons, when he was on his PSA placement, and it made me think seriously about a PhD on Parliament…

2) Emma Crewe “The House of Commons: An Anthropology of MPs at Work”. There’s an ethnographic theme here! All Emma’s work within Westminster is essential for anyone studying (or working within!) the UK Parliament.

3) Lord Norton “Power behind the Scenes: The Importance of Informal Space in Legislatures” in Parliamentary Affairs. Hard to pick just one from Lord Norton, but this helped me rethink the use of space and importance of design.

4) David Judge and Cristina Leston-Bandeira ‘The Institutional Representation of Parliament’ in Political Studies. This is a vital work to understand the role of parliamentary staff.

5) ) Sarah Childs ‘The Good Parliament’. A report, rather than an article, but the result of brilliant fieldwork which also challenges me constantly to think about the purpose of my research and the role of an academic.

Which person has been most influential and important to you in your academic career?

So many people. I am utterly convinced that the old stereotype of an academic as a solitary genius is massively out-of-date (if it was ever true) and that any academic career is due in equal parts to huge amounts of luck and support. For me, all my colleagues in the PSA Parliaments group have been an amazing help on so many levels and it was through the group I met Louise Thompson and Cristina Leston-Bandeira, without whom there is absolutely no way I’d be doing this job. They’re the total heroes of legislative studies and my academic mum role models. When I had finished my PhD and went on maternity leave both Louise and Cristina offered me the most incredible support and guidance—and my post-PhD jobs are totally due to this help. I could not be more indebted or grateful to them.

What is the first or most important thing you tell your students about parliaments?

That 95% of MPs—even if you disagree with their views—are incredibly committed to public service and do an utterly thankless job.

Where were you born, where did you grow up, and where do you live now?

I was born in Plymouth, grew up in Reading, moved to Sheffield at 18 for university and after a decade in north London, moved back to Yorkshire seven years ago.

What was your first job?

Leaflet delivering with my twin, maybe age 12? (a bit older than in the attached photo, anyway!) We soon moved to daily newspaper rounds and then when we turned 16 I got a job at Burger King with my twin working at McDonalds on the very same street.

What was the toughest job you ever had?

MP constituency caseworker. Absolutely brutal.

What would your ideal job be, if not an academic?

Honestly, I think I’m doing it already.

What are your hobbies?

Running. Exploring the Peak District. Trekking round the north to watch Reading FC inevitably lose in dismal fashion. Watching a truly ridiculous amount of other sport. Chasing round after my very active toddler and my much less active elderly greyhound.

What are your favourite novels?

Brick Lane by Monica Ali – I’ve reread this multiple times every year over the last two decades and always get something new from it.

Girl, Woman, Other by Bernadine Evaristo — the greatest thing I’ve read in the last few years.

What is your favourite building?

I spend a lot of my time writing about the Palace of Westminster so I better answer that!

What is your favourite tv show?

This is going to sound terrible but I almost only watch sport. But when I’m sick the ultimate comfort TV is The West Wing (it’s totally flawed and yet I still love it).

What is your favourite holiday destination?

Pre-baby it was Boston, Massachusetts in autumn. Go for runs along the Charles, buy stacks of second-hand books in Cambridge, watch as many Red Sox and Patriots games as possible. Now, the pure joy of seeing my daughter by the seaside is even better. We went to Northumberland this year and it was incredible.

What is your favourite sport?

Football, cricket, and athletics. Plus baseball and NFL and a summer Olympics obsession. This is why I have so little time for TV or films!

Hybrid proceedings in Parliament: yes please or no thanks?

Yes, absolutely. If you care about representation you can’t dismiss the huge benefits for people living with disabilities or caring responsibilities.

Appointed or elected upper chamber?

I used to support the latter, now would be happy with a mix. But the current size and composition is unsustainable.

Restoration or Renewal?

Both, but really, just do something before it burns down.

Cat or Dog?

Dog, always. Here’s Maddy, who plays a starring role in my lectures.

Maddy; a greyhound.

Trains, planes or automobiles?

Trains. My rail geekery was only exacerbated by a year working for the Transport Select Committee.

Fish and chips or Curry?

Fish and chips, eaten on the beach.

Scones: Cornish or Devonshire method?

Devonshire! Except I skip the jam and just pile on even more cream.

