Title: House of Commons House of Lords
1House of CommonsHouse of Lords
2Parliament ,Britain
- The Crown
- The House of Lords
- The House of Commons
3House of Commons Democratically elected body 659
MPs
659 constituencies
Lose a vote of confidence
max 5 years
resign or dissovle
fails to carry its legislation
General Election
Election
By--election
4Candidates Voters
- a citizen of the UK, of a British overseas
territory, of the Republic of Ireland, or of a
member of the Commonwealth of Nations - Age 21 or over for candidates, 18 or over for
voters - Not qualified such as , Members of House of
Lords, undischarged bankrupts, mental illness
5General Election--preparation
- nominated on an official nomination paper giving
his or her full name and home address - Paper must include the signatures of 10 electors
who will support him or her including a proposer
and a seconder - must stand either for a registered political
party or as an independent.
6 - Must pay a 500 pound deposit which is lost if
they do not secure 5 of the total number of
voters cast in their constituency - ---------discourage large number of frivolous
candidates from standing - Usually approved by head office selected as
prospective Parlimentary Candidate
7Election day
In the constituency
- 3 weeks before,Local
- campaign
- Contest for the most votes
- Make public speeches
- appears on local TV
- canvasses from house
- to house
- Hand out manifesto
Candidate with the Most votes wins
First-past-the-post
8 when a Member dies, retires or is disqualified
from membership of the House of Commons
By-election
Voting only in the Constituency Without a member
The same electoral System as in General election
9The House of Lords unelected body
Senior clerics of The church of England The Lords
Spiritual
Certain members Of Peerage The Lords Temporal
As long as their ecclesiastical positions
Serve for life
10The Lords Spiritual
- No more than 26 Lords Spiritual
- Include the 5 most important ecclesiastics of the
Church - the Archbishop of Canterbury (southeast
England) - the Archbishop of York (northern England)
- the Bishop of London (southern England)
- the Bishop of Durham (nouthern England)
- the Bishop of Winchester (south-central
England)
11 - The church of Scotland is not representation by
any Lords Spiritual--- Presbyterian(????)
institution, no archbishops or bishops - The Church of Ireland did obtain representation
in the House of Lords after the Union of Ireland
and Great Britain in 1801. However, it was
disestablished in 1871, and ceased to be
reprensented by Lords Spiritual - Hence,all Lords Spiritual in the present House
are of the Church of England
12The Lords Temporal
- Originally, the Lords Temporal included several
hereditary peersdukes, marquesses, earls,
viscounts, barons, and lords of Parliament. Such
hereditary dignities are created by the Crown, in
modern times on the advice of the Prime Minister
of the day. - However,The House of Lords Act 1999 provides that
only ninety-two individuals may continue to sit
in the Upper House by virtue of hereditary
peerages.
13The Earl Marshal(???)
2
The Lord Great Chamberlain (???)
A.92 Hereditary peerages
15 elected by the whole House
90
75 chosen by fellow Hereditaries in the House
of Lords
14B.Life peers the largest group
- Created by the Sovereign, who acts on the advice
of the Prime Minister - By convention, PM allows leaders of other parties
to select some life peers ---maitian a politacal
balance in the House of Lords - Some non-party life peers are nominated by an
independent house of Lords Appointment Comminsson
15C.The lords of Appeal in Ordinary
- A group of individuals appointed to the House of
Lords so that they may exercise its judical
functions - Selected by the Prime Minister, but are formally
appointed by the Sovereign - Hold seats the House of Lords for life
16The House of Lords, as of 1 November 2004
17Thanks for your attention!