How Does the Government Organise its Majority -The Whips Overview
Carrots and Sticks used by the Whips
Managing your majority through Parliamentary Private Secretaries
Managing your majority by working with Party Groups
Free Votes in the House of Commons
Types of MPs – The Constituency Activist
Types of MPs – The Aspiring Minister
Types of MPs- The House of Commons Expert
Types of MPs- The Policy Entrepreneur
Controlling the Executive – Introduction
Controlling the Executive by Legislation
Controlling the Executive with Finance
Controlling the Executive through Appointments
Controlling the Executive through Questions
Controlling the Executive through Ministerial Statements
Controlling the Executive with Opposition Debates
Controlling the Executive through Select Committees
Overview of MP Expenses and Interests
The House of Commons, which consists of 650 MPs elected on a first past the post basis for individual constituencies.
The House of Lords, which consists of some 700+ peers appointed for their expertise or political experience and 92 hereditary peers. Both groups remain in the House of Lords for life.
There are also 23 Bishops of the Church of England who remain there until they retire as Bishops. The role of the Lords is secondary as, under the Parliament Acts of 1911 and 1949, the Lords are not able to defeat legislation concerned with taxation or expenditure and the House of Commons can overturn decisions of the House of Lords on any other legislation.
The House of Lords plays a lesser role to the Commons but still a significant role and one that has become more important in recent years. The aristocracy and clergy were part of the medieval English Parliament and eventually separated out into a different assembly from the House of Commons. From the late 17th century it was accepted that the Commons would be superior in financial matters but the Lords retained a veto over legislation. As the Commons became more democratic in the 19th with the extension of the male vote, the Lords were cautious not to constantly challenge an elected Government but conflicts intensified as the Liberal Party became more radical and won a large Commons majority in 1906. In 1909 the large Conservative majority in the Lords rejected the Liberal Government’s Budget, ignoring the precedent that the Commons was supreme in financial affairs, and a constitutional crisis ensued with the Lords backing down only after the Liberals had won two general elections during 1910. The Parliament Act of 1911 allowed the Commons to override a Lords veto over legislation.
The Parliament Act was meant to be a first stage in Lords reform but the war intervened before the Liberal Government could decide on this and the Conservatives were in the Government almost continuously from 1918 to 1945. In 1945 when Labour won its large majority the Conservative and Labour leaders in the Lords agreed what has been called the Salisbury-Addison Convention which held that the House of Lords would not defeat legislation which was in a Government’s manifesto and would unduly delay Government Bills. The Conservatives, in power from 1951 to 1964 had the continued benefit of a large Conservative majority in the Lords, but still worried about the legitimacy of an assembly whose members were there by an accident of birth. In 1958, they introduced the Life Peerages Act which allowed the Prime Minister, under the royal prerogative, to appoint people with expertise or political experience to the House of Lords for life. This gives considerable patronage to the Prime Minister, although they have not just appointed people who support their party, but also made the Lords more legitimate as people began to enter on merit.
The effect of the introduction of life peers was only gradual but by the 1980s they made up most of the members who played an active part and were more ready to be independent and challenge the legislation of the Conservative Government. Attendance improved compared with the previous 60 years, and the Lords met on more days a year.
After Labour’s House of Lords Act, 1999 removed almost all of the hereditary peers, the Lords became even more confident and assertive. A House of Lords Appointments Commission was set up in 2000 to vet the quality of people proposed by the Prime Minister for a peerage. Although Blair, Brown and Cameron have appointed peers to increase the number supporting their party, there is no majority for any party in the Lords and the Liberal Democrats and Crossbench (Independent) peers often hold the balance of power in key votes.
The Lords now plays a role in two areas:-
About 60% of the Lords’ time is spent looking at legislation. Less controversial Government Bills may start in the Lords so that they can be looked at more thoroughly before they go to the Commons and individual peers may put forward their own Bills. All members can discuss all stages of the Bill and the Government cannot curtail discussion as in the Commons. All amendments can be debated, unlike in the Commons where only some are selected. The Lords regularly amends Government legislation, especially in the area of civil liberties and many of these amendments are accepted by the Government.
Some of the conventions on this are breaking down. Examples :-
The Lords does this in a number of ways:-
The Contemporary House of Lords: Westminster Bicameralism Revived by Meg Russell, 2013 looks at the ways in which the Lords has become more influential in recent years.
The Queen has legally to agree to legislation though, in practice, she never withholds this approval. She has also had powers to dissolve and recall Parliament, now limited by the Fixed Term Parliaments Act, but these powers have always been based on strict rules based on past precedent.