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Constitution of the United Kingdom
Constitution of the United Kingdom
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Parliament is central to the United Kingdom's democratic constitution. In the Palace of Westminster the House of Commons represents the public in 650 UK constituencies and chooses the prime minister at will. The House of Lords remains unelected but can be overruled.[1]

The constitution of the United Kingdom comprises the written and unwritten arrangements that establish the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland as a political body. Unlike in most countries, no official attempt has been made to codify such arrangements into a single document, thus it is known as an uncodified constitution. This enables the constitution to be easily changed as no provisions are formally entrenched.[2]

The Supreme Court of the United Kingdom and its predecessor, the Appellate Committee of the House of Lords, have recognised and affirmed constitutional principles such as parliamentary sovereignty, the rule of law, democracy, and upholding international law.[3] It also recognises that some Acts of Parliament have special constitutional status.[4] These include Magna Carta, which in 1215 required the King to call a "common counsel" (now called Parliament) to represent the people, to hold courts in a fixed place, to guarantee fair trials, to guarantee free movement of people, to free the church from the state, and to guarantee rights of "common" people to use the land.[5] After the Glorious Revolution, the Bill of Rights 1689 and the Claim of Right Act 1689 cemented Parliament's position as the supreme law-making body, and said that the "election of members of Parliament ought to be free". The Treaty of Union in 1706 and the Acts of Union 1707 united the Kingdoms of England, Wales and Scotland, the Acts of Union 1800 joined Ireland, but the Irish Free State separated after the Anglo-Irish Treaty in 1922, leaving Northern Ireland within the UK. After struggles for universal suffrage, the UK guaranteed every adult citizen over 21 years the equal right to vote in the Representation of the People (Equal Franchise) Act 1928. After World War II, the UK became a founding member of the Council of Europe to uphold human rights, and the United Nations to guarantee international peace and security. The UK was a member of the European Union, joining its predecessor in 1973, but left in 2020.[6] The UK is also a founding member of the International Labour Organization and the World Trade Organization to participate in regulating the global economy.[7]

The leading institutions in the United Kingdom's constitution are Parliament, the judiciary, the executive, and regional and local governments, including the devolved legislatures and executives of Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland. Parliament is the supreme law-making body, and represents the people of the United Kingdom. The House of Commons is elected by a democratic vote in the country's 650 constituencies. The House of Lords is mostly appointed by cross-political party groups from the House of Commons, and can delay but not block legislation from the Commons.[1] To make a new Act of Parliament, the highest form of law, both Houses must read, amend, or approve proposed legislation three times and the monarch must give consent. The judiciary interprets the law found in Acts of Parliament and develops the law established by previous cases. The highest court is the twelve-person Supreme Court, as it decides appeals from the Courts of Appeal in England, Wales, and Northern Ireland, or the Court of Session in Scotland. UK courts cannot decide that Acts of Parliament are unconstitutional or invalidate them, but can declare that they are incompatible with the European Convention on Human Rights.[8] They can determine whether the acts of the executive are lawful. The executive is led by the prime minister, who must maintain the confidence of a majority of the members of the House of Commons. The prime minister appoints the cabinet of other ministers, who lead the executive departments, staffed by civil servants, such as the Department of Health and Social Care which runs the National Health Service, or the Department for Education which funds schools and universities.

The monarch in their public capacity, known as the Crown, embodies the state. Laws can only be made by or with the authority of the Crown in Parliament, all judges sit in place of the Crown and all ministers act in the name of the Crown. The monarch is for the most part a ceremonial figurehead and has not refused assent to any new law since the Scottish Militia Bill in 1708. The monarch is bound by constitutional convention.

Most constitutional questions arise in judicial review applications, to decide whether the decisions or acts of public bodies are lawful. Every public body can only act in accordance with the law, laid down in Acts of Parliament and the decisions of the courts. Under the Human Rights Act 1998, courts may review government action to decide whether the government has followed the statutory obligation on all public authorities to comply with the European Convention on Human Rights. Convention rights include everyone's rights to life, liberty against arbitrary arrest or detention, torture, and forced labour or slavery, to a fair trial, to privacy against unlawful surveillance, to freedom of expression, conscience and religion, to respect for private life, to freedom of association including joining trade unions, and to freedom of assembly and protest.[9]

Principles

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(London, Houses of Parliament. The Sun Shining through the Fog by Claude Monet, 1904). Parliament (from French, parler, "to talk") is the UK's highest law-making body.

Although the British constitution is not codified, the Supreme Court recognises constitutional principles,[10] and constitutional statutes,[11] which shape the use of political power. There are at least four main constitutional principles recognised by the courts. First, parliamentary sovereignty means that Acts of Parliament are the supreme source of law. Through the English Reformation, the Civil War, the Glorious Revolution of 1688 and the Acts of Union 1707, Parliament became the dominant branch of the state, above the judiciary, executive, monarchy, and church. Parliament can make or unmake any law, a fact that is usually justified by Parliament being democratically elected, and upholding the rule of law, including human rights and international law.[12]

Second, the rule of law has run through the constitution as a fundamental principle from the earliest times as "The king must [be] ... under the law, because the law makes the king" (Henry de Bracton in the 13th century). This principle was recognised in Magna Carta and the Petition of Right 1628. This means the government may only conduct itself according to legal authority, including respect for human rights.[13] Third, at least since 1928, elections in which all capable adults participate have become a fundamental constitutional principle. Originally only wealthy, property-owning men held rights to vote for the House of Commons, while the monarch, occasionally together with a hereditary House of Lords, dominated politics. From 1832 onwards, adult citizens slowly obtained the right to universal suffrage.[14]

Fourth, the British constitution is bound to international law, as Parliament has chosen to increase its practical power in cooperation with other countries in international organisations, such as the International Labour Organization,[15] the United Nations, the European Convention on Human Rights, the World Trade Organization, and the International Criminal Court. However, the UK left membership of the European Union in 2020 after a referendum in 2016.[16]

Parliamentary sovereignty

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Parliamentary sovereignty is often seen as a central element in the British constitution, although its extent is contested.[17] It means that an Act of Parliament is the highest form of law, but also that "Parliament cannot bind itself".[18] Historically, Parliament became sovereign through a series of power struggles between the monarch, the church, the courts, and the people. Magna Carta in 1215, which came from the conflict leading to the First Barons' War, granted the right of Parliament to exist for "common counsel" before any tax,[19] against the "divine right of kings" to rule.

Common land was guaranteed to people to farm, graze, hunt or fish, though aristocrats continued to dominate politics. In the Act of Supremacy 1534, King Henry VIII asserted his divine right over the Catholic Church in Rome, declaring himself the supreme leader of the Church of England. Then in the Earl of Oxford's case in 1615,[20] the Lord Chancellor (both the King's representative and head of the judiciary) asserted the supremacy of the Court of Chancery over the common law courts, contradicting Sir Edward Coke's assertion that judges could declare statutes void if they went "against common right and reason".[21]

After the Glorious Revolution of 1688, the Bill of Rights 1689 cemented Parliament's power over the monarch, and therefore over the church and courts. Parliament became "sovereign", and supreme. 18 years later however, the English Parliament abolished itself in order to create the new Parliament following on the Treaty of Union between England and Scotland, while the Scottish Parliament did likewise. Power struggles within Parliament continued between the aristocracy and common people. Outside Parliament, people from the Chartists to the trade unions fought for the vote in the House of Commons. The Parliament Act 1911 ensured the Commons would prevail in any conflict over the unelected House of Lords. The Parliament Act 1949 ensured the Lords could only delay legislation by one year,[22] and not delay any budgetary measure over a month.[23]

In a leading case, R (Jackson) v Attorney General, a group of pro-hunting protestors challenged the Hunting Act 2004's ban on fox hunting, arguing it was not a valid Act because it was passed avoiding the House of Lords, using the Parliament Acts. They argued that the 1949 Act itself was passed using the 1911 Act's power to override the Lords in two years. The claimants argued that this meant the 1949 Act should not be considered a valid law, because the 1911 Act was limited in scope and could not be used to amend its own limitation of the Lords' power. The House of Lords, sitting as the UK's highest court, rejected this argument, holding both the Parliament Act 1949 and the Hunting Act 2004 to be valid. However, in obiter dicta Lord Hope argued that Parliamentary sovereignty "is no longer, if it ever was, absolute", and that the "rule of law enforced by the courts is the ultimate controlling factor on which our constitution is based", and cannot be used to defend unconstitutional Acts (as determined by the courts).[24] There is not yet a consensus on the meaning of "Parliamentary sovereignty", except that its legitimacy depends on the principle of "the democratic process".[25]

The UK has committed to international law as a "sovereign" member, to augment its power through cooperation, in the United Nations since 1945. The first UN General Assembly was held at Methodist Central Hall, opened by Prime Minister Clement Attlee.

In recent history, Parliament's sovereignty has evolved in four main ways.[26] First, since 1945 international cooperation meant Parliament augmented its power by working with, not dominating, other sovereign nations. While Parliament had nearly uncontested power before, and so was thought by writers of the Imperial period to be able to "make or unmake any law whatever",[27] the UK chose to join the League of Nations in 1919, and after its failure, the United Nations in 1945, to participate in building a system of international law.

The Treaty of Versailles in 1919 recalled that "peace can only be established if it is based upon social justice",[28] and the UN Charter, "based on the principle of the sovereign equality of all its Members", said that "to save succeeding generations from the scourge of war, which twice in our lifetime has brought untold sorrow to mankind", the UN would "reaffirm faith in fundamental human rights", and members should "live together in peace with one another as good neighbours". The Bretton Woods Agreements Act 1945, United Nations Act 1946 and International Organisations Act 1968 wrote the UK's funding and membership of the United Nations, the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, and other bodies, into law.[29] For example, the UK bound itself to implement by order UN Security Council resolutions, up to the actual use of force, in return for representation in the General Assembly and Security Council.[30]

Although the UK has not always clearly followed international law,[31] it has accepted as a formal duty that its sovereignty would not be used unlawfully. Second, in 1950 the UK helped to write and joined the European Convention on Human Rights. While that convention reflected norms and cases decided under British statutes and the common law on civil liberties,[32] the UK accepted that people could appeal to the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg, if domestic remedies were not enough. In the Human Rights Act 1998, Parliament decided that the British judiciary should be required to apply human rights norms directly in determining British cases, to ensure a more speedy, human rights-based resolution to case law, and effectively influence human rights reasoning more.

From 1973 to 2020, the UK was a member state of the European Union (and its predecessor organisation the European Communities), which is committed to "human dignity, freedom, democracy, equality, the rule of law and respect for human rights".[33]

Third, the UK became a member of the European Union after the European Communities Act 1972 and through its ratification of the Maastricht Treaty in 1992. The idea of a Union had long been envisaged by European leaders, including Winston Churchill, who in 1946 had called for a "United States of Europe".[34][35] EU law has long been held to prevail in any conflict between Acts of Parliament for the limited fields in which it operates,[36] but member states and citizens gain control over the scope of EU law, and so extend their sovereignty in international affairs, through joint representation in the European Parliament, Council of the European Union, and the Commission. This principle was tested in R (Factortame Ltd) v Secretary of State for Transport, where a fishing business claimed that it should not be required to have 75% of British shareholders, as the Merchant Shipping Act 1988 said.[37]

Under EU law, the principle of freedom of establishment states that nationals of any member state can freely incorporate and run a business across the EU without unjustified interference. The House of Lords held that, because the EU law conflicted with the sections of the 1988 Act, those sections would not be enforced, and disapplied, because Parliament had not clearly expressed an intention to renounce the 1972 Act. According to Lord Bridge "whatever limitation of its sovereignty Parliament accepted when it enacted the [1972 Act] was entirely voluntary".[37] It was, therefore, the duty of the courts to apply EU law.

On the other hand, in R (HS2 Action Alliance Ltd) v Secretary of State for Transport the Supreme Court held that certain fundamental principles of British constitutional law would not be interpreted by the courts as having been given up by membership of the EU, or probably any international organisation.[38] Here a group protesting against the High Speed 2 rail line from London to Manchester and Leeds claimed that the government had not properly followed an Environmental Impact Assessment Directive by whipping a vote in Parliament to approve the plan. They argued that the Directive required open and free consultation, which was not fulfilled if a party whip compelled party members to vote. The Supreme Court unanimously held the Directive did not require that no party whip occurred, but if a conflict had existed a Directive would not be able to compromise the fundamental constitutional principle from the Bill of Rights that Parliament is free to organise its affairs.

