UK Constitution Flashcards
Purpose of a constitution
The purpose of a constitution is to set out the powers and responsibilities of the different institutions of government, and to describe the relationships between these institutions and between the government and the citizens.
How did the UK constitution originate vs the US constitution?
The UK constitution is different from those of most of its neighbours because, for a long period, the country has not undergone a fundamental, transforming change, such as a revolution or a military defeat followed by occupation by a foreign power. Instead the political system of the UK has evolved gradually and, at least since the civil wars of the 17th century, without dramatic breaks in continuity. This contrasts, for example, with the United States, whose constitution dates from 1787 after the American people had established their independence from Britain and their leaders had decided how they wanted to govern themselves.
Overview of history of UK Constitution
Elements of the UK constitution can be traced back more than a thousand years. In the Middle Ages, power was concentrated in the hands of the monarch. However, in order to govern the country, the Crown required the co-operation of a class of landowning nobility, who gradually gained more rights over time. From the 13th century the nobles and other interest groups gained representation in an assembly - parliament - that met to advise the monarch, pass laws and give consent to taxation. Parliament consisted of an upper house, made up of the hereditary aristocta and senior members of the church (the House of Lords), and an elected House of Commons, which initially consisted of representatives of the landed gentry and prosperous merchants.
The Commons increasingly took on a representative function, and expected to be heard when it presented grievances to the monarch.
The balance of power between the Crown and parliament was adjusted in favour of the latter as a result of the civil wars of the mid-17th century. By the 19th century, Britain was governed by a constitutional monarch who acted on the advice of ministers. The ministers were accountable to parliament as the country’s supreme law-making body. Voting rights were progressively extended to the middle- and working-classes, creating a more democratic society by the early 20th century and ending the monopoly of power traditionally enjoyed by the aristocratic elite. Within parliament this was reflected in the emergence of the elected House of Commons as the more powerful of the two chambers.
In parallel with these developments, it was recognised from the 17th century that the judiciary should be independent of political influence and control. Judges became increasingly important through their role in upholding the rule of law - the idea that no body, including the government, should be above the law.
4 overall effects of landmark constitutional documents
• reduce the powers of the monarchy, and to extend those of parliament •increase the rients and freedoms of the ordinary citizen
• draw together the component parts of the United Kingdom
• increase the power of the elected House of Commons at the expense of the unelected House of Lords
•define the UK’s relationship with the institutions that later evolved into the European Union.
List of landmark documents (6) pre 1997
The Magna Carta 1215
The Bill of Rights 1689
The Act of Settlement 1701
The Acts of Union 1707
The Parliament Acts 1911,1949
The European Communities Act 1972
Significance of Magna Carta
The Magna Carta stated the principle that no one should be deprived of liberty or property without due process of law.
Many clauses have been repealed or superseded by later legislation. Remains a powerful symbol of English liberties.
Bill of Rights Significance
The Bill of Rights included provisions for:
• regular parliaments
• free elections
• freedom of speech within parliament
The Act of Settlement significance
The act established the right of parliament to determine the line of succession to the throne.
The Acts of Union significance
United England and Scotland, which had had a shared monarch since 1603 but had retained two separate parliaments.
Both countries were now placed under one parliament based in Westminster.
This was the basis of the United Kingdom until Tony Blair’s New Labour government passed legislation to set up a Scottish parliament once again in 1997.
Significance of the Parliament Acts
1911 act affirmed that the Lords could not delay money bills. For non-financial bills, the power of veto was replaced with a two-year delaying power.
The 1949 act reduced this delaying period to one year.
Significance of European Communities Act
Passed by Edward Heath’s Conservative government, the act took Britain into the European Economic Community, the forerunner of the European Union (EU).
Repealed by Brexit.
Definition of codified
A constitution in which laws and practices are set out in a single document.
Definition of entrenched
A constitution protected by a higher court and requiring special procedures to amend it.
Definition of unitary
A political system where all legal sovereienty is contained in a single place.
Which three aspects make the UK condition unique? (3)
•It is uncodified
•It is unentrenched
•It is unitary
Explain UK constitution is uncodified
there is no single legal code or document in which its key principles are gathered together. Instead, it is derived from a number of sources, some written down, while others are unwritten
Explain UK constitution is unentrenched
it can be altered relatively easily, by a simple majority vote in parliament. It therefore has a higher degree of flexibility than a codified constitution. There is no special les procedure for amending the UK constitution. In the UK all laws have equal status. By contrast codified constitution has a higher status than ordinary laws and some or all of its provisions said to be entrenched. For example, an amendment to the United States constitution requires the support of two-thirds of Congress and three-quarters of the states to become law.
Explain UK constitution is unitary and has this changed?
sovereignty (or ultimate authority) has traditionally been located at the centre. with the component parts of the country - England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland all essentially run from London and treated in a similar way. This has been modified since the introduction of devolution in the late 1990s.
Some would now use the term union state to describe the UK since, although the centre remains strong, the individual sub-national units are governed in different ways. The distribution of power between the central and regional governments of the UK can still be altered by act of parliament.
This is an important difference with a federal constitution like that of Germany or the USA
In 1885 A. V. Dicey identified two key principles of the constitution?
•Parliamentary sovereignty
•The rule of law
In which three ways is parliament sovereign?
•Legislation passed by parliament cannot be struck down by a higher body, such as a constitutional court. The UK’s Supreme Court can interpret but not overturn acts of parliament.
