fbpx
Wikipedia

Hung parliament

A hung parliament is a term used in legislatures primarily under the Westminster system to describe a situation in which no single political party or pre-existing coalition (also known as an alliance or bloc) has an absolute majority of legislators (commonly known as members or seats) in a parliament or other legislature. This situation is also known as a balanced parliament,[1][2] or as a legislature under no overall control (NOC),[3][4][5] and can result in a minority government. The term is irrelevant/almost ubiquitous in multi-party systems and proportional representation systems where it is rare for a single party to hold a majority of the seats.

In the Westminster system, in the absence of a clear majority, no party or coalition has an automatic mandate to assume control of the executive — a status usually known in parliamentary systems as "forming (a) government". It is possible that an absolute majority may still be gained through the formation of a new coalition government, or the addition of previously unaffiliated members to a pre-existing coalition. Additionally, a minority government may instead result — that is, the party that has the most members is allowed to form government without an absolute majority, provided that it has the express, ongoing support of unaffiliated members, such as minor parties and/or independent legislators.

Overview

A normal objective of parliamentary systems – especially those requiring responsible government such as the Westminster system – is the formation of a stable government (i.e. ideally one that lasts a full parliamentary term, until the next election would normally be due). This requires a government to be able to muster sufficient votes in parliament to pass motions of confidence and supply, especially motions of no-confidence and budget bills. If such motions fail, they normally result in the dissolution of parliament and a fresh election. In some parliamentary systems, however, a new government may be formed without recourse to an election – if, for example, a minor party holds the balance of power, it may publicly express for the opposition, thereby creating a new majority.

The term "hung parliament" is most often used of parliaments dominated by two major parties or coalitions. General elections in such systems usually result in one party having an absolute majority and thus quickly forming a new government. In most parliamentary systems, a hung parliament is considered exceptional and is often seen as undesirable. In other contexts, a hung parliament may be seen as ideal – for example, if opinions among the voting public are polarised regarding one or more issues, a hung parliament may lead to the emergence of a compromise or consensus.

If a legislature is bicameral, the term "hung parliament" is usually used only with respect to the lower house.

In a multi-party system with legislators elected by proportional representation or a similar systems, it is usually exceptionally rare and difficult for any party to have an absolute majority. Under such situations, hung parliaments are often taken for granted and coalition governments are normal. However, the term may be used to describe an election in which no established coalition wins an outright majority (such as the German federal election of 2005 or the 2018 Italian general election).

History

The term apparently emerged in the United Kingdom, around the time of the 1974 election, by analogy with a hung jury, that is, one unable to reach a verdict. [1]. However, whereas a hung jury results in a mistrial, requiring a new trial, there is no general rule under which the absence of a clear majority requires a fresh election. In recent years, most "hung parliaments" have served their full term.

Australia

 
The House of Representatives elected in 2010, with a 72-72 tie between the Labor Party and the Opposition Coalition.

Australian parliaments are modelled on the Westminster system, with a hung parliament typically defined as a lack of a lower house parliamentary majority from either the Australian Labor Party or Liberal/National Coalition.

Hung parliaments are rare at the federal level in Australia, as a de facto two-party system, in which the Australian Labor Party competes against a permanent Liberal-National Coalition of the conservative parties, has existed with only brief interruptions since the early 20th century. Prior to 1910, no party had had a majority in the House of Representatives. As a result, there were frequent changes of government, several of which took place during parliamentary terms. Since 1910, when the two-party system was cemented, there have been two hung parliaments, the first in 1940, and the second in 2010. At the 1940 federal election, incumbent Prime Minister Robert Menzies secured the support of the two crossbenchers and continued to govern, but in 1941 the independents switched their support to Labor, bringing John Curtin to power.

Declining support for the major parties in recent times is leading to more non-majoritarian outcomes at elections.[6] At the 2010 federal election, which resulted in an exact 72-72 seat tie between Labor and the Liberal-National Coalition, incumbent Prime Minister Julia Gillard secured the support of four out of six Independent and Green Party crossbenchers and continued to govern.

In the 2016 federal election a hung parliament was only narrowly averted with the Liberal-National Coalition winning 76 seats, the bare minimum required to form a majority government. The Liberal-National Coalition government lost its majority government status after a by-election in 2018.

Hung parliaments are rather more common at a state level. The Tasmanian House of Assembly and the unicameral Parliament of the Australian Capital Territory are both elected by Hare-Clark proportional representation, thus, elections commonly return hung parliaments. In other states and territories, candidates contest single-member seats. With far fewer seats than federal parliament, hung parliaments are more likely to be elected. Recent examples include New South Wales in 1991, Queensland in 1998 and 2015, Victoria in 1999, South Australia in 1997 and 2002, Western Australia in 2008, the Australian Capital Territory in 2008, and Tasmania in 2010.

Canada

 
The 44th Canadian Parliament elected in the 2021 Canadian federal election was Canada's most recent hung parliament.

Hung parliaments at either the federal and provincial level are an infrequent but not unusual occurrence in Canada. Hung Parliaments are commonly referred to as minority governments.[7] Five of the previous seven recent federal elections have resulted in hung parliaments (the 38th, the 39th, the 40th, the 43rd, and the 44th). Following all five elections the largest party ruled as a "minority government". Although Canadian minority governments have tended to be short-lived, the two successive minorities under Prime Minister Stephen Harper managed to hold on to power from February 2006 until a no confidence vote in March 2011. The subsequent election saw a majority parliament elected with Harper's Conservative Party obtaining a 24-seat majority.

While most Canadian minority governments end in dissolution via non-confidence or a snap election call, there have been recent attempts to transition to a new government without returning to the ballot box. Most notably, the 2008 Canadian Federal Election resulted in the 2008–09 Canadian parliamentary dispute. While the Conservative Party had a plurality of seats, the Liberal Party and New Democratic Party, supported by The Bloc Québécois, agreed to defeat the Conservatives in favour of a Liberal/NDP coalition government. On 4 December 2008, Governor General Michaëlle Jean granted Prime Minister Stephen Harper a prorogation on the condition that parliament reconvene early in the new year. The first session of the 40th parliament thus ended, delaying and ultimately avoiding a vote of non-confidence.[8]

At the territorial level, a unique situation happened in the 2021 Yukon general election, in which the electoral district of Vuntut Gwitchin resulted in a tie. A judicial recount was held and the tie remained. A draw was held between the two candidates which ultimately named NDP challenger Annie Blake the winner against incumbent Liberal cabinet minister and MLA Pauline Frost. This victory ultimately resulted in a hung parliament in the Yukon legislature with the NDP holding the balance of power.