Fourth, devolution in the United Kingdom has meant Parliament gave the power to legislate on specific topics to nations and regions: the Scotland Act 1998 created the Scottish Parliament, the Government of Wales Act 1998 created the Welsh Assembly, the Northern Ireland Act 1998 created a Northern Ireland Executive following the historic Good Friday Agreement, to bring peace. In addition, the Local Government Act 1972 and the Greater London Authority Act 1999 give more limited powers to local and London governments. Practically, but also constitutionally, it has become increasingly accepted that decisions should not be taken for the UK which would override, and run counter to, the will of regional governments. However, in R (Miller) v Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union, a group of people who sought to remain in the European Union contested the government on whether the Prime Minister could trigger Article 50 to notify the European Commission of the UK's intention to leave, without an Act of Parliament.[39] This followed the Brexit poll of 2016 where 51.9% of those voting voted to leave.[40]

The claimants argued that, because Brexit would obliterate rights that Parliament had conferred through Acts of Parliament (such as the right of free movement of British citizens in the EU, the right to fair competition through merger control, and the right to vote for EU institutions) only Parliament could consent to notifying the intention to negotiate to leave under Article 50. They also argued that the Sewel Convention for devolved assemblies, where the assembly passes a motion that the Westminster Parliament can legislate on a devolved matter before it does so, meant the UK could not negotiate to leave without the Scottish, Welsh or Northern Ireland legislatures' consent. The Supreme Court held that the government could not begin the process of leaving purely through royal prerogative; Parliament must pass an Act enabling it to do so. However, the Sewel convention could not be enforced by courts, rather than observed.[41] This led Prime Minister Theresa May to procure the European Union (Notification of Withdrawal) Act 2017, giving her power to notify the intention to leave the EU.[42]

Rule of law

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The rule of law has been regarded as a fundamental principle of modern legal systems, including the UK.[43] It has been called "as important in a free society as the democratic franchise",[44] and even "the ultimate controlling factor on which our constitution is based".[45] Like parliamentary sovereignty, its meaning and extent is disputed. The most widely accepted meanings speak of several factors: Lord Bingham of Cornhill, formerly the highest judge in England and Wales, suggested the rule of law ought to mean that law is clear and predictable, not subject to broad or unreasonable discretion, applies equally to all people, with speedy and fair procedures for enforcement, protects fundamental human rights, and works according to international law.[46]

Other definitions seek to exclude human rights and international law as relevant but largely stem from visions of pre-democratic scholars such as Albert Venn Dicey.[47] The rule of law was explicitly recognised as a "constitutional principle" in section 1 of the Constitutional Reform Act 2005, which limited the judicial role of the Lord Chancellor and recast the judicial appointments system to entrench independence, diversity and merit.[48] As the statute gives no further definition, the practical meaning of the "rule of law" develops through case law.

The European Court of Human Rights, following common law principles,[49] protects the rule of law by requiring people's liberty, privacy or other rights are not infringed by the government unless there is a clear legal basis and justification.[50]

At its core, the rule of law, in English and British law, has traditionally been the principle of "legality". This means that the state, government, and any person acting under government authority (including a corporation),[51] may only act according to law. In 1765, in Entick v Carrington a writer, John Entick, claimed that the King's Chief Messenger, Nathan Carrington, had no legal authority to break into and ransack his home, and remove his papers. Carrington claimed he had authority from the Secretary of State, Lord Halifax, who issued a search "warrant", but there was no statute that gave Lord Halifax the authority to issue search warrants. Lord Camden CJ held that the "great end, for which men entered into society, was to secure their property", and that without any authority "every invasion of private property, be it ever so minute, is a trespass."[49] Carrington acted unlawfully and had to pay damages.

Today this principle of legality is found throughout the European Convention on Human Rights, which enables infringements of rights as a starting point only if "in accordance with the law".[52] In 1979, in Malone v Metropolitan Police Commissioner a man charged with handling stolen goods claimed the police unlawfully tapped his phone, to get evidence. The only related statute, the Post Office Act 1969 Schedule 5, stated there should be no interference in telecommunications unless the Secretary of State issued a warrant, but said nothing explicit about phone tapping. Megarry VC held there was no wrong at common law, and refused to interpret the statute in light of the right to privacy under the European Convention on Human Rights, article 8.[53]

On appeal, the European Court of Human Rights concluded the convention was breached because the statute did not "indicate with reasonable clarity the scope and manner of exercise of the relevant discretion conferred on the public authorities."[54] The judgement, however, was overshadowed by the government swiftly passing a new Act to authorise phone tapping with a warrant.[55] By itself the principle of legality is not enough to alone preserve human rights in the face of ever more intrusive statutory powers of surveillance by corporations or government.

The most broadly accepted meaning of the rule of law, advocated by Lord Bingham of Cornhill, includes the principle of legality, human rights and commitment to democracy and international law.[46]

The rule of law requires the law be truly enforced, though enforcement bodies may have room for discretion. In R (Corner House Research) v Director of the Serious Fraud Office, a group campaigning against the arms trade, Corner House Research, claimed the Serious Fraud Office acted unlawfully by dropping an investigation into the UK–Saudi Al-Yamamah arms deal. It was alleged that BAE Systems plc paid bribes to Saudi government figures.[56] The House of Lords held the SFO was entitled to take into account the public interest in not pursuing an investigation, including the security threats that might transpire. Baroness Hale remarked that the SFO had to consider "the principle that no-one, including powerful British companies who do business for powerful foreign countries, is above the law", but the decision reached was not unreasonable.[57] When enforcement or court proceedings do take place, they should proceed swiftly: anyone who is detained must be charged and put on trial or released.[58]

People must also be able to access justice in practice. In R (UNISON) v Lord Chancellor the Supreme Court held the government's imposition of £1200 in fees to bring an employment tribunal claim undermined the rule of law, and was void. The Lord Chancellor had statutory authority to create fees for court services, but in the case of employment tribunals, his Order led to a 70% drop in claims against employers for breach of labour rights, such as unfair dismissal, unlawful wage deductions or discrimination. Lord Reed said the "constitutional right of access to the courts is inherent in the rule of law". Without access to courts, "laws are liable to become a dead letter, the work done by Parliament may be rendered nugatory, and the democratic election of Members of Parliament may become a meaningless charade."[59] In principle every person is subject to the law, including government ministers, or corporate executives, who may be held in contempt of court for violating an order.[60]

In other systems the idea of a separation of powers is seen as an essential part of maintaining the rule of law. In theory, originally advocated by Baron de Montesquieu, there should be a strict separation of the executive, legislature and judiciary.[61] While other systems, notably the United States, attempted to put this into practice (e.g. requiring the executive does not come from the legislature), it is clear that modern political parties may undermine such a separation by capturing all three branches of government, and democracy has been maintained since the 20th century despite the fact that "there is no formal separation of powers in the United Kingdom".[62]

The Constitutional Reform Act 2005 ended the practice of the Lord Chancellor sitting as the head of the judiciary, while also being a Member of Parliament, and sitting in the cabinet. Since the Act of Settlement 1700, there has been only one instance of a judge being removed, and a suspension cannot happen without the Lord Chief Justice and the Lord Chancellor following a judge being subject to criminal proceedings.[63] There is now a duty on all ministers to "uphold the continued independence of the judiciary", including against assault by powerful corporations or the media.[64]

Democracy

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Parliament was recognised as a forum for the King for "common counsel" before Magna Carta.

The principle of a "democratic society", with a functioning representative and deliberative democracy, that upholds human rights, legitimises the fact of Parliamentary sovereignty,[65] and it is widely considered that "democracy lies at the heart of the concept of the rule of law".[66] The opposite of arbitrary power exercised by one person is "administration is in the hands of the many and not of the few".[67] According to the preamble to the European Convention on Human Rights, as drafted by British lawyers following World War II, fundamental human rights and freedoms are themselves "best maintained ... by "an effective political democracy".[68] Similarly, this "characteristic principle of democracy" is enshrined by the First Protocol, article 3, which requires the "right to free elections" to "ensure the free expression of the opinion of the people in the choice of the legislature".[69] While there are many conceptions of democracy, such as "direct", "representative" or "deliberative", the dominant view in modern political theory is that democracy requires an active citizenry, not only in electing representatives, but in taking part in political life.[70]

Its essence lies in not simply majority decision-making, nor referendums that can easily be used as a tool of manipulation,[71] "but in the making of politically responsible decisions" and in "large-scale social changes maximising the freedom" of humankind.[72] The legitimacy of law in a democratic society depends upon a constant process of deliberative discussion and public debate, rather than the imposition of decisions.[73] It is also generally agreed that basic standards in political, social and economic rights are necessary to ensure everyone can play a meaningful role in political life.[74] For this reason, the rights to free voting in fair elections and "general welfare in a democratic society" have developed hand-in-hand with all human rights, and form a fundamental cornerstone of international law.[75]

In the UK's "modern democratic constitution",[76] the principle of democracy is manifested through statutes and case law which guarantee the right to vote in fair elections, and through its use as a principle of interpretation by courts. In 1703, in the landmark case of Ashby v White, Lord Holt CJ stated that the right of everyone "to give [their] vote at the election of a person to represent [them] in Parliament, there to concur to the making of laws, which are to bind [their] liberty and property, is a most transcendent thing, and of a high nature".[77] This has meant that the courts actively ensure that votes cast are counted and that democratic elections are conducted according to law. In Morgan v Simpson the Court of Appeal held that if a vote "was conducted so badly that it was not substantially in accordance with the law, " then it would be declared void, and so would even minor irregularities that would affect the result.[78]

A considerable body of regulation, for instance in the Representation of the People Act 1983 or the Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act 2000, restrict spending or any foreign interference because, according to Baroness Hale "each person has equal value" and "we do not want our government or its policies to be decided by the highest spenders".[79] More broadly, the concept of a "democratic society" and what is "necessary" for its functioning underpins the entire scheme of interpretation for the European Convention on Human Rights as applied in British law, particularly after the Human Rights Act 1998, because each right can usually only be restricted if "in accordance with law" and as "necessary in a democratic society". The place of the social welfare state that is necessary to support democratic life is also manifested through the courts' interpretation. For instance, in Gorringe v Calderdale MBC, Lord Steyn, giving the leading judgement, said it was "necessary" to view the law of negligence in the context of "the contours of our social welfare state".[80] More generally, the common law has been increasingly developed to be harmonious with statutory rights,[81] and also in harmony with rights under international law.

Internationalism

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Like other democratic countries,[82] the principles of international law are a basic component of the British constitution, both as a primary tool of interpretation of domestic law and through the UK's consistent support and membership of major international organisations. As far back as Magna Carta, English law recognised the right to free movement of people for international trade.[83] In 1608, Sir Edward Coke wrote confidently that international commercial law, or the lex mercatoria, is part of the laws of the realm.[84] The constitutional crises of the 17th century centred upon Parliament halting the King's attempt to tax international trade without its consent.[85] Similarly in the 18th century, Lord Holt CJ viewed international law as a general tool for interpretation of the common law,[86] while Lord Mansfield in particular did more than any other to affirm that the international lex mercatoria "is not the law of a particular country but the law of all nations",[87] and "the law of merchants and the law of the land is the same".[88]

In 1774, in Somerset v Stewart, one of the most important cases in legal history, Lord Mansfield held that slavery was lawful "in no country" and therefore in common law.[89]

In modern case law it has been consistently accepted that it "is a principle of legal policy that [British] law should conform to public international law."[90] The House of Lords stressed that "there is a strong presumption in favour of interpreting English law (whether common law or statute) in a way which does not place the United Kingdom in breach of an international obligation."[91] For example, in Hounga v Allen the Supreme Court held that a young lady who had been illegally trafficked to the UK had a right to bring a race discrimination claim against her employers, even though she had herself been in violation of the Immigration Act 1971.[92]

In doing so, the court unanimously drew upon international treaties signed by the UK, known as the Palermo protocols, as well as the European Convention on Human Rights, in interpreting the scope of the common law doctrine of illegality, and held it was no bar for the claimant to assert her legal rights. It has been further debated whether the UK should adopt a theory of that sees international law as part of UK without any further act (a "monist" theory), or whether it should still be required for international law principles to be translated into domestic law (a "dualist" theory).[93] The current position in European Union law is that while international law binds the EU, it cannot undermine fundamental principles of constitutional law or human rights.[94]

In the Brexit referendum 51.9% voted to leave the European Union, and 48.1% to remain. Critics have filed complaints about the substantiality of the question.[95]

Since the World Wars brought an end to the British Empire and physically destroyed large parts of the country, the UK has consistently supported organisations formed under international law. From the Treaty of Versailles in 1919, the UK was a founding member of the International Labour Organization, which sets universal standards for people's rights at work. After the failure of the League of Nations and following World War II, the UK became a founding member of the United Nations, recognised by Parliament through the United Nations Act 1946, enabling any resolution of the Security Council except the use of force to be implemented by an Order in Council. Due the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in 1948, the continuation of the British Empire[clarification needed] lost substantial legitimacy under international law, and combined with independence movements this led to its rapid dissolution.

Two fundamental treaties, the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights in 1966, saw the UK ratify most rights from the Universal Declaration. Codifying the Ponsonby Rule from 1924, the Constitutional Reform and Governance Act 2010 section 20 stipulates that a treaty is ratified once it is laid before Parliament for 21 days and no adverse resolution is passed against it.[96] Regionally, the UK participated in drafting the 1950 European Convention on Human Rights which sought to guarantee basic standards of democracy and human rights to preserve peace in post-war Europe. At the same time, following long-held visions for European integration with the UK "at the centre",[97] democratic European countries sought to integrate their economies both to make war vain, and to advance social progress.

