Skip to content

The Law and Policy Blog

Independent commentary on law and policy from a liberal constitutionalist and critical perspective

Donate

You can support this independent law and policy commentary by PayPal

Subscribe

Please enter your email address to receive notifications of new stuff by me here and elsewhere.

Pages

  • About
  • Comments Policy

Categories

Recent Posts

  • A close reading of the “AI” fake cases judgment 9th May 2025
  • How the Trump administration’s “shock and awe” approach has resulted in its litigation being shockingly awful 22nd April 2025
  • How the United States constitutional crisis is intensifying 17th April 2025
  • A note about injunctions in the context of the Abrego Garcia case 14th April 2025
  • How Trump is misusing emergency powers in his tariffs policy 10th April 2025
  • How Trump’s tariffs can be a Force Majeure event for some contracts 7th April 2025
  • The significance of the Wisconsin court election result 2nd April 2025
  • “But what if…?” – constitutional commentary in an age of anxiety 31st March 2025
  • A significant defeat for the Trump government in the federal court of appeal 27th March 2025
  • Reckoning the legal and practical significance of the United States deportations case 25th March 2025
  • Making sense of the Trump-Roberts exchange about impeachment 19th March 2025
  • Understanding what went on in court yesterday in the US deportations case 18th March 2025
  • “Oopsie” – the word that means the United States has now tipped into a constitutional crisis 17th March 2025
  • Oh Canada 16th March 2025
  • Thinking about a revolution 5th March 2025
  • The fog of lawlessness: what we can see – and what we cannot see – in the current confusions in the United States 25th February 2025
  • The president who believes himself a king 23rd February 2025
  • Making sense of what is happening in the United States 18th February 2025
  • The paradox of the Billionaires saying that Court Orders have no value, for without Court Orders there could not be Billionaires 11th February 2025
  • Why Donald Trump is not really “transactional” but anti-transactional 4th February 2025
  • From constitutional drama to constitutional crisis? 1st February 2025
  • Solving the puzzle of why the case of Prince Harry and Lord Watson against News Group Newspapers came to its sudden end 25th January 2025
  • Looking critically at Trump’s flurry of Executive Orders: why we should watch what is done, and not to be distracted by what is said 21st January 2025
  • A third and final post about the ‘Lettuce before Action’ of Elizabeth Truss 18th January 2025
  • Why the Truss “lettuce before action” is worse than you thought – and it has a worrying implication for free speech 17th January 2025
  • Of Indictments and Impeachments, and of Donald Trump – two similar words for two distinct things 16th January 2025
  • Why did the DoJ prosecution of Trump run out of time? 14th January 2025
  • Spiteful governments and simple contract law, a weak threatening letter, and a warning of a regulatory battle ahead 13th January 2025
  • A close look at Truss’s legal threat to Starmer – a glorious but seemingly hopeless cease-and-desist letter 9th January 2025
  • How the lore of New Year defeated the law of New Year – how the English state gave up on insisting the new year started on 25 March 1st January 2025
  • Some of President Carter’s judges can still judge, 44 years later – and so we can see how long Trump’s new nominees will be on the bench 31st December 2024
  • “Twelfth Night Till Candlemas” – the story of a forty-year book-quest and of its remarkable ending 20th December 2024
  • An argument about Assisting Dying – matters of life and death need to be properly regulated by law, and not by official discretion 28th November 2024
  • The illiberalism yet to come: two things not to do, and one thing to do – suggestions on how to avoid mental and emotional exhaustion 18th November 2024
  • New stories for old – making sense of a political-constitutional rupture 14th November 2024
  • The shapes of things to come – some thoughts and speculations on the possibilities of what can happen next 8th November 2024
  • A postcard from the day after an election: capturing a further political-constitutional moment 6th November 2024
  • A postcard from the day of an election – capturing a political-constitutional moment 5th November 2024
  • “…as a matter of law, the house is haunted” – a quick Hallowe’en post about law and lore 31st October 2024
  • Prisons and prisons-of-the-mind – how the biggest barrier to prisons reform is public opinion 28th October 2024
  • A blow against the “alternative remedies” excuse: the UK Supreme Court makes it far harder for regulators to avoid performing their public law duties 22nd October 2024
  • What explains the timing and manner of the Chagos Islands sovereignty deal? 20th October 2024
  • Happy birthday, Supreme Court: the fifteenth anniversary of the United Kingdom’s highest court 1st October 2024
  • Words on the screen – the rise and (relative) fall of text-based social media: why journalists and lawyers on social media may not feel so special again 30th September 2024
  • Political accountability vs policy accountability: how our system of politics and government is geared to avoid or evade accountability for policy 24th September 2024
  • On writing – and not writing – about miscarriages of justice 23rd September 2024
  • Miscarriages of Justice: the Oliver Campbell case 21st September 2024
  • How Taylor Swift’s endorsement of Harris and Walz is a masterpiece of persuasive prose: a songwriter’s practical lesson in written advocacy 11th September 2024
  • Supporting Donald Trump is too much for Richard Cheney 7th September 2024
  • A miscarriage of justice is normally a systems failure, and not because of any conspiracy – the cock-up theory usually explains when things go wrong 30th August 2024
  • Update – what is coming up. 29th August 2024
  • Shamima Begum – and ‘de jure’ vs ‘de facto’ statelessness 21st August 2024
  • Lucy Letby and miscarriages of justice: some words of caution on why we should always be alert to the possibilities of miscarriages of justice 19th August 2024
