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The '''[[Parliament]] of the [[United Kingdom]]''' is responsible for holding the work of the [[Government of the United Kingdom|UK government]] to account. Its members, elected and unelected, discuss and vote on all proposed laws, and allow the government to [[taxation|tax]] the people. Through ''parliamentary sovereignty'', the parliament is supreme above all other bodies within the UK and its territories. Parliament is ''bicameral'', consisting of two houses, the 'lower' elected [[House of Commons (United Kingdom)|Commons]] and the 'upper' appointed [[House of Lords|Lords]], and is ultimately ceremonially headed by the [[monarchy of the United Kingdom|monarch]], Queen [[Elizabeth II]]. Members of each house meet at the [[Palace of Westminster]] in [[London]], with its clock tower housing [[Big Ben]], the famous [[bell]].
{{TOC|left}}
 
{{Image|Liz2-state-opening-parliament-speech.jpg|right|200px|The [[monarchy of the United Kingdom|monarch]] visits Parliament annually in a ceremony to begin parliamentary proceedings. During this State Opening of Parliament, the Queen's Speech sets out her [[Government of the United Kingdom|government]]'s intentions for the coming year.}}
{{Image|Liz2-state-opening-parliament-speech.jpg|right|200px|The [[monarchy of the United Kingdom|monarch]] visits Parliament annually in a ceremony to begin parliamentary proceedings. During this State Opening of Parliament, the Queen's Speech sets out her [[Government of the United Kingdom|government]]'s intentions for the coming year.}}
Of its two Houses, the Commons is more powerful because it is [[General election (UK)|directly elected]] by the people. Under the Fixed-term Parliaments Act 2011, the lifetime of Parliament is normally five years. By convention, most government ministers are [[Member of Parliament (UK)|Members of Parliament]], though some are drawn from the Lords and membership of Parliament is not required to serve. The Lords can delay, but not block, proposed laws, and has no role in scrutinizing [[United Kingdom Budget|Budget]] legislation; these bills rest with the Commons and the [[Chancellor of the Exchequer]], the UK's finance minister.
The '''Parliament of the United Kingdom'''  examines and challenges the work of the government; debates and passes  laws, and enables the government to raise taxes.
As a [[Bicameral legislature|bicameral legislature]], the business of Parliament takes place in two Houses: the House of Commons and the House of Lords. Their work is similar, except that the House of Commons alone is responsible for making decisions on financial Bills. The members of the House of Commons are elected representatives of geographically  determined parliamentary constituencies, whereas the those of the House of Lords are mostly appointed, having been chosen for their experience and expertise. The functions of the Crown (monarchy) in Parliament are essentially ceremonial
<ref>[http://www.parliament.uk/about/how/role/parliament-crown/ ''Parliament and Crown'', www.parliament.c.uk]</ref>
==History==
''(additional links are available on the [[/Timelines|timelines subpage]])''<br>
The United Kingdom Parliament is the product of eight hundred years of  evolution
<ref>[http://www.parliament.uk/about/living-heritage/evolutionofparliament/ ''The Evolution of Parliament'', www.parliament.uk]</ref> that converted what was once  a meeting of  monarch's advisers  into what is now a sovereign legislature. The transfer of sovereignty from the monarch began in the 13th century with the agreement that is recorded in the [[Magna Carta]], and was largely completed in the 17th century by the outcome of the [[Glorious Revolution]], as codified in the [[Bill of Rights (England)|Bill of Rights]]. Its development as a representative body started in the early 14th century with the regular appointment of representatives of the counties (knights of the shire) and of the towns (burgesses). After 1341 they sat together in one chamber, became known as the House of Commons, and deliberated separately from the King and his nobles.
<ref>[http://www.parliament.uk/about/living-heritage/evolutionofparliament/originsofparliament/birthofparliament/overview/riseofcommons/ ''The Rise of the Commons'', www.parliament.uk]</ref>
The franchise was very varied before 1832, when the first reform act was passed. After this, it was extended in stages until universal adult suffrage was established by the Representation of the People acts of 1918 and 1928.  The relative influence of the House of Lords was simultaneously reduced, and its  power to overrule the House of Commons was removed in 1911<ref>Except in respect of a House of Commons motion to extend its own life</ref>.


