The UK’s unwritten constitution is put to the
test by Johnson’s unprincipled acts
PM’s repeated flouting of uncodified rules highlights
the need for a trustworthy, future-proofed system
Catherine
Haddon
Sun 10 Jul
2022 07.00 BST
In keeping
with his entire tenure in No 10, Boris Johnson’s departure from the premiership
is proving a test of the UK constitution’s heavy reliance on convention and principle.
His final weeks or months in the job provide yet more questions about what the
UK does with its constitution in the post-Johnson era.
Before the
2010 general election, the House of Commons justice committee met
constitutional experts and the then cabinet secretary, all to discuss whether
the UK needed to set out rules for any “caretaker government”. The worry then
was if the general election produced a hung parliament it could take time
before a government was formed, and the rules for any interim government should
be set out in advance. Though there were some principles and precedents about
what should and should not happen, it wasn’t explicitly set out anywhere.
The
committee meeting led to the publication of convention as it was understood, eventually
published in the cabinet manual that now guides constitutional practice. But UK
officials and ministers back in 2010 were reluctant to call it a “caretaker”
convention. Despite long experience with such conventions in Australia and New
Zealand, they thought the term was pejorative. Instead they opted for “period
of restrictions on government activity” – these included the run-up to a
general election, the period after if no clear result had emerged and midterm
if a government lost confidence. They believed setting out principles would be
enough to avoid any chaos and that “hard and fast rules” would hinder, not
help.
One
scenario not envisaged in 2010 was one in which the prime minister had lost the
confidence of ministerial and party colleagues in their personal ability to
govern. But that is the situation now – and why those principles are likely to
be tested. Restrictions on government activity after a prime minister has been
forced into resigning by their party are a murky part of our constitution.
Quite rightly, one could argue, since the government hasn’t lost a vote of
confidence in the House of Commons and parliament isn’t dissolved. The
government still governs. But the consensus now exists that you still act with
care and responsibility and exercise discretion over big decisions.
That many
of Johnson’s own party are questioning whether he can navigate such a caretaker
period shows how little trust there is in conventions and uncodified rules. The
track record of the Johnson years – culminating in his holding on even when his
chancellor and home secretary told him time was up – shows why there is cause
for concern.
One of the
many legacies of Boris Johnson’s government is how it has exposed the
vulnerability of our constitution if someone wants to push against convention
and ignore precedent and is not worried about the consequences. From the
unlawful prorogation of parliament to threats to break domestic law (over
requesting a Brexit extension) and international law – twice – over the
Northern Ireland protocol, let alone the repeated accusations of misleading
parliament – not just over Partygate – is quite the record.
Johnson’s
time in office has shown not only how much of the constitution depends on
integrity and self-restraint, but also the difficulty in protecting the
convention-based parts of it if those in power say “But why?”. If ministers are
asking officials: “But where is that written?” or “Can you make me?” it is hard
to point even to documents that set out our constitution in writing, let alone
those that have the teeth to back them up. Johnson has shown that lack of teeth
to be the fundamental flaw in the ministerial code. It covers much of the bad
behaviour Johnson’s critics bemoan, but it can only be enforced ultimately by
Johnson himself.
To some
extent the events of the last week show that, when it came to the crunch, our
constitution worked. Political pressure and the inability to form a functioning
government were what forced Johnson into stepping down. Even the processes that
do exist in extremis – a vote by the party, a vote of confidence in the Commons
– were not needed in the end. The Queen was not dragged into a major political
and constitutional row.
As we look
to who will replace Johnson as prime minister, the assumption is that his
successor will take a different approach. But they may not. So the question of
how they reset on standards and ethics inevitably leads to questions of what
they do on the constitution. There are immediate constitutional dilemmas
Johnson’s successor will need to address, like appointing a new adviser on
ministerial interests and giving them proper powers.
But they
also need to think about how we build a better and stronger constitution for
the future – and how we make sure it protects our institutions and public trust
from anyone willing to put short-term political advantage before conserving our
system of government.
Catherine
Haddon is senior fellow at the Institute for Government
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