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February 2011
An Introduction to the
new Parliament
A service from the Houses of Parliament
Politically neutral
Aim is to increase knowledge and engagement
with work and processes of Parliament
Not an alternative to MPs
Took place on May 6 2010
What was decided?
650 seats in House of Commons
UK Government
What about the House of Lords?
Conservative - 307
Labour - 258
Lib Dem - 57
DUP - 8
SNP - 6
Sinn Fein - 5
Plaid Cymru - 3
SDLP - 3
Green - 1
Alliance - 1
Independent - 1
Speaker - 1
If a single party had won over 50% of
seats:
-automatically form Government
However, no party received over 50% of
seats:
◦ Largest party could have formed minority
Government
◦ Two parties formed coalition Government
◦ There could have been a re-election
Coalition formed between Conservatives
and Liberal Democrats
Cabinet formed
Shadow Cabinet announced
New Parliament convenes / MPs sworn in
Membership of Committees announced
House of Commons
The
Monarch
House of Lords
Makes and passes laws
(Legislation)
Holds Government to
account
Enables the Government
to set taxes
Parliament debates and discusses a huge
range of subjects that affect us all
Health and housing, schools and pensions,
jobs and training, the way in which we choose
our politicians, the way our streets are
policed, laws on immigration, roads and
railways, how our energy is provided – all are
topics debated in Parliament
Your representative in Parliament can raise
issues important to you
Is the democratically elected chamber of
Parliament.
There are 650 MPs.
MPs are usually elected every 4 to 5
years.
Making and passing laws
Holding the Government to account
Raising key issues
Representing constituents
Approving the Budget, public expenditure
and allowing government to set taxation.
The Prime Minister
The Cabinet
The party, or parties, that can command a
majority of seats in the House of
Commons forms the Government
The Government runs public departments
i.e. The Home Office, Benefits Agency
The Government proposes new laws to
Parliament
The Government is accountable to
Parliament
Government
(Whitehall)
Commons, Lords,
Monarch
•
•
•
•
•
•
Holds Government
to account
Passes laws
Enables taxation
Represents public
Raises key issues
• Approximately 110
members
• MPs and Lords
(Usually)
• Chosen by Prime
Minister
• Runs public services
• Accountable to
Parliament
In the Constituency
Helps constituents
with problems
Visits groups and
individuals to hear
issues/ concerns
Represents
constituents to
various bodies
Campaigns
In Parliament
Represents their
constituency
Raises issues on
behalf of
constituents
Passes new laws
Scrutinises the work
of Government
Questions to Ministers
Adjournment/
Westminster Hall
debates
Early Day Motions
Meetings with Ministers
As well as questions,
debates, early-day
motions
Select Committees
All-Party Parliamentary
Groups
10-Minute Rule Bill/
Private Members Bills
All UK laws decided by Parliament
Government and individual members can propose
laws
However, majority of laws passed come from
Government
e.g. Welfare Reform Act
Commons
Public Bill
Committee
Bill presented /
First Reading
Second Reading
Third Reading
Committee of
the Whole House
Lords
Bill presented /
First Reading
Report
Second Reading
Committee
(whole House)
Report
Third Reading
After
Consideration of
Lords Amendments
Ping Pong
Royal Assent
Regulations
The House of Lords is the second chamber of
Parliament, often known as the revising House.
There are more than 700 Members (777 in
November 2010)
Most are Life Peers, but there are also:
◦ 92 Hereditary Peers
◦ 26 Bishops
All Members of the House of Lords
represent you
They play an important role in the passing
of laws
They hold Ministers to account through
questions and debates
They debate key issues
A politically neutral role
Signs off laws passed by Parliament (Royal Assent).
Opens and closes Parliament each year
You can get involved through lots of different
ways including:
Contacting your MP
Contacting a Member of the HoL
Sending a petition
Working with a Select Committee
You can contact your local MP about any
issue that affects you in your
constituency.
You can request that your MP asks a
question, presents a petition or raises a
debate on your behalf.
You can find out who your MP is on the
Parliament website
You can contact any Member about issues that
you would like Parliament to look at.
You can request that a Member asks a question
or raises a debate on your behalf.
It is useful to contact a Member who has a
particular interest in your issue. You can find out
what individual Members are interested in by
looking on the Parliament website.
Local MP in first instance
Identify & contact Parliamentarians with an
interest
Be clear on aims
Remember party & Government positions
Be positive and proactive
Questions
www.parliament.uk
020 7219 4272 – Commons information
020 7219 3107 – Lords information