Question 1
Question
Parliament is sovereign, and so is [blank_start]omnicompetent[blank_end]
Question 2
Question
Threats to Parliamentary Sovereignty:
1) [blank_start]1973[blank_end], EU laws
2) [blank_start]Political[blank_end] sovereignty given to government in recent decades
3) Referendums lead to [blank_start]semi-entrenchment[blank_end]
4) [blank_start]ECHR[blank_end] is treated as supreme despite not being binding on Parliament
5) Devolution is [blank_start]semi-entrenched[blank_end]
Answer
-
1973
-
1956
-
1965
-
Practical
-
Legal
-
Political
-
semi-entrenchment
-
entrenchment
-
democratic deficit
-
Executive
-
ECHR
-
semi-entrenched
-
entrenched
Question 3
Question
The current speaker of the House of Commons is [blank_start]John Bercow[blank_end]
Question 4
Question
House of Commons Functions
Answer
-
Legitimisation
-
Legislating
-
Delaying
-
Scrutinising secondary legislation
-
Holding government to account
-
Scrutiny of legislation by Public Bill Committees/legislative committees
-
Representing constituencies
-
National debates
Question 5
Question
House of Lords Functions
Question 6
Question
Types of Bills:
[blank_start]Private Bills[blank_end] - proposed by organisations (local authority, church) and considered by committees
[blank_start]Private Members' Bills[blank_end] - proposed by individual or groups of MPs/peers (rarely pass, bring issue to Parliament's attention)
[blank_start]Public Bills[blank_end] - proposed by government and expected to be passed quickly
Answer
-
Private Bills
-
Private Members' Bills
-
Public Bills
Question 7
Question
1: [blank_start]Queen's Speech[blank_end]
2: [blank_start]First Reading[blank_end]- Bill announced
3: [blank_start]Second Reading[blank_end]- MPs debate bill, vote
4: [blank_start]Committee Stage[blank_end]- Sent to relevant Public Bill Committee (government majority in committee)
5: [blank_start]Report Stage[blank_end]- Commons as a whole approve changes
6: [blank_start]Transfer[blank_end]- 'Ping Pong', the Bill is passed to HoL for same process
7: [blank_start]Royal Assent[blank_end]
Answer
-
Queen's Speech
-
First Reading
-
Second Reading
-
Committee Stage
-
Report Stage
-
Transfer
-
Royal Assent
Question 8
Question
[blank_start]Parliamentary Privilege[blank_end] - MPs/peers cannot be prosecuted or sued for libel or slander for any actions which have taken place within Westminster
Answer
-
Parliamentary Immunity
-
Parliamentary Privilege
-
MP Impunity
Question 9
Question
Expenses scandal in [blank_start]2009[blank_end]
Question 10
Question
Mhairi Black is an example of a [blank_start]proactive[blank_end] MP
Answer
-
proactive backbench
-
front bench
-
Party Whip
Question 11
Question
Lord Adonis: [blank_start]Labour[blank_end], [blank_start]education[blank_end] expert
Lord Dannatt: [blank_start]Crossbencher[blank_end], [blank_start]military[blank_end] expert
Answer
-
Conservative
-
Labour
-
Crossbencher
-
education
-
military
-
foreign aid
-
education
-
military
-
foreign aid
-
Conservative
-
Labour
-
Crossbencher
Question 12
Question
6 arguments that the UK Parliament is effective
Answer
-
House of Lords is unaccountable
-
Increasing use of select committees
-
Parliament provides legitimacy
-
Party whips mean less opposition within parties
-
House of Lords has experts in many fields
-
No representation in House of Lords
-
Both houses check government power (particularly if Government is weak)
-
When there is a clash between party and interest group loyalty party loyalty usually wins out
-
Constituency representation
-
Many MPs support external causes
Question 13
Question
6 arguments that the UK Parliament is ineffective
Answer
-
MPs still lack expertise, knowledge, research back up and time to investigate
-
Increasing use of select committees
-
Parliament provides legitimacy
-
When there is a clash between party and interest group loyalty party loyalty usually wins out
-
No representation in House of Lords
-
Party whips mean less opposition within parties
-
House of Lords is unaccountable
-
Constituency representation
-
Legislative committees are whipped to ineffectiveness
-
Both houses check government power (particularly if Government is weak)
Question 14
Question
Opposition Roles:
[blank_start]Ceremonial function[blank_end] at occasions (e.g. visits by foreign heads of state)
To be ready to [blank_start]assume government[blank_end] if they win an election
[blank_start]Defend interests[blank_end] of sections of society that are ignored
[blank_start]Present alternatives to[blank_end] government policy
[blank_start]Highlight[blank_end] government shortcoming
[blank_start]Force government to[blank_end] explain and justify its policies
Answer
-
Ceremonial function
-
assume government
-
Defend interests
-
Present alternatives to
-
Highlight
-
Force government to
Question 15
Question
[blank_start]Public Accounts Committee[blank_end] - Examines public finances, chaired by Opposition member
[blank_start]Departmental Select Committee[blank_end] - 19 total, investigate departments. Governing party has majority in each
[blank_start]Liaison Committee[blank_end] - Calls the Prime Minister to account (appears before them twice a year)
[blank_start]Backbench Business Committee[blank_end] - Set up by Wright Reforms in 2010, 2011 investigated Hillsborough
Answer
-
Public Accounts Committee
-
Departmental Select Committee
-
Liaison Committee
-
Backbench Business Committee