1.3 Parliament Flashcards

1
Q

does parliament remain sovereign?

A
  1. increase in number of referendums and role of the EU
  2. significance of devolution
  3. the supreme court and judicial lawfare
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2
Q

is parliament effective in its representative function?

A
  1. descriptive representation (make up of parliament)
  2. whips vs constituents (ultimately the trustee model over the delegate)
  3. alternative forms of representation) private members bills and e-petitions
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3
Q

is parliament effective in its legislative function?

A
  1. the importance of a parliementary majority
  2. the role of scrutiny
  3. the role of the House of Lords (has it become more defiant)
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4
Q

does the commons need reform?

A
  1. paragraph on past reforms
  2. the effectiveness of representation
  3. the effectiveness of its legislative function
  4. the effectiveness of its scrutiny function
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5
Q

has devolution been successful?

A

yes
- answered demands for greater autonomy
- policy divergences reflect different needs and interests
- it has delivered peace in NI after 30 years of instability

no:
- caused policy divergences
- fragile in NI
- there are unequal devolved powers
- it has not reduced demands for separation

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6
Q

should the UK become a federal state?

A

yes:
- would resolve anomalies like the West Lothian question (devolution examples)
- the house of lords coul become a chamber representing the component nations of the UK or be abolished making parliament more democratic (Lords reforms examples)
- the status of Westminster parliament would be clarified (parliamentary sovereignty examples)

no:
- federalism works best in states where there is not a dominant nation
- an english parliament would rival the Westminster one and cause tensions
- there is little popular demand for it, devolution is still the preferred consitutional position

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7
Q

should there be devolution to English regions?

A

yes:
- it would enhance democracy and regional assemblies would take over from unelected quangos
- it would address the differing interests of the English regions
- regional assemblies could act as a catalyst for economic and cultural regeneration (failure of levelling up)

no:
- local government in England is already sufficient
- there is little public support for a regional government

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8
Q

should the constitution be codified?

A
  • it lacks clarity and relies too much on conventions BUT it allows flexibility
  • human rights are not entrenched BUT it would give too much power to unelected judges
  • it would set the necessary limits on state power BUT there are already sufficient limitations
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9
Q

different types of scrutiny and accountability in parliament?

A
  1. backbench MPs
  2. parliamentary questions
  3. select committees
  4. the opposition
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10
Q

what are the roles of the Prime Minister

A
  1. patronage powers
  2. authority within cabinet
  3. public standing
  4. policy making input
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11
Q

what are checks on the Prime Ministers power?

A

parliament:
- the size of the governments majority
- the role of backbench MPs
- the role of ministers
- the role of scrutiny

the supreme court:
- the significance of the creation of the SC
- the impact of the ECHR in UK courts
- increased judicial activity against the executive
- limits to SC power

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12
Q

has the Prime Minister become more Presidential?

A
  1. they face significantly more attention than in the past and are expected to shape policy agenda
  2. they are moving away from their cabinet/ministers
  3. they still require the support of their party, ministers and backbench MPs
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13
Q

ministerial responsibility

A

individual:
- mistakes made within departments
- policy failure
- personal misconduct

collective:
- features of collective responsibility (binding decisions, secrecy, confidence vote)
- exceptions to collective responsibility (temporary suspension during referendums, coalitions, free votes)

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14
Q

does the supreme court remain independent and neutral?

A

neutrality:
- efforts taken to ensure judicial neutrality
- lack of diversity in the Supreme Court
- the result of unconscious bias

independence:
- politicisation as the court independence from political interference and/or control
- politicisation as the supreme court trying to play a more active role in politics

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15
Q

is there effective UK rights protection?

A

the supreme court:
- the role of new labour
- increase interference from the SC over rights

parliament:
- historic rights protection
- successes today
- setbacks

collective v individual:
- parliament trying to protect collective, the supreme court trying to protect individual
- how to reconcile majority rights with minority ones
- the role of COVID

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