And, finally, a question asked by Ira and Bernadette, who have just turned four and who have replaced Seth who is now ten and who is too old for this nonsense: What is your favourite dinosaur and why?

Hi Ira and Bernadette! What an honour to answer your question. My daughter is not quite at dinosaur age yet, but my nephews have taught me a lot about this so in a shout out to their fave, I’ll say an allosaurus.

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News

October 2022 Newsletter

We hope that you are keeping safe and well. We have some updates for you:

  1. PSA Parliaments Annual Conference 2022 in Birmingham & Online
  2. PSA Annual Conference 2023 in Liverpool & Online
  3. Goodbye to Alexandra…
  4. …And Hello (Again) to Sean and Caroline
  5. Wanted: Treasurer & Membership Officer
  6. Urgent Questions with Diana Stirbu
  7. PSA Parliaments Online Brown Bag Seminars
  8. Recent Publications that have Caught Our Eye
  9. Recently on the Blog

If you have any notices/messages you would like us to circulate to our prizewinning group, please let us know.

1. PSA Parliaments Annual Conference 2022 in Birmingham & Online

Our Annual Conference will be held at The Exchange in Birmingham and online on 3rd-4th November 2022 with the theme of What Next? 

We have our now traditional drinks reception on the Thursday evening and then four brilliant panels on the Friday.

We had nearly twice as many paper proposals than normal and we weren’t able to accommodate everyone on the Friday so we have decided to also run some annex panels online in December and January – please keep an eye out for details in future newsletters.

The conference (including lunch and refreshments) is free for all attendees, whether presenting or in the audience, but you must register beforehand. We are also in a position to be able to offer a limited number of travel bursaries to PhD students. Please contact Stephen for further details.

Please see here for full details of the conference, including how to book tickets. 

We are very much excited to be meeting up in person after two years of online conferences and we hope to see as many of you there as possible!

2. PSA Annual Conference 2023 in Liverpool & Online

The 73rd Annual Conference of the Political Studies Association will be held in Liverpool and online on 3rd-5th April 2023 (see here for details).

The submission process is different from previous years in that specialist groups were given an exclusive timeframe for them to receive papers and propose panels ahead of the open call on 6th October.

We’ve already put together four panels but we do have room for more in our allocation. So, if you have missed the specialist group deadline and will submit through the open call but would like to present under the auspices of our group, we recommend putting “I would like to be on a PSA Parliaments panel please” somewhere prominent on your submission. It’s not now fully in our control but hopefully your request will be granted by the convenors.

As always, we do not have any preferences in terms of theory, method or empirical focus and we welcome papers from PhD students through to professors, as well as from practitioners. We are fully committed to avoiding all-male panels. We are also seeking to increase the proportion of papers on our panels from people from an ethnic minority background.

3. Goodbye to Alexandra…

After five years on the team in one guise or another, we’re very sad to say goodbye to Alexandra, who is stepping down as co-convenor after our conference in November. Alexandra has been a brilliant co-convenor and, before that, communications officer and will be sorely missed. But we’re also very happy that she is expecting her second child and that she will continue to be a valued member of the group when she returns from parental leave.

We look forward to saying goodbye to her properly in Birmingham, as well as reading her valedictory Urgent Questions in the next newsletter!

4. …And Hello (Again) to Sean and Caroline

We’re very lucky that Seán Haughey and Caroline Bhattacharya have agreed to step up from Treasurer and Membership Officer respectively to be the new co-convenors!

Many of you will already know Seán and Caroline but, for those who don’t, Seán is a Joint Lecturer in Politics and Irish Studies at the University of Liverpool whose research focusses on the Northern Ireland Assembly and Executive, and Caroline is a PhD student at the University of Helsinki (but based in Cambridge) whose research concerns parliamentary contestation, German parliamentarism and parliamentary roles.

Welcome to your new roles, Seán and Caroline!

5. Wanted: Treasurer & Membership Officer

PSA Parliaments are now looking for a new Treasurer and/or Membership Officer. 

If you are interested in joining the PSA Parliaments team and being part of, quite frankly, the friendliest and prizewinning-est specialist group in the world, then please let Stephen know in the first instance. 

PSA Parliaments team members must be based in the UK and be somewhere between PhD student and professor.

