The Constitution

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What is a Constitution?

  • Body of fundamental principles, laws and practises for the governing of the country
  • Sets out the role of government
  • Protects citizens
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Why do we have a constitution?

  • It establishes parliamentary sovereignty: makes Parliament the supreme legal authority
    • Make, amend and repeal laws
    • No Parliament can bind its successor
  • Places limitations on the use of executive power e.g. Divine Right
  • Safeguards against arbitrary government: can’t be subjected to individual will or judgement without restriction
  • Prevents the unification of power which is dictatorial: ruler cannot both make and enforce laws (Habeas Corpus, Right to Jury trial)
  • Parliamentary Government: Government relies on parliament for its authority and legitimacy. Govt. can only act with the consent of Parliament
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How different types of the Constitution work

1.UNITARY- all laws derive from Westminster; Westminster granted devolution to Scotland and Wales and have the power to remove it

2.FLEXIBLE- it can be changed by statute law; the UK constitution has frequently changed over time as it is uncodified

3.UNCODIFIED- not written in one place, however some are written e.g. the Bill of Rights; it is not entrenched so it is easier to amend 

4.FEDERAL- USA and Germany; Federal applies to the whole country e.g. taxes, war, defence (FBI, CIA in USA). State law is for the discretion of individual states e.g. death penalty, abortion, education ,state taxes

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What is meant by an ‘entrenched provision’?

A clause of a constitution which makes amendments either difficult or impossible. 

The UK is not entrenched, as it is uncodified and flexible 

The USA has a written document made up of 7 Articles and 27 other amendments. In order to amend the constitution in America, 2/3 of Congress need to agree and then 3/4 of the 50 states

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The Fusion of Powers

The Fusion of Powers

  • All Cabinet members are MPs
  • The PM and Cabinet party sits in the House of Commons
  • PM and Cabinet are chosen from HOC- party with the majority (326 seats)

The Judiciary is more separate

  • paid from a consolidated fund
  • Supreme Court in a separate building
  • Judicial Appointments Commission
  • Supreme Court not part of the House of Lords

BUT

  • Judiciary cannot strike down legistlation (unlike USA)
  • Home Secretary can interfere by pardoning criminals 
  • Lord Chancellor oversees the judicary
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The Separation of Powers

  • No one person should be a member of more than one branch of govt – Montesquieu’s ideas

USA

  • The executive is elected separate to Congress
  • The judiciary is also elected separately 
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WRITTEN LAW

WRITTEN

  • Magna Carta 1215- "The Great Charter" signed by King John
    • Established that everyone was subject to the law
    • No taxation; right to a fair and free trial
  • Bill of Rights 1689- signed by William of Orange and Mary
    • changed to a constitutional monarchy
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STATUTE LAW (Acts of Parliament)

STATUTE LAW

  • must be approved by HOC, HOL and the Monarch before they are placed in the statute book
  • Implemented usually by the executive and enforced by the court

IMPACT

  • Some acts have more significance than others
  • Under parliamentary sovereignty, parliament is the supreme law making authority
  • Can make, amend or repeal any existing act
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EU LAW

EU LAW

  • body of treaties, laws and court judgements from the EU
  • Basis was provided for by the European Communities Act 1972

IMPACT

  • Act gave legal force to existing and future EU Law. Binding without parliamentary assent
  • EU Law has precedence over U.K. domestic law. U.K. Law may have to be amended
  • UK apply EU Law directly
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CONVENTIONS

CONVENTIONS

  • rules that are neither codified nor enforced by the courts of law, but are established as the norm of political behaviour
  • Long usage gives conventions their authority 

E.g. Salisbury Convention. HOL should not vote down bills that seek to enact a manifesto commitment

IMPACT

  • By convention, the monarch must assent to Acts of Parliament or there would be a constitutional crisis. Queen Anne 1707
  • dictates that the leader of the winning party becomes PM
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COMMON LAW

  • Legal principles that have been developed and applied by U.K. Courts
  • The courts interpret the law where there is no clear statute law

IMPACT

  • judicial decisions have clarified the rights of citizens in reaction to the state
  • Rulings become part of the body of the common law, becoming more important than earlier decisions
  • Rulings often serve as a guide to future lawmakers
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Parliamentary Sovereignty

How it works in theory?

