'The Fixed-term Parliaments Act: Quiet Revolution or mere Technical Detail?'

SPEAKER
John Curtice

The Fixed-term Parliaments Act is one of the very few constitutional changes included in the coalition's Programme for Government that has managed to see the light of day. Yet it is little discussed and its potential effects seemingly inadequately understood. In this lecture, Professor John Curtice (University of Strathclyde) discusses its apparent effects on UK politics to date and its potential effects in future, focusing in particular on its implications for Prime Ministerial power, government formation, and the parliamentary and devolved electoral cycles. Is the Act merely a technical detail of little consequence - or does it represent a quiet constitutional revolution? 


This was the keynote lecture of a one day workshop on “The Fixed-term Parliaments Act”, co-sponsored by DPIR and the Constitutional Studies Programme. The Speaker was introduced by Professor Petra Schleiter.