•No parliament can bind its successor.
Parliament has the right to amend or repeal any acts passed by previous
parliaments. For example, in 2003 parliament repealed Section 28 of the
1988 Local Government Act, which had
made it illegal for local authorities and schools intentionally to promoto homosexuality.
•Parliament can make a law on
any subiect. For example the major social changes of the mid-1960s - legalising abortion and homosexuality making divorce easier to access and abolishing the death penalty depended on the passing of acts of parliament.
Meaning of parliamentary sovereignty
The principle that parliament can make, amend or unmake any law, and cannot bind its successors or be bound by its predecessors.
Meaning of the rule of law
The principle that all people and bodies, including government, must follow the law and can be held to account if they do not.
Under the rule of law:
•everyone is entitled to a fair trial and no one should be imprisoned without due legal process
•all citizens must obey the law and are equal under it
•public officials are not above the law and they can be held to account by the courts
•the judiciary must be independent of political interference.
Significance of the rule of law according to Dicey
The other major principle identified by Dicey was the rule of law. Dicey argued that this was the main way in which the rights and liberties of citizens are protected. Respect for the rule of law is Important because it acts as a check on parliamentary sovereignty, which in theory might take away people’s liberties.
What is statute law and examples?
The body of law passed by parliament. Not all laws are constitutional, only those that affect the nature of the political system and citizens rights.
It is the most important source as it is underpinned by the concept of parliamentary sovereignty.
E.g. The 1998 Scotland Act, Government of Wales Act and Northern Ireland Act created devolved legislative bodies, which were given some powers previously held by Westminster.
What is common law and examples?
Legal principles laid down by judges in their rulings in court cases, which provide precedents for later judgments.
Important in cases where it is not clear how statute law should be applied in practice.
E.g. The presumption that a person
accused of a crime is innocent until proven guilty. The medieval concept of habeas corpus (a Latin phrase meaning literally ‘you may have the body’) is a common-law protection against unlawful imprisonment, which was converted into a statute in 1679.
What are conventions and examples?
Customs and practices that do not have legal force, but which have been broadly accepted over time.
Can be challenged and changed by an act of parliament.
E.g. The principle, established since the 2003 Iraq War and subsequent parliamentary votes, that except in an emergency, the government will not order military action without prior parliamentary approval.
Wider conventions e.g. ministers should be in commons but charged with Cameron, this can be got around and made clear if necessary
Example of convention being broken
Ministers should be in commons but charged with Cameron, this can be got around and made clear if necessary.
What are authoritative works and examples?
Textbooks that explain the working of the political system.
A useful guide, but lacking legal
standing.
Erskine May’s Parliamentary Practice, first published in 1844 and regularly updated, explains the rules of parliamentary life.
Cabinet Manual, Gus O’Donnell 2010
What are treaties and example?
Formal agreements with other countries, usually ratified by parliament.
Arguably the most important treaty was Maastricht (1992), which transformed the European Community into the European Union.
Why was there pressure for constitutional reform in the 1990s?
• Demands for modernisation: Tony Blair’s New Labour Party was sympathetic to the idea of constitutional reform as part of its plan to modernise British institutions. Old Labour had adopted some political reforms, such as extending the vote to 18 year olds in 1969 and attempting to pass devolution for Scotland and Wales in 1979. However, it had been primarily
concerned with economic and social issues. New Labour was more open to demands from
pressure groups such as Charter 88 (later renamed Unlock Democracy), who wanted more open democracy and stronger guarantees of citizens’ rights. Before winning a large independent majority in the 1997 election, Blair expected that he might need support from the Liberal Democrats, who were also committed to constitutional change - particularly reform of the first-past-the post electoral system
•The experience of Conservative rule, 1978-97: The Conservative governments had refused to undertake constitutional reforms. This had helped to build up pressure for change, especially in Scotland, where the population felt ignored by a distant government in London. Scottish opinion rejected a number of Conservative policies. For example, the unpopular poll tax (a controversial way of financing local government) had been trialled there in 1989 before its introduction in England and Wales. Accusations of corruption or ‘sleaze’ against many parliamentarians in the 1990s also helped to create a climate of opinion where the health and integrity of traditional
institutions were questioned
Constitutional changes 1997-2010 (6)
House of Lords Reform
Electoral Reform
Devolution
The Human Rights Act
Creation of the Supreme Court + Lord Chancellor
How did Labour reform the House of Lords?
When the Labour government took office in 1997, the House of Lords was dominated by hereditary peers who owed their titles to inheritance. In what was intended as a transitional reform two years later, the government ended the right of all but 92 of these peers to sit in the Lords. House of Lords reform would reduce the influence of Labour’s opponents within the political system, as the majority of hereditary peers supported Conservative governments. The removal of most hereditary peers also gave the Lords a more ‘modern’ appearance. The maiority of its members were now life peers, who were supposed to have been appointed on grounds of merit, reflecting a wide variety of fields of activity, including politics, business, the trade union movement, the arts and the military. No political party now enjoyed a dominant position in the Lords. From 2000 a House of Lords Appointments Commission nominated a proportion of peers who were not linked with a party. However, the prime minister and other party leaders continued to make nominations on party political grounds, and no agreement was reached on making the Lords either wholly or partly elected, so it continued to lack democratic legitimacy.