Two grids on the same template. The first is empty - print it, fill in each cell with a one-line note while you revise. The second is a worked example to check yourself against.
Each cell asks one question: does this row strengthen the column quality (mark +) or weaken it (mark -)? Then add a one-line note saying why. The plus and minus columns are deliberately not pre-printed - your judgement is the work.
| Case+ - | IMR - personal conduct | IMR - departmental failure | CMR - collective unity | Code machinery worked | PM decisive | Convention bit | Significance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Carrington (1982) |
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| Cook (2003) |
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| Rudd (2018) |
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| Patel (2020) |
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| Williamson (2020) |
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| Sunak + Javid (July 2022) |
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| Rayner (2025) |
| Case+ - | IMR - personal conduct | IMR - departmental failure | CMR - collective unity | Code machinery worked | PM decisive | Convention bit | Significance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Carrington (1982) |
-No personal misconduct - that is the point of the case. | +Resigned for his department's failure to foresee the Falklands invasion. | -Not a unity case. | -Pre-dates the published Code (first issued 1992). | -Thatcher tried to keep him; he insisted. | +The convention worked unprompted - honour did the enforcing. | +The classic IMR-departmental benchmark - cited because modern equivalents are missing. |
| Cook (2003) |
-No misconduct involved. | -Not a departmental case. | +Could not publicly support the Iraq War, so he left - the doctrine working as written. | -Not a Code case. | -Cook chose to go; Blair could not stop him. | +Constructive resignation - the textbook example. | +The CMR resignation speech every essay can quote. |
| Rudd (2018) |
+Resigned for inadvertently misleading the Commons over Windrush removal targets. | -The underlying failure was departmental - but the trigger was personal. | -Not a unity case. | +Misleading Parliament is the Code's clearest red line. | -May defended her; the Commons evidence forced the issue. | +Gone within days of the evidence emerging. | +The standard modern proof that IMR-personal still bites. |
| Patel (2020) |
+The inquiry upheld bullying complaints - personal conduct under the Code. | -Not a departmental case. | -Not a unity case. | -The adviser found a breach; the PM overruled him; the adviser resigned instead. | +Johnson's protection was the whole story. | -The minister stayed - the clearest modern non-enforcement. | +The case that proves the Code is only as strong as the PM's will. |
| Williamson (2020) |
-No personal misconduct alleged. | +The A-level algorithm fiasco happened on his watch. | -Not a unity case. | -Departmental failure is not a Code matter - no breach found. | +Johnson kept him in post. | -The standout modern case of IMR-departmental not biting. | +Pair with Carrington for the died-or-evolved debate. |
| Sunak + Javid (July 2022) |
-Not about their own conduct. | -Not a departmental case. | +Withdrew collective support - and said so publicly. | -The trigger was Johnson's handling of the Pincher affair, not Code machinery. | -The PM was the object, not the decider - gone within two days. | +CMR at full force: mass resignation removed a sitting Prime Minister. | +The strongest modern proof the convention can still end a premiership. |
| Rayner (2025) |
+Resigned over a tax dispute - personal conduct under the Code. | -Not a departmental case. | -Not a unity case. | +The Code's machinery produced a resignation at the top of government. | -The breach finding left little room for protection. | +A serving Deputy PM resigning is the convention biting at the highest level. | +The most recent named case - the contemporary evidence the 2025 examiner report rewarded. |