In 1972, the UK joined the European Communities (reorganised and renamed the European Union in 1992) and committed to implement EU law in which it participated, in the European Communities Act 1972. In 1995, the UK also became a founding member of the World Trade Organization.[98] To ensure that the European Convention was directly applied by the courts, the Human Rights Act 1998 was passed. Parliament also passed the International Criminal Court Act 2001 to enable prosecution of war criminals, and subjected itself to the jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court. In 2016 the UK voted in a referendum on whether to leave the European Union, resulting—with a 72.2% turnout—in a margin of 51.9% favouring "leave" and 48.1% favouring "remain".[99] Some allegations were made of misconduct taking place in the campaigns in support of both referendum options, whilst authorities found nothing considered serious enough to affect results and little to chastise.[100]

Sources

[edit]

Due to the uncodified nature of the Constitution, there is no entrenched source of constitutional law. However, over time three main bodies of sources have emerged. The main sources of constitutional law are Acts of Parliament, court cases, and conventions in the way that government, Parliament and the monarch act.[101]

Acts of Parliament

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Laws that touch on topics such as the structure of government, rights of citizens and the powers of devolved assemblies become constitutionally significant simply by their subject matter and the sovereignty of parliament meaning that the specifics of the law becoming legally binding.[102] This allows for the constitution to be amended whenever a law is made on a constitutionally significant topic.

Professor Robert Blackburn lists the following as recent constitutionally significant acts:

  • "The Parliament Acts (1911–49) that regulate the respective powers of the two Houses of Parliament.
  • The Representation of the People Acts (1918) (as amended) providing for universal voting and other matters of political representation.
  • The European Communities Act (1972) making the UK a legal partner in the European Union.
  • The Scottish, Welsh and Northern Ireland devolution Acts of 1998 (as amended) creating an executive and legislature for each of those three nations in the UK.
  • The Human Rights Act (1998) establishing a bill of rights and freedoms actionable by individuals through the courts."

He claims that recent developments have seen some acts ad hoc codification.[103]

Court cases

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Via court cases, judges create common law when they decide legal proceedings. This means that in order to understand the common law, individual pieces of case law must be examined, with earlier and higher court case law having precedent over newer and lower court case law.[104] Traditionally this system of precedent operated on the basis that the reason for the decision (ratio decidendi) in a superior court binds inferior courts, and judicial comments not necessary to decide the matter at hand are persuasive but non-binding obiter dicta. However, in R v Barton and Booth, the Court of Appeal unanimously held that the Supreme Court alone is capable of issuing binding directions in non-binding obiter. Academically this proposition has been heavily criticised.[105]

Conventions

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Conventions are harder to pin down as being constitutionally significant due to be unwritten agreements without hard legal force, but they remain an integral element of the constitution.[106] Elements such as the leader of the party with a majority becoming Prime Minister, the House of Lords not vetoing secondary legislation and judges remaining impartial on government policy are all conventions.[107]

Institutions

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The UK system of parliamentary democracy ensures that the executive, and the prime minister, is removable by a simple majority vote in the House of Commons. The executive is bound to the rule of law, interpreted by the judiciary, but the judiciary may not declare an Act of Parliament to be unconstitutional.

While principles may be the basis of the UK constitution, the institutions of the state perform its functions in practice. First, Parliament is the sovereign entity. Its two chambers legislate. In the House of Commons each Member of Parliament is elected by a simple plurality in a democratic vote, although outcomes do not always accurately match people's preferences overall. Elections must be held within five years after the previous election of a Parliament, though historically they have tended to occur every four years.[108] Election spending is tightly controlled, foreign interference is prohibited, and donations and lobbying are limited in whatever form. The House of Lords reviews and votes upon legislative proposals by the Commons. It can delay legislation by one year, and cannot delay at all if the proposed Act concerns money.[109]

Most Lords are appointed by the Prime Minister, through the King,[110] on the advice of a Commission which, by convention, offers some balance between political parties. Ninety-two hereditary peers remain.[111] To become law, each Act of Parliament must be read by both houses three times, and given royal assent by the monarch. The Sovereign does not veto legislation, by convention, since 1708. Second, the judiciary interprets the law. It can not strike down an Act of Parliament, but the judiciary ensures that any law which may violate fundamental rights has to be clearly expressed, to force politicians to openly confront what they are doing and "accept the political cost".[112]

Under the Constitutional Reform Act 2005, the judiciary is appointed by the Judicial Appointments Commission with cross-party and judicial recommendations, to protect judicial independence. Third, the executive branch of government is led by the prime minister who must be able to command a majority in the House of Commons. The Cabinet of Ministers is appointed by the Prime Minister to lead the main departments of state, such as the Treasury, the Foreign Office, the Department of Health and the Department for Education. Officially the "head of state" is the monarch, but all prerogative power is exercised by the Prime Minister, subject to judicial review. Fourth, as the UK matured as a modern democracy, an extensive system of civil servants, and public service institutions developed to deliver UK residents economic, social and legal rights. All public bodies, and private bodies that perform public functions, are bound by the rule of law.

Parliament

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In the British constitution, Parliament sits at the apex of power. It emerged through a series of revolutions as the dominant body, over the church, courts, and the monarch,[113] and within Parliament the House of Commons emerged as the dominant chamber, over the House of Lords that traditionally represented the aristocracy.[114] The central justification for Parliamentary sovereignty is usually thought to be its democratic nature, although it was only upon the Representation of the People (Equal Franchise) Act 1928 that Parliament could be said to have finally become "democratic" in any modern sense (as property qualifications to vote were abolished for everyone over 21). Parliament's main functions are to legislate, to allocate money for public spending,[115] and to scrutinise the government.[116]

In practice many MPs are involved in Parliamentary committees which investigate spending, policies, laws and their impact, and often report to recommend reform. For instance, the Modernisation Committee of the House of Commons in 2002 recommended publishing draft bills before they became law, and was later found to have been highly successful.[117] There are 650 Members of Parliament (MPs) in the House of Commons, currently elected for terms of up to five years,[118] and 790 peers in the House of Lords. For a proposed Bill to become an Act, and law, it must be read three times in each chamber, and given royal assent by the monarch.

The House of Commons is the most important body in the British constitution. Its Members of Parliament are democratically elected by constituencies across the UK, and the parties who have a majority in the Commons form the British government.

Today, the House of Commons is the primary organ of representative government. Section 1 of the Representation of the People Act 1983 gives the right to all registered citizens of the United Kingdom, the Republic of Ireland and the Commonwealth aged 18 and over to elect Members of Parliament to the House of Commons. Sections 3 and 4 exclude people who are convicted of an offence and in a penal institution, or detained under mental health laws.[119] These restrictions fall below European standards, which require that people who are convicted of very minor crimes (such as petty theft or drug offences) have the right to vote.[120] Since 2013, everyone has to register individually to vote, instead of households being able to register collectively, but an annual household canvass is conducted to increase the number of registered people.[121]

As far back as 1703, Ashby v White recognised the right to "vote at the election of a person to represent him or [her] in Parliament, there to concur to the making of laws, which are to bind his liberty and property" as "a most transcendent thing, and of an high nature".[122] This originally meant that any interference in that right would lead to damages. If the denial of voting would have changed the result, or if a vote was "conducted so badly that it was not substantially in accordance with the law" the vote would have to be run again.[123] So, in Morgan v Simpson the Court of Appeal declared that an election for a Greater London Council seat was not valid after it was found that 44 unstamped ballot papers were not counted. These common law principles predate statutory regulation, and therefore appear to apply to any vote, including elections and referendums.[124]

Election spending is tightly controlled today by statute. A maximum of £20 million can be spent by political parties in national campaigns, plus £10,000 in each constituency.[125] Political advertisements on television are prohibited except for those in certain free time slots,[126] although the internet remains largely unregulated. Any spending over £500 by third parties must be disclosed. While these rules are strict, they were held in Animal Defenders International v UK to be compatible with the Convention because "each person has equal value" and "we do not want our government or its policies to be decided by the highest spenders."[127] Foreign interference in voting is completely prohibited, including any "broadcasting" (also over the internet) "with intent to influence persons to give or refrain from giving their votes".[128]

Donations by foreign parties can be forfeited in their entirety to the Electoral Commission.[129] Domestic donations are limited to registered parties, and must be reported, when they are over £7,500 nationally or £1,500 locally, to the Electoral Commission.[130] The system for electing the Commons is based on constituencies, whose boundaries are periodically reviewed to even out populations.[131] There has been considerable debate about the first-past-the-post system of voting the UK uses, as it tends to exclude minority parties. By contrast, in Australia voters may select preferences for candidates, although this system was rejected in a 2011 United Kingdom Alternative Vote referendum staged by the Cameron-Clegg coalition. In the European Parliament, voters choose a party from multi-member regional constituencies: this tends to give smaller parties much greater representation. In the Scottish Parliament, the Welsh Parliament and London Assembly, voters have the choice of both constituencies and a party list, which tends to reflect overall preferences best. To be elected as an MP, most people generally become members of political parties, and must be over 18 on the day of nomination to run for a seat,[132] be a qualifying Commonwealth or Irish citizen,[133] not be bankrupt,[134] found guilty of corrupt practices,[135] or be a Lord, judge or employee of the civil service.[136] To limit the government's practical control over Parliament, the Ministerial and other Salaries Act 1975 restricts higher payment of salaries to a set number of MPs.[137]

The House of Lords is a chamber mostly appointed by the prime minister, loosely based on the Lords' expertise, achievement, or political affiliation. Since the abolition of most hereditary peers, there has been ongoing debate about whether or how to elect the House of Lords.

Along with a hereditary monarch, the House of Lords remains an historical curiosity in the British constitution. Traditionally it represented the landed aristocracy, and political allies of the monarch or the government, and has only gradually and incompletely been reformed. Today, the House of Lords Act 1999 has abolished all but 92 hereditary peers, leaving most peers to be "life peers" appointed by the government under the Life Peerages Act 1958, law lords appointed under the Appellate Jurisdiction Act 1876, and Lords Spiritual who are senior clergy of the Church of England.[138] Since 2005, senior judges can only sit and vote in the House of Lords after retirement.[139]

The government carries out appointment of most peers, but since 2000 has taken advice from a seven-person House of Lords Appointments Commission with representatives from the Labour, Conservatives and Liberal-Democrat parties.[140] A peerage can always be disclaimed,[141] and ex-peers may then run for Parliament.[142] Since 2015, a peer may be suspended or expelled by the House.[143] In practice the Parliament Act 1949 greatly reduced the House of Lords' power, as it can only delay and cannot block legislation by one year, and cannot delay money bills at all.[144]

Several options for reform have been debated. A House of Lords Reform Bill 2012 proposed to have 360 directly elected members, 90 appointed members, 12 bishops and an uncertain number of ministerial members. The elected Lords would have been elected by proportional representation for 15-year terms, through 10 regional constituencies on a single transferable vote system. However, the government withdrew support after backlash from Conservative backbenches. It has often been argued that if the Lords were elected by geographic constituencies and a party controlled both sides "there would be little prospect of effective scrutiny or revision of government business."[145]

A second option, like in the Swedish Riksdag, could simply be to abolish the House of Lords. This was done during the English Civil War in 1649, but restored along with the monarchy in 1660.[145] A third proposed option is to elect peers by work and professional groups, so that health care workers elect peers with special health knowledge, people in education elect a fixed number of education experts, legal professionals elect legal representatives, and so on.[146] This is argued to be necessary to improve the quality of legislation.

Judiciary

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Proceedings in the UK Supreme Court, which moved to its modern home at Middlesex Guildhall in 2009, are web-streamed live.

The judiciary in the United Kingdom has the essential functions of upholding the rule of law, democracy, and human rights. The highest court of appeal, renamed from the House of Lords officially from 2005, is the Supreme Court. The Lord Chancellor's role changed dramatically on 3 April 2006, as a result of the Constitutional Reform Act 2005. Due to the Constitutional Reform Act of 2005, the make up of the Judiciary is clearly demonstrated for the first time inside the Constitution. This form of enshrined law presents a new branch of government. An independent Supreme Court has been established, separate from the House of Lords and with its own independent appointments system, staff, budget and building.[147]

Further aspects of this explores how independent the Judiciary has become. An Appointments Commission, responsible for selecting candidates to recommend for judicial appointment to the Secretary of State for Justice was established. The Judicial Appointments Commission ensures that merit remains the sole criterion for appointment and the appointments system is modern, open and transparent. In terms of scrutiny, A Judicial Appointment and Conduct Ombudsman, responsible for investigating and making recommendations concerning complaints about the judicial appointments process, and the handling of judicial conduct complaints within the scope of the Constitutional Reform Act, provides checks and balances to the Supreme Court.[147]

The Judiciary hears appeals from the whole UK in civil law matters, and for criminal law in England and Wales, and Northern Ireland. It does not hear criminal appeals from Scotland. The Supreme Court does however consider "devolution issues" where these may affect Scottish criminal law.[citation needed] Since the 1966 Practice Statement, the judiciary has acknowledged that while a system of precedent, that binds lower courts, is necessary to provide "at least some degree of certainty", the courts should update their jurisprudence and "depart from a previous decision when it appears right to do so."[148]

Litigation usually begins in a County Court or the High Court for civil law issues,[149] or a magistrates' court or the Crown Court for criminal law issues. There are also employment tribunals for labour law disputes,[150] and the First-tier Tribunal for public or regulatory disputes, ranging from immigration, to social security, to tax.[151] After the High Court, Crown Court, or appeal tribunals, cases generally may appeal to the Court of Appeal in England and Wales. In Scotland, the Court of Session has an Outer (first instance) and Inner (appeal) House. Appeals then go to the Supreme Court. Since the Human Rights Act 1998, courts have been expressly required to interpret law to be compatible with the European Convention on Human Rights. This follows a longer tradition of courts interpreting the law to be compatible with international law obligations.[152]

It is generally accepted that the British courts do not merely apply but also create new law through their interpretative function: this is obvious in the common law and equity, where there is no codified statutory basis for large parts of the law, such as contracts, torts or trusts. This also means an element of retroactivity,[153] since an application of developing rules may differ from at least one party's understanding of the law in any conflict.[154] Although formally the British judiciary may not declare an Act of Parliament "unconstitutional",[155] in practice the judiciary's power to interpret the law so as to be compatible with human rights can render a statute inoperative, much like in other countries.[156] The courts do so sparingly because they recognise the importance of the democratic process. Judges may also sit from time to time on public inquiries.[157]

The Supreme Court on Parliament Square, London

The independence of the judiciary is one of the cornerstones of the constitution, and means in practice that judges cannot be dismissed from office. Since the Act of Settlement 1700, no judge has been removed, as to do so the King must act on address by both Houses of Parliament.[158] It is very likely that a judge would never be dismissed, not merely because of formal rules but a "shared constitutional understanding" of the importance of the integrity of the legal system.[159] This is reflected, for example, in the sub judice rule that matters awaiting decision in court should not be prejudged in a Parliamentary debate.[160] The Lord Chancellor, once head of the judiciary but now simply a government minister, also has a statutory duty to uphold the independence of the judiciary,[161] for instance, against attacks upon their integrity by media, corporations, or the government itself.

