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In parliamentary democracies based on the Westminster system, confidence and supply is where a party or independent members of a parliament agree to support the government in motions of confidence and appropriation votes. Parties and independent members normally retain the right to otherwise vote in favour of their own policies or on conscience on legislative bills.[1][2][3]
A coalition government is a more formal arrangement than a confidence-and-supply agreement, in that members from junior parties (i.e., parties other than the largest) gain positions in the cabinet and ministerial roles, and may be expected to hold the government whip on passing legislation.
In most parliamentary democracies, members of a parliament can propose a motion of confidence[4] or of no confidence in the government or executive. The results of such motions show how much support the government currently has in parliament. Should a motion of confidence fail, or a motion of no confidence pass, the government will usually either resign and allow other politicians to form a new government, or call an election.
Most parliamentary democracies require an annual state budget, an appropriation bill, also called supply bill, or occasional financial measures to be passed by parliament in order for a government to pay its way and enact its policies. The failure of a supply bill is in effect the same as the failure of a confidence motion. In early modern England, the withholding of funds was one of Parliament's few ways of controlling the monarch.
Country | Head of government | Governing parties | Confidence partners | Seats | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Government | Support | Total | ||||||
Canada | Justin Trudeau | Liberal | NDP | 158 | 46.7% | 25 | 183/338 | 54.1% |
Croatia | Andrej Plenković | HDZ – SDSS | HSLS – HNS-LD – HDS – Ind. | 67 | 44.4% | 10 | 76/151 | 50.3% |
Poland | Donald Tusk | KO – PL2050 KP - NL | LT | 241 | 52.39% | 7 | 248/460 | 53.91% |
Spain | Pedro Sánchez | PSOE – Sumar | ERC – Junts – EH Bildu – EAJ/PNV – BNG – CCa | 152 | 43.4% | 27 | 179/350 | 51.1% |
Sweden | Ulf Kristersson | M – KD – L | SD | 103 | 29.5% | 73 | 176/349 | 50.4% |
Turkey | Recep Tayyip Erdoğan | AKP | MHP – HÜDA PAR – DSP | 263 | 43.8% | 55 | 318/600 | 53.0% |
Sub-national | ||||||||
Template:Country data Asturias | Adrián Barbón | FSA-PSOE | IU/IX – IAS | 19 | 42.2% | 4 | 23/45 | 51.1% |
Azores | José Manuel Bolieiro | PPD/PSD – CDS-PP - PPM | Chega – IL | 26 | 45.6% | 3 | 29/57 | 50.9% |
Template:Country data Balearic Islands | Marga Prohens | PP | Vox | 25 | 42.3% | 9 | 34/59 | 57.6% |
Template:Country data Murcia | Fernando López Miras | PP | Vox | 21 | 46.6% | 9 | 30/45 | 66.6% |
Template:Country data Navarre | María Chivite | PSN – GBai – Podemos | I-E | 21 | 42.0% | 9 | 30/50 | 60.0% |
Template:Country data Thuringia | Bodo Ramelow | LINKE – SPD – Grüne | CDU | 42 | 46.7% | 21 | 63/90 | 70.0% |
Yukon | Ranj Pillai | Liberal | NDP | 8 | 42.1% | 3 | 11/19 | 57.9% |
The Australian Labor Party Gillard government formed a minority government in the hung parliament elected at the 2010 federal election resulting from a confidence-and-supply agreement with three independent MPs and one Green MP.[5]
In November 2008, the Liberal Party and the New Democratic Party (NDP) reached an agreement to form a minority coalition government, with the Bloc Québécois having signed a confidence agreement to support the proposed coalition. However, the proposed coalition and confidence agreement fell apart in January 2009, as a result of an ensuing parliamentary dispute.[6][7]
In 2022, a few months into the 44th Canadian Parliament, the NDP agreed to a confidence-and-supply agreement with the governing Liberal Party, to continue the Liberal minority government. The deal will keep the minority Liberal government in power until 2025, with the NDP agreeing to support the government on confidence motions and budget votes. In exchange, the Liberal government is understood to have pledged to advance work on key NDP policy priorities on dental care, pharmaceutical drugs, and affordable childcare.[8]
After the 2017 British Columbia provincial election, the Green Party of British Columbia agreed to a confidence-and-supply agreement in support of the British Columbia New Democratic Party.[9] The incumbent British Columbia Liberal Party, which held a plurality of seats, briefly tried to form a government, but was immediately defeated in a confidence vote by the NDP and Greens.[10]
On 2 November 2018 (less than two months after the 2018 New Brunswick general election) the legislative assembly voted 25-23 for a motion, introduced by the Progressive Conservatives, to amend the throne speech to declare no confidence in the government. Subsequently, Premier Brian Gallant indicated his intention to resign the premiership and recommend to the lieutenant governor that PC leader Blaine Higgs be given the mandate to form a minority government: "I will go see the lieutenant governor at her earliest convenience to inform her that I will be resigning as premier, and I will humbly suggest to her honour to allow the leader of the Conservative Party to attempt to form a government and attempt to gain the confidence of the house." People's Alliance leader Kris Austin said he would work with the new government "in the areas we agree on," and reiterated his promise to support the Progressive Conservatives on confidence votes for a period of 18 months. Green Party leader David Coon said he would start working with the Tories in an attempt to ensure his party's issues were on the government's agenda.[11]
Twenty-two days after the 1985 Ontario provincial election, the Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario government resigned after a vote of no confidence, and the Ontario Liberal Party formed a government with the support of the Ontario New Democratic Party.[12] The agreement between the two parties was referred to as "The Accord".[13]
After the 2021 territorial election resulted in the Yukon Liberal Party and the Yukon Party winning the same number of seats, the third place Yukon New Democratic Party agreed to provide confidence and supply to a Liberal minority government.[14]
Third Front national governments were formed in 1989 and 1996 with outside support of one of the two major parties, BJP or Congress.
