Parliament Flashcards

1
Q

Presidential government:

A

Government office-holders are answerable to the president

President is not dependent on a continuing majority in the legislature

Executive accountable to people

Clear separation of powers - codified constitutional agreement to separate

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2
Q

Main functions of parliament:

A

Legitimating

Scrutiny

Accountability

Legislating

Law-making

Representation

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3
Q

Main functions of the House of Lords:

A

Scrutiny

Accountability

Legislating

Law-making

Delaying

Deliberation

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4
Q

Separation of powers:

A

Doctrine of the separation of powers proposes that each of the three functions of government should be entrusted to separate branches of government

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5
Q

What is the purpose of the separation of powers:

A

To fragment government power in such a way as to defend liberty and stem corruption

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6
Q

Who’s work is the separation of powers based on:

A

French philosopher, Montesquieu

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7
Q

Where is separation of powers applied most strictly:

A

USA

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8
Q

Fusion of powers:

A

Occurs when the three key parts of the state - executive, legislature and judiciary - are all integrated, as they are in the UK.

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9
Q

Representative government:

A

System of government where the electorate has given an elected parliament the power to take the major decisions on its behalf.

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10
Q

Composition of the Commons:

A

650 democratically elected MPs representing geographical constituencies from across the UK

Approximately 16 different parties represented

Comprises frontbenchers and backbenchers

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11
Q

Composition of the Lords:

A

91 Hereditary Lords

Approx 600 appointed lords

24 Church of England bishops

Over 700 members!

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12
Q

Main criticisms of the constitutional reforms of Parlaimeng since 2010:

A

Lords reform

Reduction in number of MPs

Fixed term parliaments

AV referendum

Right to recall, MPs

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13
Q

How the executive dominates Parliament:

A

Payroll Vote

Parliament Act

Party Whips

Parliamentary Majority

Party loyalty

Power of patronage

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14
Q

How parliament has some power:

A

Rebellions

When the parliamentary majority is small

Can make back room deals

When PM is weak

PMQs can be effective in revealing weaknesses in the government

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15
Q

Parliamentary government:

A

Government governs in and through the assembly or parliament

‘Fusion’ of executive and legislative branches

Main source of political authority in the UK

Government must be drawn from Parliament and must be accountable to Parliament

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16
Q

What is parliament?

A

Parliament is the central law making institution as well as being the main way in which citizens are represented

17
Q

Distinctions between the HOL and the HOC:

A

HOC - grants popular consent to proposed legislation

HOL - deliberating at length on important issues

HOC - represents the interests of constituents

HOL - delays legislation forcing government to reconsider

18
Q

Shared functions of the HOC and HOL:

A

Grant formal consent to legislation

Call government to account

Scrutinise proposed legislation and amend it where necessary

Debate key issues

Represent the interests of different sections of society

19
Q

What is the Westminster model:

A

Concept suggests that Parliament is the centre of the political system

20
Q

Presidential government:

A

Political principle that a president has a separate source of authority from that of the rest of the government

21
Q

Separation of powers:

A

Principle that the powers of the government and parliament should be separated and that they should each control each other’s power

22
Q

Fusion of powers:

A

Where there is no separation between government and Parliament

23
Q

Parliamentary government:

A

Principle that the government draws its authority from Parliament and not directly from the electorate

24
Q

Factors in the HOL favour:

A

Government does not enjoy the party support of a majority in the HOL

Most members of the Lords are not professional politicians meaning they can be independent minded

HOL cannot veto proposals but can delay and obstruct giving them so influence over government