Australia In the
Parliament of Australia, as well as in the parliaments of the six states and two self-governing territories, major political parties have whips to ensure party discipline and carry out a variety of other functions on behalf of the party leadership. The most important function of the whip's office is to ensure that all members and senators are present to take part in votes in the chamber (maintaining
quorum and preventing
censure motions). Unlike in the United Kingdom, Australian whips do not hold official office, but they are recognised for parliamentary purposes. In practice, Australian whips play a lesser role than their counterparts in the United Kingdom, as
party discipline in Australia tends to be tighter. Their roles in the chamber include taking divisions, and maintaining a "
pairs book" which controls the ability of members and senators to leave the parliament building during sittings, as well as the entitlement to be absent during divisions.
Liberal Party whips are appointed by the leader of the party, while
Australian Labor Party whips are elected by the
Caucus. For Labor and the Liberals, the chief whip is assisted by two deputy whips.
Canada In Canada the Party Whip is the member of a political party in the
Canadian House of Commons, the
Canadian Senate or a provincial legislature charged with ensuring party discipline among members of the
caucus. In the House of Commons, the whip's office prepares and distributes vote sheets identifying the party position on each bill or motion. The whip is also responsible for assigning offices and scheduling
speakers from his or her party for various bills, motions and other proceedings in the House.
Bangladesh In Bangladesh, the concept of the whip was inherited from
colonial British rule. The
Chief Whip is a member of the parliament of
Bangladesh from the ruling party who is responsible for the maintenance of party discipline inside the parliament. The work of the whip is to ensure the proper participation (as the party wants) of the party MPs in the activities of the
parliament, such as voting, If the leader and deputy leader of parliament are absent, the whip can speak for them.
India In India, every major political party appoints a whip, who is responsible for the party's discipline and behaviours on the floor of the
house. Usually, they direct the party members to stick to the party's stand on certain issues and directs them to vote as per the direction of senior party members. However, there are some cases such as
Indian Presidential elections where whips cannot direct a
Member of Parliament (MP) or
Member of Legislative Assembly (MLA) on whom to vote. Should a whip's order be violated by a member of the same party, then the whip can recommend immediate dismissal of that member from the house due to indiscipline and the Speaker of the respective house can decide on the matter (without time limit). Should the whip choose not to follow up on the violation of their official whip order by the own party member due to any reason, then any member of house can do so to the Speaker.
Ireland Whips exist for all parliamentary parties in
Dáil Éireann and
Seanad Éireann. The
government chief whip is normally a
Minister of State at the Department of the Taoiseach, and attends
cabinet meetings. The whips of each house meet weekly to set the agenda for the next week's business. Whips also coordinate
pairing. From 1998, whips and assistant whips may be entitled to an allowance on top of their base legislator's salary. In 2011, these allowances varied proportional to the size of the group, with Fianna Fáil's Dáil whip's allowance the highest at €19,000.
Malaysia Party whips in Malaysia serve a similar role as in other
Westminster system-based parliamentary democracies. However, party discipline tends to be tighter in Malaysia and therefore the role of the whip is generally less important, though its importance is heightened when the government majority is less in the lower house.
New Zealand In New Zealand, the concept of the whip was inherited from British rule. All political parties that have four or more members in Parliament have at least one party whip, although
Green Party whips are called
musterers. Parties with 25 to 44 members are allowed two whips (one senior and one junior), and parties with 45 or more members are entitled to three whips (one senior and two junior). Whips act in an administrative role, making sure members of their party are in the debating chamber when required and organising members of their party to speak during debates. Since the introduction of
proportional representation in 1996, divisions that require all members in the chamber to vote by taking sides (termed a
personal vote) are rarely used, except for
conscience votes. Instead, one of the party's whips votes on behalf of all the members of their party, by declaring how many members are in favour and/or how many members are opposed. They also cast proxy votes for single-member parties whose member is not in the chamber at the time of the vote, and also cast proxy votes during personal votes for absent members of their parties and for absent members of associated single-member parties.
United Kingdom In British politics, the
chief whip of the governing party in the
House of Commons is customarily appointed as
Parliamentary Secretary to the Treasury so that the incumbent, who represents the whips in general, has a seat and a voice in the
Cabinet. By virtue of holding the office of Parliamentary Secretary to the Treasury, the government chief whip has an official residence at
12 Downing Street, although the chief whip's office is currently located at 9 Downing Street. Government whips report to the prime minister on any possible backbench revolts and the general opinion of MPs within the party, and upon the exercise of
patronage, which is used to motivate and reward loyalty. The role of whips is largely to ensure that MPs vote as required by the party leadership, i.e. to secure the government's business, and to protect the prime minister. Whips use a combination of threats and promises to secure compliance. A former chief whip said that there was a dividing line between legitimate and illegitimate persuasion: "Yes to threats on preferment (for government positions) and
honours. No to abusing public money, such as threatening to withhold money from projects in the MP's constituency, and private lives." Former chief whips disclosed that whips have a notebook documenting MPs' indiscretions, and that they help MPs in any sort of trouble ("it might be debt, it might be ... a scandal involving small boys ...") in any way they can to "store up brownie points ... that sounds a pretty, pretty nasty reason, but it's one of the reasons because if we could get a chap out of trouble then he will do as we ask forever more."
Having the whip withdrawn Having the whip withdrawn means the MP is effectively expelled from their party. UK parties do not have the power to expel an MP from parliament, but can force the MP to sit as an independent and remove them from ministerial office. ==In other countries==