Learning Aim D Flashcards

1
Q

How can the public propose legislation?

A

Pressure groups such as unions or charities
petitions
local MP surgeries

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2
Q

How many signatures does a petition need before must be debated in parliament?

A

100,000

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3
Q

What are the four main types of bills

A

Private bills
Public bills
Private member bills
Hybrid bills

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4
Q

What is a green paper?

A

consultation documents with the aim of allowing people inside and outside parliament to give feedback on legislation and policy

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5
Q

What is a white paper?

A

Policy documents that contain plans for a future legislation

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6
Q

What are the steps a bill must go through to become a law

A

First reading
second reading
committee stage
report stage
third reading
then to the next house
consideration of amendments
royal assent

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7
Q

What is the first reading?

A

When a proposed bills title and general points are read out in parliament

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8
Q

What is the second reading?

A

the general points of a bill are debated

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9
Q

What is the committee stage?

A

an in depth review of every clause in the bill where sections can be added, removed or amended

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10
Q

What is the report stage?

A

Another review of the bill in which further amendments can be made

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11
Q

What is the third reading?

A

a final reading and debate over the bill in its final stage

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12
Q

What is the consideration of amendments?

A

Both houses must agree on any amendments made, if they do not then it will go back and forth in what’s called ping ponging until a verdict is reached

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13
Q

What is royal assent?

A

When the king approves a bill

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14
Q

What happens when a bill is passed?

A

it becomes an act of parliament however, it will not immediately become a law as their is a grace period typically of two months

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15
Q

What are some impacts of government policy on the public services?

A

civilianization
human rights act
equality act
declarations of war
use of technology
increasing use of reserve forces
target setting

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16
Q

What is a manifesto?

A

A document that sets out a political parties agenda for new policies and laws

17
Q

How can the services respond to government policy?

A

Some services can go on strike such as the fire service and NHS
However, the majority of protective services cannot strike

18
Q

How can the public respond to government policy?

A

civil disobedience
demonstrations
meetings that require police attendance
picketing
sit ins
petitions

19
Q

Who can propose legislation?

A

The government
individual MPs or lords
private individuals or organisations