Roles in a debate
Prime Minister (Opening
Speaker);
It
is the duty of the “Prime Minister” to define the topic of the debate BUT it
must be clearly linked to the Motion. In
some cases the motion will be worded in such a way as to permit a wide variety
of Definitions (e.g. “This house believes that the Glass is half full”,
Worlds 98.) Others will be tighter
motions, which allow little flexibility for Definition (e.g. “This
house believes that Northern Nationalists have nothing to fear from a United
Kingdom” Irish Times 96). As
1st Government you should look for a twist to the motion.
For example “This house would rebuild the Berlin Wall” (Worlds 96) is
often defined as repartitioning of Germany and a return to Communism.
This is, in my experience, a very difficult line to win from.
Two more “successful” definitions which I have seen run are that the
Berlin Wall represented a division between East and west and that (a) the EU
should not allow Eastern Bloc countries membership until they have fulfilled
certain Social and Economic Criteria. Or
(b) that Nato should not expand membership eastward.
When
Defining make sure that you have an argument.
You have to propose something. Saying
that something is wrong and this is how it should be is not enough.
You must say that something is wrong and THIS is what you are going to do
about it. “What you are going to
do” is the debatable part of the definition.
Example
“This house favours Positive Discrimination”.
Poor Defn: People have been discriminated against because of their
sex/race/etc and they shouldn’t be in the future therefore we’ll use
something called Positive Discrimination. Better
Definition: People have been discriminated against because of their
sex/race/etc and to correct that we are going to take actions X, Y, and Z under
the umbrella name of Positive Discrimination.
You must then fully outline what actions X, Y, and Z are and how they
will work.
Opposition
Leader;
It
is your role to set out the opposition to the Governments case.
You have only 7min (or less) to come up with your opposition case but
provided that the Government have presented a debatable case you will be
expected to handle the limited time for preparation.
Outline and develop your case.
Then deal with the points made by the government and link back the reason
for them being flawed to whatever your team’s central case is.
Remember the role of last Opp is to rebut all four Government speakers in
his/her 7 min and sum up the entire opposition case.
You have only seen one speaker so you can’t make a “Last Opp
Speech” Look at it in terms of proportions.
You’ve only seen a quarter of the Government therefore at most a
quarter of your speech should be rebuttal.
The rest should involve outlining a “substantive” opposition case.
It
is also your duty to decide if the case is debatable.
If it isn’t (and be very, very certain that it isn’t) then you must
submit an alternative definition. You
cannot simply say “That’s a Truistic/self proving” argument, spend seven
minutes outlining why and sit down. If
you do that then you will have failed to do your duty as 1st
opposition. If you have the ability
to spot a truistic argument then you should have the ability to redefine, or at
least to modify the Governments case to make it debatable.
Deputy
Prime Minister;
You
must further develop your team’s argument.
Rebut what the first opposition speaker has said but don’t spend all
your time rebutting. Your team’s
case can’t have been fully outlined and developed so to spend 7 min attacking
one opposition speaker is no win tactic.
You
must back up your teammate. If
he/she has been torn apart then don’t jump ship.
“CLARIFY” what your teammate said.
Don’t abandon your case because you realise that it is flawed.
Judges will look out for that and will penalise a “Dump” severely.
You will gain more marks for bailing your teammate out than for jumping
ship and engaging the opposition on their ground leaving your teammate behind.
Deputy
Opposition Leader;
As
with the second government speaker you must back up your teammate.
Don’t abandon your case because you realise that it is flawed.
Fix it but don’t get an entirely new one.
A good guideline is that you should spend double the amount of time
rebutting that your teammate and therefore the rest of your speech is reserved
for YOUR team’s case.
Remember
that your team’s case should be set up in such a way that it in itself rebuts
the government case. Therefore
simply by developing it you are rebutting the government.
If you remember this it should help you avoid the trap that a lot of Opp
speakers fall into of 100% point-by-point rebuttal.
There is a misconception that the opposition just have to oppose and
don’t have to lend any constructive argument or matter to the debate.
People will get away with this from time to time but the recent trend in
adjudication is to frown on that. It
is an easy way out and doesn’t really lend anything to the debate.
Constructive opposition always looks better than mere opposition for
opposition’s sake. This applies
in debating as well as most things in life.
Member
for the Government (3rd Gov Speaker);
You
are the first speaker in the second half of the debate.
Now you have options to consider
If
there has been a redefinition, and IF it was a valid redefinition then you must
decide if you are going to follow the Government line or switch to the
definition which the Opposition as offered and take them on at that.
Be careful. It is also
possible to take a combination of both but you will have to be careful not to
tangle your argument up in trying to tie the two definitions together.
If
the Government presented a case, which was debatable but weak and has been thorn
apart you cannot simply stab them in the back.
You may however bring in an “extension” this allows you to bring in a
new point of view while still roughly following the Government line.
Again just, as with 1st government, you must present a
debatable definition.
Your
role is to develop your team line. As
with all government speakers you cannot spend all you 7 min rebutting the
opposition. Outline and fully
develop YOUR team line, showing how it links to AND backs up the original
government case. As you develop
your case use it to rebut the opposition. Also
remember that a sizable amount of your teammate’s speech will involve summing
up the entire Government case and rebutting the opposition.
He/She will have little time to further develop your team’s case so you
must do a good job on your team line. You
are almost in an individual debate against 3rd Opp speaker and your
argument must be fully developed or he/she will destroy you, and there will be
no come back from your teammate. If
your teammate has to spend all his/her time bailing you out then you have failed
and have dragged him/her down with you.
Member
for the Opposition (3rd Opposition Speaker);
In
my experience this is a difficult position in terms of strategy.
You can’t give a 100% rebuttal speech and you also are limited in that
your teammate will not be in a position to spend a lot of time developing your
case (see Opposition Whip’s role). It
is up to you to set out AND fully develop your team’s case.
Remember you have to provide matter of your teams argument in such a way
that it stands out from the other teams. You
should concentrate on the third Government speaker in your rebuttal.
You must rebut what the 1st Gov team said but it is primarily
your duty to take on the extension provided by the 2nd Gov team.
If first opposition have done their job then the time you spend rebutting
the 1st Gov team will in effect be going over what they have done and
impinging on your teammate’s role.
Government
Whip; (last Gov speaker)
Both
Whips will be penalised if you do not Sum up your side and rebut the opposition.
You can develop your team line a little but the vast majority of your
time must be spent summing up the ENTIRE government case and rebutting the
Opposition arguments. Remember as
well that the 3rd opposition speaker has probably spent a sizable
amount of time attacking your teammate so you should spend some time on your
team line and counteracting the attack on it.
In short you must do 3 distinct things: (1) Sum up your team line.
(2) Sum up the first Government’s arguments (3) Rebut the Opposition.
Remember that while you cannot stab the 1st government in the
back you should really reinforce your team line and then sum up the rest of the
Government argument.
Opposition
Whip. (Last speaker of the debate)
Rebut,
Rebut, Rebut, Rebut, oh and sum up. You
are in pole position. You have had
almost an hour to develop your speech and this is a huge advantage.
You should not bring new information into the debate but remember that by
new information we mean new core arguments and examples. In
your rebuttal you may bring in new examples, which relate directly to the points
you are rebutting but you cannot make them the central plank on which your
entire argument is based. A lot of
last Opp speakers will deal with the Government speakers almost one at a time
and this generally works quite well and lends a structure to your speech.
© 2006, Colm Flynn. All rights reserved.
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