In the United Kingdom, confidence motions are a means of testing the support of the government (executive) in a legislative body, and for the legislature to remove the government from office. A confidence motion may take the form of either a vote of confidence, usually put forward by the government, or a vote of no confidence (or censure motion [1] ), usually proposed by the opposition. When such a motion is put to a vote in the legislature, if a vote of confidence is defeated, or a vote of no confidence is passed, then the incumbent government must resign, or call a general election. [2]
It is a fundamental principle of the British constitution that the government must retain the confidence of the legislature, as it is not possible for a government to operate effectively without the support of the majority of the people's representatives. [3] At the national level, this means that the UK government (the Cabinet) must retain the confidence of a majority in the House of Commons.
It is possible for a vote of no confidence to succeed where there is a minority government or a small majority, or where there are internal party splits leading to some members of the ruling party voting against its leaders. Where there is a minority government, the government may seek agreements or pacts with other parties in order to prevail in the vote and remain in office.
Despite their importance to the constitution, for a long time the rules surrounding motions of no confidence were dictated solely by convention. Under the Fixed-term Parliaments Act 2011, a vote of no confidence had to be passed in a specific form in order to create the possibility of an early general election. Under the Act, if the House of Commons passed a motion of no confidence in the government in express terms, the House must then adopt a vote of confidence in that same or an alternative government within 14 days, or a general election would be held. [4] These practices were ended in 2022, with the repeal of the 2011 Act.
A no-confidence vote was last successfully used on 28 March 1979, when the minority government of James Callaghan was defeated. [5] A no-confidence vote can have the effect of uniting the ruling party; for this reason such motions are rarely used and successful motions are even rarer. [6] Before 1979 the last successful motion of no confidence occurred in 1924. [7] The most recent confidence vote instigated by the opposition was held on 16 January 2019, with the government prevailing. [8]
Defeat of a motion of no confidence (or winning a vote of confidence) does not provide protection to the government in power for any specific length of time. MPs from any political party may propose another vote immediately, although are unlikely to do so due to convention and potential weakening of their own standing. [9]
Since 1945 there have been three votes of confidence and 23 of no confidence. [10]
Confidence motions fall into three categories:
A motion in this category is often effectively a threat of dissolution by the government, in order to persuade backbench MPs to support a bill. One such threat occurred in 1993 so that John Major could pass the Social Chapter of the Maastricht Treaty. In 2022, the outgoing government of Boris Johnson called a vote of confidence in itself after rejecting the wording of a proposed opposition motion that had signalled no confidence in both the government and Johnson's leadership specifically. [11]
Opposition motions are initiated by the opposition party and often have little chance of success. By convention, a no-confidence vote takes precedence over normal Parliamentary business for that day, and will begin with speeches from the Prime Minister and the Leader of the Opposition, rather than the ministers for the policy area which may be the concern of the motion. The motion may either profess no confidence in the Government itself, or no confidence in the particular policies of a government. Probably the most famous no-confidence motion was on the night of 28 March 1979 when Jim Callaghan's Labour Government fell from office by one vote, 311–310, [12] in what was described by the BBC as one of the most dramatic nights in Westminster's history. [13]
Although there is no commonly accepted and comprehensive definition of a confidence motion, it is possible to identify confidence motions from their timing, the speakers and the terms of the motion. [5] Motions of confidence are supportive of the government, whereas motions of no confidence are unsupportive of the government. It can be difficult to distinguish an opposition no-confidence motion from other opposition motions critical of government policy. The term censure motion can also refer to a category of motion which does not attempt to remove the government.