  • This week’s skirmish between the European Commission and X 17th August 2024
  • What Elon Musk perhaps gets wrong about civil wars being ‘inevitable’ – It is in the nature of civil wars that they are not often predictable 7th August 2024
  • How the criminal justice system deals with a riot 5th August 2024
  • The Lucy Letby case: some thoughts and observations: what should happen when a defence does not put in their own expert evidence (for good reason or bad)? 26th July 2024
  • And out the other side? The possible return of serious people doing serious things in law and policy 10th July 2024
  • What if a parliamentary candidate did not exist? The latest odd constitutional law question which nobody has really thought of asking before 9th July 2024
  • The task before James Timpson: the significance of this welcome appointment – and two of the obstacles that he needs to overcome 8th July 2024
  • How the Met police may be erring in its political insider betting investigation – and why we should be wary of extending “misconduct of public office” to parliamentary matters, even in nod-along cases 28th June 2024
  • What you need to know about commercial regulation, in the sports sector and elsewhere – for there is compliance and there is “compliance” 25th June 2024
  • Seven changes for a better constitution? Some interesting proposals from some good people. 24th June 2024
  • The wrong gong 22nd June 2024
  • The public service of an “Enemy of the People” 22nd June 2024
  • Of majorities and “super-majorities” 21st June 2024
  • The strange omission in the Conservative manifesto: why is there no commitment to repeal the Human Rights Act? 12th June 2024
  • The predicted governing party implosion in historical and constitutional context 11th June 2024
  • Donald Trump is convicted – but it is now the judicial system that may need a good defence strategy 1st June 2024
  • The unwelcome weaponisation of police complaints as part of ordinary politics 31st May 2024
  • Thoughts on the calling of a general election – and on whether our constitutional excitements are coming to an end 29th May 2024
  • Another inquiry report, another massive public policy failure revealed 21st May 2024
  • On how regulating the media is hard – if not impossible – and on why reviving the Leveson Inquiry may not be the best basis for seeing what regulations are now needed 4th May 2024
  • Trump’s case – a view from an English legal perspective 24th April 2024
  • Law and lore, and state failure – the quiet collapse of the county court system in England and Wales 22nd April 2024
  • How the civil justice system forced Hugh Grant to settle – and why an alternative to that system is difficult to conceive 17th April 2024
  • Unpacking the remarkable witness statement of Johnny Mercer – a closer look at the extraordinary evidence put before the Afghan war crimes tribunal 25th March 2024
  • The curious incident of the Afghanistan war crimes statutory inquiry being set up 21st March 2024
  • A close look at the Donelan libel settlement: how did a minister make her department feel exposed to expensive legal liability? 8th March 2024
  • A close look at the law and policy of holding a Northern Ireland border poll – and how the law may shape what will be an essentially political decision 10th February 2024
  • How the government is seeking to change the law on Rwanda so as to disregard the facts 30th January 2024
  • How the next general election in the United Kingdom is now less than a year away 29th January 2024
  • Could the Post Office sue its own former directors and advisers regarding the Horizon scandal? 16th January 2024
  • How the legal system made it so easy for the Post Office to destroy the lives of the sub-postmasters and sub-postmistresses – and how the legal system then made it so hard for them to obtain justice 12th January 2024
  • The coming year: how the parameters of the constitution will shape the politics of 2024 1st January 2024
  • The coming constitutional excitements in the United States 31st December 2023
  • What is often left unsaid in complaints about pesky human rights law and pesky human rights lawyers 15th December 2023
  • A role-reversal? – a footnote to yesterday’s post 1st December 2023
  • The three elements of the Rwanda judgment that show how the United Kingdom government is now boxed in 30th November 2023
  • On yesterday’s Supreme Court judgment on the Rwanda policy 16th November 2023
  • The courts have already deflated the Rwanda policy, regardless of the Supreme Court judgment next Wednesday 10th November 2023
  • The extraordinary newspaper column of the Home Secretary – and its implications 9th November 2023
  • Drafts of history – how the Covid Inquiry, like the Leveson Inquiry, is securing evidence for historians that would otherwise be lost 1st November 2023
  • Proportionality is an incomplete legal concept 25th October 2023
  • Commissioner Breton writes a letter: a post in praise of the one-page formal document 11th October 2023
  • “Computer says guilty” – an introduction to the evidential presumption that computers are operating correctly 30th September 2023
  • COMING UP 23rd September 2023
  • Whatever happened to ‘the best-governed city in the world’? – some footnotes to the article at Prospect on the Birmingham city insolvency 9th September 2023
  • One year on from one thing, sixteen months on from another thing… 8th September 2023
  • What is a section 114 Notice? 7th September 2023
  • Constitutionalism vs constitutionalism – how liberal constitutionalists sometimes misunderstand illiberal constitutionalism 24th August 2023
  • Performative justice and coercion: thinking about coercing convicted defendants to hear their sentences 21st August 2023
  • Of impeachments and indictments – how many of the criminal indictments against Trump are a function of the failure of the impeachment process 15th August 2023
  • A note of caution for those clapping and cheering at the latest indictment of Donald Trump 8th August 2023
  • Witch-hunt (noun) 2nd August 2023

