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17458871
Parliament of the UK
Descrição
A level Politics Mapa Mental sobre Parliament of the UK, criado por beth !! em 26-03-2019.
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Mapa Mental por
beth !!
, atualizado more than 1 year ago
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Criado por
beth !!
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Resumo de Recurso
Parliament of the UK
Composition of Parliament
Parliament made up of 2 chambers
House of Commons
650 MPs
Conservative gov to cut members to 600 by 2020
Dominant house
Power of Lords was limited in 1911+49 Parliament Acts to allow this
Directly elected every 5 years
Fixed Term Parliament Act 2011
FPTP system
Lower chamber
Includes front and back benchers
Front = Ministerial or Shadow Ministerial role
Back = MP or lord who doesn't have M or SM role
Pay and Privilege
2018 = £77,000
Paid by Independent Parliamentary Salaries Authority
Also pay MPs expenses e.g travel, staff etc
System re-examined after 2009 Expenses Scandal
Parliamentary Privilege
Freedom of Speech
Free to raise any issue without fear of prosecution
Example: MPs have revealed information subject to court injunctions
Exclusive Cognisance
Right of each house to regulate internal affairs without interference from outside bodies e.g. courts
Doesn't mean they're above law
MPs in prison or suspended from HoC for 21 days can be dismissed by voters
Recall of MPs Act 2015
ONGOING CASE: Labours Fiona Onasanya
Key Office Holders
WHIPS
Ensure MPs attend parl votes & approve absences
Instruct MPs how to vote
Enforce party discipline
Speaker
Presides over debates
Can suspend disobedient MPs
Ask MPs to be quiet or revoke remarks
Is politically impartial
Must resign from party when elected
Only votes in a tie & uses vote to further debate not make final decision
CURRENT: John Bercow
House of Lords
Around 800 members
Most members = life peers
Proposed by PM and elected by Monarch
92 hereditary peers
Was prev 750 hereditary peers
1999 Lords Reform Act removed all but 92
92 are elected but not by public
Only 15 elected by whole house, others = hereditary peers from their party and crossbench groups
Is this undemocratic?
26 senior CofE bishops
Upper chamber
Contains the Executive branch
All gov ministers incl PM are either MPs (mostly) or peers
No separation of powers
PM = part of legislature
Bicameral legislature
Role of Parliament
Legislate
Key stages in legislative process
1. First reading
2. Second reading
3. Committee Stage
4. Report Stage
5. Third reading
6. House of Lords Stage
7. Consideration of amendments
8. Royal assent
Approved by Monarch, becomes law
Hoc can accept/reject/alter amendments
Stages 1-5 repeated in Lords
Debate on house floor, no more amendments permitted
Committee amendments considered by HoC, it can accept/reject/alter
Sent to public bill committee for detailed scrutiny
Main debate
Formal intro, no debate
HoL can suspend a bill but under Parl Act 1941 it becomes law after 1yr
Majority of legislation = public bills (apply to all)
Priv bills = promoted by orgs e.g councils (only apply to specific individuals)
Gov bills = created by gov usually for manifesto promises
Priv members bills = independently introducted by backbench MPs or peers, very few become law (ALSO PUBLIC BILLS)
Scrutinise Government
PMQs
:) -Keeps PM 'on their toes'
:( - Can convey image of rowdiness and theatricals
:( - Most Q's designed to catch out opp or praise own party
:) - Allow unwelcome Q's and can expose weakness
Parliamentary Debates
:) - Allow free expression of views
:) - Televised = inform the public & improves accessibility
:( - Few minds are changed, MPs usually vote party line
:( - Many MPs use it to impress leader/further own career
Select Committees
:) - Less partisan & confrontational than debates
:) - Gov must respond to reports in 60 days
:( - Gov party always has majority on committee
:( - Govs can ignore recs, only have to respond not act
:) - Can call witnesses from outside & inside gov
:( - Witnesses can be evasive & elusive
Vote of no confidence
:) - Can bring down ineffective gov
:( - Unlikely to succeed
Scrutiny of draft legisl & vote on final bill
:) - Enables bills to be properly checked
:( - Strong party loyalty = gov bill stands little chance of failing
Theories of Representation
Trustee model
Associated with Edmund Burke
LINK: Ideologies - key conservative thinker
Electors should entrust their MP with acting in their best interest
MP listens to contituents views but is not bound by them
E.g. MPs voting with own conscience about abortion would reflect this model
Delegate model
Opposite of trustee model, condemned by Burke
MPs = mouthpieces for constituents
MPs voting against decisions that are unpopular in the constituency would reflect this model
Mandate theory
Prevalent model in Brit politics
MP = elected to carry out manifesto promises of party
Reflects fact that most votes an MP receives = due to party affiliation, not personality
Role & Influence of MPs & Peers
Both MPs and Peers can...