The list below includes all confidence motions since 1945 and some between 1940 and 1945. Government-defeated motions are noted in bold. [62]
Prime Minister in office | Party | Date | Subject of motion | Result (Noes–Ayes) Majority | Consequences | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Neville Chamberlain | Conservative | 8 May 1940 | Motion to adjourn the House [63] | 200–281 81 | The Government resigned on 10 May 1940 despite winning the no-confidence vote. | |
Winston Churchill | Conservative | 13 May 1940 | Vote welcoming the formation of the Government [64] | 0–381 381 | ||
Winston Churchill | Conservative | 29 January 1942 | Motion of Confidence in His Majesty's Government [65] | 1–464 463 | ||
Winston Churchill | Conservative | 2 July 1942 | Vote of no confidence in central direction of war [66] | 25–475 450 | ||
Clement Attlee | Labour | 6 December 1945 | Motion of censure [67] | 197–381 184 | ||
Winston Churchill | Conservative | 4 December 1952 | Motion of censure [68] | 280–304 24 | ||
Anthony Eden | Conservative | 1 November 1956 | Amendment to motion [69] | 255–324 69 | ||
6 December 1956 | Amendment to motion [70] | 260–327 67 | ||||
Harold Macmillan | Conservative | 5 February 1962 | Motion to deplore [71] | 228–326 98 | ||
Harold Macmillan | Conservative | 26 July 1962 | Motion to dissolve parliament [72] | 253–351 98 | ||
Harold Wilson | Labour | 10 November 1964 | Amendment to address [73] | 294–315 21 | ||
2 February 1965 | Motion to deplore the Government [74] | 289–306 17 | ||||
2 August 1965 | Motion of no confidence [75] | 290–303 13 | ||||
27 July 1966 | Motion of no confidence [76] | 246–325 79 | ||||
27 July 1966 | Motion of no confidence [77] | 246–325 79 | ||||
1 December 1966 | Motion of no confidence [78] | 246–329 83 | ||||
24 July 1967 | Motion of no confidence [79] | 240–333 93 | ||||
Edward Heath | Conservative | 17 February 1972 | Second Reading of the European Communities Bill [80] | 301–309 8 | ||
6 March 1972 | Motion to condemn the Government [81] | 270–317 47 | ||||
19 November 1973 | Motion of no confidence [82] | 286–304 18 | ||||
Harold Wilson | Labour | 11 March 1976 | Motion to adjourn the House [83] | 280–297 17 | ||
James Callaghan | Labour | 9 June 1976 | Motion of no confidence [84] | 290–309 19 | ||
23 March 1977 | Motion of no confidence [85] | 298–322 24 | ||||
20 July 1977 | Motion to adjourn the House [86] | 282–312 30 | ||||
14 December 1978 | Motion of confidence [87] | 290–300 10 | ||||
28 March 1979 | Motion of no confidence [88] | 311–310 1 | The Prime Minister advised Queen Elizabeth II to dissolve Parliament on 7 April 1979. [61] | |||
Margaret Thatcher | Conservative | 28 February 1980 | Motion of no confidence [89] | 268–327 59 | ||
29 July 1980 | Motion of no confidence [90] | 274–333 59 | ||||
27 July 1981 | Motion of no confidence [91] | 262–334 72 | ||||
28 October 1981 | Motion of no confidence | 210–312 102 | ||||
31 January 1985 | Motion to censure [92] | 222–395 173 | ||||
22 November 1990 | Motion of no confidence [93] | 247–367 120 | ||||
John Major | Conservative | 27 March 1991 | Motion of no confidence [94] | 238–358 120 | ||
24 September 1992 | Amendment to motion [95] | 288–330 42 | ||||
23 July 1993 | Motion of confidence [96] | 299–339 40 | ||||
1 December 1993 | Motion of no confidence [97] | 95–282 187 | The only modern example of a confidence motion in the House of Lords. | |||
28 November 1994 | Second Reading of the European Communities (Finance) Bill [98] | 303–330 27 | ||||
Theresa May | Conservative | 16 January 2019 | Motion of no confidence [99] | 306–325 19 | ||
Boris Johnson | Conservative | 18 July 2022 | Motion of confidence [100] | 238–347 109 | Held during July-September 2022 Conservative Party leadership election, after Johnson announced his intention to resign on 7 July. |
Devolved legislature | First Minister in office | Party | Date | Subject of motion | Result (Noes–Ayes) Majority | Consequences | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Welsh Assembly | Alun Michael | Labour | 2 November 1999 | Motion of no confidence in the First Secretary [101] | 26–8 18 | Political crisis in the Assembly continued over constitutional disagreements and failure of Michael's administration to secure funding from the Treasury for EU Objective One funds. Michael later resigned amid a successful second no confidence motion in February 2000. [102] | |
Welsh Assembly | Alun Michael | Labour | 9 February 2000 | Motion of no confidence in the First Secretary | 27–31 4 | Michael resigned as First Secretary [k] and Rhodri Morgan was nominated by the Assembly to succeed him before going on to form a new Labour administration and later a coalition with the Liberal Democrats. [102] | |
Northern Ireland Assembly | Arlene Foster | DUP | 19 December 2016 | Motion of no confidence in the First Minister | 36–39 3 | Despite a majority voting in favour, the motion failed due to not obtaining cross-community support so Foster continued as First Minister. [103] She later lost the role automatically when her deputy first minister resigned on 10 January 2017. [104] | |
Scottish Parliament | Humza Yousaf | SNP | 1 May 2024 | Motion of no confidence in the Scottish government [105] | 70–58 12 | The Government resigned on 7 May 2024 despite winning the vote. | |
Senedd | Vaughan Gething | Labour | 5 June 2024 | Non-binding motion of no confidence in the First Minister | 27–29 2 | Gething announced he would continue as First Minister due to the non-binding nature of the motion. [106] However, he announced his resignation a month later amid a government crisis. |
If a government wins a confidence motion they are able to remain in office. If a confidence motion is lost then the Government is obliged to resign or seek a dissolution of Parliament and call a general election. Although this is a convention, prior to the 2011 Fixed-term Parliaments Act there was no law which required that the government resign or call a general election. Modern practice shows dissolution rather than resignation to be the result of a defeat. The government is only obliged to resign if it loses a confidence vote, although a significant defeat on a major issue may lead to a confidence motion.
