The Role And Structure Of Parliament Flashcards
What is scrutiny of legislation?
- HoC shares power w/HoL
- All backbenchers serve on legislative committees; examine proposed legislation to see if it can be improved
- Weak aspect of HoC - rarely amend legislation with approval of gov
What is national debate?
- national issues that are more important than party politics; constitutional issues.
- eg - Article 50, Brexit negotiations
What is representation of interests?
- constituents, sections of society, cause
- Orgs such as Countryside Alliance, Age UK enjoy support of MPs
- campaign groups encourage supporters to write to MPs to further cause
- issues like sex equality, race/community, ageing, counter-extremism transcend party values
What is constituency representation?
- strength
- constituents/interests repped by MPs
- can lobby minister, raise matter in HoC, raise campaign
- can lead to conflict of interests
- individuals can approach MP for help w/disputes concerning public bodies
What is government accountability?
- most important political function
- gov cannot be accountable to ppl other than during general elections, HoC holds gov to account: PMQs, select committees/public accounts committee, HoC can refuse to pass legislation, votes of no confidence
What is legitimation?
- considered most important constitutional function
- gov makes laws, needs way of making sure it’s ‘will of the people’
- MPs elected vote on legislation, making law-making process more legitimate
What is legislating?
- process of passing laws
- backbenchers can develop own legislation -> private members’ bills
- MP can present bill, but likely unsuccessful -> parliament/its members do not make laws
What is a public bill?
- law that affects general public -> can be gov bill or introduced by minister
- proposed changes to law as applied to general population
- most common
- Education and Adoption Bill 2015
How is HoC structured?
- wholly elected; made up of MPs; 650 seats - 1 constituency = 1MP
- some MPs hold ministerial positions (executive)
- electoral commission - oversight of constituency size/population change
How is HoL structured?
- more undemocratic
- life peers/hereditary peers (92) - Lords Temporal
- Before CRA 2005 - Law Lords
- Lord Spiritual - religion affiliated figures (26)
- more independents/cross bench peers
- can be appointed/chosen on individual merit (PM nom)
- specialists in certain areas, not politicians
What is the role of Public Bill Committees?
- set up by HoC to scrutinise details of particular bills in committee stage; temporary; take place in public bar one brief session
- not very effective - exist/do scrutinise and take/hear evidence; don’t scrutinise well - gov has majority, lack the continuity of other permanent committees
What is the role of select committees?
- permanent/active bodies who hold gov accountable and make sure they are performing duties properly; every gov department is shadowed by one
- more effective - chaired by opposition, less whip power, access to restricted docs, gov must respond; only advisory (gov accepts 40% of recommendations), governing party still has majority
What is the role of Lords Committees?
- investigates public policy, proposed laws, gov activity; six main ones (EU Committee, Science and technology committee, communications committee, constitution committee, economic affairs committee, international relations committee), also ad hoc (Covid-19 committee)
- not effective; may perform the scrutiny well due to experts, but has fundamentally less power/legitimation and can only recommend
What are the four potential types of opposition?
- Official Opposition
- Other opposition parties
- Intra-party - opponents within governing party
- Intra-party - can be disagreements between different parties in gov during coalition
What is the purpose of opposition?
- offer scrutiny/potential checks on gov; must also offer viable/practical alternative solutions
How can opposition challenge gov?
- Leader of OO has special privileges in debates/HoC business; opening + 5 more questions at PMQs; only MP allowed to respond; first right to reply to major statements by PM
- 20 opposition days - choose topic for debate
- member of shadow cabinet can also ask questions of ministers/propose alternative policies
- select committees often produce reports critical of gov policies/implementation
What factors affect the power of opposition?
- parliamentary arithmetic - gov w/small majority enables more power for opposition; greater chance to defeat gov on legislative plans
- context - in times of national emergency; opposition parties had to be seen as largely supportive of gov when national unity main priority
What are the strength and weaknesses of opposition?
S - OO gets extra funding/privileges; opposition can position itself as alternative gov; can check/even change gov policy; backbench rebels
W - gov possesses greater resources, control of parliamentary businesses, chooses topic for most debates; much depends on quality of shadow cabinet ministers/how well they perform; successes rare; successful rebellions rare
How welll does parliament perform its representative role?
Well - all parts of UK repped through 650 constituencies of roughly equal size; wide range of parties in HoC; HoC becoming more diverse - 263 women elected in 2024, 6% MPs elected in 2019 opening identified as LGBTQ+
Not Well - not all constituencies equal in population size; FPTP favours two largest parties/regionally concentrated ones; women still underrepresented (1/2 electorate, 40% MPs in 2024)
What is the Burkean/trustee theory?
- elected officials should take into account constituents’ views, while employing personal judgement; constituents entrust their elected officials to rep them
What is the delegate theory?
- states that elected officials are mouthpieces for constituents
What is the mandate theory?
- advocates that MPs primarily there to carry out/rep their party’s policies/manifesto
What is secondary legislation?
- many laws derived from SIs (provisions within primary legislation to introduce new clauses/changes)
- Eg Misuse of Drugs Act 1971 - 2024 Order amended classification.
What are ballot bills?
- form of private member bill; have best change of become law/being properly debated
- ballot w/20 names drawn out
- eg Pet Abduction Act 2024.