1.1 Law-making Flashcards
Name the 3-arms of UK law and their role.
LEGISLATURE – makes the law (parliament)
EXECUTIVE – enforces the law (courts)
JUDICIARY – apply and interpret the law (judges)
What is an Act of Parliament - with 3 examples.
Acts of Parliament
All Acts of Parliament start off as Bills:
Public Bills: Matters of public policy which will affect either the whole country or a large section of it – most government Bills fall into this category.
Example: Constitutional Reform Act 2005.
Private Members’ Bills: Introduced by an MP after winning a ballot.
Example: Abortion Act 1967.
Private Bills: Affects individuals or corporations only.
Example: University College London Act 1996.
Describe how a bill is formed.
1) First reading
2) Second reading
3) Committee stage
4) Report stage
5) Third reading
6) House of Lords
7) Royal Assent
First reading
Title of Bill read out, acts as notification to the HofC.
Second reading
Main debating stage where all MPs can discuss the bill, ask questions and vote on it
Committee stage
Small Group of MP’s Look at the bill in detail. Amendments are made clause by clause.
Report stage
Amendments made during Committee stage are reported to the HofC and MP’s vote on these amendments.
Third reading
Overall consideration of the bill and final vote on whether it proceeds.
House of Lords
The Bill then goes to HofL where is goes through a similar process. If the HofL alters anything it goes back to the HofC. It may go back and forth. This is known as ping-pong.
Royal Assent
The King signs-off the bill as a new law (Act of Parliament)
House of Lords Definition of parliamentary sovereignty and what are some threats to parliamentary sovereignty?
Parliamentary Sovereignty – A V Dicey – Parliament has absolute and unlimited power to make or unmake any law.
Threats to Parliamentary Sovereignty: Membership of the EU, Human Rights Act 1998, Devolution
Is there a written constitution?
No
There is no single legal document that sets out the fundamental laws of how the state works
We rely on 3 principles:
* PS - Parliamentary Supremacy
* RofL - The Rule of Law
* SofP - Separation of Powers
What do we mean by the term parliamentary sovereignty?
Sovereignty is the principle of ABSOLUTE and UNLIMITED power.
An Act of Parliament can completely overrule any custom, judicial precedent, delegated legislation or previous Act of Parliament.
What is Dicey’s theory of parliamentary sovereignty?
- Parliament is sovereign and can unmake any law on any subject without legal constraints - even if people don’t like the law the courts would still have to uphold them
- No parliament can bind another.
- No act can be challenged by a court, nor its validity questioned.
- No other arm of the state can overrule an act of parliament. BUT judicial review allows the actions of ministers (or others) to be challenged in the High Court
How does EU law erode parliamentary sovereignty?
Prior to 2016, EU law overrode any UK law however the 2016 Brexit referendum means this is not technically the case but it still does influence our laws.
HRA 1998 – Under Section 3 of the HRA, judges have to interpret every act of parliament in a way that upholds human rights.
- Under Section 4 if the law abuses human rights they have to declare it incompatible and send it back to parliament
- Incorporated ECHR into British law so cases can go to British court rather than ECHR