Chapter 4 Roles and powers of the Prime Minister, Cabinet and the Ministry Flashcards

1
Q

These two groups make up the ‘Outer Ministry’

A

Junior Ministers and Assistant Ministers

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2
Q

All authority of the Prime Minister stems from Westminster ________

A

conventions

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3
Q

This section of the Constitution declares that all Ministers must be Members of Parliament

A

s64

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4
Q

Which convention states that all Ministers must publicly support the executive

A

Cabinet Solidarity

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5
Q

Three elements of Individual Ministerial responsibility are ___________

A

personal probity, professional integrity, management of portfolio

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6
Q

The most recent example of 2017 where an MP had to recontest their seat through a by-election to maintain their status as a Minister was in the case of _____________

A

Barnaby Joyce

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7
Q

The importance of secrecy of Cabinet deliberations is underlined by these discussions being kept secret for ______ years

A

30

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8
Q

The decision by the Abbott government to release Cabinet documents from the Rudd government over this programme was highly controversial

A

Home Insulation Programme

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9
Q

Cabinet secrecy is not in breach of these principles, because it ensures unity.

A

good government

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10
Q

Decisions made by cabinet may be determined by consensus, Party Room pressure, together with _____ and _______

A

majority view and Prime Ministerial authority

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11
Q

The ‘front bench’ is also referred to as the _______ benches

A

Treasury

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12
Q

When changes are made to the Cabinet, this is referred to as a Cabinet ___________

A

reshuffle

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13
Q

He was appointed to head the new ‘super ministry’, Minister for Home Affairs

A

Peter Dutton

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14
Q

The ERC is a key cabinet committee. This is the acronym for ….

A

Expenditure Review Committee

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15
Q

Ministers were first divided into the Inner and Outer categories in his term of government

A

Menzies

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16
Q

The power of the Prime Minister to choose or change Ministers is referred to as the power of ___________

A

patronage

17
Q

As chairperson of the Cabinet, the Prime Minister controls the Business List, which is the Cabinet _____

A

agenda

18
Q

The largest Cabinet portfolio in terms of budget allocation is that of __________

A

Social Services

19
Q

Limits to the power of the Prime Minister were evident in the case of this Speaker who was forced to stand down in 2015 because of embarrassing financial disclousres

A

Bronwyn Bishop

20
Q

The most recent example of a Prime Minister choosing the timing of the election date was

A

Turnbull in July 2016

21
Q

The most successful recent Prime Minister to effectively engage with social media was

A

Kevin Rudd

22
Q

The political demise of Tony Abbott was accelerate by is ‘captain’s call’ on this matter in January 2015

A

Announcement of Australian knighthoods

23
Q

The forum for meetings between the Prime Minister and the Premiers is __________

A

COAG

24
Q

The National Party backbencher who has often threatened to cross the floor in 2016 and 2017 is ______________

A

George Christensen

25
Q

If support for major parties continues to decline, this form of government may become more common in Australia

A

minority

26
Q

The best example of a perceived ‘conviction politician’ as PM since 2000 is ________

A

John Howard

27
Q

There are five links in the ‘Westminster Chain of _________’

A

Accountability

28
Q

A key role of Cabinet is to develop and communicate the government _________ and narrative

A

vision

29
Q

Cabinet policies can be implemented through legislation and __________

A

regulation

30
Q

Which government department manages the exchange of information to the Cabinet

A

Department of Prime Minster and Cabinet

31
Q

The most radical Cabinet in postwar Australia was that of the __________ government.

A

Whitlam

32
Q

The strongest recent example of the expanded role of government in smoothing the business cycle was during the _______ government.

A

Rudd in 2008

33
Q

Identify the four broad reasons for the growth of the role of government.

A

Depression experience; growth of rights and need to provide for them; extension of franchise and the needs of many more diverse groups; need for key infrastructure provision in a sprawling landmass.