  • Parliament is the supreme legal authority
  • Can make, amend or repeal laws e.g. Abortion Act 1967 amended by Human Embryology and Fertilisation Act 1990
  • No one (courts) may order ride, amend or set aside Parliamentary legislation
  • No parliament can bind its successor

How it works in practise?

  • Parliament can only pass legislation that fits with EU law- directly 7%
  • Members of the UN or NATO which has an impact
  • Referendums- direct democracy
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The Rule of Law

How it works in theory?

  • Law should govern a nation rather than being governed by arbitrary decisions of individuals
  • Cannot be subjected to individual will or judgement without restriction 

AV Dicey

  • no person can be punished unless convicted of an offence by a court of law
  • Everyone is equal under the law

How it works in practise?

  • Terrorism → 2004 Belmarsh Prison
  • Media can prejudice until proven guilty e.g. 1970s sex offenders
  • MPs are exempt from certain charges under parliamentary privileges e.g. free speech and Ryan Giggs
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Labour Constitutional Reform 1997-2005

GENERAL

Successes

  •  Gave power to UK citizens  widely accepted
  •  Kept the constitution relevant
  •  Increased democracy

Weaknesses

  • Rise in QUANGOs --> 41% increase
  • Piecemeal rather than a coherent whole
  • Different levels of election = different voting systems
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Human Rights Act 1998

Successes

  • All public bodies must comply with the rights 
  • Individuals can take HR cases to UK courts
  • Fundamental rights and freedoms of citizens are protected

Weaknesses

  • Easily manipulated- in 2001, the UK derogated from Article 5- lawful arrest
  • Eroded Parl. sovereignty- judges can strike laws that breach ECHR
  • Doesn’t go far enough- unless Parl. has the sovereign power to override ECHR
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Devolution 1997

Successes

  • Scotland, Northern Ireland and Wales can make legislation relevant to local areas in matters like education and health

Weaknesses

  • Power can be removed- subject to Westminster
  • Asymmetric devolution- 3 regions not given the same power: Scotland can vary taxes but Wales cannot
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Constitutional Reform Act 2005

Successes

  •  Replaced law lords with Supreme Court (2009)
  •  Independent body responsible for appointing judges (JAC)- not the Queen/ PM
  •  Separated the position of Speaker of Lords from Lord Chancellor
  •  Separated judiciary from the exec. and legislative

Weaknesses

  •  Lord Chancellor still has responsibility for the functioning of the courts
  •  Secretary of State for Justice and Home Sec can pardon and deport criminals
  •  Not complete separation of powers
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Freedom of Information Act 2000

Successes

  •  Gave people right of access to info. about public bodies, government etc.
  •  More transparency 

Weaknesses

  •  Govt. can veto or refuse requests for information
  •  Didn’t come into effect until 2005
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House of Commons Changes

Successes

  •  PMQs - Once on a Wednesday
  •  Reduction in working hrs.
  •  Greater scrutiny of govt. legislative proposals
  •  Controlled salaries

Weaknesses

  • Labour criticized for holding too much control in HOC- imposing strict party discipline
  • Undermined Parl. ability to act as a watchdog over executive
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House of Lords Reform

Successes

  •  Abolished all but 92 hereditary peers (now 88)
  •  HOL mainly made up of life peers
  •  No one party has a significant majority

Weaknesses

  •  Raised questions about what to do with the monarchy
  •  Debates about what the function of the HOL should be
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Constitutional Reform under the 2010 coalition

Fixed-term Parliament's Act 2011

  • Parliamentary elections must be held every five years unless a vote of no confidence occurs or a general election is called before the 5 years

Parliamentary Voting System and Constituencies Act 2011

Part 1) Alternative Voting System Referendum 2011

Part 2) sets out changes to the constituency boundaries

Counter-terrorism and Security Act 2015

  • Help the UK respond to the threat of terrorism
  • Gives the police the power to temporarily seize a passport at the boarder to investigate an individuals
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Constitutional Reform under the 2015 Govt.

