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The Westminster System is a democratic system of government modelled after that of the United Kingdom system of government and used in Westminster, the seat of government, hence its name. It is used in a number of Commonwealth nations such as Canada, Australia, Malaysia, Singapore, Jamaica, New Zealand and India and in non-Commonwealth states like Ireland. It is a series of procedures for operating a legislature. Although Westminster systems are parliamentary systems, there are parliamentary governments, such as Germany and Italy, whose
legislative procedures differ considerably from the Westminster system.
Aspects of the Westminster system include:
- an executive branch made up of members of the legislature;
- the presence of opposition parties;
- a bicameral or unicameral legislature, where each house usually is elected on a different basis and/or for different terms,
or where the members of the upper house (for example, the British House of Lords) are somehow appointed; the upper house usually has less power than the lower
house (for example, the British House of Commons,
Jamaican House of
Representatives), which is usually popularly elected. See Senate, House of Commons;
- a ceremonial head of state who is different from the head of government, and who may possess reserve powers which are not normally exercised.
Most of the procedures of a Westminster system, though not in Ireland, are typically defined by convention, practice and precedent along with, or rather
than, codification through a written constitution. Many older constitutions using the Westminster system may not even mention the existence of a
head of government or Prime Minister, with the office's existence and
role evolving outside the primary constitutional text.
Operation
In a Westminster system, the members of parliament are elected by popular vote. The head of government is usually chosen by
being invited to form a government by the head of state or representative
of the head of state (ie, governor-general in some Commonwealth
states), not by parliamentary vote. (See Kiss Hands.) A notable exception
occurs in the Republic of Ireland, where the Taoiseach (prime minister) prior to appointment by the President of Ireland is nominated by the democratically elected
lower house, Dáil Éireann.
The head of government, usually called the Prime Minister, must be able either (a) to control a majority of seats within
the elected legislative chamber, (b) ensure the existence of no absolute majority against them. If the parliament passes a
resolution of no confidence or if the government fails to pass a major bill such as the budget, then the government must either
resign so that a different government can be appointed or seek a parliamentary dissolution so that new public elections may be
held in order to re-confirm or deny their mandate.
Although the dissolution of the legislature and the call for new elections is formally done by the head of state, by
convention the head of state acts according to the wishes of the head of government.
In exceptional circumstances the head of state may either refuse a dissolution request (as in the the King-Byng Affair), or
dismiss the government (as in the Australian constitutional crisis of 1975); either action is likely to bend or
break existing conventions. The Lascelles Principles were
an attempt to create a convention to cover similar situations, but have not been tested in practice.
Ceremonies
The Westminster system has a very distinct appearance when functioning, with many British customs incorporated into day-to-day
government function. A Westminster-style parliament is usually a long, rectangular room, with two rows of seats and desks on
either side. The chairs are positioned so that the two rows are facing each other. The intended purpose of this arrangement is to
create a visual representation of the conflict-filled nature of parliamentary government. Traditionally, the opposition parties
will sit in one row of seats, and the government party will sit in the other. Of course, sometimes a majority government is so large, it must use the "opposition" seats
as well. In the lower house at Westminster (the House of Commons) there are two lines on the floor in front of the government and
opposition benches which members may only cross when exiting the chamber. The distance between the lines is the length of two
swords.
At one end of the room sits a large chair, for the Speaker
of the House. The speaker usually wears a black robe, and in many countries, a wig. Robed
parliamentary clerks often sit at narrow tables between the two rows of seats, as well.
Other ceremonies sometimes associated with the Westminster system include an annual Speech from the Throne (or equivalent) in which the Head of State gives a special address
(written by the government) to parliament about what kind of policies to expect in the coming year, and lengthy "opening of
parliament" ceremonies that often involve the presentation of a large, ceremonial mace.
Consequences
There are a number of consequences of the Westminster system. They tend to have extremely well-disciplined legislative parties
in which it is highly unusual and generally suicidal for a legislator to vote against their party and in which no confidence
votes are very rare. Also, Westminster systems tend to have strong cabinets in which cabinet members other than the prime
minister are politicians with independent basis of support. Conversely, legislative committees in Westminster systems tend to be
weak.
Another convention of the Westminster system at least used to be that ministers were responsible for the actions of their
department (even though government departments can be huge bureaucracies with powerful senior staff), so if the department was
responsible for a major misjudgement, blame would fall on the minister regardless of whether they were involved or even aware of
the situation. Such a convention of ministerial responsibility, if it were ever explicitly followed, is now ignored, with
ministers now only forced to resign when they become such an embarrassment to their government that they are too much of a
political liability to leave in their post.
A related convention is that members of the Cabinet are collectively seen as responsible for government policy and ministers
must publicly support the policy of the government regardless of their private reservation. A minister is duty-bound to resign if
they cannot publicly support the government's position.
Some countries under the Westminster system
See also:
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