During the period 1945–1970 governments were rarely defeated in the House of Commons and the impression grew that if a government was defeated it must reverse the decision, seek a vote of confidence, or resign. [107]
Brazier argues: "it used to be the case that a defeat on a major matter had the same effect as if an explicit vote of confidence had carried" but that a development in constitutional practice has occurred since the 1970s. Thatcher's defeat over the Shops Bill 1986 did not trigger a confidence motion despite being described as 'a central piece of their legislative programme'. The government simply accepted that they could not pass the bill and gave assurances to Parliament that they would not introduce it. [108]
After a defeat on a major issue of government policy the government may resign, dissolve Parliament, or seek a vote of confidence from the House. Recent historical practice has been to seek a vote of confidence from the House. John Major did this after defeat over the Social Protocol of the Maastricht Treaty. [108] Defeats on minor issues do not raise any constitutional questions. [108]
A proposed motion of no confidence can force a resignation. For example, in 2009 the proposed vote of no confidence in the Speaker of the House of Commons forced the resignation of Michael Martin in the wake of the Parliamentary Expenses Scandal. Several MPs breached a constitutional convention and openly called for the resignation of the Speaker.
Under the Fixed-term Parliaments Act 2011, a passing of a motion of no confidence was one of only two ways in which an early election could occur (the other was a motion to hold an early election passed by at least two-thirds of MPs). Following a successful motion, Parliament must dissolve, unless the motion was overturned within 14 days by the passing of an explicit motion of confidence. This procedure was designed to allow a minority government time to seek the support of other parties (as a formal coalition or with a confidence and supply arrangement) to avoid having to face re-election, or to allow an alternative government to be formed. [109] [110]
In principle, the alternative government could be led by any MP who could draw together enough support for a legislative programme that secured a vote of confidence and, by convention, a request from the monarch to form such a government. In practice, it was likely to be the leader, or a senior member, of a party with a significant number of MPs that could achieve this. In turn, they could be expected to bring about an early election using the two-thirds of MPs provision of the Fixed-Term Act to gain a popular mandate for their programme.
The only such motion under the 2011 Act was tabled on 15 January 2019, following the defeat of Theresa May's Brexit deal, [111] and was voted on the following day. May won the vote.
The House of Commons is the lower house of the Parliament of the United Kingdom. Like the upper house, the House of Lords, it meets in the Palace of Westminster in London, England. The House of Commons is an elected body consisting of 650 members known as members of Parliament (MPs), who are elected to represent constituencies by the first-past-the-post system and hold their seats until Parliament is dissolved.
The Parliament of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland is the supreme legislative body of the United Kingdom, and may also legislate for the Crown Dependencies and the British Overseas Territories. It meets at the Palace of Westminster in London. Parliament possesses legislative supremacy and thereby holds ultimate power over all other political bodies in the United Kingdom and the Overseas Territories. While Parliament is bicameral, it has three parts: the sovereign, the House of Lords, and the House of Commons. The three parts acting together to legislate may be described as the King-in-Parliament. The Crown normally acts on the advice of the prime minister, and the powers of the House of Lords are limited to only delaying legislation.
Cloture, closure or, informally, a guillotine, is a motion or process in parliamentary procedure aimed at bringing debate to a quick end.
In the Westminster parliamentary system, an early day motion (EDM) is a motion, expressed as a single sentence, tabled by a member of Parliament, which the Government has not yet scheduled for debate.
