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The Times Guide to the House of Commons
Литагент HarperCollins
The most definitive and authoritative guide to 2010’s much-anticipated General Election.Compiled and written by The Times’s unrivalled team of leading political journalists, The Times Guide to the House of Commons offers an in-depth look at UK politics, charting the run-up to the general election of 2010, as well as a thorough analysis of the extraordinary outcome and the implications it holds for Britain’s future.This large-format authority on UK politics will prove an indispensable and enjoyable point of reference for anyone interested in the state of government in Britain.Published just 9 weeks after the official election date, this is the first account of its kind to hit the shelves.Contents include:• Commentary and essays from leading Times political writers, including Matthew Parris, Ben MacIntyre, David Aaronovitch, Daniel Finkelstein and Ann Treneman, covering a great range of fascinating subjects and angles.• Expert analysis of how Britain voted and why. Includes like-for-like comparison with the results of 2005.• Inside accounts on why David Cameron embraced a full coalition with the Liberal Democrats and of Gordon Brown's decision to call off an early election.• A personal account from Mattthew Parris on why his own parliamentary career failed, and advice on what an MP must do to be effective.• A wealth of election statistics: which MPs have the most vulnerable majorities; new MPs; MPs by age, length of service, etc.• Results by constituency: informed and pithy summaries of every MP; series of full-colour maps detailing election results across the nation.• The coalition agreement in full.
The Times: Guide to the House of Commons 2010
Editor
Greg Hurst
Assistant Editor
Emily Gosden
Design Production Editor
Chris Davalle
Chief Sub-Editor
Matthew Lyons
Table of Contents
Cover Page (#u12acf0ca-8521-5946-9b95-40feee351f33)
Title Page (#u15c8c69b-4b89-5405-94ec-5f73bd389246)
THE TIMES An aid to the navigation of uncharted political waters (#u4daed27c-1e92-57ff-981f-573d823cf1be)
The House of Commons (#uf3f597a6-1990-535c-93f5-2dab3650ebb4)
The new Parliament (#u015f4e37-d506-50e4-9953-d1472eb8babb)
An ordinary beginning to an extraordinary campaign (#uce377e9c-fbe5-5ac4-82dd-593d1d3f802e)
How the polls really got it right (#u3f7449ca-81b5-54f8-bcab-539eda766ad7)
A tremor that changed the political landscape (#uc738b587-3170-5d99-9b07-ea2e4b490f41)
Who cares what the papers say? (#ucfc960bf-d03c-57f1-8a81-21f2c6b355fc)
And the winner is…television (#uc80d972e-70a5-5015-b8c7-abd9894d6ec0)
It will never be the same again (#uc733220d-d967-5ab9-8acc-f8c4fcd597df)
Meet the Class of 2010, the new politics in person (#uc4811abc-fc04-5a7f-ac64-5267aa70c216)
Women failed to break through (#u07c88de5-bc21-5c7d-a365-c91ac15c052a)
Bad news for big spenders: money can’t buy you votes (#ud7f8d413-eaaa-50a5-b428-9fbd98406a8a)
Little joy for the smaller parties (#u04a4aac8-5414-522f-8919-b35ee5abd9ec)
Don’t emerge as sounding brass or tinkling cymbal (#ub18c37b4-9f7b-5981-baab-e1d31be087ff)
The old era (#u14291444-12e6-5c4a-b770-0eff3adcc67e)
The man who detoxified the Conservative brand (#ua5ae0148-769f-5d64-8c53-66a606d1a5de)
At long last it’s OK to be a Tory (#ubf49574b-237c-5798-9a26-55da7d6405aa)
Path to power: how the Lib Dems made history (#u8f1bcab9-9104-5ec8-a1c6-ec58055b58af)
How Brown’s rivalry with Blair proved to be Labour’s undoing (#u6585f379-2222-506c-b660-9e4d9e84e09d)
Names of the dead were read to a silent Commons (#u8acbc315-8860-56d9-9ed8-f261d0b2a59c)
Hail and a fond farewell to the dearly departed (#u960edc3e-7c45-5606-b320-a6f3fce64a25)
The tragedy of Gordon Brown (#uba4c619d-fcea-5649-bbac-e9d8ef2c3bba)
New Labour found its reforming stride too late (#uf6461c03-0d2a-52dc-880b-aa4291e7a4ef)
‘This sucker’s going down’: diary of a financial crisis (#ub8c2d7c4-2e11-52f9-a222-78d6092819da)
SNP pioneers of minority rule (#u5cf04eb9-4383-5c89-96d1-4b17ace5c1df)
Northern Ireland comes back from the brink (#u9bb6aaa9-3a15-5cde-8ac8-8a9063987655)
Welsh coalition complications (#u6f23333a-3a54-502c-bbc4-b5ce2a8da47c)
All change, the gravy train has hit the buffers (#ubfaa70d2-66e9-5cbf-ada2-b14dab30dcdf)
The work of the House of Commons (#u9405bd54-ddfa-5c9a-841d-d8386d53512d)
The growing powers of the humble backbencher (#u86be1aa0-b74f-5999-a8f2-72781a07c17f)
New intake foots bill for the old (#u7451c19d-7468-5de9-9ed5-c42ea0898f5f)
A few words of friendly advice for aspiring MPs (#u494688f9-7199-53f2-83a0-18c0036d654a)
The pleasures of opposition (#u563f527c-249f-55e1-889c-37ea953a13d0)
