unit 4 aos 1 Flashcards
define constitution
a set of rules that establishes the nature, functions and limits of government. its role is to determine the powers and duties of government.
features of the constitution
establishes commonwealth parliament & outlines its structure, sets out state matters, establishes the high court of Aus and gives it powers to interpret the constitution, sets out law making powers held by commonwealth parliament
3 parts of commonwealth parliament
the queen (represented by governor general), the senate (upper house) and the house of representatives (lower house)
the house of representatives
lower house. 150 members that each represent an electoral division. 3 years in office. party that achieves majority of elected members becomes government. leader is the prime minister who appoints government ministers. party with 2nd highest number of votes becomes opposition. they appoint shadow ministers to keep a check on activities of corresponding government minister
role of hor in law making (4)
initiate and make laws(bills must be passed by HOR and senate), determine the government (political party with the most members in the HOR forms government), provide responsible government (opposition members examine them about ideas for law reform), represent the people (laws should reflect community values), scrutinise government administration(ensure legislation is debated and matters of public importance are discussed), act as a house of review, control government expenditure (only lower house can introduce money bills)
the senate
upper house. 76 members (12 from each state & 2 from each territory). each senator is elected by proportional representation for 6 years (half are elected every 3 years and the changeover takes place on july 1 of the relevant year)
role of the senate in law making
act as a house of review (reviewing bills passed throughout the lower house to ensure only relevant bills pass through), act as a states house (should have equal representation from each state regardless of size/population =section 7), scrutinise bills through committee process (the senate standing community for the scrutiny of bills role is to assess legislative proposals to determine what effect they have on individual rights, freedoms & rule of law), initiate & pass bills
3 parts of victorian parliament
the queen (represented by governor of victoria), legislative council (upper house), legislative assembly (lower house)
legislative assembly
lower house. vic is divided into 88 districts and 1 member represents each district remaining in office for 4 years. political party with most seats forms parliament (premier) second highest is opposition. leader of opposition appoints shadow ministers to keep check on activities of corresponding government minister
role of legislative assembly in law making
initiate and pass bills(main role), form government (party with most members), provide representative government (members represent interests of community), act as a house of review (when bills are initiated and passed by legislative council), control government expenditure(only vic house that can initiate money bills)
legislative council
upper house. vic is divided into 8 regions and 5 members are elected from each region (40) serving a 4 year fixed term.
role of legislative council
act as a house of review (scrutinise and debate initiated legislation), examine bills through committees(has a number of committees that debate proposed laws & recommend if bills should be supported), initiate and pass bills (less common)
the crowns representatives
governor general (federal) and 6 governors (1 for each state)
main roles of the crown (3)
granting royal assent, withholding royal assent, appointing executive council
granting royal assent (role of the crown)
approving bills before they become law. royal assent is given on the advice of the prime minister at commonwealth level and on the advice of the premier of vic at state level
withholding royal assent (role of the crown)
refusing to approve a bill (rare). circumstances where a governor general can withhold royal assent are listed in the constitution
appointing executive council (role of the crown)
comprises of the leader of the governmemt as well as senior ministers. role is to give advice on government matters and approve secondary legislation (rules/regulations made by government bodies such as government departments/statutory authorities)
state the divisions of law making powers (3)
residual powers, exclusive powers, concurrent powers
residual powers (division of law making)
law making powers left with the states during federation that arent listed in the aus constitution. commonwealth parliament has no authority to make laws in these areas (criminal law, road laws, public transport)
exclusive powers (division of law making)
powers that can only be exercised by commonwealth parliament. only commonwealth parliament can make laws in these areas (defence, currency, customs & border protection)