What are the statistics relating to division of seats and population?
England: 533: 51 million: 96,400.
Northern Ireland: 18: 2 million: 111.111.
Scotland: 59: 5 million: 84,700.
Wales:40: 3 million: 75,000.
What is the House of Commons known as?
‘The lower house’
What is the structure of the House of Commons?
650 members of Parliament: Elected from constituencies throughout the UK.
Candidates: For such elections are selected by committees drawn from local constituency parties.
Frontbench MPs: government ministers, senior and junior plus leading spokespersons from opposition parties.
Backbench MPs: All those MPs who are not frontbenchers.
Select committees: Permanent committees of backbench MPs elected by all the members of parliament.
Legislative committees: Temporary committees which scrutinize proposed legislation and propose amendments to improve the legislation.
Party whips: Senior members of parliament whose role is to keep party discipline.
The speaker: He or she is elected by Members of parliament.
What is the structure of the house of Lords?
Hereditary peers: They have inherited the title from their father and will pass their peerage on to their sons. There are normally 92 of these peers.
Life peers: Appointed for life by party leaders and an appointments commission, they do not pass on their title onto their children. These are a mixture of former politicians and civil servants and prominent citizens.
Archbishops and bishops: There are 26 of these.
The Lord Speaker: He or she presides over debates in the house and maintains discipline.
What do the members of parliament do?
What is parliamentary privilege?
An ancient principle that protects members of parliament from external pressure and specifically means they cannot be prosecuted or sued for anything they may say in the house of Commons. it also implies that the monarch can never interfere with the work of UK parliament.
Who are some famous peers?
Lord Adonis: Crossbencher, transport and education.
Lord Winston: Labour, infertility and medical ethics.
Lord Dannatt: Crossbencher, military issues.
Baroness Chakrabarti: labour, human rights.
Baroness Warsi: Conservative, race relations.
What are the functions of the House of Commons?
Legitimacy: The formal process of making proposed laws legitimate by granting consent.
Accountability: Sees the Commons acting on behalf of the people.
Scrutiny: Any proposed legislation is examined by MPs.
Constituency work: MPs are expected to ensure that the interests of their constituencies are protected.
Representation of interests: Groups of MPs seek to protect sections of society’s interests.
National debate: MPs have opportunities to debate such issues.
What are the functions of the House of Lords?
Revising: The Lords scrutinises legislation carefully.
Delaying: The Lords cannot veto a piece of legislation but they can force the government to think again for a year .
Secondary legislation: The Lords spends its greater available time checking that regulation within minor laws is acceptable.
National debate: Shared with the House of Commons.
What are the powers of the House of Commons?
The House of Commons has the power to:
What are the powers of the house of Lords?
The House of Lords has the power to:
What are the key distinctions between the House of Commons and the House of Lords?
The key distinctions are as follows:
What are the debates about parliamentary powers?
Holding government to account:
Providing democratic legitimacy:
Scrutinising legislation:
Controlling government power:
Representing constituents:
The reform of Parliament.
The House of commons:
The House of Lords.
All-appointed:
All elected:
Part elected part appointed:
The nature of parliamentary bills.
Types of legislation:
Public bills: These aare bills presented by the government. They are expected to pass successfully into law.
Primary legislation: These are major pieces of legislation either changing the law or granting powers to subsidiary bodies and individuals to make secondary legislation.
Secondary legislation: These are usually described as ministerial orders. Under powers granted in primary legislation, ministers or other bodies may make minor regulations. Most such orders are not debated in Parliament, but parliament has the option of vetoing such legislation.
Private members’ bills:
MPs may enter a ballot allowing five of them each year to present their own proposed piece of legislation. These rarely pass into law unless they recieve the support of government. There is usually not enough parliamentary time to consider them.
Private bills: Such bills are presented by individuals or organisations outside government and Parliament. They apply to parliament for permission to take certain actions which are currently forbidden. They go through a slightly simplified form of parliamentary procedure and are rarely refused.
What is the legislative process of the House of Commons?
The key stages in processing a bill into law are as follows:
First reading: MPs are informed about the bill or proposed legislation but it is not debated at this stage.
Second reading: The main debate on the bill. If it is passed, it will move to detailed scrutiny.
Committee stage: The bill committee considers the bill line by line and propose amedments.
Report stage: The bill is debated again, with all the passed amendments included
Third reading: A final debate and a last opportunity to block the legislation.
Passage to other house: Most bills are first presented in the House of commons so they next pass to the House of Lords.
Same procedures: Except that the Lords scrutinises with a comittee of the whole house.
Royal assent: This signifies the formal passage of the bill into law.
The legislative process: the House of lords.
The following are features of legislation in the House of Lords:
The role and significance of backbench MPs.
The main roles played by MPs in the House of Commons are:
What is a select comittee and what do they do?
Select comitee: A permanent comitee of backbench MPs which has a specific task, mainly to call government to account, but other select committees have different parliamentary roles.
What do they do?
They call government to account.
Who are the public accounts comittee?
The PAC’s characteristics are as follows:
What characteristics do these commitees have?
What are some important departmental select committmee reports?
Work and Pensions 2016: Into the collapse of British home stores and the loss of mich of the employees’ pension fund.
The company was reported to the Pensions regulator.
Business, innovation and Skills, 2016: Into alleged bad working practices at Sports Direct. The company was forced to pay compensation to its workers for paying below minimum wage.
Treasury, 2015: Into proposals for stricter regulation of the banking sector. Insisted that the government should implement the recommendations of the Parliamentary comission on Banking standards.
Defence, 2014: Into the circumstances when the UK should make military interventions in world conflicts. Amomg many recommendations, urged the government to consider legislation about whether Parliament should control major armed interventions.
Home affairs, 2012: Into the Independent police complaints comission’s role in the investigation into the 1997 Hillsborough disaster. The IPPC is investigating the Hillsborough disaster following the 2016 inquest.