Parliament Elections Period Single party with majority
Start End
1st Canadian Parliament 1867 Canadian federal election 24 September 1867 8 July 1872 Conservative
2nd Canadian Parliament 1872 Canadian federal election 5 March 1873 2 January 1874 Conservative[a]
3rd Canadian Parliament 1874 Canadian federal election 21 February 1874 16 August 1878 Liberal
4th Canadian Parliament 1878 Canadian federal election 13 February 1879 18 May 1882 Conservative
5th Canadian Parliament 1882 Canadian federal election 8 February 1883 15 January 1887 Conservative
6th Canadian Parliament 1887 Canadian federal election 7 April 1887 3 February 1891 Conservative
7th Canadian Parliament 1891 Canadian federal election 25 April 1891 24 April 1896 Conservative
8th Canadian Parliament 1896 Canadian federal election 19 August 1896 18 July 1900 Liberal
9th Canadian Parliament 1900 Canadian federal election 6 February 1901 29 September 1904 Liberal
10th Canadian Parliament 1904 Canadian federal election 11 January 1905 17 September 1908 Liberal
11th Canadian Parliament 1908 Canadian federal election 20 January 1909 29 July 1911 Liberal
12th Canadian Parliament 1911 Canadian federal election 15 November 1911 20 September 1917 Conservative
13th Canadian Parliament 1917 Canadian federal election 18 March 1918 4 October 1921 Government (Unionist)
Conservative
14th Canadian Parliament 1921 Canadian federal election 8 March 1922 27 June 1925 None[b]
15th Canadian Parliament 1925 Canadian federal election 7 January 1926 2 July 1926 None
16th Canadian Parliament 1926 Canadian federal election 9 December 1926 30 May 1930 None
17th Canadian Parliament 1930 Canadian federal election 8 September 1930 5 July 1935 Conservative
18th Canadian Parliament 1935 Canadian federal election 6 February 1935 25 January 1940 Liberal
19th Canadian Parliament 1940 Canadian federal election 16 May 1940 16 April 1945 Liberal
20th Canadian Parliament 1945 Canadian federal election 6 September 1945 30 April 1949 None[c]
Liberal
21st Canadian Parliament 1949 Canadian federal election 15 September 1949 14 May 1953 Liberal
22nd Canadian Parliament 1953 Canadian federal election 12 November 1953 12 April 1957 Liberal
23rd Canadian Parliament 1957 Canadian federal election 14 October 1957 1 February 1958 None
24th Canadian Parliament 1958 Canadian federal election 12 April 1958 19 April 1962 Progressive Conservative
25th Canadian Parliament 1962 Canadian federal election 27 September 1962 6 February 1963 None
26th Canadian Parliament 1963 Canadian federal election 16 May 1963 8 September 1965 None
27th Canadian Parliament 1965 Canadian federal election 18 January 1965 23 April 1968 None
28th Canadian Parliament 1968 Canadian federal election 12 September 1968 1 September 1972 Liberal
29th Canadian Parliament 1972 Canadian federal election 4 January 1973 9 May 1974 None
30th Canadian Parliament 1974 Canadian federal election 30 September 1974 26 March 1979 Liberal
31st Canadian Parliament 1979 Canadian federal election 9 October 1979 14 December 1979 None
32nd Canadian Parliament 1980 Canadian federal election 14 April 1980 9 July 1984 Liberal
33rd Canadian Parliament 1984 Canadian federal election 5 November 1984 1 October 1988 Progressive Conservative
34th Canadian Parliament 1988 Canadian federal election 12 December 1984 8 September 1993 Progressive Conservative
35th Canadian Parliament 1993 Canadian federal election 17 January 1994 27 April 1997 Liberal
36th Canadian Parliament 1997 Canadian federal election 22 September 1997 22 October 2000 Liberal
37th Canadian Parliament 2000 Canadian federal election 29 January 2001 23 August 2004 Liberal
38th Canadian Parliament 2004 Canadian federal election 4 October 2004 29 November 2005 None
39th Canadian Parliament 2006 Canadian federal election 3 April 2006 7 September 2008 None
40th Canadian Parliament 2008 Canadian federal election 18 November 2008 26 March 2011 None
41st Canadian Parliament 2011 Canadian federal election 2 June 2011 8 February 2015 Conservative
42nd Canadian Parliament 2015 Canadian federal election 3 December 2015 11 September 2019 Liberal
43rd Canadian Parliament 2019 Canadian federal election 5 December 2019 15 August 2021 None
44th Canadian Parliament 2021 Canadian federal election 22 November 2021 TBD None

Fiji

 
The 8th Republican Parliament of Fiji, elected in 2022, is the incumbent parliament and the country's most recent hung parliament.

The 2022 Fijian general election resulted in a hung parliament, with no party gaining a majority of seats. Although the FijiFirst party, led by then-Prime Minister Frank Bainimarama, won the most seats, the three other parties that won seats (the People's Alliance, the National Federation Party and the Social Democratic Liberal Party) formed a coalition and Sitiveni Rabuka, leader of the People's Alliance, became the subsequent Prime Minister, ending 16 years of Bainimarama's rule.

India

 
15th Lok Sabha, elected in 2009, was India's last hung parliament.

India is a federative multi-party parliamentary democracy with lower and upper houses at both national and sub-national levels.[9]

However, despite having a multi-party system in place, it has witnessed a clear majority parliament for 45 years against its transition to democratic republic being 70 years old.[10][11][12]

It has 8 recognized national parties with influence over major parts of India and regional parties with base certain states.[13][14]

From 1989 to 2014, India had a continuous period of parliaments producing coalition governments, with clearer majorities for the Indian National Congress and Janata Party before this period and for the Bharatiya Janata Party after it.[15] The confidence of Lok Sabha, lower house of Indian Parliament elected in general elections determines the prime minister and ruling party of India.

Lok Sabha Elections Period Single party with majority
Start End
1st Lok Sabha 1951–52 Indian general election 17 April 1952 4 April 1957 Indian National Congress
2nd Lok Sabha 1957 Indian general election 5 April 1957 31 March 1962 Indian National Congress
3rd Lok Sabha 1962 Indian general election 2 April 1962 3 March 1967 Indian National Congress
4th Lok Sabha 1967 Indian general election 4 March 1967 27 December 1970 Indian National Congress
5th Lok Sabha 1971 Indian general election 15 March 1971 18 January 1977 Indian National Congress (R)
6th Lok Sabha 1977 Indian general election 23 March 1977 22 August 1979 None
7th Lok Sabha 1980 Indian general election 18 January 1980 31 December 1984 Indian National Congress (I)
8th Lok Sabha 1984 Indian general election 31 December 1984 27 November 1989 Indian National Congress (I)
9th Lok Sabha 1989 Indian general election 2 December 1989 13 March 1991 None
10th Lok Sabha 1991 Indian general election 20 June 1991 10 May 1996 None
11th Lok Sabha 1996 Indian general election 15 May 1996 4 December 1997 None
12th Lok Sabha 1998 Indian general election 10 March 1998 26 April 1999 None
13th Lok Sabha 1999 Indian general election 10 October 1999 6 February 2004 None
14th Lok Sabha 2004 Indian general election 17 May 2004 18 May 2009 None
15th Lok Sabha 2009 Indian general election 22 May 2009 18 May 2014 None
16th Lok Sabha 2014 Indian general election 26 May 2014 24 May 2019 Bharatiya Janata Party
17th Lok Sabha 2019 Indian general election 17 June 2019 TBA Bharatiya Janata Party

Hung assemblies within states and alliances between national and regional parties at sub-national level are common.

Ireland

Because Ireland uses PR-STV, it is rare for any one party to have a majority on its own. The last such occasion was in 1977. However, one or other coalitions are known to be possible before and during the election. Therefore, a "hung Dáil" (Dáil Éireann being the lower and most dominant chamber of the Oireachtas/Parliament) in Ireland refers more to the inability of a coalition of parties who traditionally enter government together or would be expected to govern together, from doing so.

The President has no direct role in the formation of governments in the case of a hung parliament. However, he retains the power to convene a meeting of either or both the Dáil and Senate which could become important if there was a government trying to use parliamentary recess to prevent confidence votes and hold onto power. The President may also refuse to dissolve Dáil Eireann and call an election if the Taoiseach loses a vote of confidence, instead giving the other parties a chance to see if they can put together a government without proceeding to another election.

