delegated legislation (P3) Flashcards

1
Q

What is delegated legislation?

A

when parliament delegates some of its law-making powers to secondary bodies, allowing them to make new laws on parliaments behalf

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2
Q

how is parliament able to delegate its power?

A

an act of parliament is passed giving the secondary body the power to carry out tasks (parent acts/enabling acts)
these should be clear, unambiguous and give ‘what’ and ‘how’ instructions that are open to little interpretation

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3
Q

what are the three types of delegated legislation?

A

-orders in council
-statutory instruments
-by-laws

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4
Q

what are orders in council?

A

-secondary body is the privy council
-can be a quick response in emergencies
-the civil contingencies act 2004 allows PC to make law in times of emergency when parliament isn’t sitting

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5
Q

what are statutory instruments/ministerial regulations?

A

-secondary body is government ministers
-over 3000 made a year
-leave law making to departments that have expertise and responsibility in the areas
-eg police powers are made by the ministry of justice under the police and criminal evidence act 1984

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6
Q

what are by-laws?

A

-secondary body is local authorities and public corporations
-parliament doesn’t have the time or local knowledge to deal with these
-eg no ball games, no parking, no skateboards etc

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7
Q

what is an affirmative resolution order (ARO)?

A

-part of a parent act that is subject to parliamentary scrutiny and a vote before coming into force, used in controversial areas

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8
Q

what must parliament do in the absence of an ARO?

A

parliament has 40 days to pass a negative resolution order to prevent an SI from coming into force
if the deadline is missed, only primary legislation or repealing the parent act can remove the delegated legislation

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9
Q

what does the delegated powers scrutiny committee do?

A

-part of the house of lords
-considers the provisions of any bills going through parliament delegate legislative power inappropriately, reporting the findings to HoL before the committee stage of the bill
-has no power to amend bills

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10
Q

what is the joint scrutiny committee?

A

-role is to scrutinise SI’s
-looking for retrospective liability issues, bad wording or attempts to impose taxation

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11
Q

what is ultra vires?

A

-‘beyond the powers’ i.e. the secondary body has exceeded the powers given to it

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12
Q

what is required judicially for delegated legislation?

A

-a party affected by the delegated legislation must apply to the king’s bench division of the high court for judicial review
-can result in finding the delegated legislation to be ultra vires
-judicial review can also conclude a piece of delegated legislation is without legal effect because it’s ‘outrageous in its defiance of logic’ (wednesbury unreasonableness)

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13
Q

what are the two types of ultra vires?

A

-procedural UV - secondary body has exceeded its powers and failed to follow the procedural instructions of the parenting act
-substantive UV - the secondary body has gone beyond the powers granted to it and made more regulations than permitted

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14
Q

what are some advantages of delegated legislation?

A

-saves parliamentary time
-can respond quickly to emergency situations
-parliament can concentrate on producing parent acts
-local people are experts in local issues
-often used as a fast way of implementing directives from the EU

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15
Q

what are some disadvantages of delegated legislation?

A

-lacks publicity, hard for public to keep up with new laws
-parliamentary controls aren’t always effective, scrutiny committee cant scrutinise everything
-causes dangers
-judges can void through ultra vires, so doctrine of parliamentary sovereignty is eroded
-not a democratic source of law
-judges can’t exercise control unless a member of the public takes legal action, which is time consuming and expensive

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