A motion or vote of no confidence is a motion and corresponding vote thereon in a deliberative assembly as to whether an officer is deemed fit to continue to occupy their office. The no-confidence vote is a defining constitutional element of a parliamentary system, in which the executive's mandate rests upon the continued support of the majority in the legislature. Systems differ in whether such a motion may be directed against the prime minister, against individual cabinet ministers, against the cabinet as a whole, or some combination of the above.
The House of Representatives is the sole chamber of the New Zealand Parliament. The House passes laws, provides ministers to form the Cabinet, and supervises the work of government. It is also responsible for adopting the state's budgets and approving the state's accounts.
The Parliament of Malaysia is the national legislature of Malaysia, based on the Westminster system. The bicameral parliament consists of the Dewan Rakyat and the Dewan Negara. The Yang di-Pertuan Agong (King), as the head of state, is the third component of Parliament.
An opposition day is a day in a legislature using the Westminster system in which an opposition party sets the agenda. Most days the parliamentary agenda is set by the government; opposition days allow the smaller parties to choose the subject for debate. The number of days varies between parliaments.
A vote of no confidence in the British Labour government of James Callaghan occurred on 28 March 1979. The vote was brought by the Official Opposition leader Margaret Thatcher and was lost by the Labour government by one vote, which was announced at 10:19 pm. The result mandated a general election that was won by Thatcher's Conservative Party. The last time an election had been forced by the House of Commons was in 1924, when Ramsay MacDonald, the first Labour prime minister, lost a vote of confidence. Labour politician Roy Hattersley later remarked that the vote marked "the last rites" of Old Labour. Labour did not return to government for another 18 years, with New Labour ideology. The BBC has referred to the vote as "one of the most dramatic nights in Westminster history".
The 1993 confidence motion in the second Major ministry was an explicit confidence motion in the Conservative government of John Major. It was proposed in order to ensure support in the British Parliament for the passing of the Maastricht Treaty. Due to previous defeats caused when Eurosceptic Conservative MPs voted with the opposition, the Government had to obtain support for its policy on the Social Chapter before the European Communities Amendment Act 1993 could come into effect and allow the United Kingdom to ratify the treaty. Dissenting Conservative MPs were willing to vote against the Government, but had to come into line on a confidence motion or else lose the Conservative whip. Only one eurosceptic MP was deliberately absent; and as a result, the motion passed by 40 votes and the United Kingdom ratified the Maastricht Treaty.
The vote of no confidence in the second Salisbury ministry occurred when the Conservative government of Robert Cecil, the Marquess of Salisbury decided to meet Parliament after the general election despite not winning a majority. The government presented a Queen's Speech, but was defeated on 11 August 1892 when the House of Commons carried by 350 to 310 an amendment moved by the opposition Liberal Party declaring that Her Majesty's "present advisers" did not possess the confidence of the House. After the vote Salisbury resigned and Liberal Party leader William Ewart Gladstone became Prime Minister for the fourth time.
The Fixed-term Parliaments Act 2011 (FTPA) was an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom which, for the first time, set in legislation a default fixed election date for general elections in the United Kingdom. It remained in force until 2022, when it was repealed. Since then, as before its passage, elections are required by law to be held at least once every five years, but can be called earlier if the prime minister advises the monarch to exercise the royal prerogative to do so. Prime ministers have often employed this mechanism to call an election before the end of their five-year term, sometimes fairly early in it. Critics have said this gives an unfair advantage to the incumbent prime minister, allowing them to call a general election at a time that suits them electorally. While it was in force, the FTPA removed this longstanding power of the prime minister.
In 2011, the government of the United Kingdom acknowledged that a constitutional convention had developed whereby the House of Commons should have an opportunity to debate the matter before troops are committed. It said that it proposed to observe that convention except when there was an emergency and such action would not be appropriate.
On 15 January 2019, a motion of no confidence in the government of Theresa May was tabled in the House of Commons. On 16 January, the House rejected the motion by a vote of 325 to 306.
The European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2019, commonly referred to as the Cooper–Letwin Act, was an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom that made provisions for extensions to the period defined under Article 50 of the Treaty on European Union related to the United Kingdom's withdrawal from the European Union. It was introduced to the House of Commons by Labour MP Yvette Cooper and Conservative MP Sir Oliver Letwin on 3 April 2019, in an unusual process where the Government of the United Kingdom did not have control over Commons business that day.
In July 2022, a motion of confidence in the second Johnson ministry was tabled in the House of Commons. The motion, debated on 18 July, was laid by the government itself after it had refused to allow time for a Labour Party no-confidence motion. The Government won the vote on 18 July, but the Prime Minister resigned in September.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)