In 2016, Fine Gael and Labour, who had been in government the previous five years, were unable, due to Labour's collapse, to enter government again. Fianna Fáil had enough seats to put together a rainbow government with the other centre-left, hard left parties and independents but negotiations broke down. Fianna Fáil had also promised not to enter coalition with Sinn Féin.

The press began to speculate about a Germany style "Grand Coalition" similar to the Christian Democrats and Social Democrats there. Many members of FF considered FG too right wing to enter coalition with and threatened to leave the party this came to pass. As talks continued on without a new government (the old government, constitutionally, which had just been voted out, remaining in power including ministers who had lost their seats) FF agreed to allow a government to form by abstention. The parliamentary arithmetic fell in such a way that if FF TD's abstained on confidence and supply matters, a FG minority government could, with the support of a group of independents, form a new government. This was agreed in exchange for a number of policy concessions. Once the deal with FF was signed, Taoiseach Enda Kenny conducted talks with the independents and entered government for a second term.

Israel

All parliamentery elections in Israel have resulted in hung parliaments. The Knesset consists of 120 members and the highest number of seats a single faction has ever received was the 56 members Alignment (Ma'arach) got in the October 1969 elections. When the same faction was formed in January 1969 it consisted of 63 members, the only instance to date of a faction with an absolute majority in the Knesset. The lowest number of seats the largest faction has ever received in a Knesset election was 26 members received by One Israel in the 1999 Israeli general election.

Malaysia

The 2022 general election of Malaysia resulted in a hung parliament with no party or party coalition winning a simple majority for the first time in Malaysian history.[16] Following five days of deliberation and negotiations within coalitions and parties, the Yang di-Pertuan Agong of Malaysia announced Pakatan Harapan (PH) chairman Anwar Ibrahim, whose coalition won the most seats, as the tenth Prime Minister of Malaysia on 24 November 2022,[17] with Barisan Nasional (BN), Gabungan Parti Sarawak (GPS), Gabungan Rakyat Sabah (GRS) and various independent parties joining in the coalition government.[18]

New Zealand

Hung parliaments had a relatively uncommon place in New Zealand politics prior to the introduction of proportional representation in 1993. Only on four occasions since the beginnings of party politics in 1890 had a hung parliament occurred under the FPTP system: in 1911, 1922, 1928 and 1931. The rarity between 1936 and 1996 was due to the regression into a two-party system, alternating between the long dominating New Zealand Labour Party and New Zealand National Party.[19] From the first MMP election in 1996 until the 2020 election no single party gained an outright majority in parliament. The 2020 election was the first to return a majority – a narrow majority for the Labour Party – since 1993.[20]

United Kingdom

 
The House of Commons following the 2017 general election. No party had a majority.

In the United Kingdom, before World War I, a largely stable two-party system existed for generations; traditionally, only the Tories and Whigs, or from the mid-19th century the Conservative and Liberal parties, managed to deliver Members of Parliament in significant numbers. Hung parliaments were thus rare, especially during the 19th century. The possibility of change arose when, in the aftermath of the Act of Union, 1800, a number of Irish MPs took seats in the House, though initially these followed the traditional alignments. However, two Reform Acts (in 1867 and in 1884) significantly extended the franchise and redrew the constituencies, and coincided with a change in Irish politics. Following the 1885 general election, neither party had an overall majority. The Irish Parliamentary Party held the balance of power and made Irish Home Rule a condition of their support. However, the Liberal Party split on the issue of Irish Home Rule, leading to another general election in 1886, in which the Conservatives won the most seats and governed with the support of the fragment of Liberalism opposed to Home Rule, the Liberal Unionist Party.

Both the election of January 1910, and that of December 1910 produced a hung parliament with an almost identical number of seats won by the governing Liberal Party and the Conservative Party. This was due both to the constitutional crisis and to the rise of the Labour Party. The elections of 1929 resulted in the last hung parliament for many years; in the meantime, Labour had replaced the Liberals as one of the two dominating parties.

Since the elections of 1929, three general elections have resulted in hung parliaments in the UK. The first was the election in February 1974, and the ensuing parliament lasted only until October. The second was the May 2010 election, the result of which was a hung parliament with the Conservative party as the largest single party. The results for the 3 main parties were: Conservatives 306, Labour 258, Liberal Democrats 57.[21] The third one resulted from the snap election held in June 2017 that had been called for by Theresa May in order to strengthen her majority heading into Brexit negotiations later in 2017. However, this election backfired on May and her Conservative Party, resulting in a hung parliament after the snap election.[22]

The formation of the coalition resulting from the 2010 election led to the Fixed-term Parliaments Act 2011, which instituted fixed five-year Parliaments and transferred the power to call early elections from the Prime Minister to Parliament itself. This was the idea of the Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg, then the leader of the Liberal Democrats, who said that this would stop the Prime Minister and leader of the Conservative Party, David Cameron, from calling a snap election to end the hung parliament, as many other Conservatives had requested.

Hung parliaments can also arise when slim government majorities are eroded by by-election defeats and defection of Members of Parliament to opposition parties, as well as resignations of MPs from the House of Commons. This happened in December 1996 to the Conservative government of John Major (1990–97) and in mid-1978 to the Labour government of James Callaghan (1976–79); this latter period covers the era known as the Winter of Discontent. The minority government of Jim Callaghan came when Labour ended their 15-month Lib–Lab pact with the Liberals having lost their majority in early 1977.

According to researchers Andrew Blick and Stuart Wilks-Heeg, the phrase "hung parliament" did not enter into common usage in the UK until the mid-1970s. It was first used in the press by journalist Simon Hoggart in The Guardian in 1974.[23]

Academic treatments of hung parliaments include David Butler's Governing Without a Majority: Dilemmas for Hung Parliaments in Britain (Sheridan House, 1986) and Vernon Bogdanor's 'Multi-Party Politics and the Constitution' (Cambridge University Press, 1983).

Consequences

In countries used to decisive election outcomes, a hung parliament is often viewed as an unfavourable outcome, leading to relatively weak and unstable government. A period of uncertainty after the election is common, as major party leaders negotiate with independents and minor parties to establish a working majority.

An aspiring head of government may seek to build a coalition government; in Westminster systems, this typically involves agreement on a joint legislative programme and a number of ministerial posts going to the minor coalition partners, in return for a stable majority. Alternatively, a minority government may be formed, establishing confidence and supply agreements in return for policy concessions agreed in advance, or relying on case by case support.

Australia

In the Western Australian state election of 2008 the Australian Labor Party won more seats than the Liberal Party at 28 to 24. The National Party along with three independents had the seats needed to give either party a majority. To help the Liberal Party form government, the Nationals supported the party on the condition that the Royalties for Regions policy was implemented.

In the 1999 Victorian state election, the Labor Party won 42 seats, while the incumbent Liberal National Coalition retained 43, with 3 seats falling to independents. The Labor Party formed a minority government with the 3 independents.

The 2010 Tasmanian state election resulted in a hung parliament. After a period of negotiation, the incumbent Labor government led by David Bartlett was recommissioned, but containing the Leader of the Tasmanian Greens, Nick McKim, as a minister, and the Greens' Cassy O'Connor as Cabinet Secretary.

