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The British Parliamentary Debate Format

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International Debate Education Association and Willamette University. The British Parliamentary Debate Format. 2010 BFSU Tournament. Robert Trapp, Willamette University Yang Ge, Dalian Nationalities University. Teams and Speakers. The Basic Format. Points of Information. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Robert Trapp, Willamette University Yang Ge, Dalian Nationalities University 2010 BFSU Tournament International Debate Education Association and Willamette University
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Page 1: The British Parliamentary Debate Format

Robert Trapp, Willamette UniversityYang Ge, Dalian Nationalities University

2010 BFSU Tournament

International Debate Education Association and Willamette University

Page 2: The British Parliamentary Debate Format

Team Speakers

First PropositionPrime Minister

Deputy Prime Minister

First OppositionLeader of Opposition

Deputy Leader of Opposition

Second PropositionMember of Government

Government Whip

Second OppositionMember of Opposition

Opposition Whip

Page 3: The British Parliamentary Debate Format

Team Speaker Time

First Proposition Prime Minister 7 minutes

First Opposition Leader of Opposition 7 minutes

First Proposition Deputy Prime Minister 7 minutes

First Opposition Deputy Leader of Opposition 7 minutes

Second Proposition Member of Government 7 minutes

Second Opposition Member of Opposition 7 minutes

Second Proposition Government Whip 7 minutes

Second Opposition Opposition Whip 7 minutes

Page 4: The British Parliamentary Debate Format

Points of information may be offered after the first minute but prior to the last minute of any speech.

The debater giving the speech has the authority to accept or refuse the offer of a point of information.

If the offer of a point of information is accepted, the person offering the point has a maximum of fifteen seconds to make the point.

The norm is for a speaker to accept a minimum of two points of information.

Rarely does a speaker accept more than three points of information.

Page 5: The British Parliamentary Debate Format

Speaker Responsibilities

Prime Minister 1st speaker for 1st proposition:

•Defines and interprets the motion •Develops the case for the proposition

Leader of Opposition 1st speaker for 1st opposition:

•Accepts the definition of the motion•Refutes the case of the 1st proposition •Constructs one or more arguments against the Prime Minister’s interpretation of the motion.

Deputy Prime Minister 2nd speaker for 1st proposition:

•Refutes the case of the 1st opposition•Rebuilds the case of the 1st proposition •May add new arguments to the case of the 1st proposition

Deputy Leader of Opposition 2nd speaker for 1st opposition:

•Continues refutation of case of 1st proposition•Rebuilds arguments of the 1st opposition •May add new arguments to the case of the 1st opposition

Page 6: The British Parliamentary Debate Format

Speaker Responsibilities

Member of Government 1st speaker for 2nd proposition:

•Defends the general direction and case of the 1st proposition•Continues refutation of 1st opposition team•Develops a new argument that is different from but consistent with the case of the 1st proposition (sometimes called an extension).

Member of Opposition 1st speaker for 2nd opposition:

•Defends the general direction taken by the 1st opposition.•Continues general refutation of 1st proposition case•Provides more specific refutation of 2nd opposition•Provides new opposition arguments

Government Whip 2nd speaker for 2nd proposition:

•Summarizes the entire debate from the point of view of the proposition, defending the general view point of both proposition teams with a special eye toward the case of the 2nd proposition•Does not provide new arguments.

Opposition Whip 2nd speaker for 2nd opposition:

•Summarizes the entire debate from the point of view of the opposition, defending the general view point of both opposition teams with a special eye toward the case of the 2nd opposition•Does not provide new arguments.


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