The widespread opposition of Labour backbenchers has forced the health secretary to make some cosmetic changes to the proposals. |
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Yet by failing to meet expectations of a radical cabinet rehaul, he may yet be confronted by unruly backbenchers. |
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Now Manchester's ruling Labour group has pledged to act after its own backbenchers joined the clamour for change. |
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Party leaders and backbenchers both rated cross-voting as the most serious violation of party discipline. |
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Intoxicated by the discovery of their own power, Labour backbenchers celebrated a rare parliamentary victory. |
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Two of the backbenchers who suddenly find themselves Parliamentary Secretaries will no doubt be thrilled. |
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He said there was a groundswell of opinion among backbenchers, and said he had been involved with a statement released detailing the plans. |
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In addition to spending more time in the chamber than most backbenchers, she also has a frontbench job as a spokesman on culture. |
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The position now reached by the Executive on its repeal is one backbenchers can live with. |
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At a private meeting of the Parliamentary Labour Party earlier, the Prime Minister himself urged backbenchers to back him. |
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And would he really not make a better contribution to the national debate than half the backbenchers in parliament? |
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Labour backbenchers are confident the last tally-ho will soon echo across Britain's countryside. |
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It is an attempt to square their own backbenchers, but they have failed to satisfy them and we are now set for a battle royal. |
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These are the government frontbenchers, government backbenchers, opposition frontbenchers, and opposition backbenchers. |
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The executive's refusal to accept the committee's decision has caused outrage among Labour backbenchers. |
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Some Labour backbenchers have added their voices to the chorus of condemnation. |
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It all depends, I suppose, on whether his whips still have the backbenchers in their iron grip. |
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A decline in party discipline and of members' willingness to obey the whips, is one means of restoring influence to the backbenchers. |
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Scunnered with the malign Scottish press, scunnered with his own backbenchers, scunnered with the amateurism and ineptness of the parliament. |
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I am less impressed by the claque of backbenchers whose running gibes whenever a minister is on his feet add little to the discussions. |
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The parliament's backbenchers did, however, force Executive ministers to change the law so two questions on religion could be included. |
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He was never able to operate freely because Europhobe backbenchers held the balance of power in parliament. |
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Labour backbenchers precariously hanging on to marginal seats began to stir. |
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His rediscovered Gaullism was one of the forces driving wavering Labour backbenchers into the lobbies to support the Prime Minister. |
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If the Government is reduced to grubbing the votes of its most backward-looking, antediluvian backbenchers, then what is it in office for? |
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Why do ministers ask so few questions in private, and backbenchers ask so few questions in public? |
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Many Liberal backbenchers and opposition members were completely unaware of the negotiations. |
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This is the time for Labour backbenchers to put political integrity before government opportunism. |
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Being an MP may be a doddle for obscure Labour backbenchers, but not for party leaders, and Salmond will inevitably become UK leader again. |
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Ministers and backbenchers agree that his continued membership is a source of increasing embarrassment. |
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He had lost some right-wing ministers and alienated many backbenchers and supporters outside Parliament. |
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Many Labour backbenchers regard them as the doves in the Cabinet most capable of leading anti-war dissent. |
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But here he is, threatening to go on and on, surrounded by fawning Labour ministers, backbenchers and constituency delegates. |
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But a minister whose policy is unpopular with some of his own backbenchers may find opposition support embarrassing. |
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His own backbenchers and members of the opposition have all threatened to walk out of Westminster or resign. |
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Expect, too, plenty of backbenchers to step forward fearlessly to criticise the leadership. |
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Even Liberal backbenchers concede that the Prime Minister's first instincts are authoritarian. |
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A prime minister running scared from his own backbenchers abstaining this week on a motion that he said is illegal. |
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Labour whips have been heard promising backbenchers that their consciences will not be put through the wringer again. |
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They show contempt for the hard work the standing committee has done, including that done by its own MPs and Liberal backbenchers. |
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I hope that you have sympathy for the backbenchers who are here trying to see the light to ensure that taxpayers have their money's worth. |
