In British politics, the 1922 Committee consists of all backbenchConservativeMembers of Parliament, though when the party is in opposition, frontbench MPs other than the party leader may also attend its meetings. It meets every week while Parliament is in session, and provides a way for Tory backbenchers (and indirectly, ordinary party members) to have their views heard by frontbenchers.
The 1922 Committee has a 12-member executive committee, the chairman of which must oversee any election of a new party leader, or any vote of confidence for the current one; such a vote can be triggered by 15 percent of Tory MPs writing a letter to the chairman asking for such a vote. This was invoked most recently on October 28, 2003, when 25 MPs requested a vote of confidence in Iain Duncan Smith by writing to the chairman, Sir Michael Spicer. Duncan Smith lost the vote the next day.
The committee was formed in 1923, but takes its name from the 1922 General Election. Contrary to popular opinion, it does not come directly from a meeting in 1922 when Conservative MPs (successfully) demanded that the party withdraw from the coalition government of David Lloyd George. Many new Conservative MPs (enough for an overall majority) were elected in the general election that this act triggered, and they formed the 1922 Committee but the founder MPs were not the ones who had taken the decision to break up the coalition government. However the membership of the Committee was subsequently expanded to include virtually all MPs in the party and the name serves as a reminder of the power of the backbench MPs.
The 1922Committee is the Conservativebackbenchers’ “trade union”, serving to represent Conservative opinion in the House of Commons.
The forebears of the present-day Conservatives were the Cavaliers of the 17th century and the Tories of the 18th and 19th centuries.
As a result the Conservatives were excluded from effective majority government until 1874 in favour of the Liberal Party, the main opposition to the Conservative Party from 1832 until after 1918.
In British politics, the 1922Committee consists of all backbenchConservativeMembers of Parliament, though when the party is in opposition, frontbench MPs other than the party leader may also attend its meetings.
The 1922Committee has an 18-member executive committee, the chairman of which must oversee any election of a new party leader, or any vote of confidence for the current one; such a vote can be triggered by 15 percent of Tory MPs writing a letter to the chairman asking for such a vote.
The committee was formed in 1923, but takes its name from the 1922 General Election.