2.3-the legislative process Flashcards

1
Q

what is the difference between public and private bills?

A
  • public bills affect the whole population
  • private bills only apply to a certain group and give powers that are beyond or in conflict with general law
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2
Q

what is the difference between government bills and private members bills?

A
  • government bills are introduced by government and seek to fill the governments manifesto commitements
  • private members bills are introduced by back benchers
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3
Q

what is a key example of a succesfull private members bill?

A

the abortion act 1967 (legalised abortion)

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4
Q

why are private members bills often unsuccesfull?

A
  • government controls most of the legislative angenda
  • they are very suseptable to filibustering as there is very little time allocated to them
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5
Q

how can private members bills be introduced?

A
  • ballot: mps enter a ballot at the start of the parliamentary session. 20 Mps are chosen and can propose their bill on one of the 13 fridays in the parliamentary session
  • 10 minute bills: allow mps to make a case for a bill lasting up to 10 mins
  • presentation: mps introduce a PMB but do not speak to support it.
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6
Q

what happens to a bill before it enters the HOC?

A
  • can start with a green paper (a consultation)
  • then turned into a white paper (a firm proposal)
  • committees are allowed to comment
  • the bill is drafted
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7
Q

what stages does a bill go through before it enters the lords?

A
  • first reading: the bill is formally introduced by a minister
  • second reading: a minister defends the bill, takes questions, at this stage the bill may be contested
  • if the bill is contested their is a vote, which government generally wins
  • committee stage: the bill is sent to a public bill committee (reflect the composition of the house)
  • report stage: mps can propose and vote on any ammendments
  • third reading: the bill is voted on
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8
Q

how is the process of a bill in the lords different to that of the commons?

A
  • the committee stage is normally done in the chamber
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9
Q

what is the role of the lords in the legislative process?

A
  • provides technical ammedments, only opposes a bill when it is truly justifies
  • if the lords ammendements are rejected by the commons the lords generally accepts it lack of legitimacy and stands down
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10
Q

give an example of when the lords back down after the commons rejected its ammendements?

A
  • the 2020 EU withdraal act was sent back to the commons with 5 ammendments
  • one ammendments included the guarentee of the continuance of the ERASMUS scheme
  • the commons rejected all 5 and the lords backed down
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11
Q

what is parliamentary ping pong?

A
  • when a bill goes back and forth between the houses before an agreement is made?
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12
Q

give an example of when parliamentary ping pong took place.

A
  • the 2021 trade act
  • the lords tried to introduce an ammendment that trade deals could not be agreed with countries who had committed genocide
  • the bill went back and forth 6 times until the lords backed down
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13
Q

what is the salisbury convention?

A
  • the house of lords should not vote down a bill that attempts to fulfill the governments manifesto
  • they can introduce technical ammendements but not ‘wrecking ammendments that change the intention’
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14
Q

what limits do the 1911 and 1949 parliament acts put on the lords?

A
  • 1911: removed the power to delay financial bills, veto power way replaced with the power to delay for 2 years
  • 1949: reduced the power to delay to 1 year
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15
Q

what is secondary legislation?

A

allows ministers to introduce statutory instruments to make further changes witin the scope of the law

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16
Q

give an example of the use of statutory instruments? 2 examples

A
  • statutory instruments are used to ban new substances by adding them to a list under the misuse of drugs act 1971
  • in 2016 the government bolished maintainence grants for uni students
17
Q

how has the legislative scrutiny of the commons decreased in recent years?

A
  • mps spend less time in the chamber
  • the use of oral evidence in the committee stage has fallen
  • very few bills recieve pre-legislative scrutiny (when they are green/white papers)
  • the government often rushes bills through parliament
18
Q

give evidence to show that mps spend less time in the chamber than peers.

A
  • betwen 2006-2021 on average Mps spend 24% of time in the chamber
  • while peers spent on average 44%
19
Q

contrast 2 pieces of legislation to show that government has been rushing legislation through the commons.

A
  • the recent illiegal immigration bill was given just 2 days in the committee of the whole house
  • the 2016 immigration act had 15 committee sessions and recieved 55 written pieces of evidence
20
Q

how long can committe reports take?

A
  • up to 4 months
21
Q

what % of bills passed recieve pre- legislative scrutiny?

A

10%

22
Q

what % of bills passed were subject to atleast 1 oral evidence session?

A

27%

23
Q

how does the government control the legislative timetable? (2)

A

standing order 14
- state sthat govt business takes precedence

programme motion
- the government sets the ammount of time given to each stage

24
Q

what is the process of a private members bill?

A
  • mps enter a ballot
  • 20 mps are chosen
  • mps are able to propose a bill on one of the 13 fridays