In parliamentary debate, the Prime Minister is the first Proposition speaker - the debater who opens the round. The PM has three main jobs: define the motion, introduce the Proposition case, and set up the terms of the debate. Everything that happens in the rest of the round builds on what the PM says first.
The PM's Responsibilities
- Define any contested terms in the motion
- Set the framework for how the judge should evaluate the round
- Introduce 2-4 main contentions with claim-warrant-impact structure
- Give the Opposition something concrete to respond to
Why the PM Speech Is Hard
The PM speaks first, which means they have no opposing arguments to respond to yet. Every decision - what to define, what to contend, how to frame the round - has to be made in prep time. A weak PM speech makes the rest of the round much harder for the Proposition team. A strong PM speech makes it much harder for the Opposition to recover.