2 year Prime Ministers - the norm?
2 year Prime Ministers - the norm?
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Discussion

Mojooo

Original Poster:

13,286 posts

202 months

So it looks recent PMs cannot dominate their MPs - and these days there is intense media attention on every little thing which eventually leads to a 'PM must resign' narrative with every bloody thing.

Does that mean that all future PMs are only going to last a couple of years at the most?

Was it better when we didn't have such connected medias and basically most people couldn't be arsed/felt detached from politics?

Whilst it may be good that wrong decisions lead to sackings, its hardly good for stability. It also creates an environment where Politicians and the media know they can get a PM out with enough pressure - this will be our 4th out in the same way in the last 10 years.

Vanden Saab

17,227 posts

96 months

Out of the 60 PMs we have had less than half have lasted for 4 years and a quarter have lasted less than 2 years. 6 have died in office and 11 resigned due to illness. 2/3rds have resigned or been defeated at an election.

Edited by Vanden Saab on Sunday 8th February 05:46

DrDeAtH

3,676 posts

254 months

2 year Keir?

cheesejunkie

5,193 posts

39 months

Unfortunately you might have a point. The knives will be out pretty much as soon as any PM enters office. The media likes a scalp, especially if it's a labour one.

Mind you I'd far prefer that to the US attitude of nothing to see here when discussing Trump's latest fk up.

I don't like it. I think MPs should be given time to enact policies even if I don't like the policy. As VS mentions it's fairly rare in our recent system for a PM to win an election and get voted out in another one.

Maybe Labour are getting a fondness for regicide as rabid as the Tory's lust for it. I can't see it, different rules for a start, but as mentioned on another post I do think the man's days are numbered and we will have a different PM at the next election.

Rumdoodle

1,677 posts

42 months

France is getting through them at an even faster rate than the UK.

Wills2

27,902 posts

197 months


Since Brexit yes it's the norm, it's almost like we've made the country ungovernable and each PM is presented with a Gordian knot to untie.


(no doubt some reform supporter will point out that France is a similar position which apparently makes it OK)


steveatesh

5,295 posts

186 months

Wills2 said:
Since Brexit yes it's the norm, it's almost like we've made the country ungovernable and each PM is presented with a Gordian knot to untie.


(no doubt some reform supporter will point out that France is a similar position which apparently makes it OK)

Thank god the pandemic had zero affect on the UK, nor the energy shock from the Russian attack on Ukraine. It would have been a lot worse if they had!

Randy Winkman

20,411 posts

211 months

One thing that I think is clear is that people use whatever is the current issue of concern to try to get rid of the person they didn't like and wanted rid of in the first place. But that's probably always been the case.

tim0409

5,612 posts

181 months

cheesejunkie said:
The media likes a scalp, especially if it's a labour one.
Back on planet Earth, I don’t recall the media going easy on Johnson or Truss, or Rishi Sunak for that matter. If you genuinely think the media are biased against Labour you need to lie down in a dark room and hopefully gain a bit of perspective.

Mr Penguin

3,981 posts

61 months

Yes, although it is worth remembering that no PM in history has been kicked out by their party in their first term after becoming PM by general election.

cheesejunkie

5,193 posts

39 months

tim0409 said:
Back on planet Earth, I don t recall the media going easy on Johnson or Truss, or Rishi Sunak for that matter. If you genuinely think the media are biased against Labour you need to lie down in a dark room and hopefully gain a bit of perspective.
No, I don't.

I could do a comedy list of Telegraph anti Labour headlines but it wouldn't burst your bubble.

Iamnotkloot

1,815 posts

169 months

cheesejunkie said:
tim0409 said:
Back on planet Earth, I don t recall the media going easy on Johnson or Truss, or Rishi Sunak for that matter. If you genuinely think the media are biased against Labour you need to lie down in a dark room and hopefully gain a bit of perspective.
No, I don't.

I could do a comedy list of Telegraph anti Labour headlines but it wouldn't burst your bubble.
Eh? So what? The DT is well known as well right of centre so that’s hardly revelatory.

I could do a list from The Guardian of anti-Tory headlines but that’s pointless too.

Vanden Saab

17,227 posts

96 months

Mr Penguin said:
Yes, although it is worth remembering that no PM in history has been kicked out by their party in their first term after becoming PM by general election.
Ahem, Boris...

alangla

6,193 posts

203 months

Short terms aren’t that uncommon, if anything Johnson and May lasted reasonably well, Thatcher, Blair and, to an extent, Cameron & Major were unusually long serving, so one could suggest it’s actually the long serving ones that are unusual https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_prime_minist...

Mr Penguin

3,981 posts

61 months

alangla said:
Short terms aren t that uncommon, if anything Johnson and May lasted reasonably well, Thatcher, Blair and, to an extent, Cameron & Major were unusually long serving, so one could suggest it s actually the long serving ones that are unusual https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_prime_minist...
Look at the ones who lasted more than 7 years in a single stint - nine in total, five before 200 years ago, two more before the first world war, only Blair and Thatcher since then.

Sway

33,279 posts

216 months

Vanden Saab said:
Mr Penguin said:
Yes, although it is worth remembering that no PM in history has been kicked out by their party in their first term after becoming PM by general election.
Ahem, Boris...
Didn't he technically resign? And he didn't become PM by general election, he became PM then called one.