6. Urgent Questions with Diana Stirbu

This month’s interviewee is Professor Diana Stirbu, perhaps best known for her work on the Welsh Parliament/Senedd Cymru.

Head over to Urgent Questions to read about photography, Japan and what she has in common with Homer Simpson!

7. PSA Parliaments Online Brown Bag Seminars

After the success of our online events over the past couple of years, we will be holding some online seminars this year. 

The purpose of the seminars will be to allow people to showcase their work and to generate debate and discussion. As such, papers presented will be recently published work, or work accepted for publication, rather than work in progress. The seminars will last an hour and will be held on Wednesday lunchtimes on an ad hoc basis.

If you would like to present a paper, or want to nominate someone, then please email Stephen.

8. Recent Publications that have Caught Our Eye

Peter CleggMette Marie Stæhr HarderElisabeth Nauclér and Rafael Cox Alomar have published an article, Parliamentary representation of overseas territories in the metropolis: a comparative analysis in Commonwealth & Comparative Politics.

Ben Worthy and Stefani Langehennig have published an article, Accountability, analysis and avoidance: how PMO data impacts on Westminster, in the Journal of Legislative Studies.

Simon Weschle has published an article, Politicians’ Private Sector Jobs and Parliamentary Behavior, in the American Journal of Political Science.

And, finally, a new issue of Legislative Studies Quarterly has been published. 

If you would like your published research to be featured in this section, please email Stephen with details.

9. Recently on the Blog

We published one great blog in September:

If you have an idea for a blog on some aspect of parliamentary study, please get in touch with our communications officer, Chris.

Categories
News

September 2022 Newsletter

We hope that you are keeping safe and well and that you had a lovely summer. We have some updates for you in our first newsletter of the new academic year:

  1. PSA Parliaments Annual Conference 2022 in Birmingham & Online
  2. PSA Annual Conference 2023 in Liverpool & Online
  3. PSA Parliaments Online Brown Bag Seminars
  4. Urgent Questions with Pete Dorey
  5. PhD Opportunity in Irish Politics at the University of Liverpool
  6. Workshop on Belonging, Inclusion & Exclusion at Westminster
  7. Gen+ParlNet: Call for Abstracts & a Save the Date
  8. Congratulations to Wang Leung Ting!
  9. Recent Publications that have Caught Our Eye
  10. Recently on the Blog

If you have any notices/messages you would like us to circulate to the group, please let us know.

1. PSA Parliaments Annual Conference 2022 in Birmingham & Online

Our Annual Conference will be held at The Exchange in Birmingham and online on 3rd-4th November 2022.

The theme of the conference is What Next? 

The deadline for submitting paper proposals is Friday 16th September but we have already made tickets available for those who know they will be attending.

The conference (including lunch and refreshments) is free for all attendees, whether presenting or in the audience, but you must register beforehand.

Please see here for full details of the conference, including how to submit proposals and book tickets.

We are very much excited to be meeting up in person after two years of online conferences and we hope to see as many of you there as possible!

2. PSA Annual Conference 2023 in Liverpool & Online

The 73rd Annual Conference of the Political Studies Association will be held in Liverpool and online on 3rd-5th April 2023 (see here for details) and PSA Parliaments will be convening a number of panels.

The submission process is different from previous years in that specialist groups have been given an exclusive timeframe until the 12th September for them to receive papers and propose panels ahead of the open call in October.

If you would like to propose a paper or a panel to be held under the auspices of the prize-winning PSA Parliaments group, then please fill out this form before 12th September.

As always, we do not have any preferences in terms of theory, method or empirical focus and we welcome papers from PhD students through to professors, as well as from practitioners. We are fully committed to avoiding all-male panels. We are also seeking to increase the proportion of papers on our panels from people from an ethnic minority background so please get in touch with Alexandra if you come from an ethnic minority background and would like to discuss how your research could be highlighted on our panels.

3. PSA Parliaments Online Brown Bag Seminars

After the success of our online events over the past couple of years, we’re hoping to hold some online seminars this year.

The purpose of the seminars will be to allow people to showcase their work and to generate debate and discussion. As such, papers presented will be recently published work, or work accepted for publication, rather than work in progress. The seminars will last an hour and will be held on Wednesday lunchtimes on an ad hoc basis.

