Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

The individual member in the British house of commons: Facing both ways and marching forward

Norton, Philip

Authors



Contributors

Lawrence D. Longley
Editor

Reuven Y. Hazan
Editor

Abstract

© 2000 Frank Cass & Co. Ltd. The British MP has a constituency face and a Westminster face. The constituency face has become more demanding in recent decades but is essentially, though not wholly, non-threatening to party leaders. The Westminster face has become more complex, with the intra-party and non-party modes of executive-legislative relationships becoming more prominent in the twentieth century. The modes have become institutionalised through the development of party structures and departmental select committees in the House of Commons. These changes have taken place as MPs have sought to achieve some autonomy in parliamentary behaviour as a response to externally induced constraints on that behaviour. The capacity to influence party leaders has increased but is under challenge as a consequence of organisational and electoral changes in the 1990s.

Citation

Norton, P. (2000). The individual member in the British house of commons: Facing both ways and marching forward. In L. D. Longley, & R. Y. Hazan (Eds.), The Uneasy Relationships Between Parliamentary Members and Leaders (53-74). Frank Cass & Co

Online Publication Date Dec 25, 2013
Publication Date Feb 28, 2000
Deposit Date Apr 1, 2022
Pages 53-74
Book Title The Uneasy Relationships Between Parliamentary Members and Leaders
Chapter Number 3
ISBN 9780714650593 ; 9780714681108
Public URL https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/3592363