The CPI-M gave outside support to the Congress Party from 2004 to 2008, but later withdrew support after the India–United States Civil Nuclear Agreement.
After the 2016 general election, a minority government was formed by Fine Gael and some independents, with confidence and supply (Irish: muinín agus soláthar[15]) support from Fianna Fáil in return for a published set of policy commitments from the government.[16] Fianna Fáil abstained on confidence and supply votes, but reserved the right to vote for or against any bill proposed in the Dáil or Seanad. The deal lasted until the 32nd Dáil was dissolved on 14 January 2020 for a general election to be held in February 2020.[17][18]
In Italy, the equivalent of confidence and supply is called "external support" (Italian: appoggio esterno). Starting from the 50's through the 70's there were various examples of Christian Democratic cabinets being able to govern thanks to confidence and supply agreements with other minor parties. Most famously, the Andreotti III Cabinet was formed in 1976 thanks to a confidence and supply agreement between the Christian Democrats and the Italian Communist Party, referred to as "the historic compromise" (Italian: il compromesso storico), in which the Communist Party agreed not to vote against the government during confidence votes.
The Dini Cabinet, formed in 1995, and the Monti Cabinet, formed in 2011, were technocratic governments which relied on the support of the main parties in Parliament during confidence votes.
In Japan , the equivalent of a confidence and supply arrangement is called "extra-cabinet cooperation" (閣外協力 kakugai kyōryoku). The latest such agreement was made after the 1996 House of Representatives election between the Second Hashimoto Cabinet, an LDP single-party government somewhat short of majorities in both houses, and two parties which had formed the governing coalition with the LDP until the election: the JSP and Shintō Sakigake (NPH/NPS/Sakigake). By 1997, the LDP had gained a House of Representatives majority of its own through accessions (see New Frontier Party) and was hoping to regain full parliamentary control in the 1998 House of Councillors election. Instead, the cooperation agreement was ultimately terminated while the government lost seats in the 1998 election, leaving clear control to the opposition, a so-called "Twisted Diet". The Hashimoto Cabinet resigned to give way for a new cabinet led by prime minister Keizō Ōbuchi which entered formal negotiations with other parties to form a coalition government by January 1999 (First Reshuffled Obuchi Cabinet).
There is another implicit form of cooperation where (usually very small) parties which are not part of the cabinet join one of the ruling parties in joint parliamentary groups in one or both houses of the National Diet and vote with the government. A recent example were the joint LDP groups with the Party for Japanese Kokoro and New Party Daichi during the 2nd Reshuffled Third Abe Cabinet.
A confidence and supply agreement was signed on 13 September 2021 between Barisan Nasional and Pakatan Harapan to strengthen political stability amid the COVID-19 pandemic. This is the first such agreement signed to ensure bipartisan cooperation.[19]
In New Zealand, confidence and supply arrangements are common due to the MMP system used in the country. The parties providing confidence and supply have a more prominent role than in other countries, with MPs from the support parties often being appointed to ministerial portfolios outside of Cabinet.[20] New Zealand codified the procedures it used to form these Governments in its Cabinet Manual.[21]
John Key's National Party administration formed a minority government in 2008 thanks to a confidence-and-supply agreement with the ACT, United Future and the Māori Party.[22] A similar arrangement in 2005 had led to Helen Clark's Labour Party forming a coalition government with the Progressive Party, with support on confidence and supply from New Zealand First and United Future. After the 2014 election, National re-entered confidence-and-supply agreements with United Future, the ACT Party, and the Māori Party. In 2017, despite National winning more votes than Labour in the election, New Zealand First chose to enter coalition with Labour to help them change the government, with support on confidence and supply from the left-wing Green Party.[21]
Between 1977 and 1978, Jim Callaghan's Labour Party stayed in power thanks to a confidence-and-supply agreement with the Liberal Party, in a deal which became known as the Lib-Lab Pact. In return, the Labour Party agreed to modest policy concessions for the Liberal Party.[23][24]
In the aftermath of the 2017 general election which left Theresa May's Conservative Party without a majority, a confidence-and-supply agreement was agreed with the Democratic Unionist Party.[25]
Confidence and supply deals are more frequent in the devolved legislatures of Scotland and Wales due to the use of proportional representation.[citation needed] The Scottish National Party and Scottish Green Party had a confidence and supply deal in the Scottish Parliament.[26] The Welsh Labour Party and Plaid Cymru had a similar co-operation deal in the Welsh Parliament until October 2017.[27]
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Confidence and supply.
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