If you would like to present a paper, or want to nominate someone, then please email Stephen.

4. Urgent Questions with Pete Dorey

This month’s interviewee is Professor Pete Dorey, co-author of House of Lords reform since 1911: Must the Lords go? (Palgrave Macmillan) and the textbook Exploring British Politics (Routledge).

Head over to Urgent Questions to read about being an ageing indie kid, curries and how delivering newspapers shapes your politics!

5. PhD Opportunity in Irish Politics at the University of Liverpool

The Institute of Irish Studies at the University of Liverpool invites applications for a PhD studentship beginning in September 2022.

Potential areas of research include power-sharing, post-conflict governance, gender and the politics of Northern Ireland/Ireland, constitutional change, political economy of Ireland/Northern Ireland, British-Irish relationships, parliamentary studies, or UK devolution. Applications broadly focussed on the governance and politics of Northern Ireland, or comparative projects which include the governance and politics of Northern Ireland, will also be considered. Qualitative, quantitative and mixed-methods projects are welcome.

Full details of the studentship, including how to apply, can be found here.

6. Workshop on Belonging, Inclusion & Exclusion at Westminster

Colleagues from London South Bank University and the University of Leeds are holding a workshop on ‘Belonging, Inclusion and Exclusion at Westminster’ in London on Friday 23rd September (1-4pm).

More details are available here.

7. Gen+ParlNet: Call for Abstracts & a Save the Date

Our friends at Gen+ParlNet will host three online seminars this academic year (the + is to make explicit that Gen+ParlNet very much welcomes research addressing gender and parliaments from intersectional lenses).

The seminars aim to provide a wonderful opportunity for researchers to get new eyes on their research from colleagues in the field.

Each seminar will feature two papers which will be circulated in advance. After a brief introduction by the author (10 min), a designated discussant will comment on the paper. Hereafter, all participants will be able to give their comments on the paper. The seminars will last for 90 minutes each (though Seminar 3 may be extended) and will be open to all who pre-register.

The three seminars will be held on: Thursday, November 10 at 09.00Thursday, February 02 at 15:30; and Tuesday, May 02 at 9:00 (all Brussels time).

The first two seminars are open for submissions of abstracts that address questions relating to gender+ sensitive parliaments in a wide sense, and we encourage all scholars to submit their abstracts for one of these seminars to Mette Marie Staehr Harder no later than October 1st.

A website for the network will be up and running shortly but, in the meantime, you can register for their mailing list by contacting Sonia Palmieri and you can follow them on Twitter here.

8. Congratulations to Wang Leung Ting!

Congratulations to a good friend of PSA Parliaments, Wang Leung Ting, who has recently taken up a lectureship post in comparative politics at the University of Reading!

9. Recent Publications that have Caught Our Eye

Cherry Miller has published an article, Between Westminster and Brussels: Putting the “Parliament” in Parliamentary Ethnography, in Politics & Gender.

Moritz Schmoll and Wang Leung Ting have published an article, Explaining Physical Violence in Parliaments, in the Journal of Conflict Resolution.

David Judge and Mark Shephard have published an article, Divining the UK’s national interest: MPs’ parliamentary discourse and the Brexit withdrawal process, in British Politics.

Monique DoyleJennifer Rault-Smith and Rashaad Alli of the South African Parliamentary Monitoring Group have published a report on parliamentary oversight in light of state capture and the Zondo Report.

The Westminster Foundation for Democracy (WFD) and the National Democratic Institute (NDI) have published four new policy briefs on parliaments and public debt management:

More details about the briefs can be found here.

Ben WorthyCat Morgan and Stefani Langehennig have published a project report for their Leverhulme Trust funded project, Who’s Watching Parliament?, which looked at how new data tools like TheyWorkForYou are impacting upon Parliament. 

The House of Lords Liaison Committee have published a report Review of House of Lords investigative and scrutiny committee activity in 2021–22.

And, finally, new issues of Parliamentary Affairs, Government & Opposition, Representation and the Journal of Legislative Studies have been published.

If you would like your published research to be featured in this section, please email Stephen with details.

10. Recently on the Blog

We published three great blogs over the summer:

If you have an idea for a blog on some aspect of parliamentary study, please get in touch with our communications officer, Chris.