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How does the relevant political context shape effective that scrutiny practice — scrutiny of the executive and how effective that scrutiny is in practice? Use the relevant political concepts and evidence from The structure and role of Parliament.
- A.Define executive power and accountability, compare the UK and USA through the UK Prime Minister normally leads the parliamentary majority, whereas the US President is separately elected and operates within a formal separation of powers, test evidence, then judge how far different executive-legislative relationships alter appointment, policy and scrutiny powers.
- B.Define executive power and accountability, then write two separate country descriptions with no connection.
- C.Start with a judgement and omit the institutional evidence.
- D.Assume the UK Prime Minister and US President hold the same constitutional mandate and powers and avoid evaluating the difference.
Model answer
What a good answer should say
- The correct answer is Define executive power and accountability, compare the UK and USA through the UK Prime Minister normally leads the parliamentary majority, whereas the US President is separately elected and operates within a formal separation of powers, test evidence, then judge how far different executive-legislative relationships alter appointment, policy and scrutiny powers.
Explanation
Why this works
Define executive power and accountability, compare the UK and USA through the UK Prime Minister normally leads the parliamentary majority, whereas the US President is separately elected and operates within a formal separation of powers, test evidence, then judge how far different executive-legislative relationships alter appointment, policy and scrutiny powers. This is correct because the structure links AO1 knowledge, AO2 comparison and AO3 judgement to executive power and accountability.
Apply cabinet responsibility, party majority, executive orders, congressional checks, appointments, impeachment and legislative scrutiny precisely. the UK Prime Minister normally leads the parliamentary majority, whereas the US President is separately elected and operates within a formal separation of powers.
A structural viewpoint emphasises formal rules; however, a rational or cultural viewpoint may explain how actors use those rules. Overall, judge the evidence from a legislative vote, executive order, ministerial convention, appointment or scrutiny example and explain whether different executive-legislative relationships alter appointment, policy and scrutiny powers for "Analyse and evaluate scrutiny of the executive and how effective that scrutiny is in practice.".
Common mistake
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