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coalition government, constitution commitee, evidence session, leader lords, lords chief whip

Lords take evidence on how the Coalition works

27 November 2013

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The House of Lords Constitution Committee will take evidence from former Leader of the Lords Lord Strathclyde and former Liberal Democrat House of Lords Chief Whip Lord Shutt of Greetland as they continue their inquiry into the constitutional implications of coalition government.

The Committee will also hear from Lord Adonis, who was a negotiator for the Labour party during the negotiations with the Lib Dems following the 2010 general election.

Witnesses

At 10:30am, Wednesday 27 November 2013, Committee room 1, Palace of Westminster:

  • Rt Hon Lord Strathclyde, CH, Leader of the House of Lords 2010–13, Leader of the Opposition in the House of Lords 1998–2010
  • Rt Hon Lord Shutt of Greetland, OBE, Lords Deputy Chief Whip and Liberal Democrat Chief Whip, 2010–12

and at approximately 11:15am:

  • Rt Hon Lord Adonis, member of Labour negotiation team after 2010 general election

Purpose of the session

With Lord Strathclyde and Lord Shutt the Committee are likely to explore how the House of Lords responded to coalition government and whether there were occasions where government legislation came under threat due to the opposition of one the coalition parties’ Peers.

The Committee are also likely to ask whether the convention of collective responsibility came under strain in the Lords and how disputes between the parties were resolved. This will be the first time Lord Strathclyde will have spoken in Parliament since he stood down as Leader of the House in January 2013.

The Committee will then question Lord Adonis on a range of areas, including how well prepared Labour were for the possibility of a hung Parliament at the 2010 election, how the convention that the incumbent Prime Minister has the right to try and form a government in the event of a hung Parliament works when another party has won more MPs, and what work the Labour party are undertaking to prepare for the possibility of another hung Parliament after the 2015 general election.

Further information