The UK Parliament developed over many centuries, and through the [[British Empire]] and the [[Commonwealth of Nations]] has become the model for several other parliaments around the world. Its roots are in mediaeval councils, which led to an [[Parliament of England|English Parliament]] and eventually the establishment of the [[Parliament of Great Britain]] in 1707, when [[England]] and [[Wales]] were united with [[Scotland]] into one [[state]]. Nowadays, much legislation applied only to Scotland goes through the [[Scottish Parliament]] instead, since its creation in 1999.
==The Houses of Parliament==
===House of Commons===
The [[House of Commons (United Kingdom)|House of Commons]] shares with the House of Lords the functions of scrutinising government activity and  approving legislative proposals, but it has legislative priority in the sense that it cannot be overruled by the House of Lords. Its work is carried out by elected [[Member of Parliament (UK)|Members of Parliament]] with the support of an administrative staff. Members of Parliament serve in a range of rôles, including [[Minister (government)|Ministers]] who are the political managers of government departments, and [[Shadow minister]]s who are their opposition counterparts; the "Leader of the House" and the "whips", who together manage the business of the House; and "backbenchers" to whom none of those duties have been assigned. Its chief officer is "the Speaker", who chairs its debates, enforces its rules, acts as its spokesman, and takes charge of its administrative staff.


==History==
===House of Lords===
The United Kingdom Parliament is the product of eight hundred years of  evolution that converted what was once  a meeting of  monarch's advisers  into what is now a sovereign legislature.
As Parliament's second chamber, the [[House of Lords]]<ref>[http://www.parliament.uk/lords ''House of Lords'', www.parliament.gov.uk]</ref> plays an important part in the scrutiny of legislation. All House of Commons legislation must be sent to it for consideration before  becoming law. Its appointed members are often able to apply expertise or experience to such legislation, but their  power  to deal with it is limited by a combination of law and convention. They cannot amend budgetary proposals, they cannot hold up other legislation for much more than a year; and there is a convention under which they do not oppose proposals that fulfill  promises made in the majority party's election manifesto <ref>[http://www.parliament.uk/documents/lords-information-office/holwork.pdf ''The Work of the House of Lords'', House of Lords, 2009].</ref>.
The transfer of sovereignty from the monarch began in the 13th century with the agreement that is recorded in the [[Magna Carta]], and was largely completed in the 17th century by the outcome of the [[Glorious Revolution]], as codified in the [[Bill of Rights (England)|Bill of Rights]] .


==House of Commons==
==The Crown==
{{main|House of Commons (United Kingdom)}}
The phrase "Crown in Parliament" is a pedantic statement of the full constitutional makeup of the United Kingdom's legislature, but the Sovereign's legislative rôle arises only from the constitutional  requirement that the Bills passed by Parliament become law only after they have received royal assent. The personal discretionary powers of the Sovereign  which are part of the [[United Kingdom/Addendum#The Royal Prerogatives|royal prerogative]] include the rights to advise, encourage and warn Ministers in private; to appoint the Prime Minister and other Ministers; as well as to assent to legislation. The Sovereign may, in a grave constitutional crisis, act without or against ministerial advice. In ordinary circumstances, however the Sovereign, accepts and gives way to Ministerial advice. The
The House of Commons is the lower house of the legislative branch of government. 650 Members of Parliament (MPs) sit in the Commons, and each is elected using the ''[[first past the post]]'' electoral system by a constituency of voters. Almost all MPs are members of a [[political party]], and the party which forms the majority of seats in the Commons usually forms the Government, with the head of the majority party as [[Prime Minister of the United Kingdom|Prime Minister]]. The Opposition, being the largest minority party, sits opposite the Government. Parliament is dissolved normally every five years, and a [[general election (UK)|general election]] is held to decide the makeup of the House of Commons and, by extension, the Government. Debates in Parliament are often broadcast on [[radio]] and [[television]], and a formal publication is made daily of the business of both Houses in [[Hansard]].
[[United Kingdom/Addendum#The prerogative executive powers|executive powers of the royal prerogative]] are nowadays exercised by Ministers, and can be exercised without the prior consent of Parliament. They include diplomatic action and the declaration of war.