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The new Labour government can no longer expect to ride roughshod over their own backbenchers. |
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The week past has shown, for the first time, that Labour backbenchers have found out how to revolt against ministers and that they are willing to do so. |
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Seats on committees were handed out by party whips as a watery consolation to backbenchers rejected for preferment. |
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This is a salutary example for backbenchers, most of whom spend more time grumbling about their lack of preferment than mastering hard policy. |
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The backbenchers of the Liberal Party did not get that much say in their own budget. |
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This comes after the Opposition was mauled yesterday in Question Time when Labor backbenchers were really looking to make budgetary inroads on the equity angle. |
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He said Cameron was in hock to his backbenchers and was not acting in the national interest. |
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I will suggest a few pranks backbenchers can play on cabinet to bring it back to reality, the rookies. |
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As I was saying, the fire consumed 50 of the backbenchers and sent the rest scurrying back into the castle. |
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The fire consumed 50 of the backbenchers and set the rest scurrying back to the castle. |
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Forcing Labour to vote for such a pledge and it is hard to see how it could refuse would send Tory backbenchers into rapture. |
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How troublesome will backbenchers really be when it comes to a vote? |
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It is hypocritically using backbenchers to promote its Conservative ideology. |
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Nothing starts a feeding frenzy more than the smell of cash around Liberal backbenchers. |
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But whether that will be enough to appease Cameron's backbenchers is doubtful. |
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The reason is he was out polling his backbenchers to make sure he could get them on side to vote against this motion. |
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On this side of the House a free vote means everyone, not just backbenchers, can vote the way their constituents want them to. |
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It is an excellent example of how people in this place, backbenchers, have made a contribution to the thinking of this place. |
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My question to the Prime Minister is, is he listening to his backbenchers or does he have a three line whip on this bill? |
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However it is wonderful, and it is quite sad at the same time, to hear the government's own backbenchers do the same thing. |
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Even Conservative backbenchers do not have tremendous access to power and certainly the opposition parties do not. |
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The Prime Minister has said that his backbenchers can vote their conscience, but cabinet ministers have to vote with the government. |
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It is the sign of the need that many backbenchers see even if the government does not. |
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Certainly, government backbenchers might want to read it themselves so they know who is running this government, because they know they are not. |
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Even backbenchers complain about it at times, because they wield little influence. |
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Empowered backbenchers can be useful allies for our industry, but the political situation is also a lot more volatile. |
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At regular intervals, backbenchers apishly banged their desks to salute their leader or, in response to their opponents, broke into bursts of sarcastic laughter. |
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The joy among backbenchers when McCreevy announced the programme last December was almost unconfined, as they scurried off to their constituencies to bask in the good news. |
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The Scottish parliament standing orders help cage its backbenchers. |
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It will require considerable effort and much scrutiny before trust and confidence in the public service are restored in the eyes of government backbenchers, the Opposition, and the public. |
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Closure is okay now that the Liberals are government, making sure that their backbenchers fall into line or their nomination papers will not be signed. |
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There's nothing wrong with a Government listening to the concerns of its backbenchers. |
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Unlike the party opposite, we did not develop a temporary itch for democratic reform when we were seeking approval of backbenchers, or in a leadership struggle, or when we go to the voters every so often. |
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Of course, that would obviously lead to a number of problems that even would be beyond the control of the Conservative backbenchers, so I cannot blame them. |
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Maudling, when Parliament dispersed at the beginning of August, could have commanded a majority among backbenchers in the Commons. |
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Any MP may introduce a bill under the Ten Minute Rule, although in practice it is only used by backbenchers. |
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They are embarrassed that they have lost the support of their colleagues in the Senate and their own backbenchers, prominent members of the Liberal Party, former deputy prime ministers, former leadership candidates. |
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But the government should substantiate its position further if it wants more support from our side and from its own backbenchers, who are left in the dark. |
