Shortly describe constitutional law
Which are the three major principles that underlines the constitutional rules?
What is public law?
Involves two branches: Constitutional law and administrative law.
What is administrative law?
Enforced by the executive branch of the government.
(a) it regulates international trade, manufacturing, pollution, taxation etc
(b) may also apply to review of decisions of so called smipublic bodies, such a non-profit coperations, disciplinary boards etc
Describe the British constitution
Merger of the United Kingdom and Great Britain and Kingdom of Ireland in 1801:
It is a unitary state and not a federation such as the US.
It is a combination of statue, common law and unwritten convention. The constitution is not written down in one single statue.
What is the Bill of Rights 1689?
It is a statute which introduces Parliamentary privilege. This statute is fundamental for the functioning of the British Parliament. It enabled any member of the either chamber in Parliament to make accusations about individuals or companies in open debates without fear of arrest or prosecution for deformation.
Name some unwritten souses of the British constitution
Define the Crown
Corporation sole (legal entity comprising a single incorporated office occupied by a single person). It is the legal embodiment of governance (not physical crown). Own all land (known as a monarch owning the Crown state in right of the Crown. This is different from the Queens personal property. It also refers to the executive and the judiciary. This means that buildings that are owned by the Government is also Crown land, since the Government is not a legal entity. The Crown can have copyright (since it’s a legal entity).
What is the Parliament?
It is the supreme legislative body in the UK and British overses territories. Its headed by Queen Elizabeth II
Consists of:
What is the House of Lords?
They are responsible for scrutinizing legislation proposed by the House of Commons.
Appointment can be made by inheritance (Lords Temporal) or by ecclesiastical role (Lords Spiritual).
Lords Temporal - majority are life peers appointed by the monarch on the advice of the Prime Minister.
Lords Temporal: is comprised by 26 senior bishops of the Church of England.
You can no longer inherit the position.
What is the House of Commons
It’s the lower House and has 650 members. Members are elected. MP’s must be 18 years old, meet citizenship requirements. Cannot be member is bankrupt, mentally ill, guilty of high treason, prisoners with a sentence in excess of more than one year, people guilty of elected related offences.
How is Parliament dissolved?
The monarch cannot dissolve Parliament.
New Parliamentary session begin after a general election, which is held every 5 years (as a main rule). Parliament is automatically dissolved by law 25 working days before the election date. There are two ways Parliament can be dissolved before the election date.
1.
What is the Bill of RIghts?
Introduced a constitutional principle that is fundamental to the functioning of the British Parliament namely Parliamentary Privilege. It enables any member of either chamber in Parliament to make accusations about individuals or companies in open debate without fear of arrest for contempt of court or of prosecution for defamation.
What is constitutional convention?
An informal and uncodified procedureal agreement that is followed by the institutions of a state, even though it is not written in any docuemnt that has legal force.
Name some common constitutional conventions
What is Parliamentary Sovereignty?
Means the legislative supremacy of Parliament. Holds that statues passed by Parliament are the UK’s supremacy and final source of law and Parliament can in theory change the constitution by an act of parliament.
What is the law of confidence?
Developed in common law to protect from unauthorized disclosure of information which is communicated in confidence, if the protection is in the public interest. The When confidential information is in the Government’s possession, it can be protected from disclosure only if the public interest requires protection.
It must:
What is CRAIG?
It is the Constitutional Reform and Governance Act 2010. It substantially reformed the Royal Prerogative. Conferred the Ponsonby Rule in statue. This means that treaties must be laid before Parliament before ratified.
Define Civil Service and what qualities Civil Servants should have
The civil service is independent of government and is also composed mainly of career bureaucrats hired on professional merit rather than appointed or elected, whose institutional tenure typically survives transitions of political leadership. They should be politically impartial, have integrity and act honestly.
What does the Lord Chief Justice do?
Head of the Judiciary of England and Wales and the most senior judge in the Criminal Division of the Court of Appeal. Hes responsibilities include:
The Lord Chief Justices are appointed by a special panel convened by the Judicial Appointments Commission. Generally appointed from among Appeal Court Judges. Appointment can also be made from the Supreme Court.
The Lords Chief Justice is also head of Criminal Justice and President of the Courts of England and Wales
What does the Lord Chancellor do?
Appointed by the Sovereign on the advice of the Prime Minister. Member of the Privy Counsel and Cabinet (as Justice Secretary/minister of Justice) and is responsible for the efficient functioning and independence of the courts
Describe “Separation of Powers”
A fundamental principle of the British Constitution. The state is divided in three branches:
How is the House of Lords powers limited in regards to law making?
The Parliament Act (1911) and the Parliament Act (1949) provide a way of solving disagreement between the Commons and Lords, under which certain types of bills may be presented for Royal Assent without the consent of the Lords. The Lords can no longer Veto a Bill, except in cases where the purpose of the Bill is to extend the lifetime of Parliament. The Lords can delay a Bill with one year.
Bills that are NOT subject to the Parliament Act must be approved by the House of Lords:
Public Money Bills do not require the consent from the House of Lords. The Lords cannot block or amend, provided that it has been presented to them before one month before end of session.
Note that Private Member Bills are not the same as Private Bills and is therefore not included in the above.
Describe the Entrick V Carrington case in regards to the Rule of Law
The judgment established the limits of executive power in English law: the state may act lawfully only in a manner prescribed by statute or common law