Life as a Member of Parliament (#u4c3b24f7-d4b2-505e-bb6f-2441d17a6f0c)
MPs who stood down before the election (#ud88e8d47-4fb3-593f-8a1a-d715c49e58c0)
Defeated MPs (#uaf09f8ab-eed1-5b26-be76-4ceeff3beb4b)
Her Majesty’s Government The Cabinet (#litres_trial_promo)
Departmental Ministers and Whips (#litres_trial_promo)
General Election 2010: results by constituency (#litres_trial_promo)
House of Commons, May 2010 (#litres_trial_promo)
MPs with majorities of less than 10 per cent (#litres_trial_promo)
How the nation voted (#litres_trial_promo)
Tories rediscovered the art of by-election victory (#litres_trial_promo)
By-elections 2005-10 (#litres_trial_promo)
Manifestos (#litres_trial_promo)
Coalition programme for government (#litres_trial_promo)
Conservative manifesto (#litres_trial_promo)
Liberal Democrat manifesto (#litres_trial_promo)
Labour manifesto (#litres_trial_promo)
Smaller parties’ manifestos (#litres_trial_promo)
Index to candidates (#litres_trial_promo)
Copyright (#litres_trial_promo)
About the Publisher (#litres_trial_promo)
THE TIMES An aid to the navigation of uncharted political waters (#ulink_539437ac-0fca-543d-9ed7-3dd4fc147966)
Greg Hurst
Editor of the Guide
The general election of 2010 was a watershed: the first since February 1974 at which no single party won an overall majority. The inconclusive outcome was accompanied by a strong sense of paradox. The Conservative Party won the most seats, 305, with one additional seat expected, and duly delivered, in the election in Thirsk & Malton that was delayed by the death of a candidate. And yet, by falling short of an absolute Commons majority, David Cameron was widely held to have failed to seize fully, particularly in the final year, the opportunity presented to him as the outgoing Government, and Gordon Brown in particular, became steadily more unpopular.
The Liberal Democrats, clear winners of the campaign itself, were stunned actually to suffer a net loss of five seats, bringing their tally down to 57. They had expected significant gains after the television debates propelled Nick Clegg into the living rooms of voters unhappy with Mr Brown but with nagging doubts about Mr Cameron. The ten-point jump in support for the Liberal Democrats after the first leaders’ debate was unprecedented in polling history. Even as the party’s poll ratings began to glide downwards many Liberal Democrats hoped for, and expected, net gains of perhaps 20 or 30 seats.
The paradox was greatest within the Labour Party. Clear loser of the election, with a net loss of 90 seats, it endured its worst performance since 1931 during the Great Depression. Within Labour ranks, however, a grim sense of satisfaction was evident, even some pride, both at having clawed back from the prospect of being pushed into third place by the Liberal Democrats and at having denied Mr Cameron the majority that he wanted and, they may have calculated, he needed.
One refreshing aspect was that turnout, having reached a postwar low in 2001, rose again to 65.1 per cent, up by 3.7 per cent on 2005; if an election is interesting or the result uncertain, voters are more inclined to take part.
If the result appeared confusing to some, its immediate aftermath must have seemed doubly so. Gordon Brown, vanquished, returned to Downing Street. The Conservatives and Liberal Democrats, after weeks, months even, of fighting one another tooth and nail, dispatched teams to begin talks on a tentative arrangement for a minority administration or even a coalition. The outcome, Britain’s first coalition since Churchill’s cross-party administration during the Second World War, from 1940-45, and the first in peacetime since Ramsay MacDonald’s National Government of 1929-35, and those that followed, ushered in a new era of British politics.
Coalition politics presents significant new challenges for the House of Commons. Ministers who are members of competing parties must find ways of working together that go beyond pragmatism and practical effectiveness and are based on trust, while maintaining their separate political entities and those of their parties. Backbench Members of both governing parties must find the language, tone and levers to criticise and influence individual aspects of policy or decisions of administration without tearing at the fabric of the coalition itself. There will be others unhappy about the very fact of coalition government, whose challenge is to advance their cause without being cast as wreckers. Such questions apply well beyond the exchanges on the floor of the Commons, to its select committees, public bill committees and its very culture as an institution.
