17.2.5

Legislative: Upper Houses of Government

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Upper Houses of Parliament: Strengths and Weaknesses

The upper chambers of the legislative branch are the Senate and the House of Lords.

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Strengths of the Senate

  • The Senate has strong scrutiny powers over the other branches of government.
    • The Senate has the power to confirm appointments to the executive and judiciary by a majority vote.
    • The Senate has the power to try impeachment cases of members of the executive.
    • The Senate has the power to ratify treaties which have been formed and negotiated by the president.
  • The Senate is more prestigious than the House, with Senators serving longer six-year terms in office and representing the whole state.
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Strengths of the House of Lords

  • The House of Lords is strong at investigating and debating important policy issues.
    • Members of the House of Lords are experts in different policy areas and highly experienced.
    • Legislative debate in the House of Lords is detailed and of a high quality.
  • The House of Lords represents people in society who are less well represented in public life including people from different professional backgrounds and of different political views.
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Weaknesses of the Senate 1

  • The Senate’s legislative power is limited because it has equal legislation power to the House of Representatives.
    • Neither chamber can impose its will on the other meaning that they must agree for any legislation to pass.
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Weaknesses of the Senate 2

  • The filibuster has been increasingly used in the Senate, which is a tactic of extending debate on legislation to delay a vote from taking place and stop the bill passing.
    • 60 votes are needed to end the filibuster and vote on passing a bill which makes it harder to pass laws.
  • Direct scrutiny is limited to committees, which the president rarely gives evidence to.
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Weaknesses of the House of Lords

  • The House of Lords has weak legislative power.
    • The Parliament Act 1949 stops the Lords from blocking legislation passing through Parliament. The House of Lords only has the power to delay and propose amendments.
    • The Salisbury Convention prevents the Lords from opposing policies in the elected government’s manifesto.
  • The House of Lords is weak in its representative function.
    • The House of Lords is not elected and so it does not directly represent citizens.

Jump to other topics

1Democracy & Participation

2Political Parties

3Electoral Systems

4Voting Behaviour & the Media

5Conservatism

6Liberalism

7Socialism

8The UK Constitution

9The UK Parliament

10The Prime Minister & the Executive

11Relationships Between Government Branches

12US Constitution & Federalism

13US Congress

14US Presidency

15US Supreme Court & Civil Rights

16US Democracy & Participation

17Comparing Democracies

18Feminism

19Nationalism

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