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Constitution of the United Kingdom

Summary: This article is part of the seriesPolitics of the United Kingdom Parliament Monarchy House of Lords House of Commons Lord Chancellor Speaker ...

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Constitution of the United Kingdom

     From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.


This article is part of the series
Politics of the United Kingdom
Parliament
Monarchy
House of Lords
House of Commons
Lord Chancellor
Speaker
Prime Minister
Privy Council
Government Departments
Cabinet
Scottish Parliament
National Assembly for Wales
Northern Ireland Assembly
Scottish Executive
Welsh Assembly Government
Northern Ireland Executive
Local government
Greater London Authority
Elections
Referendums
Political Parties
Constitution
The United Kingdom has an uncodified constitution, which means it is not all contained in a single document. There are several sources of the constitution, some being written down and some not.

Table of contents
1 Key principles
2 Sources
3 Reform
4 See also

Key principles

The key principles of the constitution are the underlying features of the constitution. The two most important principles have existed for a very long time, since the creation of Parliament. They were identified by the constitutional lawyer, A.V. Dicey as the twin pillars of the constitution. The most recent key principle is European Union membership, the principle that EU law takes precedence over UK law. This principle was famously identified in the Factortame case were the Merchant Shipping Act 1988 was overturned. This appears to undermine the principle of Parliamentary sovereignty, but Parliament could still withdraw from the EU by repealing the European Communities Act 1972, so in a way sovereignty is preserved.

  • Parliamentary sovereignty (Parliament is the supreme law making body)
  • Rule of law (everyone is equal before the law)
The other important principles are:

Sources

There are several sources of the constitution, shown below. Not all of the sources are written down, some being contained in conventions for example, but is incorrect to say the UK has an "unwritten constitution" because much of it is written down.

The main sources of the constitution are:

Among the many key statues or conventions are:

Reform

The expansion of the electoral franchise

Main article: The expansion of the electoral franchise Between 1832 and 1989, numerous Acts of Parliament increased the number of people from 5% of the adult population to the system of universal suffrage for all people 18 or over that exists today.

New Labour's reforms

First Term

In Labour's first term (1997-2001), it introduced a large package of constitutional reforms, which it promised in its 1997 manifesto. The most major were:

  • The creation of the devolved assemblies in Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland, with there own elections
  • The creation of a devolved assembly in London and the introduction of directly elected mayors.
  • The beginning of a process of reform of the House of Lords, including the removal of all hereditary peers except 92.
  • The incorporation of the European Convention on Human Rights into UK law by the passing of the Human Rights Act 1998
  • The passing of the Freedom of Information Act 2000
  • The passing of the Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act 2000, creating the Electoral Commission to regulate elections and referendums and party spending to an extent.

Second Term

The House of Commons voted on seven options in February 2003 on what proportion of elected and appointed members (from 100% elected to 100% appointed) the House of Lords should have. None of the options received a majority.

In 2004, the Joint Committee of both the House of Commons and House of Lords, tasked with overseeing the drafting of the proposed Civil Contingencies Bill, published its first report, in which, amongst other things, it suggested ammending the bill's clauses that grant Cabinet Ministers the power "to disapply or modify any Act of Parliament" was overly wide, and that the bill should be modified to preclude changes to the following Acts, which, it suggested, formed "the fundamental parts of constitutional law" of the United Kingdom: (names are shown as they appear in Hansard: [1])

See also

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This article is from Wikipedia. This article was up-to-date as of 8 May 2004 - See live article
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