Awkward Bench
English
Proper noun
- (UK politics, slang) The front row of seats below the gangway on the Labour side of the House of Commons, where rebel MPs often sit.
- 1999, Robert Waller; Byron Criddle, The Almanac of British Politics, page 288:
- Described as 'a sabre-toothed growler on Labour's awkward bench' (Robert Hardman), he sits alongside Dennis Skinner a mere arm's length from the Chief Whip, whom, in opposition during the 1992 Parliament, he defied 52 times, […]
- 2005, Great Britain. Parliament. House of Commons, Parliamentary Debates (Hansard), page 451:
- I am pleased that he is on the awkward Bench and hope to see him here in future.
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See also
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