Members of the judiciary can be appointed from among any member of the legal profession who has over 10 years of experience having rights of audience before a court: this usually includes barristers, but can also mean solicitors or academics.[162] Appointments should be made "solely on merit" but regard may be had to the need for diversity when two candidates have equal qualifications.[163] For appointments to the Supreme Court, a five-member Judicial Appointments Committee is formed including one Supreme Court judge, three members from the Judicial Appointments Commission, and one lay person.[164] For other senior judges such as those on the Court of Appeal, or for the Lord Chief Justice, Master of the Rolls, or the heads of the High Court divisions, a similar five member panel with two judges is formed.[165] Gender and ethnic diversity is lacking in the British judiciary compared to other developed countries, and potentially compromises the expertise and administration of justice.[166]

Backing up the judiciary is a considerable body of administrative law. The Contempt of Court Act 1981 enables a court to hold anyone in contempt, and commit the person to imprisonment, for violating a court order, or behaviour that could compromise a fair judicial process. In practice this is enforced by the executive. The Lord Chancellor heads the Ministry of Justice, which performs various functions including administering the Legal Aid Agency for people who cannot afford access to the courts. In R (UNISON) v Lord Chancellor the government suffered scathing criticism for creating high fees that cut the number of applicants to employment tribunals by 70 per cent.[167] The Attorney General of England and Wales, and in Scottish matters, the Advocate General for Scotland, and the Solicitor General for England and Wales represent the Crown in litigation. The Attorney General also appoints the Director of Public Prosecutions who heads the Crown Prosecution Service, which reviews cases submitted by the police for prosecution, and conducts them on behalf of the Crown.[168]

Executive

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The prime minister, at 10 Downing Street, exercises political power of the British government, when they command majority support of the House of Commons.

The executive branch, while subservient to Parliament and judicial oversight, exercises day to day power of the British government. The UK remains a constitutional monarchy. The formal head of state is Charles III, the monarch since 2022. No Queen or King has withheld assent to any bill passed by Parliament since 1708,[169] and all constitutional duties and power are accepted by binding convention to have shifted to the prime minister, Parliament or the courts.[170] Over the 17th century, the Petition of Right was asserted by Parliament to prevent any taxation by the monarch without Parliament's consent, and the Habeas Corpus Act 1640 denied the monarch any power to arrest people for failing to pay taxes.

The monarch's continued assertion of the divine right to rule led to Charles I being executed in the English Civil War, and finally the settlement of power in the Bill of Rights 1689. Following the Act of Union 1707 and an early financial crisis as South Sea Company shares crashed, Robert Walpole emerged as a dominant political figure. Leading the House of Commons from 1721 to 1742, Walpole is generally acknowledged to be the first prime minister (Primus inter pares). The PM's modern functions include leading the dominant political party, setting policy priorities, creating Ministries and appointing ministers, judges, peers, and civil servants. The PM also has considerable control through the convention of collective responsibility (that ministers must publicly support the government even when they privately disagree, or resign), and control over the government's communications to the public.

By contrast in law, as is necessary in a democratic society,[171] the monarch is a figurehead with no political power,[172] but a series of ceremonial duties, and considerable funding. Aside from private wealth and finance,[173] the monarchy is funded under the Sovereign Grant Act 2011, which reserves 25 per cent of the net revenue from the Crown Estate.[174] The Crown Estate is a public, government corporation,[175] which in 2015 held £12 billion in investments, mostly land and property, and therefore generates income by charging rent to businesses or people for homes.[176] The monarch's major ceremonial duties are to appoint the prime minister who can command the majority of the House of Commons,[177] to give royal assent to Acts of Parliament, and to dissolve Parliament upon the calling of an election.[178]

Minor ceremonial duties include giving an audience to the Prime Minister, as well as visiting ministers or diplomats from the Commonwealth, and acting on state occasions, such as delivering the "King's speech" (written by the government, outlining its political platform) at the opening of Parliament. Public support for the monarchy remains high, with only 21% of the population preferring a republic instead. However, on the other hand, it has been argued that the UK should abolish the monarchy, on the ground that hereditary inheritance of political office has no place in a modern democracy. A referendum was held in Australia, in 1999 on becoming a Republic, but failed to get a majority.[179][180]

US President Barack Obama (R) meeting with Opposition leader Jeremy Corbyn (L):
The task of the official opposition, currently led by Kemi Badenoch of the Conservative Party, is to hold the government and the Prime Minister to account in and out of Parliament.

Although called the royal prerogative, a series of important powers that were once vested in the king or queen are now exercised by government, and the prime minister in particular. These are powers of day-to-day management, but tightly constrained to ensure that executive power cannot usurp Parliament or the courts. In the Case of Prohibitions in 1607,[181] it was held that the royal prerogative could not be used to determine court cases, and in the Case of Proclamations in 1610 it was held new prerogative powers could not be created by the executive.[182]

It is also clear that no exercise of the prerogative can compromise any right contained in an Act of Parliament. So, for instance, in R (Miller) v Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union the Supreme Court held that the Prime Minister could not notify the European Commission of an intention to leave under Article 50 of the Treaty on European Union without an Act of Parliament, because it could result in rights being withdrawn that were granted under the European Communities Act 1972, such as the right to work in other EU member states or vote in European Parliament elections.[183]

Though royal prerogative powers can be categorised in different ways,[184] there are around 15.[185] First, the executive may create hereditary titles, confer honours and create peers.[186] Second, the executive can legislate by an Order in Council, though this has been called an 'anachronistic survival'.[187] Third, the executive can create and administer financial benefits schemes.[188] Fourth, through the Attorney General the executive can stop prosecutions or pardon convicted offenders after taking advice.[189] Fifth, the executive may acquire more territory or alter limits of British territorial waters.[190] Sixth, the executive may expel aliens and theoretically restrain people from leaving the UK.[191] Seventh, the executive can sign treaties, although before it is considered ratified the treaty must be laid before Parliament for 21 days and there must be no resolution against it.[192] Eighth, the executive governs the armed forces and can do "all those things in an emergency which are necessary for the conduct of war".[193]

The executive cannot declare war without Parliament by convention, and in any case has no hope in funding war without Parliament.[194] Ninth, the Prime Minister can appoint ministers, judges, public officials or royal commissioners. Tenth, the monarch needs to pay no tax, unless statute states it expressly.[195] Eleventh, the executive may by royal charter create corporations, such as the BBC,[196] and franchises for markets, ferries and fisheries.[197] Twelfth, the executive has the right to mine precious metals, and to take treasure troves. Thirteenth, it may make coins. Fourteenth, it can print or licence the authorised version of the Bible, Book of Common Prayer and state papers. And fifteenth, subject to modern family law, it may take guardianship of infants.[198]

In addition to these royal prerogative powers, there are innumerable powers explicitly laid down in statutes enabling the executive to make legal changes. This includes a growing number of Henry VIII clauses, which enable a Secretary of State to alter provisions of primary legislation. For this reason it has often been argued that executive authority should be reduced, written into statute, and never used to deprive people of rights without Parliament. All uses of the prerogative, however, are subject to judicial review: in the GCHQ case the House of Lords held that no person could be deprived of legitimate expectations by use of the royal prerogative.[199]

Whitehall hosts the major offices of the British government, led by cabinet ministers. Facing towards Big Ben is a statue of Charles I, who was executed in 1649 following the English Civil War.

Although the Prime Minister is the head of Parliament, His Majesty's Government is formed by a larger group of Members of Parliament, or peers. The "cabinet" is a still smaller group of 22 or 23 people, though only twenty ministers may be paid.[200] Each minister typically heads a Department or Ministry, which can be created or renamed by prerogative.[201] Cabinet committees are usually organised by the Prime Minister. Every minister is expected to follow collective responsibility,[202] and the Ministerial Code 2010. This includes rules that Ministers are "expected to behave in a way that upholds the highest standards of propriety", "give accurate and truthful information to Parliament", resign if they "knowingly mislead Parliament", to be "as open as possible", have no possible conflicts of interest and give a full list of interests to a permanent secretary, and only "remain in office for so long as they retain the confidence of the Prime Minister".[203]

Assisting ministers is a modern civil service and network of government bodies, who are employed at the pleasure of the Crown.[203] The Civil Service Code requires civil servants to show "high standards of behaviour", uphold core values of "integrity, honesty, objectivity and impartiality", and never put themselves in a position that "might reasonably be seen to compromise their personal judgment or integrity".[204] Since the Freedom of Information Act 2000, it has been expected that government should be open about information, and should disclose it upon a request unless disclosure would compromise personal data, security or may run against the public interest.[205] In this way the trend has been to more open, transparent and accountable governance.

Local government

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The London Assembly and Mayor of London work at City Hall. The only region of England with representation, it has limited powers including over transport, the environment and housing.[206]

The constitution of British regional governments is an uncodified patchwork of authorities, mayors, councils and devolved government.[207] In Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland and London unified district or borough councils have local government powers, and since 1998 to 2006 new regional assemblies or Parliaments exercise extra powers devolved from Westminster. In England, there are 55 unitary authorities in the larger towns (e.g. Bristol, Brighton, Milton Keynes) and 36 metropolitan boroughs (surrounding Liverpool, Manchester, Leeds, Birmingham, Sheffield, and Newcastle) which function as unitary local authorities.

In other parts of England, local government is split between two tiers of authority: 32 larger County Councils, and within those 192 District Councils, each sharing different functions. Since 1994, England has had eight regions for administrative purposes at Whitehall, yet these have no regional government or democratic assembly (like in London, Scotland, Wales or Northern Ireland) after a 2004 referendum on North East Assembly failed. This means that England has among the most centralised, and disunified systems of governance in the Commonwealth and Europe.

Three main issues in local government are the authorities' financing, their powers, and the reform of governance structures. First, councils raise revenue from Council Tax (charged on local residents according to property values in 1993[208]) and business rates charged on businesses with operations in the locality. These powers are, compared to other countries, extreme in limiting local government autonomy, and taxes can be subjected to a local referendum if the Secretary of State determines they are excessive.[209]

In real terms since 2010, central government cut local council funding by nearly 50 per cent, and real spending fell by 21 per cent, as councils failed to make up cuts through business rates.[210] Unitary authorities and district councils are responsible for administering council tax and business rates.[211] The duties of British local governments are also extremely limited compared to other countries, but also uncodified so that in 2011 the Department for Communities and Local Government enumerated 1340 specific duties of local authorities.[212] Generally, the Localism Act 2011 section 1 states local authorities may do anything an individual person may do, unless prohibited by law, but this provision has little effect because human beings or companies cannot tax or regulate other people in the way that governments must.[213]

The Local Government Act 1972 section 101 says that a local authority can discharge its functions through a committee or any officer, and can transfer functions to another authority, while section 111 gives authorities the power to do anything including spending or borrowing 'which is calculated to facilitate, or is conducive or incidental to, the discharge of any of their functions'. However, the real duties of local council are found in hundreds of scattered Acts and statutory instruments. These include duties to administer planning consent,[214] to carry out compulsory purchasing according to law,[215] to administer school education,[216] libraries,[217] care for children,[218] roads or highway maintenance and local buses,[219] provide care for the elderly and disabled,[220] prevent pollution and ensure clean air,[221] ensure collection, recycling and disposal of waste,[222] regulate building standards,[223] provide social and affordable housing,[224] and shelters for the homeless.[225]

Local authorities do not yet have powers common in other countries, such as setting minimum wages, regulating rents, or borrowing and taxing as is necessary in the public interest, which frustrates objectives of pluralism, localism and autonomy.[226] Since 2009, authorities have been empowered to merge into 'combined authorities' and to have an elected mayor.[227] This has been done around Manchester, Sheffield, Liverpool, Newcastle, Leeds, Birmingham, the Tees Valley, Bristol and Peterborough. The functions of an elected mayor are not substantial, but can include those of Police and Crime Commissioners.[228]

Devolved governments

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The Scottish Parliament at Holyrood has 129 MSPs with extensive powers, including taxation.

Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland have their own devolved governments and national parliament, similar to state or provincial governments in other countries. The extent of devolution differs in each place. The Scotland Act 1998 created a unicameral Scottish Parliament with 129 elected members each four years: 73 from single member constituencies with simple majority vote, and 56 from additional member systems of proportional representation. Under section 28, the Scottish Parliament can make any laws except for on 'reserved matters' listed in Schedule 5. These powers, reserved for the British Parliament, include foreign affairs, defence, finance, economic planning, home affairs, trade and industry, social security, employment, broadcasting, and equal opportunities.

By convention, members of the British Parliament from Scottish constituencies do not vote on issues that the Scottish Parliament has exercised power over.[229] This is the most powerful regional government so far. The Northern Ireland Act 1998 lists which matters are transferred to the Northern Ireland Assembly. The Government of Wales Act 1998 created a 60-member national assembly with elections every four years, and set out twenty fields of government competence, with some exceptions. The fields include agriculture, fisheries, forestry and rural development, economic development, education, environmental policy, health, highways and transport, housing, planning, and some aspects of social welfare.[230] The Supreme Court has tended to interpret these powers in favour of devolution.[231]

Human rights

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At Speakers' Corner of Hyde Park, London, here the people traditionally gather to exchange views, debate, and listen. Debating and free speech societies are found throughout the UK and make a regular part of TV.[232]

Codification of human rights is recent, but before the Human Rights Act 1998 and the European Convention on Human Rights, British law had one of the world's longest human rights traditions. Magna Carta bound the King to require Parliament's consent before any tax, respect the right to a trial "by lawful judgment of his Peers, or by the Law of the Land", stated that "We will sell to no man, we will not deny or defer to any man either Justice or Right", guaranteed free movement for people, and preserved common land for everyone.[233]

After the English Civil War the Bill of Rights 1689 in England and Wales, and the Claim of Rights Act 1689 in Scotland, enshrined principles of representative democracy, no tax without Parliament, freedom of speech in Parliament, and no "cruel and unusual punishment". By 1789, these ideas evolved and inspired both the US Bill of Rights, and the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen after the American and French Revolutions. Although some labelled natural rights as "nonsense upon stilts",[234] more legal rights were slowly developed by Parliament and the courts. In 1792, Mary Wollstonecraft began the British movement for women's rights and equality,[235] while movements behind the Tolpuddle Martyrs and the Chartists drove reform for labour and democratic freedom.[236]

Upon the catastrophe of World War II and The Holocaust, the new international law order put the Universal Declaration of Human Rights 1948 at its centre, enshrining civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights.[237] In 1950, the UK co-authored the European Convention on Human Rights, enabling people to appeal to the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg even against Acts of Parliament: Parliament has always undertaken to comply with basic principles of international law.[238]

Because this appeals process was long, Parliament legislated to "bring rights home" with the Human Rights Act 1998, so that people can raise human rights claims in British courts based on the Convention directly. The Convention contains the rights to life, rights against torture, against forced labour, to marry, to an effective remedy, and the right to suffer no discrimination in those rights.[239] Most case law concerns the rights to liberty, privacy, freedom of conscience and freedom of expression, and to freedom of association and assembly.[240] The UK also enshrines rights to fair labour standards, social security, and a multitude of social and economic rights through its legislation.

Administrative law

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Any person in the UK who is significantly affected by a public body's act can challenge a decision by judicial review. The claims usually begin in the High Court.

Administrative law, through judicial review, is essential to hold executive power and public bodies accountable under the law. In practice, constitutional principles emerge through cases of judicial review, because every public body, whose decisions affect people's lives, is created and bound by law. A person can apply to the High Court to challenge a public body's decision if they have a "sufficient interest",[241] within three months of the grounds of the cause of action becoming known.[242] By contrast, claims against public bodies in tort or contract, where the Limitation Act 1980 usually sets the period as 6 years.[243]

Almost any public body, or private bodies exercising public functions,[244] can be the target of judicial review, including a government department, a local council, any Minister, the Prime Minister, or any other body that is created by law. The only public body whose decisions cannot be reviewed is Parliament, when it passes an Act. Otherwise, a claimant can argue that a public body's decision was unlawful in five main types of case:[245] (1) it exceeded the lawful power of the body, used its power for an improper purpose, or acted unreasonably,[246] (2) it violated a legitimate expectation,[247] (3) failed to exercise relevant and independent judgement,[248] (4) exhibited bias or a conflict of interest, or failed to give a fair hearing,[249] and (5) violated a human right.[250]

As a remedy, a claimant can ask for the public body's decisions to be declared void and quashed (or certiorari), or it could ask for an order to make the body do something (or mandamus), or prevent the body from acting unlawfully (or prohibition). A court may also declare the parties' rights and duties, give an injunction, or compensation could also be payable in tort or contract.[251]

History

[edit]
John Ball, a leader of the Peasants' Revolt of 1381 following repression after the Black Death, preached that "matters goeth not well to pass in England, nor shall not do till everything be common, and that there be no villains nor gentlemen, but that we may be all unied [sic] together, and that the lords be no greater masters than we be."[252]

The history of the British constitution, though officially beginning in 1800,[253] traces back to a time long before the four nations of England, Scotland, Wales and Ireland were fully formed.[254] Before the Norman Invasion of 1066, the written history of law was scant.[255]

Following the conquest, according to the legal record Laws of Edward the Confessor,[256] in 1070 William the Conqueror, on the advice of the King's Council (Curia Regis), summoned nobles learned in the law from all parts of the country in order to learn the established laws and customs. After hearing from 12 men from each county on oath, he expressed the wish to establish Norse law as the common law in England under one monarch, because his ancestors and those of his Norman barons all came from Norway. He was, however, persuaded by those summoned, that the laws of the Britons, English and Picts should remain in force 'because it was hard to adopt laws and to judge according to those that they did not know'. It is recorded that 'Finally, by the counsel and at the request of his barons, he acquiesced' and authorised and confirmed the laws as they were under Edward the Confessor.

The Domesday Book was compiled in 1086 cataloguing all land and labour to levy taxes. Just 12 per cent of people were free, while the feudal system made others serfs, slaves or bordars and cottars.[257]

Henry II, who became the monarch in 1154, established the common law by creating a unified system of law "common" to the country.

In 1190 Richard the Lionheart, more closely tied with the Pope in Rome, joined the Third Crusade to invade the Holy Land, but at great cost. Taxes levied by Richard I,[258] and his successor King John to pay for the wars led to intense discontent, and the aristocracy forcing the King to sign Magna Carta 1215. This was a commitment to hold 'common counsel' before any taxation, hold courts at a fixed place, hold trials according to law or before an accused's peers, guarantee free movement of people for trade, and give back common land.[259]

Failure to abide by Magna Carta led to the First Barons' War, and the popular legend of Robin Hood emerged: a returned crusader who robbed from the rich to give to the poor.[260] The commitments on common land were soon recast in the Charter of the Forest 1217, signed at St Paul's by Henry III.[261] These documents established that the monarch, even with apparent authority from God, was bound by law, and it remains 'the nearest approach to an irrepealable "fundamental statute" that England has ever had.'[262]

Throughout the Middle Ages, common land was a source of welfare for common people, peasant labourers bound by a feudal system of control. In 1348, the Black Death struck England, and killed around a third of the population. As peasants lost their lords, and there was a shortage of workers, wages rose. The King and Parliament responded with the Statute of Labourers 1351 to freeze wage rises. This led to the Peasants' Revolt of 1381, where leaders demanded an end to feudalism, and for everything to be held in common.[263] Despite the revolt's violent repression, slavery and serfdom broke down,[264] yet most people remained without any substantial liberty, in political or economic rights. As sheep farming became more profitable than agricultural work, enclosures of common land dispossessed more people, who turned into paupers and were punished.[265]

Under Henry VIII, to seal a divorce from Catherine of Aragon and marry Anne Boleyn (who he soon beheaded for supposed infidelity), the Church of England was declared separate from Rome in the Act of Supremacy 1534, with the King as the head. The Law in Wales Act 1535 united Wales and England in one administrative system, while the King became ever more despotic, executing the Lord Chancellor, Sir Thomas More in 1535, and Dissolution of the monasteries and murdering those who resisted. After Henry VIII died, and power struggles following the death of his boy Edward VI at age 15,[266] Elizabeth I, the daughter of Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn, took the throne in 1558. Half a century of prosperity followed as Elizabeth I avoided wars, and founded corporations including the East India Company to monopolise trade routes. Under her successor, James I, further companies were created to colonise North America, including the London Company and the Virginia Company in 1606, and the Massachusetts Bay Company in 1628. Many religious dissidents left England to settle the new world.

The Glorious Revolution of 1688 confirmed Parliament's supremacy over the monarch, represented by John Locke's Second Treatise on Government (1689). This laid the foundations for a peaceful unification of England and Scotland in the Act of Union 1707.

While Elizabeth I maintained a Protestant church, under her successor James VI and I, who unified the Scottish and English Crowns, religious and political tensions grew as he asserted a divine right of Kings.[267] This prompted a series of cases from Sir Edward Coke,[268] the Chief Justice of the Common Pleas and then King's Bench courts, which denied that the King could pass judgement in legal proceedings,[269] and held that the royal prerogative was subject to the law and cannot be expanded.[182] Coke CJ went even further in Dr Bonham's case, holding that even that "the common law will control Acts of Parliament".[270] Though supported by some judges,[271] the idea that common law courts could nullify Acts of Parliament was rejected, and the common law was formally placed under the King's control in the Earl of Oxford's case, establishing that equity (then administered by the Lord Chancellor in the House of Lords) was above common law.[272]

Coke fell from favour,[273] and was removed from judicial office. When Charles I succeeded to the throne in 1625, and more fervently asserted a divine right, including the ability to levy tax without Parliament,[274] Coke and others presented the Petition of Right 1628.[275] This demanded the King to abide by Magna Carta, levy no tax without Parliament, not arbitrarily commit people to prison, not have martial law in times of peace, and not billet soldiers in private homes. Charles I responded by shutting down or proroguing Parliament and taxing trade (or "ship money") without authority. The country descended into the English Civil War in 1642 culminating in the capture and execution of King Charles I on Whitehall in 1649 by the New Model Army led by Oliver Cromwell.[276]

Cromwell, not wishing to become a King, became a de facto dictator. After his death,[277] the monarchy was restored with Charles II in 1660, but his successor James VII and II again attempted to assert divine right to rule. In 1688, Parliament 'invited' a replacement King and Queen, William and Mary of Orange, and after a brief conflict forced James II out.[278] Known as the Glorious Revolution, Parliament proclaimed a new Bill of Rights 1689, with a Claim of Right Act 1689 in Scotland, that cemented Parliamentary sovereignty. As well as reaffirming Magna Carta, it says the 'pretended power of suspending laws or the execution of laws by regal authority without consent of Parliament is illegal', that 'election of members of Parliament ought to be free', and that 'Parliament ought to be held frequently'.[279] The justification for government itself, encapsulated by John Locke in his Second Treatise on Government was the protection of people's rights: "lives, liberties and estates."[280]

With Parliamentary sovereignty as the cornerstone of the new constitution, Parliament proceeded to set up a system of finance in the Bank of England Act 1694 and the Act of Settlement 1700 created an independent system of justice: judges were salaried and could not be removed except by both Houses of Parliament, no member of the House of Commons could be paid by the Crown, and the Crown had to be Anglican. In 1703, Ashby v White established that the right to vote was a constitutional right.[281] The Acts of Union 1707, ratifying the Treaty of Union 1707, between the then-independent states of Scotland and England, resulted in them both merging their states to create a new state, Great Britain, and dissolving their parliaments to create a new Parliament, which gave Scottish electors representation in Westminster. The Treaty also stipulated that Scottish private law would continue under a Scottish court system.[282]

The new union was soon faced with disaster as in the Treaty of Utrecht, Spain granted the Asiento de Negros to Britain, allowing British merchants to sell slaves in Spanish America. The South Sea Company, incorporated to monopolise the asiento licence, became the object of mass financial speculation, provoked by government ministers interested in its rising share price. When it transpired, contrary to promoters' stories, that no trade was done because the Spanish had revoked their promise the stock market crashed, driving economic chaos.[283]

This was made worse by the decision of conservative politicians to endorse the company to take over the national debt as an alternative financier to the government over the Whig dominated Bank of England. The result of the crash was that the Chancellor of the Exchequer was imprisoned in the Tower of London for his corruption, the Postmaster General committed suicide, and the disgraced Lord Chancellor was replaced with Lord King LC who promptly ruled that people in a position of trust must avoid any possibility of a conflict of interest.[284][285] Out of the chaos, Robert Walpole emerged as a stable political figure who for 21 years held a majority of the House of Commons, and is now considered the first "Prime Minister".[286]

In 1765, Entick v Carrington established that the government could do nothing but that which was empowered by law,[287] while the first teacher of English law, William Blackstone represented the standard view in his Commentaries on the Laws of England that slavery was unlawful and that "the spirit of liberty is so deeply ingrained in our constitution" any person enslaved in England must be freed. However, the Atlantic slave trade had accelerated to the North American colonies. In 1772, when Lord Mansfield ruled in Somerset v Stewart that slavery was unlawful at common law,[288] this set off a wave of outrage in the southern colonies of America, whose economies were heavily dependent on slavery. Together with northern colonies' grievances over taxation without representation, this led to the American Revolution and declaration of independence in 1776.[289] The British military failed to hold control. Instead, it began settling Australia from 1788.[290]

In 1789, the French Revolution broke out, and the French King was deposed with demands for "liberty, equality and fraternity". The British aristocracy reacted with repression on free speech and association to forestall any similar movement.[291] While figures like Jeremy Bentham called natural rights "nonsense upon stilts",[292] Mary Wollstonecraft called for A Vindication of the Rights of Woman as well as men, arguing that unjust gender and class oppression flowed from "the respect paid to property... as from a poisoned fountain".[293] While successful in the Napoleonic Wars in defeating France, and cementing union with Ireland in the Act of Union 1800,[294] liberty, freedom and democracy were scarcely protected in the new "United Kingdom".

