
Contents
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4.1 Introduction 4.1 Introduction
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4.2 Identity and Political Structure 4.2 Identity and Political Structure
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4.3 Ghost Hunting: English Departments 4.3 Ghost Hunting: English Departments
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4.4 Ghost Hunting: England’s Domestic Government? 4.4 Ghost Hunting: England’s Domestic Government?
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4.5 Cabinet Government for England? 4.5 Cabinet Government for England?
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4.6 Getting and Spending: England’s Taxation and Expenditure 4.6 Getting and Spending: England’s Taxation and Expenditure
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4.7 Brexit and the Territorial Distribution of Responsibilities 4.7 Brexit and the Territorial Distribution of Responsibilities
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4.8 Is there a Ghost in the Government Machine, and Could it Be Made Manifest? 4.8 Is there a Ghost in the Government Machine, and Could it Be Made Manifest?
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References References
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4 The Ghost in the Machine? The Government of England
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Published:November 2018
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Abstract
The asymmetry of the UK as a union means that England, unlike Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, not only has no domestic legislature but no executive of its own either. Westminster is England’s Parliament and the UK Government is England’s Government. Much attention has been devoted to the (parliamentary) anomaly of the West Lothian Question, but there has been little discussion of England’s Government. This chapter asks whether the UK Government contains a ghost in the machine: an embryonic English Government, perhaps in English departments or cabinet committees, or shown in social or economic policy or in taxation and spending. It notes how deeply entangled UK and English economic and fiscal policy are, notably via the Barnett formula, and considers the options for more explicit English governance such as a ‘Minister for England’, but questions how politically salient this would be when the main issue is England’s relations with Europe.
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