“…Accordingly, the temporal utterances made in Parliament are classified in the study in accordance with their interactional status as (1) contested, (2) uncontested and (3) ratified. The broad definition of contestation adopted in this study reflected not only the general competitive nature of political semantics (Gallie, 1956; Freeden, 2003: 71) but also the specificity of conversational collaboration in deliberative settings bent on self-regulation in the absence of proscribed adversarial roles (courts) or pre-set hierarchies (doctor–patient or teacher–pupil exchanges – see Foucault, 1971: 65; Lasswell, 1971: 282; Burton, 1981: 62–64; Heath, 1984: 247; Newmeyer, 1990: 244–245; Drew and Heritage, 1992: 5–6; Linell, 2001: 83; Thornborrow, 2002: 43; Philips, 2006: 479–480; Hanks, 2006: 301; Ladegaard, 2009; Junge, 2011: 29; Raymond et al, 2019). To be sure, outright rejections and contestations of comparisons did occur in the House of Commons during the period observed; however, the need to balance competition and coordination in the process of sustaining interactional routine led the members of the House of Commons to explore various mitigation strategies (Brown and Levinson, 1978: 40; Fraser, 1980; Leach, 1983: 108; Caffi, 1999), such as modifying, questioning and otherwise qualifying temporal comparisons of their interlocutors.…”