Comparing parliament and congress Flashcards

1
Q

Comparing SoPs

A

Congress more powerful

Parl. is dominated by executive branch, so is less able to control legislation or restrict the executive

Con. is not dominated, exec. is elected separately. President lacks patronage power and may lack a congressional majority.

Congress is a more active law-maker than parliament

However, much depends on which party is in power. Aggressive/ passive congress is dependent on the president’s majority or minority in both chambers

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2
Q

Comparing checks and balances

A

Congress more powerful

US Constitution places stronger checks on Congress
Ratification of treaties, declaring war lies with Congress

Royal prerogatives gives those powers to the PM. Executive appointments are not subject to parliamentary approval

However, conventionally the PM does take these things to vote (ref. parl. majority)

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3
Q

Comparing powers of second chambers

A

Congress more powerful

Congress has a lot of power over executive. Two equally powerful chambers, with significant. checks on president, making restrictions on the executive branch much more successful

The Lords is a relatively weak legislative body, revising chamber

However, a resurgence in the lords, with a more aggressive chamber based on greater legitimacy after the removal of hereditary peers. Short-term increase in power during the coalition gov. as the Salisbury convention was effectively suspended (blocking of financial bill)

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4
Q

Comparing location of sovereignty

A

Parl. is more powerful
Parliamentary sovereignty means that parl. is more powerful than congress. Parl. can make constitutional laws at will, so it can more easily project its power throughout the UK system

Parl. can enact major constitutional change, leaving the EU, removing the HRA, devolved powers

Congress is constrained by the SC and the Constitution. It cannot overturn judicial decisions or alter fundamental constitutional practices unilaterally

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5
Q

Comparing imperial presidency

A

Constitutional restraints on president fail, Congress has lack of control over policy. Presidential use of executive order, signing statements, and executive agreements all have the effect of bypassing Congress, allowing president to act unilaterally.

President can act similarly to PM. Cabinet limits PM.

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6
Q

Comparing bicameralism

A

The supremacy of the Commons means parl. can act decisively and exercise power, exert influence within the system as a whole

The equal nature of the two legislative chambers can weaken rather than strengthen their power. If there’s conflict within Congress, with the House and the Senate disagreeing over policy, it may be unable to act

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7
Q

Strengths of representation in Congress and Parliament

A

Congress- separate elections from executive, frequent elections, SoPs, Complementary representation of two years (delegates) and six years (trustees)

Parl.- Elected commons is responsive to public opinion, and a mandate from the people
Complementary representation, Commons can consider opinions, Lords can consider best interest through a more reasoned view

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8
Q

Strengths of legislation in Congress and Parliament

A

Congress- powerful legislative body, able and willing to restrict executive proposals
Proactive in initiating legislation
High quality legislation is detailed due to levels of scrutiny, especially in powerful committees in both chambers

Parl.- Scrutinise and block bills providing quality legislation. Gov majority and influence in parl. makes it efficient, passed and agreed in timely fashion

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9
Q

Strengths of checks in Congress and Parl.

A

Congress- high levels of checks on. the executive due to SoPs and checks and balances
Congress can declare war, remove a president from office and ratify treaties and appointments (Senate)

Parl.- Effective cheeks on exec. through voting on legislation, select committees and question time.
Can remove a failing gov. through vote of no confidence
Checks are not excessive, allowing for strong, effective gov.

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10
Q

Strengths of lower chambers in representation

A

House- Two year terms and SoPs leads to high sensitivity to public opinion

Commons- Elected chamber with a tradition of MPs representing all constituents regardless of who they voted for

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11
Q

Strengths of the upper chambers in representation

A

Senate- Representative due to SoPs
Six year terms allow for Senators to take a more rational/ long-term view of public interests

Lords- Serves the interests of the people because it can use its own judgements
Not strongly affected by the gov., patronage, whips and therefore can represent the people off gov. carry out unpopular/ undesirable policies

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12
Q

Strengths of upper chambers in legislation

A

Senate uses just general strengths of legislation

Lords- Lords influence over legislation via their ability to delay/ amend bills
Expertise gives authority over legislative matters

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13
Q

Strengths of upper chambers in checks

A

Senate- specialist function of removal from office after impeachment

Lords- Expertise gives authority in scrutinising gov actions and policies
Limits to checks (eg not blocking bills) ensures scrutiny but not weak gov.

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14
Q

Weaknesses of Congress and Parliament in representation

A

Congress- FPTP means lack of voter choice and safe seats
The party with the most votes does not necessarily get the most seats

Parl.- same, bout with votes and seats disproportionately

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15
Q

Weaknesses of Con./Parl in legislation

A

Con- Power is shared in Congress, making it extremely difficult to pass legislation
Some procedures such as pro barrel politics is undesirable

Parl.- is mainly a reactive body considering gov. proposals with limited significant initiation of bills.
Has fairly limited ability and willingness to challenge gov. proposals

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16
Q

Weaknesses of Con/Parl checks

A

Con- provides excessive checks leading to weak gov. for example through legislative gridlock
Partisanship in Congress has led to unacceptably high levels of checks under divided gov.

Parl- Insufficient checks on the gov. due to gov. majority/ whip system and patronage
Only one chamber has significant checking power

17
Q

Weaknesses of Upper chambers in representation

A

Senate- 6 year terms are arguable too long
With 2 senators per state, small states are overrepresented

Lords- Unelected and unaccountable, lack democratic legitimacy

18
Q

Weakness of upper chambers in legislation

A

Senate- filibuster is undemocratic, can lead to ineffective gov.

Lords- limited legislative powers and cannot block legislation
Commons can overturn amendments
Salisbury convention limits blocking of bills

19
Q

Weakness of upper chambers’ checks

A

Senate- overall weakness of Congress

Lords- Limited power to check gov. as cannot overturn legislative proposals or insist amendments