Archives

Masterdon link

Mastodon

Thoughts on the calling of a general election – and on whether our constitutional excitements are coming to an end

29 May 2024

When the general election was suddenly called I was in the middle of writing about another legal topic for Prospect.

And then when the current Prime Minister squelchingly announced a general election, I was asked if I could quickly write about that instead.

*

My first thought was that this new general election told us something about the unintended consequences of constitutional reform – for the Fixed-term Parliaments Act 2011 was supposed to put an end to this sort of thing.

Had the Act had its intended prime effect, we would still be 4/5 way through the 2020-25 parliament, which would have followed the 2015-20 parliament.

But, of course, that did not happen.

Instead of an orderly and leisurely succession of predictable five-year parliaments, we have had consistent political chaos and constant constitutional drama.

We had a general elections in 2017 and 2019 by sidestepping (in two different ways) the primary object of the 2011 Act, and then the Act itself was repealed in 2022.

That is not to say the Act was ineffective: it certainly had effects.

Indeed the extraordinary events of late 2019 – where Parliament insisted with the Benn Act that there could not be a no-deal Brexit which, when enacted, enabled the then Prime Minister to get opposition support for a December general election – only make sense by knowing the constraints of the 2011 Act in stopping that Prime Minister calling a sooner election.

And the course of that 2017-19 “hung” parliament – a much underestimated parliament, though it certainly frustrated those who dislike having parliamentary checks and balances on executive power – can also only be understood by knowing that a Prime Minister was not able to easily call another general election.

The Fixed-term Parliaments Act 2011 certainly was an effective piece of legislation, they were just not the effects that were intended.

*

But writing about that 2011 statute did not seem enough to carry a Prospect article.

I was stuck.

And then…

…and then this was tweeted – and widely retweeted:

It is safe to say that in thirty years of thinking about constitutional issues I have never considered such a question: could a general election, once called, somehow be un-called?

What a notion!

Constitutional law should not be this fun; constitutional law should be dull.

And not only had I never considered it, I also could not think of an immediate answer to the question.

The historian and commentator Robert Saunders mentioned that in 1831 the following happened:

Perhaps a vote like this could have been passed by a majority of the House of Commons, but it would have had to have been done very quickly.

And it would have required, well, a majority of the House of Commons – and those government backbenchers aghast at the sudden general election are presumably a minority.

So that was not going to happen.

*

The only other realistic way would be for there to be a change of Prime Minister – or a change of mind by the Prime Minister.

And that would all have to been done before parliament dissolved tomorrow (30 May 2024).

That has not happened.

And it is difficult to think how it could have happened, for there would not have been enough time for a vote of no confidence and a new election for a new Conservative leader. It also assumes that the King would have accepted the new leader immediately as Prime Minister.