During this time, with the invention of the steam engine the Industrial Revolution had begun. Poverty had also accelerated through the Speenhamland system of poor laws by subsidising employers and landowners with parish rates. The Corn Laws from 1815 further impoverished people by fixing prices to maintain landowner profits.[295] While the Great Reform Act 1832 extended the vote slightly, only those with property had any representation in Parliament. The 1833 Slavery Abolition Act abolished slavery within the British Empire, compensating slave owners and made ex-slaves in the colonies work for their owners for four to six years as indentured servants without pay; this was abolished in 1838 after public outcry. With the Poor Law Amendment Act 1834, further punishment for poverty was inflicted as people were put into work houses if found to be unemployed. In R v Lovelass a group of agricultural workers who formed a trade union were prosecuted and sentenced to be transported to Australia under the Unlawful Oaths Act 1797,[296] triggering mass protests.

Demanding democratic reform, the Chartists met on Kennington Common during the Revolutions of 1848.

A movement called Chartism grew demanding the right to vote for everyone in free and fair elections. As the great famine hit Ireland and millions migrated to the United States, Chartists staged a mass march from Kennington Common to Parliament in 1848 as revolutions broke out across Europe, and the Communist Manifesto was drafted by German revolutionary Karl Marx and Manchester factory owner Friedrich Engels. While the Crimean War distracted from social reform and Viscount Palmerston opposed anything,[297] the American Civil War of 1860 to 1865 ended slavery in the US, and the UK gradually enabled greater political freedom.

In the Second Reform Act 1867 more middle class property owners were enfranchised, the Elementary Education Act 1870 provided free primary school, and the Trade Union Act 1871 enabled free association without criminal penalty.[298] The Representation of the People Act 1884 reduced the property qualification further, so that around one third of men in Britain could vote. However, the act did not establish universal suffrage; 40% of men and all women could not vote.[299][300]

From the start of the 20th century, Britain underwent vast social and constitutional change, beginning with an attempt by the House of Lords to suppress British trade unions.[301] In response, the labour movement organised to support representatives in Parliament, and in the 1906 general election won 29 seats and supported the Liberal Party's programme of reform. This included a legal guarantee of the right of unions to collectively bargain and strike for fair wages,[302] an old age pension,[303] a system of minimum wages,[304] a People's Budget with higher taxes on the wealthy to fund spending. After a further election brought by the House of Lords blocking reform, Parliament pass a National Insurance system for welfare,[305] and the Parliament Act 1911 prevented the House of Lords blocking legislation for more than two years, and removed the right to delay any money bills.[306]

Despite this, the Liberal government, against the opposition of Labour, armed for and entered the First World War. At the end of the War, with millions dead, Parliament passed the Representation of the People Act 1918 which enabled every adult male the vote, although it was only after the mass protest of the Suffragettes that the Representation of the People (Equal Franchise) Act 1928 enabled all women to vote, and that the UK became democratic. The War also triggered uprising in Ireland, and an Irish War of Independence leading to the partition of the island between the Republic of Ireland in the south and Northern Ireland in the Government of Ireland Act 1920.

The Versailles Treaty at the end of the War demanded German reparations, beggaring the country through the 1920s and upon the Great Depression leading to a fascist collapse under Hitler.[307] The failed international law system, was replaced following the Second World War with the United Nations where the UK held a permanent seat on the UN Security Council. However the British Empire began to crumble as decolonisation occurred in Asia, Africa and the Americas. To prevent any recurrence of the Holocaust and war, the Council of Europe was established to draft the European Convention on Human Rights in 1950. Further it was seen that the only way to prevent conflict was through economic integration. The European Economic Community, which became the European Union in 1992, was supported by Winston Churchill with the UK to be "at the centre",[35] although it did not enter until the European Communities Act 1972.

The evolution of the British Empire. After the end of the Second World War, the Empire was gradually dismantled via a process of decolonisation, with the majority of former British colonies choosing to join the Commonwealth of Nations. The Commonwealth is open to any country committed to peace, liberty, equality, and development, as stipulated in the Harare Declaration of 1991.

Under Margaret Thatcher, significant cuts were made to public services, labour rights, and the powers of local government, including abolishing the Greater London Council. However some powers were restored with extensive devolution of power in the Scotland Act 1998, Northern Ireland Act 1998, Greater London Authority Act 1999 and the Government of Wales Act 2006. After many years of armed conflict in Northern Ireland, the Good Friday Agreement of 1998 brought peace. The Human Rights Act 1998 empowered courts to apply Convention rights without the need for claimants to take cases to the Strasbourg court. The House of Lords Act 1999 reduced but did not eliminate hereditary peers. Since the 2008 financial crisis,[308] a Conservative and Liberal Democrat coalition launched a programme of "austerity" cuts, and cemented their term in the Fixed-term Parliaments Act 2011. After 2015, however, early elections were held anyway in 2017, following a referendum on EU membership that resulted in 51.89 per cent of people favouring to leave, and 48.11 per cent of voters favouring to remain.

Worldwide influence

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Aspects of the British constitution were adopted in the constitutions and legal systems of other countries around the world, particularly those that were part of, or formerly part of, the British Empire including the United States and those countries that adopted the Westminster parliamentary system. The British constitution is the source of the modern concepts of the rule of law, parliamentary sovereignty and judicial independence and adoption of British constitutional principles propagated their spread around the world.[309][310][311][312] One of the oldest constitutional systems in the world, dating back over one thousand years, it is characterised by the stability of its governing institutions, its capacity to absorb change, a bicameral legislature and the concept of responsible government.[313]

Theory and reform

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The legal scholar Eric Barendt argues that the uncodified nature of the United Kingdom constitution does not mean it should not be characterised as a "constitution", but also claims that the lack of an effective separation of powers, and the fact that parliamentary sovereignty allows Parliament to overrule fundamental rights, makes it to some extent a "façade" constitution.[314] Lord Scarman presents a spirited argument for a written constitution for the UK, but still refers to the 1688 compromise and resulting Acts of Parliament as a constitution.[315]

A. V. Dicey identified that ultimately "the electorate are politically sovereign," and Parliament is legally sovereign.[316] Barendt argues that the greater political party discipline in the House of Commons that has evolved since Dicey's era, and the reduction in checks on governmental power has led to an excessively powerful government that is not legally constrained by the observance of fundamental rights.[314] A Constitution would impose limits on what Parliament could do. To date, the Parliament of the UK has no limit on its power other than the possibility of extra-parliamentary action (by the people) and of other sovereign states (pursuant to treaties made by Parliament and otherwise). It has been commented by Dicey that formally, the British Parliament was limited by the terms of the international treaties that created it in the first place. His comment that it would be imprudent for the British Parliament to try and abolish Scots Law, for example, has been criticised judicially as "cynical" but was written in the high Victorian era when Parliament was grappling with the concept of Irish Home Rule, strongly opposed by many politicians at the time.[citation needed]

Proponents of a codified constitution argue it would strengthen the legal protection of democracy and freedom.[317] As a strong advocate of the "unwritten constitution", Dicey highlighted that English rights were embedded in the general English common law of personal liberty, and "the institutions and manners of the nation".[318] Opponents of a codified constitution argue that the country is not based on a founding document that tells its citizens who they are and what they can do. There is also a belief that any unwarranted encroachment on the spirit of constitutional authority would be stiffly resisted by the British people, a perception expounded by the 19th century American judge Justice Bradley in the course of delivering his opinion in a case heard in Louisiana in 1873: "England has no written constitution, it is true; but it has an unwritten one, resting in the acknowledged, and frequently declared, privileges of Parliament and the people, to violate which in any material respect would produce a revolution in an hour."[319]

The Labour government under prime minister Tony Blair instituted constitutional reforms in the late 1990s and early-to-mid 2000s.[320] The effective incorporation of the European Convention on Human Rights into British law through the Human Rights Act 1998 has granted citizens specific positive rights and given the judiciary some power to enforce them. The courts can advise Parliament of primary legislation that conflicts with the Act by means of "Declarations of Incompatibility" – however, Parliament is not bound to amend the law nor can the judiciary void any statute – and it can refuse to enforce, or "strike down", any incompatible secondary legislation. Any actions of government authorities that violate Convention rights are illegal except if mandated by an Act of Parliament.

Changes also include the Constitutional Reform Act 2005 which alters the structure of the House of Lords to separate its judicial and legislative functions. For example, the legislative, judicial and executive functions of the Lord Chancellor are now shared between the Lord Chancellor (executive), Lord Chief Justice (judicial) and the newly created post of Lord Speaker (legislative). The role of Law Lord (a member of the judiciary in the House of Lords) was abolished by transferring them to the new Supreme Court of the United Kingdom in October 2009.

Gordon Brown launched a "Governance of Britain" process when he took over as PM in 2007. This was an ongoing process of constitutional reform with the Ministry of Justice as lead ministry. The Constitutional Reform and Governance Act 2010 is a piece of constitutional legislation. It enshrines in statute the impartiality and integrity of the British Civil Service and the principle of open and fair recruitment. It enshrines in law the Ponsonby Rule which requires that treaties are laid before Parliament before they can be ratified.

The Coalition Government formed in May 2010 proposed a series of further constitutional reforms in their coalition agreement. Consequently, the Parliamentary Voting System and Constituencies Act 2011 and the Fixed-term Parliaments Act 2011 were passed, though the government of Boris Johnson subsequently repealed the latter in 2022. The Acts were intended to reduce the number of MPs in the House of Commons from 650 to 600, change the way the UK is divided into parliamentary constituencies, introduce a referendum on changing the system used to elect MPs and take the power to dissolve Parliament away from the monarch. The Coalition also promised to introduce law on the reform of the House of Lords. In the referendum, the Alternative Vote system was rejected by 67% to 33%, and therefore all reforms regarding the voting system were dropped.[321] Conservatives forced the government to drop House of Lords reforms, and the Liberal Democrats said they would refuse to support changes to the boundaries of constituencies, as they believed such changes favoured the Conservatives.

See also

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Notes

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The Constitution of the United Kingdom comprises the fundamental rules, principles, and practices that govern the operation of the state, lacking a single codified document and instead deriving from an accumulation of statutes, , constitutional conventions, and works of authority. This uncodified framework has evolved incrementally over centuries, reflecting historical developments such as the limitation of monarchical power through key enactments like the of 1215 and the Bill of Rights 1689. Central to the UK constitution is the principle of , which posits that the holds supreme legal authority, enabling it to enact, amend, or repeal any law without constraint from prior enactments or external bodies. This sovereignty underpins a fusion of legislative and executive powers, with the government drawn from and accountable to Parliament, while the judiciary interprets laws through precedents. Constitutional conventions, though non-legal, enforce norms such as the monarch's neutrality and ministerial responsibility to Parliament, providing flexibility absent in rigid codified systems. Notable developments include since 1998, granting legislative powers to assemblies in , , and [Northern Ireland](/page/Northern Ireland), which has tested unitary state principles without altering core sovereignty. The establishment of the in 2009 formalized judicial independence, separating the highest court from the . Controversies, such as the 2019 ruling on unlawful of , highlight the constitution's adaptability through amid political tensions, including Brexit's reconfiguration of EU-derived sources.

