Premiership: The Development, Nature and Power of the British Prime MinisterThe office of Prime Minister stands at the apex of the British political system. An undertsanding of this post is essential to all who are -- or aspire to be -- within government, or who observie it from outside. This book combines the methods of history and political science to produce theories of the development, nature and power of the premiership, and to explain the implications for present politicians and analysts. It is essential reading for for academics, students, journalists and all who are working in or intersted in politics. |
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achieve actors administrative fusion aides Alastair Campbell Algernon West Allen Anthony Seldon argued associated Blair premiership British Government Brown Cabinet government Cabinet Office Cabinet Secretary CDTF centre Chapter Christopher Foster Civil Service constitutional coreexecutive Crossman decisions departmental described discussion dominant End to Sofa established executive exercise existence formal full Cabinet functions fusion and fission Gladstone Gordon Brown Government in Crisis Harold Wilson Hennessy House of Commons Ibid individual institutional resources involved Iraq Jonathan Powell Labour Lloyd George London Lord midnineteenth century ministerial Minutes of Evidence nineteenth century objectives office of Prime organisation Parliament parliamentary particular party PASC Peel Peter Hennessy Pitt the Younger political Power Inquiry premier premiership presidency presidential Prime Minister Prime Minister’s Department public leadership responsibility role Sidney Low Sofa Government special advisers staff tendency tenure Tony Blair Treasury University Press Walpole Walpole’s Whitehall zigzag