It is a measure of how strange the last few years have been that such a possibility was canvassed.

*

Another way for the general election to be un-called could be perhaps a judicial review going even further than “Miller II” – which merely quashed a prorogation – that attacked the very proclamation of a general election.

That would have been a breathtaking (and rather entertaining) invitation to the courts for an extension of the remit of judicial review – and surely those government supporters who were upset by the Miller cases would not resort to such an ambitious and bold legal claim.

And now, we will perhaps never know how such an un-calling of an election would be done in practice.

*

As I mention in the Prospect article (please click and read), it may be that with this general election our period of constitutional giddiness is coming to an end.

Or it may be that there are new constitutional excitements ahead: the moves towards Irish unification and Scottish independence, towards a closer and more sustainable relationship with the European Union, and towards a reformed House of Lords. There may even be scope for a re-examination of the role and powers of the Crown as and when there is a new monarch.

So a “brace” – if not a “brace, brace”.

***

Comments Policy

This blog enjoys a high standard of comments, many of which are better and more interesting than the posts.

Comments are welcome, but they are pre-moderated and comments will not be published if irksome, or if they risk derailing the discussion.

More on the comments policy is here.

Posted on 29th May 2024Author David Allen GreenCategories Constitutional Law, Democracy, Elections and Voting, United Kingdom Law and Policy

12 thoughts on “Thoughts on the calling of a general election – and on whether our constitutional excitements are coming to an end”

  1. Adam says:
    29th May 2024 at 10:26

    All of this – including the ‘cancel the election’ idea – reminds me how small groups often seem able to wield outsized amounts of influence in our democratic system. This is a flaw in ‘first past the post, oppositional two-party-dominated’ electoral systems.

    Reply
    1. Stuart Shurlock says:
      30th May 2024 at 07:53

      It could be said that a similar flaw exists in nations where PR is used in elections. The resulting outcomes are usually coalition governments where small groups can also appear to wield disproportionate influence. Some would the Greens were in exactly that position in the Scottish government.

      Reply
  2. Dan Le says:
    29th May 2024 at 10:27

    Fascinating as ever.

    Am I right to think that in the 1831 case, it was still up to the monarch to appoint a government and party structures still hadn’t become so binding as to ensure that the biggest party in the Commons would automatically become the governing one, and also that PMs were usually from a chamber where there are no elections? So not really comparable with now.

    Reply
  3. Chris Turner says:
    29th May 2024 at 10:34

    It seemed to me that the Fixed Term Parliaments Act only made sense in the context of a PR based parliament where coalitions and cooperation were the norm instead of the current two party adversarial system which is a consequence of FPTP, and which is fundamentaly failing us.

    Reply
  4. John Turner says:
    29th May 2024 at 10:58

    I think there is much more ‘fun’ ahead if Labour wins the 2024 General Election.

    Senior Labour sources have said that Sir Keir is frustrated with the democratic process so:

    The hereditary peers would leave the House of Lords and be replaced by as many if not more Labour life peers to get Sir Keir’s legislative programme through the Lords with the minimal amount of obstruction. Sir Keir, anonymous sources say, is unhappy with the traditional constitutional roles of the Lords in revising Bills, acting as a counterweight to the House of Commons and holding the Government to account

    Already twenty Labour MPs are each working with an unelected and/or self appointed faith leader ahead of playing a key role in Sir Keir’s Government

    Sir Keir will alongside the faith leaders bring in unelected and/or self appointed community leaders to play a key role at the heart of his Government

    And, Sir Keir’s Take Back Control agenda sounds less inapt when set in the national context of taking planning decisions about major projects, however defined, away from local government and placing them in the hands of an anonymous group of civil servants, possibly leavened with businessmen from the City of London (see below)

    Sir Keir’s enhanced devolution for Scotland package, drawn up inclusively by Labour grandees and supporters is on a take it or leave it basis to be enacted by Act of Parliament with no input from the Scottish Parliament or the Scottish People in a referendum

    Labour has been considering its take on the current Government’s Rwanda scheme. It must be cost effective; credible enough to deter migrants and avoid the legal challenges that have delayed the Rwanda plan

    Rachel Reeves has said that she aims to place her British Infrastructure Council with representatives from some of the biggest UK and global investment funds, and her Industrial Strategy Council on a statutory basis, whatever that means. Both bodies will have a significant number of members drawn from outside of government. The history of bringing business people into government is a chequered one. It worked well for David Lloyd George and Winston Churchill in World War One and World War Two, respectively. It damaged for all eternity the reputations of Sir Keir’s and Reeves’s spiritual Labour predecessors, Ramsay MacDonald and Philip Snowden.

