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Early Day Motions (EDMs) Added: 26 February 2009 These are motions set down for 'an early day'. They are printed in the Vote Bundle (in a separate section on blue pages) and provide an opportunity to register an opinion and gather support on almost any subject. They are useful for drawing attention to specific events or campaigns and demonstrating the extent of parliamentary support for a particular cause or point of view. However, there is usually no time available to actually debate an EDM, unless it's (and this is extremely rare) especially significant and has a high number of signatories, or it's tabled with the function of 'praying against' a negative statutory instrument (thus forcing a debate). EDMs may be tabled by any MP, though most often they are used by backbenchers – there is an unwritten rule that Ministers, Government Whips and Parliamentary Private Secretaries will neither table nor sign them. Different types of EDM:
No matter what the purpose of an EDM, it has to abide by the following rules in order to be tabled:
EDMs should be handed in or sent to the Table Office, and (unless handed in by a Member) must bear the signature of at least one Member. Names can be added by signing and sending or bringing to the Table Office a copy of the motion, or a signed note of the numbers of the relevant motions. A list of names to be added must be signed by the Member submitting it. Names cannot be added by phone, fax or e-mail. Names added after 10.30 p.m. on Mondays, 7.30 p.m. on Tuesdays and Wednesdays, 6.30 p.m. on Thursdays and 3 p.m. on Fridays are deemed to have been added on the following sitting day. Relevant interests must be declared, even if only adding a name to an existing motion. Amendments must not increase the motion's length beyond 250 words. Names of Members signing an amendment are automatically withdrawn from the main motion. If the Member in charge of an EDM (i.e. the first signatory or 'sponsor' wants to withdraw an EDM, he/she can, even if other Members have signed it. Individual names may also be withdrawn. EDMs are printed in the Vote Bundle the day after they are tabled; reprinted on each day during the rest of that week and in the following week if names are added; and reprinted on any Thursday thereafter if names have been added during the preceding week. After the first occasion, only the first six names and the new names are printed, together with the total number of names. Lists of those who have signed EDMs are available on POLIS and can be requested from the Table Office. An average of around ten EDMs are tabled per sitting day, which amounts to between two and three thousand per session. This fact, and the triviality of many EDMs, has led some critics to refer to them as 'parliamentary graffiti'. Some favourites from the past few years:
On the whole though, EDMS are useful for MPs to express views and test support, and for the whips to keep tabs on who's thinking what. At the end of a session, all EDMs fall but can be introduced in the next session, though the signatures will need to be collected again. Contact: Table Office, 3302, 3303, 3305. Library Factsheet on Early Day Motions (Revised February 2009): http://www.parliament.uk/parliamentary_publications_and_archives/factsheets/p03.cfm The EDM database is at: http://edmi.parliament.uk/EDMi/Default.aspx. The BBC Politics website has a page here: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/82132.stm.
CD/February 2009
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