In the 2010 federal election, neither Labor nor the Liberal coalition secured the majority of seats required to form a Government in their own right. In order to counter the potential instability of minority government involved groups may negotiate written agreements defining their terms of support. Such measures were undertaken by the Gillard Government in 2010.[24]

India

In India if an election results in a 'hung assembly' in one of the state Legislative Assemblies and no party is capable of gaining confidence then fresh elections are announced to be held as soon as possible. Until this occurs President's Rule is applied. In India there have been many situations of hung assemblies in the state legislatures. However, invariably, the President of India in the case of Lok Sabha elections and the Governor of the state concerned, in the case of state elections, would attempt to give opportunities to the parties, starting with the one that got the maximum number of seats in the elections, to explore possibilities of forming a coalition government, before bringing in President's Rule.

New Zealand

The first such occasion was in 1911 when the Liberal Party won fewer seats than the opposition Reform Party despite tallying the most votes. A vote of no confidence was placed by Reform and the Liberals survived by just one vote. This prompted Prime Minister Sir Joseph Ward to resign, his replacement Thomas Mackenzie was later defeated in July 1912 in a vote with several MPs and Labour crossing the floor to vote with the opposition, the last time in New Zealand history a government has changed on a confidence vote. This broke 23 years of Liberal governance and William Massey formed a new Reform Party government. Massey governed through to his death in 1925, though in 1922 the Reform Party suffered major losses and Massey was forced negotiate with several Independent MPs to retain power.

In 1928, Reform were ousted from governance and Joseph Ward once again won back power. However, the Reform and United (Liberal) parties were tied on seats with Labour holding the balance of power. Labour chose to back Ward rather than let Reform leader Gordon Coates remain in office. In the next election in 1931, there was again a three-way deadlock. On this occasion the Reform and United parties became a coalition government out of mutual fear of Labour's ever-increasing appeal as the Great Depression worsened.

1993 was the last time a hung parliament occurred in New Zealand. Governor-General Dame Catherine Tizard asked Sir David Beattie to form a committee, along with three retired appeal court judges, to decide whom to appoint as Prime Minister. [25] However, National won an extra seat after special votes were counted, giving National 50 seats and Labour 45 seats (4 were won by third party candidates). Labour's Sir Peter Tapsell agreed to become Speaker of the New Zealand House of Representatives. As a result, National did not lose a vote in the house and maintained a dubious majority for three years.

United Kingdom

In the February 1974 general election, no party gained an overall parliamentary majority. Labour won the most seats (301, which was 17 seats short of an overall majority) with the Conservatives on 297 seats, although the Conservatives had a larger share of the popular vote. As the incumbent Prime Minister, Edward Heath remained in office attempting to build a coalition with the Liberals. When these negotiations were unsuccessful Heath resigned and Labour led by Harold Wilson took over in a minority government.

In the 2010 UK general election, another hung parliament occurred with the Conservatives as the largest party, and discussions followed to help create a stable government. This resulted in agreement on a coalition government, which was also a majority government, between the Conservative Party, which won the most votes and seats in the election, and the Liberal Democrats.

In the 2017 UK general election, a hung parliament occurred for the second time in seven years with the Conservatives again being the largest party. The Conservatives led by Theresa May formed a minority government, supported by a confidence-and-supply agreement with the Northern Ireland's Democratic Unionist Party.

Working majority

There have been occasions when, although a parliament or assembly is technically hung, the party in power has a working majority. For example, in the United Kingdom, the tradition is that the Speaker and Deputy Speakers do not vote and Sinn Féin MPs never take their seats per their policy of abstentionism, so these members can be discounted from the opposition numbers.

United Kingdom

In 2005, this was the case in the 60-seat National Assembly for Wales, where Labour lost their majority when Peter Law was expelled for standing against the official candidate in the 2005 Westminster election in the Blaenau Gwent constituency. When the Assembly was first elected on 1 May 2003, Labour won 30 seats, Plaid Cymru won 12, the Conservatives won 11, Liberal Democrats won 6, and the John Marek Independent Party won a seat.

When Dafydd Elis-Thomas (Plaid Cymru) was reelected as the presiding officer, this reduced the number of opposition AMs who could vote to 29, as the presiding officer votes only in the event of a tie and, even then, not on party political lines but according to Speaker Denison's rule. Thus, Labour had a working majority of one seat until Law ran in Blaenau Gwent.[26]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ It was first controlled by a Conservative majority. After a scandal in the Conservative Party, the Liberals took power.
  2. ^ While the Liberals won a one seat majority in the 1921 Canadian federal election resignations changed the parliament from a small majority to a Hung Parliament.
  3. ^ Liberals gained majority due to due to resignations and by-elections.

References

  1. ^ "Balanced parliament: No need to rush". The Guardian. London. 5 May 2010.
  2. ^ "SNP puts case for hung parliament". BBC News. 20 April 2010.
  3. ^ "Q+A - What happens if no party gets a majority in UK election?". Reuters. 7 May 2010.
  4. ^ Paun, Akash (4 December 2009). "Hung up on 'no overall control'". The Guardian. London.
  5. ^ "Welcome to the era of no overall control". New Statesman. Retrieved 27 December 2013.
  6. ^ Ward, Alan J. (2014). Parliamentary Government in Australia. Anthem Press. p. 172. ISBN 978-1783081219. Retrieved 3 July 2016.
  7. ^ Minority Governments in Canada. The Canadian Encyclopedia. 17 January 2012. Retrieved 6 October 2021.
  8. ^ "GG agrees to suspend Parliament: Harper". CBC. 4 December 2008. from the original on 5 December 2008. Retrieved 4 December 2008.
  9. ^ Burnell & Calvert 1999, p. 125.
  10. ^ . The Hindu. 24 December 2004. Archived from the original on 13 February 2009. Retrieved 2 November 2008.
  11. ^ Dunleavy, Diwakar & Dunleavy 2007.
  12. ^ Business Standard 2009.
  13. ^ "List of Political Parties & Symbol MAIN Notification". Election Commission of India. 15 March 2019.
  14. ^ "Amending notification regarding political parties and their election symbol dated 10.01.2020". Election Commission of India. 15 January 2020.
  15. ^ "General Election 2014". Election Commission of India. from the original on 23 May 2014. Retrieved 20 January 2020.
  16. ^ "Hung Parliament in GE15, as both Pakatan and Perikatan in race to form govt". Malay Mail. 20 November 2022. Retrieved 25 November 2022.
  17. ^ "Anwar Ibrahim sworn in as Malaysia's 10th Prime Minister". New Straits Times. 24 November 2022. Retrieved 24 November 2022.
  18. ^ "Parliament session on Dec 19, motion of confidence on PM to be tabled - PM Anwar". Bernama. 24 November 2022. Retrieved 25 November 2022.
  19. ^ Bassett, Michael (1982). Three Party Politics in New Zealand 1911–1931. Auckland: Historical Publications. pp. 64–5. ISBN 0-86870-006-1.
  20. ^ Shaw, Richard (19 October 2020). "Labour's single-party majority is not a failure of MMP, it is a sign NZ's electoral system is working". The Conversation. Retrieved 24 October 2020.
  21. ^ "General election 2010 results of a hung parliament" 10 May 2010 at the Wayback Machine, PoliticsRAW. May 08, 2010
  22. ^ "Election results 2017: UK wakes up to hung Parliament". BBC News. 9 June 2017. Retrieved 9 June 2017.
  23. ^ Blick, Andrew; Stuart Wilks-Heeg (April 2010). (PDF). Liverpool: Democratic Audit. p. 2. Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 July 2010. Retrieved 20 April 2010.
  24. ^ Fenna, Alan; Jane Robbins; John Summers (2013). Government Politics in Australia. Pearson Higher Education AU. p. 49. ISBN 978-1486001385. Retrieved 3 July 2016.
  25. ^ McLean, Gavin (2006). The Governors: New Zealand's Governors and Governors-General. Otago University Press. ISBN 1-877372-25-0.
  26. ^ Labour lose assembly majority as Law quits 7 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine, ePolitix.com. April 17, 2005

