5.2.8   The Separation of Powers

(This is an archived page, from the Patterns of Power Edition 3 book.  Current versions are at book contents).

M.J.C. Vile, in his book Constitutionalism and the Separation of Powers, defined the three branches of governance as being:

·     The ‘executive’ (which is referred to as the ‘government’ in Britain, or the ‘Administration’ in American terminology).

·     The legislature

·     The judiciary

He argued that they

“must be kept separate and distinct, no individual being allowed to be at the same time a member of more than one branch.  In this way each of the branches will be a check to the others and no single group of people will be able to control the machinery of the State.” [p. 14]

He went on to say that "the doctrine has rarely been held in this extreme form, and even more rarely been put into practice" – but it is nonetheless a powerful safeguard and a worthwhile objective.

The mechanisms for forming a government depend upon the political system (6.1.2).  It has direct control over the law enforcement agencies and the penal system – which both form part of the Legal Dimension.  The executive itself is bound by the rule of law in most countries, as part of their Constitutions.

The legislature, in a liberal democracy, is elected and is under political control but is usually separate from the executive.  In America, the two houses of Congress are separate from the Administration and act as a check on the power of the President – notably by controlling funding.  In Britain, the two houses of Parliament act as a check on the power of the government (though the Prime Minister and cabinet are members of Parliament).  In both cases there is a limit on the power of the government to create new legislation – so that it cannot, for example, reduce individual freedom without the consent of the majority of the democratically elected representatives of the people.  Other democracies, and other types of government, have differing degrees of separation between the legislature and the executive. 

An executive has to be decisive in the short term, acting on behalf of the people, but a legislature has to represent the diversity of the people and take a longer-term view of society's interests; it also has the effect of acting as a check on the executive's political powers.

The separation between the judiciary and the executive ensures that the latter obeys the rules.  The executive must not be 'above the law'.  This is especially important in the case of the law enforcement agencies, for which the executive is responsible.  A separate judiciary provides an impartial judgement to ensure that the law enforcement agencies do not break the law when bringing cases to trial.  And, as noted previously (5.2.6.3), the judiciary is better placed than politicians to consider individual cases.

The separation between the legislature and judiciary, within the Legal Dimension, is a safeguard to ensure the impartiality of justice, so that a judge cannot invent law on a personal whim but is bound by a separately authorised body of rules.  The argument in favour of balancing power towards the legislature is that there is political control over it in a liberal democracy, whereas the populace has no direct say in the appointment of judges.  The counterargument is that a legislature with a temporary political majority should not easily be able to make laws to undermine civil rights which were established by due process at an earlier time – so judges should have the power to prohibit legislation which breaches the Constitution or agreements with other countries. 

The separation of powers is an important safeguard for human rights against oppression, particularly where rights have been agreed at a supra-national level; without it, a government can suppress opposition and victimise individuals without any checks or hindrances.  There are many examples of governments making laws that prohibit dissent and then keeping themselves in power by imprisonment, torture or execution of their opponents.  As one of the American Founding Fathers, James Madison, wrote in The Federalist No. 47:

“The accumulation of all powers, legislative, executive, and judiciary, in the same hands, whether of one, a few, or many, and whether hereditary, selfappointed, or elective, may justly be pronounced the very definition of tyranny.”