9.1.1

Houses of Parliament

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House of Commons

The UK has a bicameral system of parliament. This means it is made up of two chambers - the House of Commons and House of Lords. Parliament is the legislature and has the role of making laws in the UK.

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House of Commons selection

  • The House of Commons is the lower house in the bicameral system of the UK, which is where Members of Parliament (MPs) sit.
  • MPs are elected to the House of Commons at a general election.
  • People vote from a list of candidates standing in their constituency.
  • The winning candidate represents the constituency in Parliament.
    • Constituencies are areas that the UK has been divided into.
    • There are 650 constituencies in the UK.
    • Each constituency has one MP in the House of Commons.
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House of Commons membership

  • Most Members of Parliament are called backbenchers.
    • Backbenchers are MPs that do not sit in the two front benches in the House of Commons. All political parties have backbenchers.
  • The MPs who sit on the front benches in the House of Commons are members of the government, cabinet ministers, members of the shadow cabinet and the opposition party’s leadership team.
  • The speaker in the House of Commons is an MP who manages and chairs debates in the chamber. The speaker is elected by other MPs.

House of Lords

The House of Lords is Parliament’s upper house in the bicameral system of the UK (two chambers which are involved in law-making). Some members of the House of Lords are known as ‘Peers’.

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Peers

  • Members of the House of Lords include life peers, hereditary peers, archbishops and bishops.
  • Peers are known as 'Lords Temporal'.
  • Most members of the House of Lords are Life peers, meaning that they are a Lord for their lifetime but cannot pass the title on to their children.
    • There are 676 Life peers as of 2018.
  • Members of the House of Lords used to all be hereditary peers, meaning that they inherited their title as a Lord from their family.
    • The House of Lords Act 1999 reduced the number of hereditary peers to 92.
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Lords Spiritual

  • Other members of the House of Lords are archbishops and bishops.
  • Bishops and archbishops are known as 'Lords Spiritual'.
  • There are 26 archbishops and bishops who are members of the House of Lords.
  • The Lords Spiritual come from the Church of England.
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House of Lords selection

  • The House of Lords appointments committee can appoint members to the House of Lords who are not aligned with any party.
    • Any member of the public can nominate a person to be reviewed for membership selection by the committee.
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House of Lords selection 2

  • The prime minister can appoint members to the House of Lords through using the power of patronage.
    • Gordon Brown (prime minister from 2007-2010) appointed Lord Sugar to the House of Lords in 2009.
    • David Cameron appointed Ed Llewellyn, his former chief of staff, as a member of the House of Lords in 2016.
    • Party leaders of the Conservatives, Labour and Liberal Democrats can use political lists to include people their party want appointed to the House of Lords, and act in the party’s interests.

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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