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Tag Archives: Simon Hix

The controversial origins of centralised agenda control at Westminster 

Posted on December 13, 2024 by The Constitution Unit

The 1902 ‘Balfour reforms’ established a core feature of the UK House of Commons: ministers’ control of its agenda. In a new article, summarised in this blogpost, Tom Fleming, Simon Hix, and Radoslaw Zubek explore how this important change came about, and question the idea that it was adopted with cross-party consensus. 

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Posted in Government, Parliament, Parties and politicians | Tagged Arthur Balfour, Balfour reforms, Henry Campbell-Bannerman, House of Commons, MPs, parliament, parliamentary procedure, parliamentary scrutiny, Radoslaw Zubek, Simon Hix, Standing Order 14, Thomas Fleming, Tom Fleming | 2 Comments
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