European Union Act 2015

  • Making provision for holding referendum on whether the UK should remain a member of the European Union
  • Introduced by Phillip Hammond

British Bill of Rights 

  • Theresa May (PM) suggested that the UK replaces the Human Rights Act with a British Bill of Rights

Grammar Schools

  • Theresa May proposed that more Grammar Schools should be established in the UK. So far, it has been unsuccessful
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Unitary advantages and disadvantages

Unitary

Advantages

  • Straightforward- in one place, not time consuming, no conflict of legislation between federal and state
  •  All at Westminster- so it maintains parliamentary sovereignty

Disadvantages

  • Unitary system has given the “West” Lothian question (due to devolution) e.g. Tuition Fees 2012
  • Doesn’t allow for it to be area specific
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Flexible advantages and disadvantages

Flexible

Advantages

  • Can easily adapt to circumstances e.g. Brexit ( no formal amendments)
  • Maintains parliamentary sovereignty- no parliament can bind its successor

Disadvantages

  • Large majorities in Parl. can easily amend through Acts of Parl.
  • Legislation can be “abused”- not set in stone e.g. Article 5 of HRA
  • Labour’s constitutional reform- HRA ill throughout
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Uncodified advantages and disadvantages

Uncodified

Advantages

  • Amendments are easy (US gun laws)
  • Codified can date very easily

Disadvantages

  • Difficult to understand (US- aware of rights “rights culture”)
  • UK judicial review does not follow written rules-complicated
  • A codified constitution would overturn ECHR rulings
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Does the UK need a codified constitution?

For

  • Sets stricter boundaries on the government- binds Parl.
  • Draw together loose ends e.g. Devolution
  • Prevents extreme governments
  • Help the UK overturn rulings for the ECHR
  • Have primacy over decisions made in HR courts
  • Easy for citizens to refer to
  • Give the constitution greater power over EU (constitutional sovereignty) 
  • Clearly sets out legislation so everyone is subject to the same laws
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Does the UK need a codified constitution? cont.

Against

  • Less flexible- it is easier to pass an Act of Parl. then amend the constitution (US- 27; gun laws)
  • It becomes outdates very quickly- hard to change (US shootings vs. gun laws)
  • Our constitution has evolved to meet needs of society at the time
  • Country has managed without one, it works. 1689 Bill of Rights
  • Magna Carta, BoR and HRA protect the important rights
  • Hard to bring all legislation together; common law would be very difficult to codify, who would do it?
  • The UK constitution is MASSIVE
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Does the UK constitution limit the executive?

Yes

  • Executive is challened by Parliamentary Sovereignty- can't pass law without Parliament
  • Fixed-Term Parliament Act 2011- Wilson able to increase majority through 1966 GE
  • Supreme Court can strike down law under EU law
  • Convention- royal assent to all statutes mean sovereignty cannot be undermined
  • EU law takes precedent over UK domestic law

No

  • Supreme Court cannot strike down laws- only make suggestions
  • Can amend the constitution through Statue Law
  • Govt. can propose to leave the EU (e.g. Brexit)
  • Govt. derogated from Article 15 in 2001
  • Constitution is uncodified and flexible- specific powers aren't written down (unlike US: article 1 defines role of the Congress)
  • Cameron used statutory instruments- potential use of 1000 after Brexit (Fracking)
  • No entrenched provisions- very easily amended esp. with a large majority
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