External links

United Kingdom

hung, parliament, hung, parliament, term, used, legislatures, primarily, under, westminster, system, describe, situation, which, single, political, party, existing, coalition, also, known, alliance, bloc, absolute, majority, legislators, commonly, known, membe. A hung parliament is a term used in legislatures primarily under the Westminster system to describe a situation in which no single political party or pre existing coalition also known as an alliance or bloc has an absolute majority of legislators commonly known as members or seats in a parliament or other legislature This situation is also known as a balanced parliament 1 2 or as a legislature under no overall control NOC 3 4 5 and can result in a minority government The term is irrelevant almost ubiquitous in multi party systems and proportional representation systems where it is rare for a single party to hold a majority of the seats In the Westminster system in the absence of a clear majority no party or coalition has an automatic mandate to assume control of the executive a status usually known in parliamentary systems as forming a government It is possible that an absolute majority may still be gained through the formation of a new coalition government or the addition of previously unaffiliated members to a pre existing coalition Additionally a minority government may instead result that is the party that has the most members is allowed to form government without an absolute majority provided that it has the express ongoing support of unaffiliated members such as minor parties and or independent legislators Contents 1 Overview 2 History 2 1 Australia 2 2 Canada 2 3 Fiji 2 4 India 2 5 Ireland 2 6 Israel 2 7 Malaysia 2 8 New Zealand 2 9 United Kingdom 3 Consequences 3 1 Australia 3 2 India 3 3 New Zealand 3 4 United Kingdom 4 Working majority 4 1 United Kingdom 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External links 8 1 United KingdomOverview EditA normal objective of parliamentary systems especially those requiring responsible government such as the Westminster system is the formation of a stable government i e ideally one that lasts a full parliamentary term until the next election would normally be due This requires a government to be able to muster sufficient votes in parliament to pass motions of confidence and supply especially motions of no confidence and budget bills If such motions fail they normally result in the dissolution of parliament and a fresh election In some parliamentary systems however a new government may be formed without recourse to an election if for example a minor party holds the balance of power it may publicly express for the opposition thereby creating a new majority The term hung parliament is most often used of parliaments dominated by two major parties or coalitions General elections in such systems usually result in one party having an absolute majority and thus quickly forming a new government In most parliamentary systems a hung parliament is considered exceptional and is often seen as undesirable In other contexts a hung parliament may be seen as ideal for example if opinions among the voting public are polarised regarding one or more issues a hung parliament may lead to the emergence of a compromise or consensus If a legislature is bicameral the term hung parliament is usually used only with respect to the lower house In a multi party system with legislators elected by proportional representation or a similar systems it is usually exceptionally rare and difficult for any party to have an absolute majority Under such situations hung parliaments are often taken for granted and coalition governments are normal However the term may be used to describe an election in which no established coalition wins an outright majority such as the German federal election of 2005 or the 2018 Italian general election History EditThe term apparently emerged in the United Kingdom around the time of the 1974 election by analogy with a hung jury that is one unable to reach a verdict 1 However whereas a hung jury results in a mistrial requiring a new trial there is no general rule under which the absence of a clear majority requires a fresh election In recent years most hung parliaments have served their full term Australia Edit The House of Representatives elected in 2010 with a 72 72 tie between the Labor Party and the Opposition Coalition Australian parliaments are modelled on the Westminster system with a hung parliament typically defined as a lack of a lower house parliamentary majority from either the Australian Labor Party or Liberal National Coalition Hung parliaments are rare at the federal level in Australia as a de facto two party system in which the Australian Labor Party competes against a permanent Liberal National Coalition of the conservative parties has existed with only brief interruptions since the early 20th century Prior to 1910 no party had had a majority in the House of Representatives As a result there were frequent changes of government several of which took place during parliamentary terms Since 1910 when the two party system was cemented there have been two hung parliaments the first in 1940 and the second in 2010 At the 1940 federal election incumbent Prime Minister Robert Menzies secured the support of the two crossbenchers and continued to govern but in 1941 the independents switched their support to Labor bringing John Curtin to power Declining support for the major parties in recent times is leading to more non majoritarian outcomes at elections 6 At the 2010 federal election which resulted in an exact 72 72 seat tie between Labor and the Liberal National Coalition incumbent Prime Minister Julia Gillard secured the support of four out of six Independent and Green Party crossbenchers and continued to govern In the 2016 federal election a hung parliament was only narrowly averted with the Liberal National Coalition winning 76 seats the bare minimum required to form a majority government The Liberal National Coalition government lost its majority government status after a by election in 2018 Hung parliaments are rather more common at a state level The Tasmanian House of Assembly and the unicameral Parliament of the Australian Capital Territory are both elected by Hare Clark proportional representation thus elections commonly return hung parliaments In other states and territories candidates contest single member seats With far fewer seats than federal parliament hung parliaments are more likely to be elected Recent examples include New South Wales in 1991 Queensland in 1998 and 2015 Victoria in 1999 South Australia in 1997 and 2002 Western Australia in 2008 the Australian Capital Territory in 2008 and Tasmania in 2010 Canada Edit Further information Federal minority governments in Canada The 44th Canadian Parliament elected in the 2021 Canadian federal election was Canada s most recent hung parliament Hung parliaments at either the federal and provincial level are an infrequent but not unusual occurrence in Canada Hung Parliaments are commonly referred to as minority governments 7 Five of the previous seven recent federal elections have resulted in hung parliaments the 38th the 39th the 40th the 43rd and the 44th Following all five elections the largest party ruled as a minority government Although Canadian minority governments have tended to be short lived the two successive minorities under Prime Minister Stephen Harper managed to hold on to power from February 2006 until a no confidence vote in March 2011 The subsequent election saw a majority parliament elected with Harper s Conservative Party obtaining a 24 seat majority While most Canadian minority governments end in dissolution via non confidence or a snap election call there have been recent attempts to transition to a new government without returning to the ballot box Most notably the 2008 Canadian Federal Election resulted in the 2008 09 Canadian parliamentary dispute While the Conservative Party had a plurality of seats the Liberal Party and New Democratic Party supported by The Bloc Quebecois agreed to defeat the Conservatives in favour of a Liberal NDP coalition government On 4 December 2008 Governor General Michaelle Jean granted Prime Minister Stephen Harper a prorogation on the condition that parliament reconvene early in the new year The first session of the 40th parliament thus ended delaying and ultimately avoiding a vote of non confidence 8 At the territorial level a unique situation happened in the 2021 Yukon general election in which the electoral district of Vuntut Gwitchin resulted in a tie A judicial recount was held and the tie remained A draw was held between the two candidates which ultimately named NDP challenger Annie Blake the winner against incumbent Liberal cabinet minister and MLA Pauline Frost This victory ultimately resulted in a hung parliament in the Yukon