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A GROUP of 30 Labour backbenchers yesterday launched an anti-euro campaign to mark 100 days of the single currency. |
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But a Labour source said if it went ahead it would soften the blow for their backbenchers who have been hammered by voters. |
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A group of Labour backbenchers close to Tony Blair are heading for Crewe, where a by-election takes place on Thursday. |
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By SARAH BARDON FURIOUS Government backbenchers want the Education Minister to reverse savage cuts to rural schools. |
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And yet Labour would argue that any such plan has already been railroaded by the threat of Ukip and the rising influence of rightwing backbenchers. |
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A take note debate is really a pat on the head for Liberal backbenchers. |
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But the report published this week, which exonerates one Liberal Democrat, three Labour and 11 Tory backbenchers, does not deal with any of the more sensitive charges. |
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It takes only 46 Tory MPs to trigger a vote of no confidence, by writing to the chairman of the 1922 Committee of backbenchers and requesting one. History shows how regicidal the Conservative Party can be. |
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More provokingly, the EU's perceived mania for regulation is seen as wrecking efforts to conquer more promising markets. Such arguments convince many backbenchers. |
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But after his backbenchers and backwoodsmen made plain this was one thing they would not wear, Cameron threw both the Tory machine and the considerable Tory bankbook at the operation. |
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These huddle with LDP members, the cosmetically enhanced politician included, who resent the resurgence under Mr Abe of grubby factional politics and backbenchers with the power to thwart market-oriented policy. |
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But the prime minister thinks there is still enough wriggle room to please enough of his backbenchers and – for now – his most outspoken critics are willing to give him time. |
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We know Abbott has been calling backbenchers for quiet chats. |
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It is simply ironic and incredulous that two Liberal backbenchers have to stand in the House and literally yell and scream in order to tell the government that what it is doing is wrong. |
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As a matter of fact, a couple of weeks ago, even the chairman said that we were nothing but a bunch of powerless backbenchers, and you did not even flinch. |
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The row over Juncker comes at a crucial time for the prime minister as he is under increasing pressure from Tory backbenchers to solidify his commitment to a referendum. |
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The backbenchers love to yak, but they are devoid of ideas themselves. |
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She has joined the growing chorus of criticism by some government ministers and backbenchers, legal experts and community groups, over attempts to increase executive powers to revoke citizenship of suspected terrorists. |
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How much more secure the government's future would be if other ministers acknowledged and remedied the mistakes which have offended their backbenchers. |
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Finally, backbenchers, send the Prime Minister a clear message that the strong arm, disciplinarian tactics of the past no longer wash in today's world. |
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Conservative backbenchers lined up to demand separate powers for English MPs shortly after the polls closed, underlining the pressure on Cameron to act. |
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The later he leaves it, the more risk he takes that his backbenchers will have become querulous and his government will have descended into a midterm slump by the time the people are asked the question. |
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I do not think Canadians are foolish enough to be fooled by that, but for the benefit of the backbenchers on the Conservative side, I would like to clarify the record. |
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Another austerity budget in December has already raised the spectre of widespread industrial action and could yet put him on a collision course with the Greens and his own backbenchers. |
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Disloyal backbenchers have a lot more fun than dogsbody junior ministers. Individual MPs have become more autonomous for one other big reason: the power of incumbency. |
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Two backbenchers – one an old codger on the way down, the other a newcomer on the way up – are called upon to propose the 'Humble Address' when the Commons reconvenes. |
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Second, as a diversionary tactic to keep attention from its shortfalls it does not want opposition parties, its own backbenchers and the media focusing on the economy and the issues that are important to Canadians. |
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He said that it was shameful to invite the first nations to this table to discuss with us, because they would just be discussing with backbenchers. |
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The gambit followed months of bellyaching by Tory backbenchers. |
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Other members of parliament, in contrast, are known as backbenchers. |
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In November, he declined Lord Salisbury's invitation to be part of a delegation of senior Conservative backbenchers who met with Baldwin to discuss the matter. |
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The governing United Bermuda Party was split on the issue, with Premier Sir John Swan supporting independence while many of his backbenchers were opposed. |
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Whips have historically been brutal to backbenchers to secure their vote. |
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