The House itself is a chamber of green benches. More senior politicians usually sit closer to the floor (though a 'frontbencher' is a government minister, and will also sit near the despatch boxes, from where major speeches are made), while lowlier members are positioned further back ('backbenchers'). Members of the governing party ideally face those of other parties; as there are not enough seats for all 650 MPs, in well-attended debates many must stand or sit on the stairs. The chamber often has a lively atmosphere, with members cheering on or heckling speakers; debates are brought to order by the [[Speaker of the House of Commons (UK)|Speaker]].
==Legislative procedures==
Legislative proposals, termed Bills, are dealt with  in a succession of [[House of Commons (United Kingdom)/Addendum#Parliamentary stages|parliamentary stages]], termed readings;  including  examinations in legislative committees, and full-scale debates in the parliamentary chambers. The legislative process concludes with  the entirely formal stage of Royal Assent, and  the end product is termed an Act of Parliament. The underlying  procedures and conventions are such that the final outcome of the processes of scrutinising,  debating and amending government proposals is usually their  passage into law.


===Members of Parliament===
==Scrutiny==
{{main|Member of Parliament (UK)}}
The activities of every government department come under the scrutiny of a House of Commons Select Committee, and the Public Accounts Committee has general oversight over public expenditure. Select Committees have right of access to departmental files, and the power to call civil servants as witnesses, and are supported by teams of investigators.
Members of Parliament must be over 18, be a citizen of the UK, [[Ireland (state)|Ireland]] or the [[Commonwealth of Nations|Commonwealth]], and satisfy various other criteria (such as not being a lunatic). Once elected, MPs [[Resigning from the UK Parliament#Resigning from the House of Commons|cannot technically resign]], but must seek disqualification through being given a Crown appointment in order to leave.


Members of Parliament can introduce legislation to the Commons through a variety of methods, including [[Early Day Motions]] and through formal bills. They also able to sit on a variety of committees which draft legislation and conduct a variety other business. Most legislation is proposed by the government, and the passage of bills through the House is overseen by the 'Leader of the House of Commons', a government minister. MPs may introduce their own 'private member's bill', but a full debate or vote is unlikely without government support.
==The Palace of Westminster==
The debating chambers and committee rooms are housed in the Palace of Westminster on the North bank of the river Thames, adjacent to Westminster  bridge and near to Westminster Abbey. ([http://www.bl.uk/onlinegallery/onlineex/crace/p/zoomify88138.html plan]) <ref>[http://www.parliament.uk/about/living-heritage/building/palace/ ''The Palace of Westminster'', www.parliament.gov.uk]</ref>. Its centrepiece is the Central Lobby ([http://www.flickr.com/photos/uk_parliament/sets/72157606360526262/ images]), a large octagonal hall from which corridors lead north to the House of Commons Lobby and Chamber and south to the Peers' Lobby and House of Lords Chamber. Beyond the House of Lords are the ceremonial rooms used during the State Opening of Parliament - the Queen's Robing Room and the Royal Gallery. To the north of the House of Commons are the Speakers' and Serjeant-at-Arms's rooms, and offices for ministers and officials. Beyond these is the Clock Tower which houses Big Ben. The oldest building in the palace is the 11th century Westminster Hall ([http://www.parliament.uk/visiting/online-tours/virtualtours/westminster-hall-tours/ virtual tour]), which is used for major ceremonial occasions and for Commons adjournment debates.