    I think it was a nice touch that the work with faith leaders was ‘leaked’ to the media in time for the Guardian to cover the story on Easter Sunday.

    Sir Keir has ruthlessly centralised power within his Labour Party so it is perhaps hardly surprising that he appears to plan to do so in Government?

    The front page of Tuesday’s i carried the story that all of Labour’s directly elected mayors are bracing themselves to stand up to Sir Keir’s centralising tendencies.

    A Labour insider said, according to the i, there is already “distrust” between the party’s HQ and some mayors.

    Quintin Hogg, Lord Hailsham once spoke about the potential for a UK Government with a large majority to become an elective dictatorship.

    And how does Parliament hold a group of business leaders on a statutory decision making Treasury committee to account?

    Reply
  5. Nigel Love says:
    29th May 2024 at 11:48

    The FTPA is a prime example of Cameron’s casual insouciance as PM. Did he intend a permanent change to our electoral arrangements, or merely to ensure that the coalition with the Lib Dems held for the full five years?

    If the latter, why didn’t he insert a sunset clause into the legislation? If the former, he neglected to consider what was to happen if a minority government wanted an early election, given that the only devices available for curtailing the fixed term required the consent of a majority. In 2019 a concerted, organised opposition might have kept an impotent government in office but not in power until 2022.

    Reply
  6. Raphael says:
    29th May 2024 at 19:30

    I’m impressed. Something that happened in British politics has surprised me. I wouldn’t have thought that was still possible.

    Reply
  7. Kevin Hall says:
    29th May 2024 at 20:43

    The attempt to delay the election by preventing the dissolution of Parliament shows the desperation of the Tory hardliners to cling to power as long as possible regardless of the constitutional implications. That kind of thinking began with illegal prorogation of Parliament and continued with various attempts to bypass human rights conventions and international law.

    Such a move would surely have backfired. Rather than improve their chances, the delay of the election and the prospect of yet another leadership election would have destroyed any remaining credibility of the Tory Party as a government for the foreseeable future.

    Reply
  8. Stuart Shurlock says:
    30th May 2024 at 08:11

    The short time available within the “normal” dissolution process would seem to prevent any attempt to reverse it. It would need more time, and the whole list of circumstances to be favourable for it to succeed. It would appear to be impossible within the Conservative Party’s current leadership election process. Even if enough letters were received to start that process, just one PM loyalist putting themselves forward as a “blocking” candidate would be enough to create delays beyond any feasible maximum timescale for a new election.

    I don’t know enough about Labour’s rules to be able to comment on a similar situation with a Labour PM.

    Reply
  9. mike+roberts says:
    31st May 2024 at 16:16

    A quick question I can’t think of anywhere else to post:

    If there was a serious event before July 4th (say a new pandemic or war) that required a recall of parliament, what might happen given there are now no MPs apart from those MPs in cabinet roles?

    Reply
    1. David Allen Green says:
      31st May 2024 at 16:50

      No clear idea. A recall of parliament would require I suspect the king to issue a new proclamation somehow cancelling his proclamation of an election. But beyond that I can only offer guesswork

      The government continues, and ministers are still ministers. It is difficult to imagine a crisis that required parliament itself to be recalled.

      Reply
      1. John Turner says:
        1st June 2024 at 08:26

        Which is quite shocking in a way and a reminder of the extent of the Royal Prerogative exercised by UK Prime Ministers.

        And an interesting contrast with, for example, the power the United States Congress voted itself in 1973 to curb a President’s ability to commit the USA to war.

        The separation of powers was designed to prevent a President from becoming a Monarch.

        According to Wikipedia, “The War Powers Resolution requires the president to notify Congress within 48 hours of committing armed forces to military action and forbids armed forces from remaining for more than 60 days, with a further 30-day withdrawal period, without congressional authorization for use of military force or a declaration of war by the United States. The resolution was passed by two-thirds each of the House and Senate, overriding the veto of President Richard Nixon.”

        I assume that for Congress to be notified in 48 hours it has to be convened as a body in Washington?

        Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Post navigation

Previous Previous post: Another inquiry report, another massive public policy failure revealed
Next Next post: The unwelcome weaponisation of police complaints as part of ordinary politics
Proudly powered by WordPress