legislature with the NDP holding the balance of power Parliament Elections Period Single party with majorityStart End1st Canadian Parliament 1867 Canadian federal election 24 September 1867 8 July 1872 Conservative2nd Canadian Parliament 1872 Canadian federal election 5 March 1873 2 January 1874 Conservative a 3rd Canadian Parliament 1874 Canadian federal election 21 February 1874 16 August 1878 Liberal4th Canadian Parliament 1878 Canadian federal election 13 February 1879 18 May 1882 Conservative5th Canadian Parliament 1882 Canadian federal election 8 February 1883 15 January 1887 Conservative6th Canadian Parliament 1887 Canadian federal election 7 April 1887 3 February 1891 Conservative7th Canadian Parliament 1891 Canadian federal election 25 April 1891 24 April 1896 Conservative8th Canadian Parliament 1896 Canadian federal election 19 August 1896 18 July 1900 Liberal9th Canadian Parliament 1900 Canadian federal election 6 February 1901 29 September 1904 Liberal10th Canadian Parliament 1904 Canadian federal election 11 January 1905 17 September 1908 Liberal11th Canadian Parliament 1908 Canadian federal election 20 January 1909 29 July 1911 Liberal12th Canadian Parliament 1911 Canadian federal election 15 November 1911 20 September 1917 Conservative13th Canadian Parliament 1917 Canadian federal election 18 March 1918 4 October 1921 Government Unionist Conservative14th Canadian Parliament 1921 Canadian federal election 8 March 1922 27 June 1925 None b 15th Canadian Parliament 1925 Canadian federal election 7 January 1926 2 July 1926 None16th Canadian Parliament 1926 Canadian federal election 9 December 1926 30 May 1930 None17th Canadian Parliament 1930 Canadian federal election 8 September 1930 5 July 1935 Conservative18th Canadian Parliament 1935 Canadian federal election 6 February 1935 25 January 1940 Liberal19th Canadian Parliament 1940 Canadian federal election 16 May 1940 16 April 1945 Liberal20th Canadian Parliament 1945 Canadian federal election 6 September 1945 30 April 1949 None c Liberal21st Canadian Parliament 1949 Canadian federal election 15 September 1949 14 May 1953 Liberal22nd Canadian Parliament 1953 Canadian federal election 12 November 1953 12 April 1957 Liberal23rd Canadian Parliament 1957 Canadian federal election 14 October 1957 1 February 1958 None24th Canadian Parliament 1958 Canadian federal election 12 April 1958 19 April 1962 Progressive Conservative25th Canadian Parliament 1962 Canadian federal election 27 September 1962 6 February 1963 None26th Canadian Parliament 1963 Canadian federal election 16 May 1963 8 September 1965 None27th Canadian Parliament 1965 Canadian federal election 18 January 1965 23 April 1968 None28th Canadian Parliament 1968 Canadian federal election 12 September 1968 1 September 1972 Liberal29th Canadian Parliament 1972 Canadian federal election 4 January 1973 9 May 1974 None30th Canadian Parliament 1974 Canadian federal election 30 September 1974 26 March 1979 Liberal31st Canadian Parliament 1979 Canadian federal election 9 October 1979 14 December 1979 None32nd Canadian Parliament 1980 Canadian federal election 14 April 1980 9 July 1984 Liberal33rd Canadian Parliament 1984 Canadian federal election 5 November 1984 1 October 1988 Progressive Conservative34th Canadian Parliament 1988 Canadian federal election 12 December 1984 8 September 1993 Progressive Conservative35th Canadian Parliament 1993 Canadian federal election 17 January 1994 27 April 1997 Liberal36th Canadian Parliament 1997 Canadian federal election 22 September 1997 22 October 2000 Liberal37th Canadian Parliament 2000 Canadian federal election 29 January 2001 23 August 2004 Liberal38th Canadian Parliament 2004 Canadian federal election 4 October 2004 29 November 2005 None39th Canadian Parliament 2006 Canadian federal election 3 April 2006 7 September 2008 None40th Canadian Parliament 2008 Canadian federal election 18 November 2008 26 March 2011 None41st Canadian Parliament 2011 Canadian federal election 2 June 2011 8 February 2015 Conservative42nd Canadian Parliament 2015 Canadian federal election 3 December 2015 11 September 2019 Liberal43rd Canadian Parliament 2019 Canadian federal election 5 December 2019 15 August 2021 None44th Canadian Parliament 2021 Canadian federal election 22 November 2021 TBD NoneFiji Edit Main article Politics of Fiji The 8th Republican Parliament of Fiji elected in 2022 is the incumbent parliament and the country s most recent hung parliament The 2022 Fijian general election resulted in a hung parliament with no party gaining a majority of seats Although the FijiFirst party led by then Prime Minister Frank Bainimarama won the most seats the three other parties that won seats the People s Alliance the National Federation Party and the Social Democratic Liberal Party formed a coalition and Sitiveni Rabuka leader of the People s Alliance became the subsequent Prime Minister ending 16 years of Bainimarama s rule India Edit Main article Politics of India 15th Lok Sabha elected in 2009 was India s last hung parliament India is a federative multi party parliamentary democracy with lower and upper houses at both national and sub national levels 9 However despite having a multi party system in place it has witnessed a clear majority parliament for 45 years against its transition to democratic republic being 70 years old 10 11 12 It has 8 recognized national parties with influence over major parts of India and regional parties with base certain states 13 14 From 1989 to 2014 India had a continuous period of parliaments producing coalition governments with clearer majorities for the Indian National Congress and Janata Party before this period and for the Bharatiya Janata Party after it 15 The confidence of Lok Sabha lower house of Indian Parliament elected in general elections determines the prime minister and ruling party of India Lok Sabha Elections Period Single party with majorityStart End1st Lok Sabha 1951 52 Indian general election 17 April 1952 4 April 1957 Indian National Congress2nd Lok Sabha 1957 Indian general election 5 April 1957 31 March 1962 Indian National Congress3rd Lok Sabha 1962 Indian general election 2 April 1962 3 March 1967 Indian National Congress4th Lok Sabha 1967 Indian general election 4 March 1967 27 December 1970 Indian National Congress5th Lok Sabha 1971 Indian general election 15 March 1971 18 January 1977 Indian National Congress R 6th Lok Sabha 1977 Indian general election 23 March 1977 22 August 1979 None7th Lok Sabha 1980 Indian general election 18 January 1980 31 December 1984 Indian National Congress I 8th Lok Sabha 1984 Indian general election 31 December 1984 27 November 1989 Indian National Congress I 9th Lok Sabha 1989 Indian general election 2 December 1989 13 March 1991 None10th Lok Sabha 1991 Indian general election 20 June 1991 10 May 1996 None11th Lok Sabha 1996 Indian general election 15 May 1996 4 December 1997 None12th Lok Sabha 1998 Indian general election 10 March 1998 26 April 1999 None13th Lok Sabha 1999 Indian general election 10 October 1999 6 February 2004 None14th Lok Sabha 2004 Indian general election 17 May 2004 18 May 2009 None15th Lok Sabha 2009 Indian general election 22 May 2009 18 May 2014 None16th Lok Sabha 2014 Indian general election 26 May 2014 24 May 2019 Bharatiya Janata Party17th Lok Sabha 2019 Indian general election 17 June 2019 TBA Bharatiya Janata PartyHung assemblies within states and alliances between national and regional parties at sub national level are common Ireland Edit Because Ireland uses PR STV it is rare for any one party to have a majority on its own The last such occasion was in 1977 However one or other coalitions are known to be possible before and during the election Therefore a hung Dail Dail Eireann being the lower and most dominant chamber of the Oireachtas Parliament in Ireland refers more to the inability of a coalition of parties who traditionally enter government together or would be expected to govern together from doing so The President has no direct role in the formation of governments in the case of a hung parliament However he retains the power to convene a meeting of either or both the Dail and Senate which could become important if there was a government trying to use parliamentary recess to prevent confidence votes and hold onto power The President may also refuse to dissolve Dail Eireann and call an election if the Taoiseach loses a vote of confidence instead giving the other parties a chance to see if they can put together a government without proceeding to another election In 2016 Fine Gael and Labour who had been in government the previous five years were unable due to Labour s collapse to enter government again Fianna Fail had enough seats to put together a rainbow government with the other centre left hard left parties and independents but negotiations broke down Fianna Fail had also promised not to enter coalition with Sinn Fein The press began to