===Speaker of the House of Commons===
==Parliamentary ceremonial==
{{main|Speaker of the House of Commons (UK)}}
===The State Opening of Parliament===  
The Speaker is the House's chair, responsible for keeping debates to order and ensuring that proper parliamentary procedure is followed, and also acts as ceremonial spokesperson for the House, typically to convey good wishes or other messages to the monarch. The Speaker sits high up in a chair close to the despatch boxes, and from this position can call on MPs to speak or, if necessary, cease their address. The Speaker has the power to suspend proceedings in the event of serious disorder. The 'Speaker's procession' occurs daily when the Speaker, formally attired, walks from their official residence through the Palace of Westminster to the House.
The State Opening is the main ceremonial event of the parliamentary calendar. It takes place on the first day of each of a  parliament's five twelve-month "sessions".  After a formal procession from Buckingham Palace to Westminster, the Queen arrives at the Sovereign's Entrance  and proceeds to the Robing Room, where she puts on the Imperial State Crown and parliamentary robe. A procession then leads through the Royal Gallery to the Chamber of the House of Lords, where the Queen takes the Throne. The official known as 'Black Rod' is sent to summon the Commons. In a symbol of the Commons' independence, the door to their chamber is slammed in his face and not opened until he has knocked on the door with his staff of office. The Members of the House of Commons follow Black Rod and the Commons Speaker to the Lords Chamber and stand behind the Bar of the House of Lords (at the opposite end of the Chamber from the Throne) to hear the Queen's Speech. The purpose of State Opening is for the monarch to deliver the Queen's Speech, which is the Government's statement of its legislation  programme for the coming session. The speech is delivered  from the Throne in the House of Lords, in the presence of Members of both Houses. The motion that the House sends a 'Humble Address' to the Queen thanking her for the Speech is then introduced in both Houses. The Government's programme, as presented in the Queen's Speech, is then debated by both Houses for four or five days.


The Speaker is an MP who is no longer affiliated to their party. Following a general election, the Speaker is elected through a vote by all members. Candidates make speeches organised by the 'Father of the House', i.e. the MP with the longest record of continuous parliamentary service. Traditionally, the elected Speaker makes a show of physically resisting the office, and is light-heartedly dragged to the Speaker's chair by other MPs. This reflects past times when being Speaker might incur the wrath of the monarch or others (between the fourteenth and sixteenth centuries, several were killed). From this point, the new Speaker must sever all ties to their old party. The Speaker also has three deputies, who are also MPs and generally do not vote.<ref>''House of Commons Information Office'': '[http://www.parliament.uk/documents/upload/m02.pdf The Speaker]'. .pdf document.</ref>
===The Speaker's procession===
Before every sitting of the House of Commons, the Speaker leaves his official residence in the Palace of Westminster, preceded by a Doorkeeper and the Serjeant at Arms who carries the Mace. The Trainbearer, Chaplain and Speaker’s Secretary follow behind. This formal procession walks along the
Library Corridor, through the Lower Waiting Hall and Central and Members’ Lobbies to the Commons chamber.


==House of Lords==
==Public perceptions==
{{main|House of Lords}}
:''(data from the Hansard Society's Audit of Political Engagement, 2011 Report[http://hansardsociety.org.uk/blogs/parliament_and_government/archive/2011/03/30/audit-of-political-engagement-8.aspx])''<br>
The 'House of Lords is the upper chamber of Parliament. Its members, who sit on red benches, are appointed or originally inherited their position. Not all lords are entitled to sit in the House  - since the [[House of Lords Act 1999]], only 92 [[hereditary peer]]s are allowed to sit in the House, the rest being life peers. The total number of peers sitting in the House is about 745. Of those sitting, there are two types - Lords Temporal and Lords Spiritual. The latter are there by virtue of their ecclesiastical office in the [[Church of England]] and the [[Church of Ireland]]. There are also the twelve [[Lords of Appeal in Ordinary]] (commonly referred to as Law Lords), who are members of the House, but do not exercise any legislative powers - instead judging cases which have reached the House in its status as the final national court of appeal.
Satisfaction with the way Parliament works was expressed by 27 percent of the respondents to the Hansard Society survey, compared with 35 percent who said they were dissatisfied. The level of satisfaction tended to be lower among the younger age groups, falling to 15 percent for the 18-24 age group.
 
