What are the nature and characteristics of legislation?
What are the 3 types of legislation?
What is public legislation?
What was an occurance where legislation was made on one specific individual?
What was the takeaway from this case?
In 1531 where Henry VIII declared the Bishop of Rocehstor’s cook guilty of treason by poisoning and ordering that he put to death by boiling alive
It is not lawful to pass such act.
What is private legislation?
Where legislation is passed on a specific organisation (e.g. university, organisations)
What is hybrid legislation?
Bill that contains both public and private provisions
What is the importance of legislation?
Main importance is to formulate and implement policy
What are the 5 ranges/scope of legislation?
What are the important issues/critics/concerns about legislation?
Public bodies, politicians, and pressure groups tend to influence how legislation is made
Issues
What is the relationship between parliament, devolved legislatures and the EU
Devolved legislature - Scottish Parliament, North Ireland Assembly, and National Assembly for Wales
However, note that Westminster Parliament is still the supreme legislative body. As Devolution Act states
“the grant of legislative powers does not affect the power of the Parliament of the United Kingdom to make laws for those parts of the United Kingdom.”
What is the relationship between the Judiciary and Legislature?
Role of judges in legislation
Background/traditionally
What are the 5 exceptions that judges can consider the validity of legislation today?
What is the concept of parliamentary sovereignty in primary legislation? Who considers whether an Act is valid or not, what are the justification?
The UK constitution allows politicians rather than the courts to have power to consider an Act as valid or recognised as binding law
It needs to be recognised that the government (HOC) has a dominant role in the legislative process
2 justifications
What is the electoral system that the HOC uses? Explain.
‘first-past-the-post’
It results in the House having a composition unproportionate to the number of votes cast nationally for each political parties
How does the Rule of Law coincide with Primary legislation?
Since enacting the Human Rights Act 1998
ROL is able to hold the Executives to account when legislation confers powers to the government
How does Separation of Powers coincide with primary legislation
UK does not adhere to strictly to SOP, which does not clearly state the limits of each organ
Who creates and what do they contribute to primary legislature?
Ministers & civil servants
Government lawyers
Ministers
Secretary of State
Crown
Parliament
MPs and peers
What is the 7 processes of primary legislation?
What is policymaking?
What are the 2 important aspects of policymaking? Explain.
Immediate policymaking
Consultation (important to policymaking)
What is drafting bills?
In the UK consists a centralised system of drafting Bills.
Written by over sixty ‘parliamentary counsel’ (government lawyers) working from No. 36 Whitehall
What is the critism for drafting bills? What are the 4 reasons for the critism?
Often said that the Acts are incomprehensible to non-lawyers (or even some lawyers) because of the complexity of their language grammar, and structure
4 reasons
What has been done today to ‘combat’ the crtisms of understanding bills?
To help with criticisms, Since 1999, all governmental bills have been accompanied with ‘explanatory notes’
What are framework bills?
Only set out the broad framework for the government’s policy
Leaving the detail to be filled by delegated legislation in government departments
Note