Fundamental Principles

Parliamentary Sovereignty

constitutes the foundational principle of the United Kingdom's uncodified constitution, positing that the Crown in possesses unlimited legislative authority to enact, amend, or repeal any law whatsoever. This doctrine asserts 's supremacy over all other domestic institutions, including the executive, judiciary, and devolved legislatures, with no entrenched constitutional barriers preventing future Parliaments from altering prior legislation. Originating from medieval assertions of parliamentary privileges against monarchical overreach, the principle crystallized during the of 1688–1689, when the Bill of Rights 1689 explicitly curtailed royal powers, mandating parliamentary consent for taxation, frequent elections, and prohibiting the suspension of laws without parliamentary approval. These provisions effectively transferred ultimate law-making power from the sovereign to , establishing legislative independence as a bulwark against arbitrary rule. Legal theorist Albert Venn Dicey provided the classic articulation in his 1885 work Introduction to the Study of the Law of the Constitution, delineating three core elements: first, can legislate on any subject matter to any extent; second, no Parliament can bind its successors, ensuring each holds equal authority; and third, the judiciary cannot invalidate or override validly enacted statutes, as courts recognize Parliament alone as the source of law. This formulation underscores as a political and legal fact derived from continuous parliamentary practice rather than any written entrenchment, reflecting the UK's historical evolution from absolutist monarchy to representative legislature without a . Dicey's view, while influential, has been critiqued for overlooking evolving judicial roles, yet it remains the orthodox benchmark, affirmed in judicial decisions emphasizing Parliament's irreducible supremacy. In the twentieth century, parliamentary sovereignty encountered external pressures from international commitments, notably the United Kingdom's 1973 accession to the European Economic Community via the European Communities Act 1972, which incorporated EU law with direct effect and supremacy over conflicting domestic statutes. However, this arrangement was conditional; sovereignty persisted theoretically because Parliament could repeal the 1972 Act, a faculty exercised through the European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018 following the 2016 referendum, thereby repatriating full legislative autonomy post-Brexit on January 31, 2020. Similarly, the Human Rights Act 1998 required courts to interpret statutes compatibly with the European Convention on Human Rights where possible, with declarations of incompatibility prompting parliamentary response, but explicitly preserved sovereignty by denying courts power to annul primary legislation. Devolution under the Scotland Act 1998, Government of Wales Act 1998, and Northern Ireland Act 1998 delegated powers to subnational assemblies, yet Westminster retained residuary authority to legislate on devolved matters, underpinned by statutes affirming parliamentary supremacy. Judicial interventions, such as in R (Miller) v Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union UKSC 5, reinforced sovereignty by mandating explicit parliamentary authorization for major constitutional changes like triggering Article 50 of the Treaty on European Union, ensuring executive actions align with legislative primacy. Likewise, R (Miller) v The Prime Minister UKSC 41 invalidated the 2019 prorogation of Parliament as frustrating its essential functions, not by limiting sovereignty but by safeguarding Parliament's capacity to deliberate and legislate freely. These rulings illustrate courts' role in upholding, rather than eroding, sovereignty through common law constitutionalism, where judicial review polices procedural excesses without substantive override. Contemporary affirmations, including the Retained EU Law (Revocation and Reform) Act 2023, underscore 's post-Brexit latitude to diverge from prior -derived rules without judicial veto, dispelling notions of self-imposed or irrevocable constraints. While and international obligations introduce practical political limits via conventions—such as Westminster's restraint on overriding devolved legislatures—these do not legally impinge on , which remains absolute in principle, enabling to repeal devolution statutes if politically feasible. This enduring doctrine, rooted in historical precedent and , distinguishes the from jurisdictions with rigid constitutions, prioritizing legislative adaptability over judicial supremacy.

Rule of Law

The constitutes a core unwritten principle of the United Kingdom's constitution, mandating that all individuals and institutions, including the government, are subject to and accountable under the , with no arbitrary exercise of power. This principle predates the modern state, with foundational elements appearing in of 1215, which prohibited punishment without lawful judgment and restricted the Crown's ability to impose penalties outside established legal processes. By embedding constraints on executive authority through clauses like those requiring , laid early groundwork for limiting monarchical discretion and affirming legal supremacy over . In the late 19th century, legal scholar formalized the as a distinctive feature of the British constitution in his 1885 treatise Introduction to the Study of the Law of the Constitution, identifying three key aspects: the absence of arbitrary or wide discretionary authority vested in the government; equality of all persons before the law, with ordinary courts applying the same standards to officials and citizens alike; and the derivation of individual rights primarily from judicial precedents rather than codified bills. Dicey's framework emphasized that ordinary law governs without special exemptions or powers overriding , a principle reinforced by subsequent judicial interpretations that prioritize over executive fiat. Building on Dicey, former Law Lord Tom Bingham expanded the doctrine in his 2010 book The Rule of Law, delineating eight substantive principles adapted to contemporary governance: the law must be accessible, intelligible, clear, and predictable; it should not be applied retrospectively or with disproportionate severity; fundamental must be protected; the executive must exercise powers within legal limits and be accountable to courts; disputes over legal rights and liabilities must be resolved by independent judges; fair public hearings must be available before deprivation of life, liberty, or property; effective remedies must exist for rights violations; and states must comply with obligations. These principles underscore the judiciary's role in scrutinizing governmental actions, as seen in cases like R (Miller) v Prime Minister (2019), where the ruled that proroguing without valid justification violated constitutional norms by frustrating parliamentary functions essential to the . The UK's adherence to the coexists with , creating inherent tensions where statutes can theoretically override precedents, yet courts interpret legislation presumptively in harmony with rule-of-law values unless explicitly displaced. Government officials, including the Attorney General, have reaffirmed this commitment in recent addresses, such as the 2024 Bingham Lecture, stressing that the underpins effective governance and international compliance without subordinating Parliament's legislative primacy. While parliamentary reports and legal organizations have highlighted potential erosions through expedited legislation or executive overreach in areas like , official responses maintain that —bolstered by the , which established the on October 1, 2009—safeguards the principle against systemic threats.

Constitutional Monarchy

The United Kingdom functions as a constitutional monarchy, wherein the monarch acts as head of state with primarily ceremonial and representational responsibilities, while substantive political power resides with the elected Parliament and the government it holds accountable. This arrangement ensures the monarch remains politically neutral, embodying continuity and national unity rather than exercising direct governance. The current monarch, King Charles III, acceded to the throne on 8 September 2022 upon the death of Queen Elizabeth II, whose 70-year reign exemplified the restrained, advisory role central to the system. The monarch's formal powers derive from the royal prerogative and statutes, but by longstanding convention, these are exercised only on the advice of the Prime Minister and Cabinet, rendering the sovereign a figurehead in routine matters. Key functions include summoning, proroguing, and dissolving Parliament; appointing the Prime Minister, typically the leader of the majority party in the House of Commons; and granting royal assent to bills passed by Parliament, a step not withheld since 1708. The monarch also holds roles as Supreme Governor of the Church of England and Head of the Armed Forces, though operational command rests with ministers. In extraordinary situations, the possesses reserve powers exercisable at personal discretion to safeguard constitutional principles, such as selecting a in a lacking a clear or refusing premature dissolution if it contravenes democratic norms. These powers, rooted in and rather than codified , have remained largely theoretical; Queen Elizabeth II navigated complex scenarios, including the 1974 appointment of Edward Heath's successor and multiple minority governments, without overt intervention. Legal scholars debate their precise scope, emphasizing that any activation risks politicizing and eroding public trust in its impartiality. This framework evolved gradually from medieval precedents, with pivotal transformations during the 17th century: the (1642–1651) demonstrated the perils of absolutism, leading to the of 1688 and the Bill of Rights 1689, which curtailed monarchical authority by prohibiting suspension of laws without parliamentary consent and mandating frequent parliaments. The further entrenched Protestant succession and judicial independence, solidifying Parliament's dominance. By the , conventions formalized under Victoria, whose deference to ministers like and Disraeli shifted effective power, establishing the modern paradigm where the monarch "reigns but does not rule." Beyond domestic duties, the monarch represents the internationally, fostering diplomatic relations and serving as since 1949, a of 56 nations tracing to the former . This role underscores the monarchy's symbolic function in promoting stability amid political flux, with public support polls consistently showing approval rates above 60% for the institution during Elizabeth II's tenure, though debates persist on its cost—estimated at £86.3 million annually from the Sovereign Grant in 2021–2022—and relevance in a diverse society. Reforms, such as the 2013 Succession to the Crown Act enabling absolute primogeniture, reflect adaptations to contemporary values while preserving core conventions.

Limited Government and Accountability

The United Kingdom's unwritten constitution does not impose formal legal limits on parliamentary power akin to enumerated constraints in codified systems, relying instead on political accountability and conventions to curb executive overreach. , the foundational principle affirming Parliament's unlimited legislative authority, is balanced in practice by the government's dependence on maintaining a majority, enforced through mechanisms like no-confidence votes that can trigger dissolution and elections. This electoral linkage, with general elections mandated at intervals of no more than five years under the Dissolution and Calling of Parliament Act 2022, ensures periodic public judgment on government performance, as seen in the 2024 election where the Conservative administration lost its after 14 years in power. Ministerial accountability to forms the core of executive restraint, embodying the convention that ministers must answer for departmental policies, decisions, and actions, including those of civil servants and agencies. Individual responsibility requires ministers to correct parliamentary statements promptly and resign for grave failures, a practice exemplified by high-profile cases such as the 2021 resignation of Health Secretary over a breach of guidelines. Collective cabinet responsibility further binds the government to unified policy support, with dissenters expected to resign or face dismissal, reinforcing internal discipline without judicial enforcement. Parliamentary scrutiny tools, including daily oral questions to ministers and prime ministers, weekly , and departmental select committees, enable detailed examination of conduct. These 16 Commons departmental committees, each shadowing a ministry, conduct inquiries, summon witnesses, and review spending, as in the Public Accounts Committee's exposure of inefficiencies in defense procurement totaling billions since 2010. The committees' cross-party composition and powers to compel evidence enhance their role in holding the executive to account, though their effectiveness depends on cooperation rather than binding sanctions. Judicial review provides an additional check on executive actions, allowing courts to quash decisions by public bodies—including ministers—for illegality, irrationality, or procedural impropriety, without challenging primary legislation. Originating in and bolstered by the , this mechanism has invalidated executive measures, such as the 2019 prorogation of Parliament deemed unlawful in R (Miller) v The Prime Minister. Conventions like the Sewel principle, stipulating Westminster's restraint on devolved matters without consent, further self-limit central power politically, though non-justiciable. These elements collectively foster accountability, yet critics argue they yield to electoral majorities, permitting temporary expansions of state authority during crises like the COVID-19 pandemic's emergency powers under the Coronavirus Act 2020.

Historical Evolution

Medieval and Early Foundations

The foundations of the United Kingdom's constitution emerged in medieval through a series of documents and assemblies that gradually constrained monarchical authority and introduced elements of representative governance and the . The , sealed by King John on 15 June 1215 at , marked the first explicit limitation on royal power, requiring the king to adhere to feudal customs and providing remedies against arbitrary arrest or seizure without lawful judgment. Although initially a baronial agreement annulled by later that year, its reissues in 1216, 1217, and 1225 under Henry III embedded principles such as , influencing later constitutional developments by asserting that was subject to law. Tensions persisted under Henry III, culminating in the adopted at the "Mad Parliament" on 11 June 1258, which established a of 15 barons to oversee royal decisions, reformed the by appointing a and , and mandated regular for consultation. These provisions curtailed the king's by vesting in elected officials and requiring baronial approval for major policies, representing an early attempt at shared governance amid fiscal disputes over funding for the king's Sicilian ambitions. Though annulled by Henry III in 1261 with papal support and later quashed by in the Mise of , the Provisions demonstrated growing baronial insistence on accountability and foreshadowed parliamentary oversight. The Second Barons' War escalated these reforms when Simon de Montfort, , seized control after the in 1264 and convened a from 20 to mid-March 1265 at Westminster, summoning not only magnates and clergy but also elected knights from shires and burgesses from towns. This assembly, held to legitimize de Montfort's regime and secure taxes for ransoming Henry III, introduced broader representation beyond the feudal elite, laying groundwork for the ' role in consent to taxation. De Montfort's defeat at in August 1265 ended his experiment, but it influenced subsequent convocations by normalizing elected elements in assemblies. Under Edward I, parliaments evolved from ad hoc councils into more structured bodies, with the "Model Parliament" summoned on 24 September 1295 comprising archbishops, bishops, abbots, earls, barons, two knights per shire, and two burgesses per borough, providing a template for representative composition. Edward convened it amid wars with Wales, Scotland, and France, seeking grants for military funding and judicial reforms like the issuance of statutes, which reinforced common law principles over royal prerogative. By 1297, Edward's confirmation of the charters—including reissued versions of Magna Carta—affirmed parliamentary consent for taxation and legislation, establishing precedents for "no taxation without representation" that persisted into later eras. These medieval developments, rooted in feudal disputes and pragmatic needs for counsel and revenue, incrementally shifted power toward consultative institutions without fully supplanting monarchical authority.

