Constitutional Conventions PDF
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Uploaded by LustrousMistletoe
University of Dundee
Dr Tarik Olcay
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Summary
These lecture notes cover the topic of constitutional conventions, defining them and explaining their role in the UK constitution. The notes also outline how conventions differ from legal rules and how to identify them. Examples such as the appointment of a prime minister are discussed.
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PUBLIC LAW I – SOURCES OF POWER Constitutional conventions Dr Tarik Olcay University of Dundee Week 2 LEARNING OBJECTIVES Describe the nature of constitutional conventions Explain the role of constitutional conventions in the UK Constitution...
PUBLIC LAW I – SOURCES OF POWER Constitutional conventions Dr Tarik Olcay University of Dundee Week 2 LEARNING OBJECTIVES Describe the nature of constitutional conventions Explain the role of constitutional conventions in the UK Constitution Distinguish constitutional convention from mere political practice CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS Definition: “conventions, understandings, habits or practices which, though they may regulate the … conduct of the several members of the sovereign power … are not in reality laws at all since they are not enforced by courts” – AV Dicey (1885) “a non-legal, but nonetheless binding, rule of constitutional behaviour” – Adam Tomkins (2003) Non-legal (political): not enforceable by courts enforcement v. recognition Albert Venn Dicey Source: Wikipedia CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS Binding – but not due to a threat of judicial sanction political consequences e.g. ministerial responsibility – which includes that ministers must not knowingly mislead Parliament – not a legal wrong but a constitutional wrong weight of its own authority e.g. the appointment of the Prime Minister Effectiveness Lawyers’ bafflement Nature of conventional rules generally IDENTIFYING CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS Not every political practice is a constitutional convention what does happen vs what should happen Ivor Jennings (1903-65) ‘flesh which clothes the dry bones of the law’ three-pronged test precedent sense of obligation reason THE ROLE OF CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS Implications for legal and political constitutionalism in the UK Conventions are not enforceable in court – political constitutionalist element Conventions complementing constitutional law No authoritative list of constitutional conventions Some conventions being written down Ministerial Code Cabinet Manual But these are merely ‘snapshots’ and not a source of a legal rule LAW & CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS Royal Assent Law: Every bill must receive a Royal Assent after it has passed its necessary parliamentary stages in order to become law Convention: The monarch will give the Royal Assent to every bill which has passed successfully through Parliament Appointment of PM when advised to do so by ministers Law: At common law the monarch has unlimited power to appoint ministers including the PM (this is a prerogative power) Convention: The gov’t must have the confidence of a majority in the HoC, which means that PM is appointed from the HoC – normally the leader of the political party