The proposition that Parliament holds the government to account elicited agreement from 38 percent of respondents and disagreement from 26 percent. The proposition that Parliament "is working for you and me" met with agreement from 30 percent of them, and disagreement from 49 percent. A feeling of being knowledgeable about Parliament was expressed by 53 percent of men and 35 percent of women.
Under the 1911 [[Parliament Act]], the House of Commons, despite being the lower house, has supremacy and places a limit on the amount of delay that the Lords can have on bills enacting manifesto pledges. Ultimately, the House of Lords can only hold up, not block, almost all legislation, although legislation which is unpopular in the upper house is often modified in order to satisfy complaints from the Lords.


==References==
==References==
 
{{reflist}}[[Category:Suggestion Bot Tag]]
{{reflist}}

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The monarch visits Parliament annually in a ceremony to begin parliamentary proceedings. During this State Opening of Parliament, the Queen's Speech sets out her government's intentions for the coming year.

The Parliament of the United Kingdom examines and challenges the work of the government; debates and passes laws, and enables the government to raise taxes. As a bicameral legislature, the business of Parliament takes place in two Houses: the House of Commons and the House of Lords. Their work is similar, except that the House of Commons alone is responsible for making decisions on financial Bills. The members of the House of Commons are elected representatives of geographically determined parliamentary constituencies, whereas the those of the House of Lords are mostly appointed, having been chosen for their experience and expertise. The functions of the Crown (monarchy) in Parliament are essentially ceremonial [1]

History

(additional links are available on the timelines subpage)
The United Kingdom Parliament is the product of eight hundred years of evolution [2] that converted what was once a meeting of monarch's advisers into what is now a sovereign legislature. The transfer of sovereignty from the monarch began in the 13th century with the agreement that is recorded in the Magna Carta, and was largely completed in the 17th century by the outcome of the Glorious Revolution, as codified in the Bill of Rights. Its development as a representative body started in the early 14th century with the regular appointment of representatives of the counties (knights of the shire) and of the towns (burgesses). After 1341 they sat together in one chamber, became known as the House of Commons, and deliberated separately from the King and his nobles. [3] The franchise was very varied before 1832, when the first reform act was passed. After this, it was extended in stages until universal adult suffrage was established by the Representation of the People acts of 1918 and 1928. The relative influence of the House of Lords was simultaneously reduced, and its power to overrule the House of Commons was removed in 1911[4].

The Houses of Parliament

House of Commons

The House of Commons shares with the House of Lords the functions of scrutinising government activity and approving legislative proposals, but it has legislative priority in the sense that it cannot be overruled by the House of Lords. Its work is carried out by elected Members of Parliament with the support of an administrative staff. Members of Parliament serve in a range of rôles, including Ministers who are the political managers of government departments, and Shadow ministers who are their opposition counterparts; the "Leader of the House" and the "whips", who together manage the business of the House; and "backbenchers" to whom none of those duties have been assigned. Its chief officer is "the Speaker", who chairs its debates, enforces its rules, acts as its spokesman, and takes charge of its administrative staff.

House of Lords

As Parliament's second chamber, the House of Lords[5] plays an important part in the scrutiny of legislation. All House of Commons legislation must be sent to it for consideration before becoming law. Its appointed members are often able to apply expertise or experience to such legislation, but their power to deal with it is limited by a combination of law and convention. They cannot amend budgetary proposals, they cannot hold up other legislation for much more than a year; and there is a convention under which they do not oppose proposals that fulfill promises made in the majority party's election manifesto [6].

The Crown

The phrase "Crown in Parliament" is a pedantic statement of the full constitutional makeup of the United Kingdom's legislature, but the Sovereign's legislative rôle arises only from the constitutional requirement that the Bills passed by Parliament become law only after they have received royal assent. The personal discretionary powers of the Sovereign which are part of the royal prerogative include the rights to advise, encourage and warn Ministers in private; to appoint the Prime Minister and other Ministers; as well as to assent to legislation. The Sovereign may, in a grave constitutional crisis, act without or against ministerial advice. In ordinary circumstances, however the Sovereign, accepts and gives way to Ministerial advice. The executive powers of the royal prerogative are nowadays exercised by Ministers, and can be exercised without the prior consent of Parliament. They include diplomatic action and the declaration of war.

