Hello, Dinah!
Hello, Dinah!
An excoriating analysis of the dire state of the US Supreme Court, by Lord Sumption, former UK Supreme Court Justice and Honorary Fellow of Magdalen.
www.prospectmagazine.co.uk/world/north-...
... and (3) National Security and the Law www.daqc.co.uk/2022/11/19/n... /3
... (2) Writing a Constitution (revised version to be published in Public Law this October) www.daqc.co.uk/2023/12/01/w... ... /2
If you are wondering whether to follow and want to know the sort of thing I do, here are recent lectures on (1) the House of Lords and the Law www.daqc.co.uk/2022/11/19/t... .../1
The Labour Party adopted this approach in 2015, the conservatives around turn of century, so not a development that coincided with the development of democracy.
Delighted you are here. This place has exceeded expectations in my first 24 hours. But needs more institutional (e.g. parliamentary) accounts - and [ducks] more conservatives.
Until relatively recently, this was the way our constitution worked.
Democracy is about having a roughly equal right to choose those that govern. It was therefore much more democratic for those who had been elected to represent the people of this country to choose Rishi Sunak as Prime Minister than for 172,000 Con party members to choose Liz Truss.
Coda to this. Whist there are differences, it is notable that John Swinney was appointed FM without a party vote after the short-lived Yousaf ministry, presumably to avoid another divisive leadership contest amongst party members; similarly, Sunak was appointed by MPs agreeing, to avoid party vote
Yes I agree. Itβs a sort of softball version at the moment
Labour could strip members of vote in future leadership contests : I appear not to be the only one who thinks party members should not vote on leaders midterm: itβs inconsistent with constitutional principle.
www.thetimes.com/article/3109...
Yes Adam - a rule whereby a parliament nominates a first minister achieves much the same as the governing partyβs MPs choosing. And imagine how inappropriate it would be if all the MPs agreed a contract with party members by which they would vote for the person chosen by party members
As far as I can tell, political parties are essentially private memberβs clubs and can do whatever the heck they want to. See: expelling members en masse on fake pretext ahead of Corbynβs 2nd leadership election. (Of which I was oneβ¦)
More on this and the constitutional issues around appointing ministers from outside Parliament, here (partly paywalled Iβm afraid) : www.lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v4...
The issue was not as obvious when Johnson was appointed as it was mid Brexit crisis and the Con Party was fractured and a minority administration. May was effectively appointed by MPs without a party election.
The radical policies she had promised to members quickly resulted in MPs withdrawing their support from her and Sunak was appointed without another members vote.
Because constitutional principle requires the King to appoint the individual most likely to command the confidence of the Commons, not party members. The issue arose starkly when Liz Truss was appointed PM, when Sunak had the support of Conservative MPs.
Iβve recently been seeking to explain why the rules that the political parties now have for choosing party leaders by vote of members operate inconsistently with constitutional principle as well as being contrary to the public interest, at least when prime ministers are replaced mid term. Why?
Good evening Bluesky. Iβm giving this a try, learning the ropes and now in an echo chamber very helpfully created by @seanjones.org - for which many thanks indeed. Hoping to reach out beyond lawyers to advance a little here and there the understanding of legal issues.