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The cabinet and the prime minister

The central institution, the core of the British Government is the Cabinet. The Cabinet is composed of about 20 ministers personally selected by the Prime Minister. Cabinet-making is a very important part of a Prime Minister’s job and a Cabinet remains very much the expression of Prime Minister’s personality. He not only appoints ministers but can require their resignation. He can replace a minister or break up th

entire Cabinet. He controls the agenda of business to be dealt with at Cabinet meetings. He can dissolve the House of Commons and thus bring about a General Election at any time.

The Prime Minister can introduce peers, and if necessary make peers, and he can demote his rivals.

The policy of ministers must be in agreement with the policy of the Government as a whole and each minister is expected to support it. If he cannot agree with Cabinet's policy or if he lost the confidence of the majority of his colleagues a Cabinet minister has no choice but to resign.

The Cabinet is the most powerful organ of government in Britain.The Cabinet of Ministers introduces legislation, controls finance, arranges the time-table of the House of Parliament, conducts foreign affairs, controls the colonies, exercises supervision over every department of administration. Much of the work of the Cabinet is done through committees.The Cabinet is constitutionally responsible to Parliament and can be forced to resign but in practice it is the Cabinet that dominates Parliament. Its ministers are front-benchers in Parliament. The final decision on all the questions of policy rests with the Cabinet.

Departments of the uk

Her Majesty's Government of the United Kingdom contains a number of Cabinet ministers who are usually called secretaries of state when they are in charge of Government departments. These members of the Cabinet are supported by civil servants in ministerial departments.

Government departments are either ministerial departments or non-ministerial departments.

Ministerial departments are led politically by a Government minister, normally a member of the Cabinet and cover matters that require direct political oversight. For most departments, the Government minister is known as a secretary of state and is a member of the Cabinet. He or she is generally supported by a team of junior ministers. The administrative management of the department is led by a senior civil servant known as a permanent secretary. As well as governmnt departments there are government agencies formed to operate different public services i.e. Post Office, British Railway etc. Each government agency is subject to control of one of government departments.

Non-ministerial departments generally cover matters for which direct political oversight is judged unnecessary or inappropriate. They are headed by senior civil servants. Some fulfill a regulatory or inspection function, and their status is therefore intended to protect them from political interference. Some are headed by Permanent Secretaries or Second Permanent Secretaries.

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