speculate about a Germany style Grand Coalition similar to the Christian Democrats and Social Democrats there Many members of FF considered FG too right wing to enter coalition with and threatened to leave the party this came to pass As talks continued on without a new government the old government constitutionally which had just been voted out remaining in power including ministers who had lost their seats FF agreed to allow a government to form by abstention The parliamentary arithmetic fell in such a way that if FF TD s abstained on confidence and supply matters a FG minority government could with the support of a group of independents form a new government This was agreed in exchange for a number of policy concessions Once the deal with FF was signed Taoiseach Enda Kenny conducted talks with the independents and entered government for a second term Israel Edit All parliamentery elections in Israel have resulted in hung parliaments The Knesset consists of 120 members and the highest number of seats a single faction has ever received was the 56 members Alignment Ma arach got in the October 1969 elections When the same faction was formed in January 1969 it consisted of 63 members the only instance to date of a faction with an absolute majority in the Knesset The lowest number of seats the largest faction has ever received in a Knesset election was 26 members received by One Israel in the 1999 Israeli general election Malaysia Edit The 2022 general election of Malaysia resulted in a hung parliament with no party or party coalition winning a simple majority for the first time in Malaysian history 16 Following five days of deliberation and negotiations within coalitions and parties the Yang di Pertuan Agong of Malaysia announced Pakatan Harapan PH chairman Anwar Ibrahim whose coalition won the most seats as the tenth Prime Minister of Malaysia on 24 November 2022 17 with Barisan Nasional BN Gabungan Parti Sarawak GPS Gabungan Rakyat Sabah GRS and various independent parties joining in the coalition government 18 New Zealand Edit See also Electoral reform in New Zealand Hung parliaments had a relatively uncommon place in New Zealand politics prior to the introduction of proportional representation in 1993 Only on four occasions since the beginnings of party politics in 1890 had a hung parliament occurred under the FPTP system in 1911 1922 1928 and 1931 The rarity between 1936 and 1996 was due to the regression into a two party system alternating between the long dominating New Zealand Labour Party and New Zealand National Party 19 From the first MMP election in 1996 until the 2020 election no single party gained an outright majority in parliament The 2020 election was the first to return a majority a narrow majority for the Labour Party since 1993 20 United Kingdom Edit Further information Parliament of the United Kingdom The House of Commons following the 2017 general election No party had a majority In the United Kingdom before World War I a largely stable two party system existed for generations traditionally only the Tories and Whigs or from the mid 19th century the Conservative and Liberal parties managed to deliver Members of Parliament in significant numbers Hung parliaments were thus rare especially during the 19th century The possibility of change arose when in the aftermath of the Act of Union 1800 a number of Irish MPs took seats in the House though initially these followed the traditional alignments However two Reform Acts in 1867 and in 1884 significantly extended the franchise and redrew the constituencies and coincided with a change in Irish politics Following the 1885 general election neither party had an overall majority The Irish Parliamentary Party held the balance of power and made Irish Home Rule a condition of their support However the Liberal Party split on the issue of Irish Home Rule leading to another general election in 1886 in which the Conservatives won the most seats and governed with the support of the fragment of Liberalism opposed to Home Rule the Liberal Unionist Party Both the election of January 1910 and that of December 1910 produced a hung parliament with an almost identical number of seats won by the governing Liberal Party and the Conservative Party This was due both to the constitutional crisis and to the rise of the Labour Party The elections of 1929 resulted in the last hung parliament for many years in the meantime Labour had replaced the Liberals as one of the two dominating parties Since the elections of 1929 three general elections have resulted in hung parliaments in the UK The first was the election in February 1974 and the ensuing parliament lasted only until October The second was the May 2010 election the result of which was a hung parliament with the Conservative party as the largest single party The results for the 3 main parties were Conservatives 306 Labour 258 Liberal Democrats 57 21 The third one resulted from the snap election held in June 2017 that had been called for by Theresa May in order to strengthen her majority heading into Brexit negotiations later in 2017 However this election backfired on May and her Conservative Party resulting in a hung parliament after the snap election 22 The formation of the coalition resulting from the 2010 election led to the Fixed term Parliaments Act 2011 which instituted fixed five year Parliaments and transferred the power to call early elections from the Prime Minister to Parliament itself This was the idea of the Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg then the leader of the Liberal Democrats who said that this would stop the Prime Minister and leader of the Conservative Party David Cameron from calling a snap election to end the hung parliament as many other Conservatives had requested Hung parliaments can also arise when slim government majorities are eroded by by election defeats and defection of Members of Parliament to opposition parties as well as resignations of MPs from the House of Commons This happened in December 1996 to the Conservative government of John Major 1990 97 and in mid 1978 to the Labour government of James Callaghan 1976 79 this latter period covers the era known as the Winter of Discontent The minority government of Jim Callaghan came when Labour ended their 15 month Lib Lab pact with the Liberals having lost their majority in early 1977 According to researchers Andrew Blick and Stuart Wilks Heeg the phrase hung parliament did not enter into common usage in the UK until the mid 1970s It was first used in the press by journalist Simon Hoggart in The Guardian in 1974 23 Academic treatments of hung parliaments include David Butler s Governing Without a Majority Dilemmas for Hung Parliaments in Britain Sheridan House 1986 and Vernon Bogdanor s Multi Party Politics and the Constitution Cambridge University Press 1983 Consequences EditIn countries used to decisive election outcomes a hung parliament is often viewed as an unfavourable outcome leading to relatively weak and unstable government A period of uncertainty after the election is common as major party leaders negotiate with independents and minor parties to establish a working majority An aspiring head of government may seek to build a coalition government in Westminster systems this typically involves agreement on a joint legislative programme and a number of ministerial posts going to the minor coalition partners in return for a stable majority Alternatively a minority government may be formed establishing confidence and supply agreements in return for policy concessions agreed in advance or relying on case by case support Australia Edit In the Western Australian state election of 2008 the Australian Labor Party won more seats than the Liberal Party at 28 to 24 The National Party along with three independents had the seats needed to give either party a majority To help the Liberal Party form government the Nationals supported the party on the condition that the Royalties for Regions policy was implemented In the 1999 Victorian state election the Labor Party won 42 seats while the incumbent Liberal National Coalition retained 43 with 3 seats falling to independents The Labor Party formed a minority government with the 3 independents The 2010 Tasmanian state election resulted in a hung parliament After a period of negotiation the incumbent Labor government led by David Bartlett was recommissioned but containing the Leader of the Tasmanian Greens Nick McKim as a minister and the Greens Cassy O Connor as Cabinet Secretary In the 2010 federal election neither Labor nor the Liberal coalition secured the majority of seats required to form a Government in their own right In order to counter the potential instability of minority government involved groups may negotiate written agreements defining their terms of support Such measures were undertaken by the Gillard Government in 2010 24 India Edit In India if an