legislative process

Cards (37)

  • pre legislative process
    • idea stage
    • consultation stage
    • drafting
  • idea stage
    idea for new law from law commission and manifesto reports
    eg. party manifestos
  • major matters
    green paper issued by minister who has responsibility for that matter
  • green paper
    consultative document on a topic, gov view put forward, proposals for law reforms
    interested parties invited - considerations and changes made
    gov remains uncommitted
  • white paper
    published with firm proposals, finalised version of the idea
    gov's 'statement of intent'
  • consultation is valuable, time for consideration
    gov criticised for 'knee jerk' reaction - rushing laws
  • formal legislative procedure
    major legislation - made through acts of parliament, long process before act of parliament becomes law
  • most acts of parliament introduced by gov, drafted by lawyers and parliamentary draftsmen
  • bill
    when proposed law has been drafted
  • bills become acts of parliaments when gone through necessary stages
  • bills put forward by gov and introduced by gov minister
  • wording of bills are unambiguous, precise and comprehensive
  • 2 main types of bill - public and private
  • public bill
    matters of the public policy which affect the whole country
    eg Legal Aid
  • private bill
    affect individual people or corporations
    eg. Whitehaven Harbour Act 2007 - transferred all rights and obligations in respect of harbour from 3 companies to Whitehaven Harbour Commissions
  • private members bills
    individual MPs can introduce a bill - backbenchers
  • private members bills
    introduced by ballot or 10 min rule each parliamentary session (10-12 months) 20 private members present bill to parliament
  • few private members bills become law:
    abortion act 1967 - made abortion legal
    marriage act 1994 - people can get married in any registered place
  • parliamentary process
    bill has to be passed by both House of Commons and Lords
    can start in either house, finance bills must start in House of Commons
  • House of Commons - democratically elected body, vote against is the end of Bill
  • gov have majority - policies supported by gov likely to become law
  • first reading
    second reading
    committee stage
    report stage
    third reading
    consideration of amendments
    royal assent
  • first reading
    formal procedure, name and main aims read out, no discussion or voting
  • second reading
    main debate, MPs debate principles of bill, speaker controls debates
    end vote verbal aye or no, unclear goes to formal vote
    majority for bill to progress
  • committee stage
    detailed examination of each clause of Bill done by standing committee (16 - 50 MPs). committee is chosen specifically for Bill, MPs with chosen knowledge of subject
    finance bills - whole house will sit in committee
  • report stage
    standing commission report back to house any amendments
    no amendments - no report stage
    amendments debated, accepted or rejected
  • third reading
    final vote, formality, unlikely to fail, only be further debate on Bill if 6 MPs request
  • House of Lords
    same 5 stages, committee stage involves whole house
    HoL make amendments, goes back to HoC for to consider
    if Hoc don't accept, goes back to HoL - 'ping pong'
  • royal assent
    final stage, monarch formally gives approval to bill and becomes an act of parliament
    is a formality under Royal Assent Act 1961
  • parliament acts
    power of HoL limited - Parliament Acts 1911 and 1949, allow bill to become law if HoL reject but must introduced to HoC in next session passing all stages again
    Parliament Acts only used on 4 occasions since 1949 eg. Hunting Act 2004
  • House of Lords not an elected body - refines and adds to law
  • pro
    democratic - made by elected representatives
  • pro
    act of parliament can reform whole areas of law in one act
    eg. Fraud Act 2006 - abolished old offences, created newer simpler structure of offences
  • pro
    consultation stage before bill is presented - gov can consider objections to proposals, lengthy thorough process
  • con
    parliament doesn't have time to deal with all proposed reforms
    eg. law commission proposed changes to OAPA but still not reformed
  • con
    lengthy process, takes months to pass a bill
  • con
    acts are very long and complex, hard to understand
    lead to court case on interpretation of meaning - wording is difficult