Vote on legislation
Sit on Parl committees
Serve in gov as minister or shadow minister
Contribute to debates & ask ministers Qs
Introduce Priv member bills
Make media appearances & give interviews
Enjoy parliamentary privilege
MPs alone can...
Undertake constituency casework
Hold regular surgeries where public can raise issues directly to them
Parliament fulfilling redress of grievance
Undertake backbench rebellions against own party
Key role in selection of party leader - Lab & Cons leaders req. set number of MP votes before wider party vote
Provide democratic legitimacy to gov
Peers alone can...
Contribute specialised insights in debates
Peers often = wide range of backgrounds e.g. arts, science etc
Revising and advising on legislation
Known as 'think again house'
Lack of mandate = can't block legisl or force its views on HoC
Maintain independence
Many peers = crossbench & unlikely to be swayed by party political decisions
Work of Committees
Public Bill Committee
Functions
Go through bills, debate & suggest amendments
Ad Hoc, only meet when bill is in committee stage
Significance
Ensure bills = properly written and fulfil aims
Opportunity for MPs, peers & interest groups to lobby & suggest change
Major changes = unlikely as gov party has majority on committee & whips choose members on each committee
Commons Select Committee
Functions
Provide general oversight of gov activity
Less party political & partisan aims for cross party collab
Sit in horseshoe form
Many chaired by opposition backbenchers
Able to select own areas of investigation & summon witnesses
Significance
Composition = all backbenchers
Committee chair elected by fellow MPs not whips
Produce reports gov must respond to in 60 days
Gov = not obliged to carry out committee recs
Reports often generate publicity in media
Lords Select Committee
Functions
Investigate specialist subjects
Currently 6 main committees; EU, science&tech, int relations etc
Significance
Often contain genuine expertise
Gov party doesn't have majority in this committee
Public Accounts Committee (HoC only)
Functions
Trad. chaired by experiences opposition backbencher
Scrutinises value for money in public spending& how well gov delivers public service
Significance
Covers wide range of policy areas
Commons Liaison Committee
Functions
Comprises chairs all all commons select committees
Chaired by independent backbencher
Chooses select committee reports for WM debate
Questions PM on aspects of public policy, usually x3 per year
Significance
Provides more measured & focused way for MPs to hold PM to account with PMQ theatrics
Coordinates roles of select committees
Has no ability to force gov or PM to change policy
How effective are they?
Estimated that 40% of recs are accepted by gov
But gov can still deny recs
Help Parl hold exec to account
Gov with hoC majority will also have committee majority
Can Q ministers, civil servants & outside experts & req gov papers
People may not provide info when Q'ed & access to gov paper may be denied
Role of the Opposition
Prov. scrutiny & criticism of gov policy and action in Parl debates
Suggest amendments to bills
Argue alternatives - what they'd do in power
Provide gov in waiting e.g. shadow cabinet
Nominate topics on 20 days of parl session, official op get 17 2nd biggest get 3
Influence of Parl on gov decisions
Influence
Committee system & reports
Select committee chairs no longer chosen by whips
Debates & Q's
Backbench rebels HoC
Inform lobbying of ministers by MPs&Peers
Amending lesgisl (esp Peers)
Restrictions
Gov can ignore select committee reports
Select committees = poor resources
Gov ,majority usually prevent backbench rebels
Party whips ensure party discipline
Party discipline in Commons
Party whip system
Enforce party discipline & minimise internal dissent in votes
Fragile in minority gov
Majority gov can defeat backbench rebellions
Struggle to pass controversial legisl
Important votes = 3 line whips
MP must vote following whips order
Failure to do so by a gov minister = resignation or dismissal
Votes on matters of conscience tend to = Free votes
MP free to vote how they want
Whips also partly control allocation of MPs to select & public bill committees
Select committee chairs are elected by MP = secret ballot
Whips power = slightly reduced
Gov controls most Parl timetable
MPs want promotion, don't upset leader
Gov can use HoC majority to override Lords amendments & use Parl Act if needed
Parl & interaction with other gov branches
Parl provides personnel for gov; PM & ministers
Parl = where gov called to account & scrutinised
Passes laws that are interpreted &enforced by judiciary
Any laws passed must be compatible with ECHR and until Brexit EU law
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