Is there real reason to fear a Labour 'supermajority'?
The Independent|July 02, 2024
Wisely or not, the Conservatives have tacitly conceded not just defeat but an appalling humiliation on polling day, and are now begging for mercy.
SEAN O'GRADY
Is there real reason to fear a Labour 'supermajority'?

Somewhat unconvincingly. The prime minister himself, in the dying days of his administration, has declared: “I don’t want Britain to sleepwalk into the danger of what an unchecked Labour government with a supermajority would mean.”

The home secretary, James Cleverly, agrees and says that Labour would “distort” the constitution: “I think there’s a real risk that they take a majority, if that’s what they get, to try to lock in their power permanently, because they don’t really feel confident they’re going to be able to make a credible case to the British people at the next election.”

Not all such fears are fully justified.

What is a supermajority and what would it mean?

The concept of a “supermajority” in the usual constitutional sense doesn’t exist in the British system. It does in other countries, where, typically, a two-thirds majority in a parliament is required to enact major constitutional change. There was one such provision in the UK, under the 2011 Fixed-term Parliaments Act, to authorise an early election, but that was abolished a couple of years ago.

What Rishi Sunak, Grant Shapps and others really mean is just “beyond a landslide”, because there is no word for the scale of the unprecedented majority Labour is about to win – perhaps 250 seats over all other parties and a staggering 350 over the Conservatives. Historic.

But won’t Labour be able to do what they want?

This story is from the July 02, 2024 edition of The Independent.

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This story is from the July 02, 2024 edition of The Independent.

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