Parlimentary Reform/ Sovereignty Flashcards
House of Lords Act 1999?
Attempted to abolish the majority of hereditary peers and make the electoral process for life peers more meritocratic and representative of a wider range of fields
Why is House of Lords act 1999 good ?
Increased scope of people represented in the HoL, successfully shifting the Lords away from being dominated by male white tories
This strengthens democracy and increases integrity of HoL and their right to their powers
How much did the Conservative party balance decrease between 99 and 2016 as a result of House of Lords reform
40% —-> 31%
Fixed term parliament act 2011?
Fixes the date of general elections at exactly five years after the previous election - unless there is a vote of no confidence or 2/3 of MPs agree
Why is fixed term parliament act 2011 good?
Prevents a manipulation of the date by the ruling party which gives all parties a more even chance in elections
How many hereditary peers remain in the HoL and why?
92
Stage 2 of labours plans never materialised
Why did first past the post system not been reformed?
Low AV referendum turn out (contrary to urges of Lib Dems) giving an unfair advantage to the two main parties
Why is it also bad that the Lords are unelected?
They are unelected legislators meaning the uks legislative branch is not completely democratic… perhaps leading to a representative deficit and less effective checks and balances
How do we know European Union reforms important?
We called a referendum earlier this year : our involvement in the eu effects our constitution so much that the whole country was called to answer the question of leaving it
What is doctrine of direct effect?
Established that EU laws do not require the consent of parliament which mean the EU can impose something that uk wholeheartedly oppose
What is doctrine of supremacy?
Reduces uk sovereignty meaning that the eu law has the status to replace any conflicting uk law
Examples of doctrine of supremacy
Factortame case (1990) resulting in the striking down of the merchant shipping act 1988£ by the EUropean Supreme Court as the Euro found it discriminatory unfair and a breach of community law
Why do these doctrines reduce parliamentary sovereignty?
(Ignoring parliaments power to invoke article 50)
Source of uk constitution
Higher that statue
Treaties (Lisbon, nice and Amsterdam) mean Britain isn’t control of who can reform our constitution demonstrating the ultimate significance of the Eu reforms to our constitution
Signal of eu laws significance?
EU law is now a source of the UK’s constitution
Treaties info ?
Amsterdam treaty (1997) The nice treaty (2002) Lisbon treaty (2009)... amended in 2011 forced member states in severe financial crisis (e.g. Greece) to declare themselves insolvent and to forfeit their eu council voting rights