Legislative procedures

Legislative proposals, termed Bills, are dealt with in a succession of parliamentary stages, termed readings; including examinations in legislative committees, and full-scale debates in the parliamentary chambers. The legislative process concludes with the entirely formal stage of Royal Assent, and the end product is termed an Act of Parliament. The underlying procedures and conventions are such that the final outcome of the processes of scrutinising, debating and amending government proposals is usually their passage into law.

Scrutiny

The activities of every government department come under the scrutiny of a House of Commons Select Committee, and the Public Accounts Committee has general oversight over public expenditure. Select Committees have right of access to departmental files, and the power to call civil servants as witnesses, and are supported by teams of investigators.

The Palace of Westminster

The debating chambers and committee rooms are housed in the Palace of Westminster on the North bank of the river Thames, adjacent to Westminster bridge and near to Westminster Abbey. (plan) [7]. Its centrepiece is the Central Lobby (images), a large octagonal hall from which corridors lead north to the House of Commons Lobby and Chamber and south to the Peers' Lobby and House of Lords Chamber. Beyond the House of Lords are the ceremonial rooms used during the State Opening of Parliament - the Queen's Robing Room and the Royal Gallery. To the north of the House of Commons are the Speakers' and Serjeant-at-Arms's rooms, and offices for ministers and officials. Beyond these is the Clock Tower which houses Big Ben. The oldest building in the palace is the 11th century Westminster Hall (virtual tour), which is used for major ceremonial occasions and for Commons adjournment debates.

Parliamentary ceremonial

The State Opening of Parliament

The State Opening is the main ceremonial event of the parliamentary calendar. It takes place on the first day of each of a parliament's five twelve-month "sessions". After a formal procession from Buckingham Palace to Westminster, the Queen arrives at the Sovereign's Entrance and proceeds to the Robing Room, where she puts on the Imperial State Crown and parliamentary robe. A procession then leads through the Royal Gallery to the Chamber of the House of Lords, where the Queen takes the Throne. The official known as 'Black Rod' is sent to summon the Commons. In a symbol of the Commons' independence, the door to their chamber is slammed in his face and not opened until he has knocked on the door with his staff of office. The Members of the House of Commons follow Black Rod and the Commons Speaker to the Lords Chamber and stand behind the Bar of the House of Lords (at the opposite end of the Chamber from the Throne) to hear the Queen's Speech. The purpose of State Opening is for the monarch to deliver the Queen's Speech, which is the Government's statement of its legislation programme for the coming session. The speech is delivered from the Throne in the House of Lords, in the presence of Members of both Houses. The motion that the House sends a 'Humble Address' to the Queen thanking her for the Speech is then introduced in both Houses. The Government's programme, as presented in the Queen's Speech, is then debated by both Houses for four or five days.

The Speaker's procession

Before every sitting of the House of Commons, the Speaker leaves his official residence in the Palace of Westminster, preceded by a Doorkeeper and the Serjeant at Arms who carries the Mace. The Trainbearer, Chaplain and Speaker’s Secretary follow behind. This formal procession walks along the Library Corridor, through the Lower Waiting Hall and Central and Members’ Lobbies to the Commons chamber.

Public perceptions

(data from the Hansard Society's Audit of Political Engagement, 2011 Report[1])

Satisfaction with the way Parliament works was expressed by 27 percent of the respondents to the Hansard Society survey, compared with 35 percent who said they were dissatisfied. The level of satisfaction tended to be lower among the younger age groups, falling to 15 percent for the 18-24 age group. The proposition that Parliament holds the government to account elicited agreement from 38 percent of respondents and disagreement from 26 percent. The proposition that Parliament "is working for you and me" met with agreement from 30 percent of them, and disagreement from 49 percent. A feeling of being knowledgeable about Parliament was expressed by 53 percent of men and 35 percent of women.

References