For the Labour Party, in particular, the task of opposition carries heightened responsibilities. In the previous two Parliaments, the Liberal Democrats provided an increasingly significant alternative voice to that of the official Opposition, for example as the only British party to oppose the invasion of Iraq in 2003 and offering an alternative analysis during the financial crisis of 2008-09. Their entry into office gives the coalition Government an initial working majority in the Commons of 82 once the Speaker and Sinn Féin are excluded and leaves the main duty of opposition on Labour’s shoulders alone. Furthermore, the coalition will have, between its peers, a large majority over Labour in the House of Lords, where cross-benchers do not vote as a block. This is the first time a Government has commanded majorities in both Houses of Parliament since John Major in 1997, and makes the opposition’s work of scrutiny and challenge in the Commons doubly important.
Gordon Brown’s resignation as Prime Minister and leader of the Labour Party heralded the opening of a new chapter for his party. Amid the uncertainty and fast-moving events of the post-election hiatus, this happened in two stages. First came an undertaking to step down at a future date if an alternative “progressive” coalition with the Liberal Democrats and minority parties could be negotiated. Then came his immediate departure as the coalition between Mr Cameron and Mr Clegg fell into place, although before its details were complete. Harriet Harman, Labour’s deputy leader, took his place temporarily as Leader of the Opposition as the party agreed to a timetable of more than four months to elect a new leader for its annual conference in late September.
Two parties are represented in the new House of Commons for the first time: the Green Party, 11 years after it gained two seats in the European Parliament, thanks to its method of election by proportional representation, and the Alliance Party of Northern Ireland. The United Kingdom Independence Party and British National Party polled substantially more votes than the Greens, and both improved their share of the vote, without winning seats. The trend of independent Members of Parliament, re-established by Martin Bell in 1997, was reversed in mainland Britain with the defeat of Richard Taylor in Wyre Forest, where he served two terms, and Dai Davies in Blaenau Gwent. It was maintained only by the presence of Lady Sylvia Hermon, who broke with the Ulster Unionists to retain her seat with a large majority. Her victory reflects the very different politics of Northern Ireland.
The outcome of the general election, inconclusive as it was, nonetheless captured the mood of Britain in the late spring of 2010: dissatisfied with Labour (other than in Scotland, the only part of Britain where the party’s vote went up, and Inner London); attracted in significant numbers by Mr Cameron, although with doubts harboured by some and antipathy among a minority; restless for change; and disenchanted with politics and the excesses of the previous Parliament.
The most important dynamic for the Commons itself is the scale of the turnover of its Members. More than one third, 227, are new to Parliament. This is fewer than the 242 new MPs returned in 1997, a postwar record, but is a massive transfusion for an institution that had lost touch with what the electorate expected from it. At the election 149 MPs stood down of their own volition (or their party’s) rather than face the voters again, far more than the 115 who did so before the end-of-era election of 1997. Five former MPs also return after periods of broken service.
The Times Guide to the House of Commons 2010 has itself undergone change. Its commitment to accuracy and balance remain, but with even greater emphasis on analysis and comment. Writers from The Times explore the wider undercurrents that had an impact on the voters’ view of politicians: the scandal of misuse of Commons allowances; the banking crisis and recession; and the handling of military campaigns in Iraq and Afghanistan. The Guide gives greater scope for the best of The Times’s journalism beyond that of its writers, with the work of its photographers, illustrators, graphic artists and designers used to full effect.
Profiles of each Member of Parliament are livelier, intended to convey a sense of what each is like, what motivates them and how effectively they discharge their role, in addition to biographical details of what they have done. Information is included, too, on thousands of candidates who contested the election, were unsuccessful but attracted sufficient support to hold their deposit. Many among them, no doubt, will be the subject of fuller profiles in the next Guide as Members of Parliament.
Finally, and perhaps most importantly, there is a new chapter that explains and discusses the work of the House of Commons, its powers, recent reforms and their effect. Former Members of Parliament describe the reality of serving on the government and opposition benches, from the challenge of finding how to make their voice heard and the satisfaction of influencing events to the monotony of waiting, day after day, night after night, to vote.
The new Parliament is embarking on a journey of political change through waters familiar to much of continental Europe but, to date, largely uncharted by practitioners of politics, commentators, observers and electors in the United Kingdom. The Times Guide to the Commons seeks, as ever, to offer itself as their navigational aid.
The House of Commons (#ulink_0cc8177d-ad9f-5a36-a654-b2eebaae12b6)
The following were elected Members of the House of Commons in the 2010 general election
Alliance Alliance
C Conservative
DUP Democratic Unionist Party
Green Green
Ind Independent
Lab Labour
LD Liberal Democrat;
PC Plaid Cymru
SNP Scottish National Party
SF Sinn Féin
SDLP Social Democratic and Labour Party
Speaker Speaker
A