Independent government

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Under non-party government , also party free government , English non government party , is understood in democratic systems, a government whose prime minister no party is partly also the entire government team (Cabinet) . Likewise, these can also be governments whose members consist of civil servants ( civil servants government ) and / or persons with special experience in their field ( expert government ).

Function of a government without party politics

The Prime Minister may from the civil service come (caretaker government) , but also a diplomat , jurist , but also about person then the economy, technology and science, technocracy called to be. Such governments are typical for times of domestic political tensions or transitional phases of constitutional law.

These are mostly "unity governments " ( consensus governments , non-partisan governments) or transitional governments . Such a government will be formed about when after a democratic election stalemate arises and the parties agree on a neutral candidate, or otherwise does not form a government comes about, for example, after multiple failed government negotiations , and the Head of State determines a representative of the election winner. Even if party political disputes lead to domestic political crises, non-party governments are installed. Something similar can be found in times of a state becoming a state, when party affairs are still being put on the back burner of the common consolidation of the state.

Conversely, at the beginning of parliamentarism, the opposite is also found: a monarch disregards bourgeois concerns and puts together a government he trusts from civil servants ( statism ) . Special cases of the non-party governments are also the military governments , which are also constituted outside of the democratic distribution of power.

The model of non-party government was also considered by various political theorists as a state model , according to Bolingbroke's idea of ​​the Country Party , a nationwide party, in the 18th century.

Examples of non-partisan governments

See also

literature

historical:

  • Eugen Richter : self-administration and government of civil servants. A lecture on the errors and shortcomings of the more recent Prussian administrative laws, 1878. (Reprint publisher: EOD Network, 2012, ISBN 978-3-226-00941-5 ).
  • Walther Schotte: The non-party government. In: Reich and State. No. 11, 1932; also In: The Ring. 4th year, August 19, 1932.

Individual evidence

  1. cf. en: Consensus democracy in the English language Wikipedia
  2. ^ HN Fieldhouse: Bolingbroke and the idea of ​​non-party government. LXXXV. In: History. Vol. 23,> No. 89, June 1938, pp. 41-56, doi: 10.1111 / j.1468-229X.1938.tb00148.x ;
    cf. also en: Country Party (Britain)