用戶:Politics Notes on the UK Parliament
Introduction 編輯
The UK has a bicameral legislature.
Bicameral: a parliament with two chambers
The UK Parliament is composed of:
- the House of Lords (the upper chamber)
- the House of Commons (the lower chamber)
In addition, the monarch retains a formal and ceremonial role in parliament
Commons: structure and members 編輯
A democratically elected chamber of 650 MPs
each MP is elected in a single-member constituency by the FPTP electoral system
the number of MPS is not fixed and can change following reviews od parliamentary constituencies
Frontbenchers: Ministers and shadow ministers
Backbenchers: MPs with no ministerial or shadow ministerial posts
Parliamentary Privilege 編輯
The legal immunity enjoyed by members of parliament, particularly their right to free speech in parliament.
Freedom of Speech: Members of both houses are free to raise any issue in parliament without fear of prosecution.
MPs have revealed information that is subject to court injunctions
Exclusive Cognisance: The right of each house to regulate its own internal affairs without interference from outside bodies
Key Office Holders 編輯
Whips
- a) A party official responsible for ensuring that MPs turn up to parliamentary votes and follow party instructions on how to vote;
- b) An instruction to vote that is issued to MPs by political parties
Whips (a) have 3 main roles:
- Ensuring that MPs attend parliamentary divisions (votes) and approving the absence of MPs when their vote will not be required
- Issuing instructions on how MPs should vote
- Enforcing discipline within the parliamentary party
Speaker of the Commons
presides over debates in the chamber
selecting MPs to speal
maintain order
may temporarily suspend MPs who break parliamentary rules
elected by MPs in a secret ballot
must stand down from the post at a general election but is normally re-elected at the start of the next parliament
once chosen, the speaker gives up their party affiliation and is non-partisan
the speaker does not vote unless there is a tie
in which case they do not use it to deliver a final decision
Lords: Structure and Members 編輯
Peer: a member of the House of Lords
chaired by the Lord Speaker
who is elected by peers and is politically neutral
The House of Lords has three different categories of members:
- hereditary peers
- life peers
- lords spiritual (2 archbishops, 24 senior bishops)
Hereditary Peers 編輯
before 1999, the Lords had more than 750 hereditary peers
HoL Act 1999 ended the right of all but 92 hereditary peers to sit and vote in the Lords
when one dies or resigns, a by-election is held in which peers from the same group choose a replacement from a register of hereditary peers
by Sep 2021, 43 by-elections had been held
Life Peers 編輯
Life Peerages Act 1958 gave the PM the right to appoint members to the Lords for life
their tile and right to sit in the Lords cannot be inherited
since the removal of most hereditary peers, life peers are the largest category of members of the upper house
The removal of most hereditary peers was intended to be the first step towards wider reform of the Lords, but reform has stalled as MPs and peers have been unable to agree on whether a reformed upper chamber should be wholly appointed, partially elected or wholly elected
Comparative powers of the Commons and the Lords 編輯
The commons has been the dominant chamber for over a century. It has a bumber of exclusive powers
- the right to insist on legislation: in cases of conflict over legislation, the lords should ultimately give way to the commons
- Financial privilege: the lords cannot delay or amend money bills
- the power to dismiss the executive: if the government is defeated on a motion of no confidence, it must resign
the primacy of the commons is underpinned in legislation, notably the Parliament Acts of 1911 and 1949, and in constitutional conventions
the main conventions covering the relationship between the two chambers are:
- the Salisbury Convention: Bills implementing manifesto commitments are not opposed by the Lords.
- Reasonable time: the Lords should consider government business within a reasonable time
- Secondary Legislation: the Lords does not usually object to secondary legislation
The Parliament Act 編輯
the Lords does not have a veto iver legislation approved by the Commons
it can only delay most bills passed by the Commons for up to 1 year. Prior to 1911 it could block bills passed by the commons indefinitely
the Parliament Act 1911 restricted this veto power to 2 parliamentary sessions, which was subsequently reduced to 1 by the parliament act 1949
Confidence and Supply 編輯
the government requires the confidence and supply of the commons to remain in office
supply refers to the authorisation of government spending by the commons.
traditionally, a government defeated on a key supply bill is expected to resign.
the commons can remove the government by defeating irtin a motion of no confidence or a confidence motion
Motion of no confidence: a parliamentary censure motion initiated by the opposition which, if passed, requires the resignation of the governent
Confidence motion: a motion of confidence in the government. It may be initiated by the government as a threat of dissolution, or used to approve the formation of a new government
Functions of Parliament 編輯
Legislation 編輯
Bill: is a proposal for a new law, or change to a current law.
Act of Parliament: A law passed by parliament
Public Bill: A bill concerning a general issue of public policy, introduced by a government minister
The government may produce a consultative Green Paper setting out options, and/or
a White Paper explaining the objectives of government polcy
First Reading: formal presentation of the title of the bill on the floor of