8.1 - The Impact of the Supreme Court on Legislative and Policy-Making Processes Flashcards
What is the Supreme Court?
The highest court of appeal in the UK.
How many people are in the Supreme Court?
12.
Who does the judiciary represent?
The courts and judges.
Why are judgements reached in senior courts more important?
They can set legal precedents that can be referred to in subsequent cases.
Who works out how laws interact in the real world?
Parliament makes the laws.
The judges decide how they actually work in the real world.
Why are the judiciary arguably more important for legislation than Acts of Parliament?
‘Whoever hath the absolute authority to interpret any written or spoken laws, it is he who is truly the lawgiver and not the person who first wrote or spake them’.
What provides the basis for English Common Law?
How senior judges interpret Acts of Parliament and resolve cases creates legal precedent.
Why are decisions of the supreme court supremely (haha) important?
The decisions it reaches must be followed in future cases.
What used to be the highest court of appeal prior to the Supreme Court?
The Lords.
Which Lords acted as the highest court of appeal?
The 12 Law Lords in the Appellate Committee.
Why were the Lords split from the judiciary?
Having the Lords also act as as the highest court of appeal breached the principle of the ‘separation of powers’.
Who split the Lords from the Judiciary?
Blair.
When did Blair split the Lords from the Judiciary?
The Constitutional Reform Act 2005.
What replaced the Appellate Committee?
The Supreme Court.
Why is the supreme court better than the previous appellate committee?
- Separates powers.
- More open to public scrutiny.
How far does the jurisdiction of the supreme court reach?
Across the whole UK and is the highest court of appeal for all civil cases.
Final court of appeal in England, Wales and Northern Ireland. In Scotland, the High Court of the Justiciary fulfils this role.