election results in a hung assembly in one of the state Legislative Assemblies and no party is capable of gaining confidence then fresh elections are announced to be held as soon as possible Until this occurs President s Rule is applied In India there have been many situations of hung assemblies in the state legislatures However invariably the President of India in the case of Lok Sabha elections and the Governor of the state concerned in the case of state elections would attempt to give opportunities to the parties starting with the one that got the maximum number of seats in the elections to explore possibilities of forming a coalition government before bringing in President s Rule New Zealand Edit The first such occasion was in 1911 when the Liberal Party won fewer seats than the opposition Reform Party despite tallying the most votes A vote of no confidence was placed by Reform and the Liberals survived by just one vote This prompted Prime Minister Sir Joseph Ward to resign his replacement Thomas Mackenzie was later defeated in July 1912 in a vote with several MPs and Labour crossing the floor to vote with the opposition the last time in New Zealand history a government has changed on a confidence vote This broke 23 years of Liberal governance and William Massey formed a new Reform Party government Massey governed through to his death in 1925 though in 1922 the Reform Party suffered major losses and Massey was forced negotiate with several Independent MPs to retain power In 1928 Reform were ousted from governance and Joseph Ward once again won back power However the Reform and United Liberal parties were tied on seats with Labour holding the balance of power Labour chose to back Ward rather than let Reform leader Gordon Coates remain in office In the next election in 1931 there was again a three way deadlock On this occasion the Reform and United parties became a coalition government out of mutual fear of Labour s ever increasing appeal as the Great Depression worsened 1993 was the last time a hung parliament occurred in New Zealand Governor General Dame Catherine Tizard asked Sir David Beattie to form a committee along with three retired appeal court judges to decide whom to appoint as Prime Minister 25 However National won an extra seat after special votes were counted giving National 50 seats and Labour 45 seats 4 were won by third party candidates Labour s Sir Peter Tapsell agreed to become Speaker of the New Zealand House of Representatives As a result National did not lose a vote in the house and maintained a dubious majority for three years United Kingdom Edit In the February 1974 general election no party gained an overall parliamentary majority Labour won the most seats 301 which was 17 seats short of an overall majority with the Conservatives on 297 seats although the Conservatives had a larger share of the popular vote As the incumbent Prime Minister Edward Heath remained in office attempting to build a coalition with the Liberals When these negotiations were unsuccessful Heath resigned and Labour led by Harold Wilson took over in a minority government In the 2010 UK general election another hung parliament occurred with the Conservatives as the largest party and discussions followed to help create a stable government This resulted in agreement on a coalition government which was also a majority government between the Conservative Party which won the most votes and seats in the election and the Liberal Democrats In the 2017 UK general election a hung parliament occurred for the second time in seven years with the Conservatives again being the largest party The Conservatives led by Theresa May formed a minority government supported by a confidence and supply agreement with the Northern Ireland s Democratic Unionist Party Working majority EditThere have been occasions when although a parliament or assembly is technically hung the party in power has a working majority For example in the United Kingdom the tradition is that the Speaker and Deputy Speakers do not vote and Sinn Fein MPs never take their seats per their policy of abstentionism so these members can be discounted from the opposition numbers United Kingdom Edit In 2005 this was the case in the 60 seat National Assembly for Wales where Labour lost their majority when Peter Law was expelled for standing against the official candidate in the 2005 Westminster election in the Blaenau Gwent constituency When the Assembly was first elected on 1 May 2003 Labour won 30 seats Plaid Cymru won 12 the Conservatives won 11 Liberal Democrats won 6 and the John Marek Independent Party won a seat When Dafydd Elis Thomas Plaid Cymru was reelected as the presiding officer this reduced the number of opposition AMs who could vote to 29 as the presiding officer votes only in the event of a tie and even then not on party political lines but according to Speaker Denison s rule Thus Labour had a working majority of one seat until Law ran in Blaenau Gwent 26 See also EditCoalition government Cohabitation government Divided government Minority governmentNotes Edit It was first controlled by a Conservative majority After a scandal in the Conservative Party the Liberals took power While the Liberals won a one seat majority in the 1921 Canadian federal election resignations changed the parliament from a small majority to a Hung Parliament Liberals gained majority due to due to resignations and by elections References Edit Balanced parliament No need to rush The Guardian London 5 May 2010 SNP puts case for hung parliament BBC News 20 April 2010 Q A What happens if no party gets a majority in UK election Reuters 7 May 2010 Paun Akash 4 December 2009 Hung up on no overall control The Guardian London Welcome to the era of no overall control New Statesman Retrieved 27 December 2013 Ward Alan J 2014 Parliamentary Government in Australia Anthem Press p 172 ISBN 978 1783081219 Retrieved 3 July 2016 Minority Governments in Canada The Canadian Encyclopedia 17 January 2012 Retrieved 6 October 2021 GG agrees to suspend Parliament Harper CBC 4 December 2008 Archived from the original on 5 December 2008 Retrieved 4 December 2008 Burnell amp Calvert 1999 p 125 sfn error no target CITEREFBurnellCalvert1999 help Narasimha Rao Passes Away The Hindu 24 December 2004 Archived from the original on 13 February 2009 Retrieved 2 November 2008 Dunleavy Diwakar amp Dunleavy 2007 sfn error no target CITEREFDunleavyDiwakarDunleavy2007 help Business Standard 2009 sfn error no target CITEREFBusiness Standard2009 help List of Political Parties amp Symbol MAIN Notification Election Commission of India 15 March 2019 Amending notification regarding political parties and their election symbol dated 10 01 2020 Election Commission of India 15 January 2020 General Election 2014 Election Commission of India Archived from the original on 23 May 2014 Retrieved 20 January 2020 Hung Parliament in GE15 as both Pakatan and Perikatan in race to form govt Malay Mail 20 November 2022 Retrieved 25 November 2022 Anwar Ibrahim sworn in as Malaysia s 10th Prime Minister New Straits Times 24 November 2022 Retrieved 24 November 2022 Parliament session on Dec 19 motion of confidence on PM to be tabled PM Anwar Bernama 24 November 2022 Retrieved 25 November 2022 Bassett Michael 1982 Three Party Politics in New Zealand 1911 1931 Auckland Historical Publications pp 64 5 ISBN 0 86870 006 1 Shaw Richard 19 October 2020 Labour s single party majority is not a failure of MMP it is a sign NZ s electoral system is working The Conversation Retrieved 24 October 2020 General election 2010 results of a hung parliament Archived 10 May 2010 at the Wayback Machine PoliticsRAW May 08 2010 Election results 2017 UK wakes up to hung Parliament BBC News 9 June 2017 Retrieved 9 June 2017 Blick Andrew Stuart Wilks Heeg April 2010 Governing without majorities Coming to terms with balanced Parliaments in UK politics PDF Liverpool Democratic Audit p 2 Archived from the original PDF on 13 July 2010 Retrieved 20 April 2010 Fenna Alan Jane Robbins John Summers 2013 Government Politics in Australia Pearson Higher Education AU p 49 ISBN 978 1486001385 Retrieved 3 July 2016 McLean Gavin 2006 The Governors New Zealand s Governors and Governors General Otago University Press ISBN 1 877372 25 0 Labour lose assembly majority as Law quits Archived 7 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine ePolitix com April 17 2005External links Edit Look up hung parliament in Wiktionary the free dictionary United Kingdom Edit Charter 2010 planning for a hung parliament Hang Em a pressure group Hung parliament news Archived 28 January 2015 at the Wayback Machine New Statesman Hung parliaments What you need to know Institute for Government 2010 Q amp A What is a hung parliament BBC News 8 March 2010 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hung parliament amp oldid 1131585172, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.