A balanced parliament still seems the most likely outcome of the next general election.
In an earlier post ( 15th May, 2013) I have argued that we need to dispense with the convention that, after a general election, the new prime minister walks into the front door of No 10 and the old one sneaks out of the back, all within 24 hours, and suggested
that at least ten days be allowed for the formation of a government.
I want now to suggest that it is rather silly to try to apply
to a coalition government the same rules of collective responsibility as have
traditionally applied to one-party governments.
I suggest that any new coalition agreement should divide issues into at
least four categories:
1.
1. Those
areas where both (or all) the parties
are agreed and on which they will work together and support each other both
inside and outside parliament.
2. .2 Those areas on which the minority
party(ies) do not agree with the
majority party, but promise to offer “confidence and support” whilst reserving
the right to offer alternative courses.
3. 3 Those areas where the minority party (ies) do
not agree with the majority party and reserve the right to campaign on alternative policies
and to abstain on any vote in parliament.
4. 4.
Those areas on which there is no agreement and
on which the minority parties have the right to campaign and vote
independently.
Such categorisation would avoid some of the embarrassments
for Liberal Democrats which have arisen over the past three years, many arising
from Nick Clegg’s naïve assertion that the coalition members must “own” all
that the government does. From my point
of view the main embarrassment has been and continues to be Liberal Democrat
support for Osborne’s economic policies: others may be concerned about other issues
(support for the restructuring of the NHS, or the creation of “free” schools
and extension of the academy programme, for example).
An attempt to categorise issues in the above manner in the
2010 agreement would, for example, have helped clarify the Conservatives’
intentions on electoral reform and reform of the second chamber - that their promise to introduce measures to
facilitate them did not, we realised too late, imply that they would actually
vote for them.
It is important that, whatever the public rivalries and protestations of the possibility of outright victory, party managers should be getting together discussing these ideas now rather than leaving everything to be sorted out in the flurry of post-election exhaustion.
It is important that, whatever the public rivalries and protestations of the possibility of outright victory, party managers should be getting together discussing these ideas now rather than leaving everything to be sorted out in the flurry of post-election exhaustion.
It is of course quite possible that haggling in such detail
would take more than ten days, but I’m fairly certain that the “almighty
markets” would soon get used to the idea, and the sky would not fall in.
Very sensible but impracticable. The essence of coalition is agreement: no agreement, no viable coalition. This is why Labour seems a much more attractive partner for the Lib_Dems than the Tories. Two left of centre partners rather than a cobbled together alliance of Left and Right?
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