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Lecture 2. Parliament
Vocabulary you should know before the lecture:
Provision – Disposition
Snap election – Election surprise/ anticipée
Outline of the lecture:
- Introduction and a little history
- How do you get a seat in Parliament?
- The House of Commons
- The House of Lords.
- How Parliament works
- Who presides over the House of Commons and the House of Lords?
- What Parliament does
- The scrutinising of legislation
- Types of bills
- The legislative process
- Parliamentary ping-pong
- The House of Lords’ limited power to block legislation
- How the House of Commons became more powerful
- Holding the government to account
- Holding debates
- Political parties in Parliament
- The main national political parties
- Scottish, Welsh and Northern Irish parties
- How political parties operate in the House of Commons
What you need to know after the lecture:
- Introduction and a little history
- What are the two houses of Parliament?
- What was the ancestor of Parliament called?
- What precedent did Simon de Montfort set in 1265? Why was this significant?
- What happened in Parliament in 1332?
- How do you get a seat in Parliament?
- How many constituencies are there in the UK?
- What is the electoral system used in the UK general election? How does it work?
- Why has the first past the post system been criticised?
- What are the advantages of the FPTP system?
- When, according to the Fixed Term Parliaments Act, are general elections to be held? What exceptions exist to this provision?
- Who has the right to vote in UK general elections?
- What are the different types of peers in the House of Lords?
- How are political appointments of life peers made? What are political peers also called?
- How are non-political appointments of life peers made? What are non-political peers also called?
- How did the House of Lords Reform Act (1999) change the composition of the upper house?
- How Parliament works
- Who presides over the House of Commons? What are his duties? What must he do in the event of a tied vote?
- Who presides over the House of Lords?
- What are Parliament’s three main roles?
- What are the main characteristics of a public bill?
- What are the main characteristics of a private member’s bill?
- What are the five stages of the legislative process?
- What happens during the second reading and the committee stage?
- How many public bills do not pass the House of Commons?
- When does parliamentary ping-pong occur?
- Why is some compromise generally found between the two chambers at the end of parliamentary ping-pong?
- What happens if no compromise is found between the two chambers?
- What are the two main reasons which explain why the HL have limited power to block legislation?
- What is a constitutional convention?
- What was the immediate cause of the constitutional crisis of 1909?
- What was the immediate consequence of the crisis?
- How did the 1949 Parliament Act change the 1911 act?
- Political parties in Parliament
- What are the four main national political parties? Who is the leader of each party? Are they left-wing, right-wing or centrist?
- What are the four main other parties in the House of Commons? What are their main policy objectives?
- What is particular about Sinn Féin?
- Why are there rarely surprises in the way MPs vote?
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