Stuart Era and Glorious Revolution

The Stuart era, commencing with James VI and I's accession to the English throne on 6 April 1603 upon Elizabeth I's death, marked initial tensions between monarchical assertions of divine right and parliamentary prerogatives. James I promoted the absolutist theory that kings derived authority directly from God, bypassing intermediary institutions like Parliament, which led to disputes over taxation for wars against Spain and the Palatinate, as well as religious policies favoring episcopacy amid Puritan opposition. His successor, Charles I, who reigned from 1625 to 1649, exacerbated these frictions by dissolving multiple parliaments that withheld funds without concessions on issues like the Petition of Right in 1628, which affirmed habeas corpus, prohibited forced loans, and barred martial law in peacetime. Charles's eleven-year personal rule from 1629 imposed extralegal revenues such as ship money, a levy traditionally for coastal defense but extended nationwide, culminating in the Long Parliament's convening on 3 November 1640 to impeach royal advisors like the Earl of Strafford. These conflicts erupted into the English Civil Wars (1642–1651), pitting royalists against parliamentarians over the locus of sovereignty, with Parliament asserting its indispensable role in governance and finance while rejecting absolute monarchy. The wars resulted in Charles I's defeat, trial for high treason, and execution on 30 January 1649 outside Banquing Hall, , establishing the as a republican interregnum under Oliver Cromwell's protectorate from 1653, which experimented with written constitutions like the but ultimately failed to endure due to military rule's incompatibility with English traditions of mixed government. The Restoration of Charles II on 29 May 1660 reinstated the monarchy but under implicit parliamentary oversight, evidenced by the Cavalier Parliament's Clarendon Code (1661–1665), which enforced Anglican conformity, and the 1673 Test Act barring Catholics and nonconformists from office, reflecting entrenched fears of absolutism akin to Louis XIV's . James II's reign from 1685, however, revived absolutist tendencies through his overt Catholicism, suspension of anti-Catholic laws via dispensing powers, and maintenance of a , alienating even supporters and prompting the birth of his son James Francis Edward on 10 June 1688, perceived as a Catholic succession ploy. The unfolded bloodlessly in from November 1688, as William of Orange landed at on 5 November with 15,000 troops at the invitation of seven nobles (the Immortal Seven), prompting James II's flight to France on 11 December and deemed abdication by the Convention assembled on 22 January 1689. This assembly offered the throne jointly to William III and Mary II on 13 February 1689, conditional upon their acceptance of the Declaration of Rights, enacted as the Bill of Rights on 16 December 1689, which codified parliamentary supremacy by prohibiting royal suspension of laws or taxation without consent, banning peacetime standing armies without parliamentary approval, guaranteeing frequent s via triennial elections, protecting and debate in , and disqualifying Catholics from the throne. The Bill's provisions entrenched the principle that the monarch could not dispense with statutes or interfere in elections, while affirming jury trials and moderate bail, thereby shifting constitutional balance toward legislative authority and the over personal . Subsequent enactments solidified these gains; the Act of Settlement 1701, passed on 12 June amid fears of Catholic reversion following William III's death without issue and the death of Princess Anne's last child in 1700, secured Protestant succession through Sophia of Hanover and her heirs, while mandating judicial independence by requiring judges' tenure during good behavior (removable only by parliamentary address), prohibiting the monarch or advisors from pardoning impeachments, and barring foreigners from naturalized office-holding without consent. These measures collectively transitioned England from absolutist pretensions to a constitutional monarchy, where royal power yielded to parliamentary consent in legislation, finance, and succession, laying foundational precedents for limited government and accountability that influenced later developments like cabinet responsibility, though the era's religious exclusions underscored causal linkages between confessional strife and institutional evolution rather than abstract democratic ideals. The Stuart conflicts thus empirically demonstrated that monarchical overreach, unchecked by representative bodies, precipitated systemic crisis, reinforcing causal realism in constitutional design toward diffused authority.

Nineteenth-Century Reforms

The nineteenth century marked a pivotal phase in the evolution of the United Kingdom's , characterized by statutory interventions that expanded electoral representation, professionalized the , and restructured the , largely in response to industrialization, , and demands for accountability. These reforms shifted power dynamics within , particularly the House of Commons, while reinforcing conventions of without altering the monarchy's formal role. The Great Reform Act of 1832 addressed longstanding distortions in parliamentary representation by abolishing 56 rotten boroughs in —small, unpopulated constituencies often controlled by patrons—and reducing representation in 31 others to a single member, while enfranchising new urban constituencies such as and Birmingham, totaling 67 additions. It standardized the borough franchise by granting voting rights to male householders occupying property worth at least £10 annually, thereby extending suffrage to approximately 200,000 middle-class men and increasing the electorate from about 3% to 5% of the adult male population, though women and most working-class men remained excluded. This act redistributed seats to reflect industrial demographics but preserved property qualifications, averting broader radical change amid fears of unrest following events like the . Subsequent expansions accelerated . The Second Reform Act of 1867, passed under a Conservative government, enfranchised all male householders in boroughs and those paying £10 annual rent as lodgers, doubling the electorate to around 2 million and incorporating skilled working-class voters, particularly in urban areas. Complementing this, the Ballot Act of 1872 introduced secret voting, curbing electoral bribery and intimidation that had plagued open polling since the . The Third Reform Act of 1884 harmonized county and borough franchises, granting rural householders equivalent rights and adding 1.7 million voters, while the equalized constituency sizes, creating 670 roughly equal single-member districts and further aligning representation with population shifts. Collectively, these measures tripled the electorate by century's end, fostering party discipline and the rise of mass politics without granting . Administrative reforms underpinned executive efficiency. The Northcote-Trevelyan Report of 1854, commissioned amid patronage scandals exposed by inquiries into corruption, recommended recruiting civil servants via open competitive examinations, establishing a unified , and promoting based on merit rather than political connections, principles enacted through orders-in-council from onward. This created a neutral, permanent insulated from ministerial turnover, enhancing the implementation of parliamentary decisions and conventions of ministerial responsibility. Judicial restructuring culminated in the of 1873 and 1875, which abolished fragmented superior courts—including the courts of King's Bench, Common Pleas, and , alongside the equity-focused —and established the of Judicature, comprising the (with divisions for Queen's Bench, Chancery, , , Admiralty, and Common Pleas) and the Court of Appeal. These acts fused by prioritizing equity over conflicting rules and streamlined procedure, reducing delays and jurisdictional overlaps that had hindered access to justice since medieval times. These reforms entrenched cabinet government by empowering a more representative Commons, where prime ministers like Palmerston and Gladstone increasingly coordinated policy through disciplined parties, though the upper house retained veto powers until the twentieth century. They preserved parliamentary sovereignty while adapting to societal pressures, prioritizing incremental stability over revolutionary upheaval.

Twentieth-Century Developments and Decolonization

The marked a pivotal reform to the legislative process, curtailing the ' ability to veto money bills entirely and limiting its power to delay other public bills to two years, thereby affirming the primacy of the elected in fiscal and legislative matters. This change arose from a triggered by the Lords' rejection of Liberal Chancellor David Lloyd George's 1909 "," which proposed increased taxation on the wealthy to fund social welfare; the Act was passed after the threatened to create sufficient new peers to overcome opposition in the Lords. The measure entrenched the convention of Commons supremacy in financial legislation while preserving a revised role for the Lords as a delaying chamber. The represented an early experiment in amid rising and violence, partitioning the island into (remaining part of the ) and Southern Ireland, each with its own parliament and executive responsible for domestic affairs while reserving key powers like defense and foreign policy to Westminster. Although the Southern Parliament never fully functioned due to the , the Act established Northern Ireland's Stormont Parliament, which operated until 1972, and formalized partition as a constitutional boundary, influencing subsequent approaches to territorial . This legislation underscored the flexibility of the unwritten constitution in accommodating regional autonomy without codifying secession rights, though it sowed seeds for enduring sectarian tensions. The formalized the legislative independence of the self-governing dominions (such as , , , Newfoundland, and ), declaring that no future would extend to a dominion as part of its law unless explicitly requested, and affirming the dominions' extraterritorial legislative capacity. Enacted to codify resolutions from the 1926 and 1930 Imperial Conferences, it severed the UK Parliament's unilateral authority over these territories, marking a constitutional shift from imperial supremacy to a looser association under . While not applying to all colonies, the Statute laid the groundwork for broader by recognizing the equality of dominion parliaments, thereby adapting the 's constitutional framework to an evolving empire without altering core principles like over the UK itself. The Parliament Act 1949 further refined the 1911 reforms by reducing the Lords' delaying power on non-money bills from two years (or sessions) to one year, streamlining the legislative process and diminishing aristocratic veto potential in an era of expanding democratic expectations. Passed under Labour government amid post-war reconstruction, it reflected a consensus on dominance, having been invoked to enact nationalizations and welfare statutes like the Act 1946. These Acts collectively strengthened the executive-legislative balance, enabling rapid policy implementation during economic and social upheavals, including emergency powers delegated via statutes like the Emergency Powers (Defence) Act 1939 and 1940, which temporarily expanded ministerial authority but lapsed post-war without permanent constitutional embedding. Decolonization accelerated after , with the UK Parliament passing independence acts for over 50 territories between 1947 and the 1980s, fundamentally contracting the empire's territorial reach and the scope of Westminster's legislative oversight. The Independence Act 1947, for instance, partitioned British India into independent dominions ( and ), terminated suzerainty over princely states, and abolished the Secretary of State for India office, signaling the end of direct rule over the empire's largest possession. Subsequent acts granted sovereignty to Ceylon (1948), (1957), (1960), and others, often retaining the as head of state for Commonwealth realms while establishing republican options for non-realms via the London Declaration of 1949. This process did not alter the UK's internal constitutional sovereignty—Parliament retained unlimited power over remaining territories—but it recalibrated conventions around the Crown's role, transforming the from imperial sovereign to symbolic head of a voluntary association, and prompted statutory adjustments like the , which redefined citizenship amid mass migration from former colonies. The rapidity of these changes, driven by economic strain, anti-colonial movements, and pressure, highlighted the constitution's adaptability through ordinary legislation rather than entrenched barriers to imperial dissolution.

Post-1990s Devolution and Brexit Era

The of powers to , , and marked a significant evolution in the UK's unwritten constitution during the late 1990s, driven by the Labour government's agenda under to address regional nationalisms and the Agreement's requirements. held on 11 September 1997 approved a with tax-varying powers by 74.3% to 25.7% and a Welsh assembly by a narrow 50.3% to 49.7%; a separate Northern Ireland on 22 May 1998 endorsed the Belfast Agreement by 71.1%, facilitating power-sharing. The UK Parliament enacted the , , and , establishing these bodies with authority over devolved matters such as health, education, and transport while reserving , defense, and macroeconomic policy to Westminster; this arrangement preserved , as devolved powers could theoretically be altered or revoked by . Concomitant reforms enhanced judicial independence and human rights protections. The , receiving on 9 November 1998 and entering force on 2 October 2000, incorporated the into domestic law, obliging public authorities to act compatibly with Convention rights and empowering courts to declare legislation incompatible without invalidating it. The abolished the office of as head of the judiciary, created the of the United Kingdom (operational from 1 October 2009), and established the , thereby separating the highest judicial functions from the to reinforce the and . The process from onward tested devolution's boundaries and reaffirmed amid repatriation of EU competences. The EU Referendum Act 2015 authorized a 23 vote, resulting in 51.89% favoring Leave (17,410,742 votes) against 48.11% for Remain, with and [Northern Ireland](/page/Northern Ireland) majorities for retention. In R (Miller) v Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union UKSC 5, the unanimously held on 24 January 2017 that the executive could not invoke Article 50 of the without primary legislation, as doing so would alter domestic rights and frustrate parliamentary intent, thus upholding sovereignty. The UK formally withdrew from the EU on 31 January 2020 at 11:00 pm GMT, ending 47 years of membership and transferring regulatory powers over areas like agriculture and fisheries—previously uniform under EU law—to Westminster and devolved administrations. Brexit strained intergovernmental relations, particularly via the Sewel Convention, under which Westminster "will not normally" legislate on devolved matters without consent from devolved legislatures—a non-justiciable practice originating in 1998 but codified in the Scotland Act 2016 and others. Scotland and Wales withheld legislative consent for key Brexit bills, including the European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018, yet Westminster proceeded, prompting debates over the convention's "normally" qualifier and leading to the UK Internal Market Act 2020, which imposed mutual recognition of goods and services across the UK to avert post-Brexit trade barriers, thereby limiting devolved regulatory divergence. In R (Miller) v The Prime Minister UKSC 41, the Supreme Court ruled on 24 September 2019 that Prime Minister Boris Johnson's advice to prorogue Parliament from 9 September to 14 October 2019 was unlawful, as it frustrated Parliament's ability to scrutinize Brexit without reasonable justification, nullifying the prorogation and underscoring judicial limits on executive prerogative. These developments highlighted tensions in the UK's asymmetrical quasi-federal structure, with repatriated powers enhancing devolved scope but Westminster retaining ultimate authority.

Sources of Constitutional Authority

Statutes

The statutes comprising the United Kingdom's constitution are Acts of Parliament that codify fundamental governance principles, limit executive power, define institutional relationships, and allocate authority across territories. Unlike ordinary legislation, these statutes often possess a special status, resistant to implied , as affirmed in judicial interpretations emphasizing their role in preserving constitutional continuity. They span from medieval restraints on to modern and post-EU adjustments, collectively underpinning while embedding protections against arbitrary rule. Magna Carta (1215) sealed limitations on royal authority, mandating for freemen, prohibiting arbitrary taxation without consent, and establishing that the king is subject to the law—principles reissued in subsequent versions that influenced and fair trial norms. The Bill of Rights 1689, responding to James II's absolutism, prohibited the monarch from suspending laws or levying taxes without parliamentary approval, guaranteed free elections and speech in Parliament, and barred Catholics from the throne, thereby subordinating the Crown to legislative consent. The Act of Settlement 1701 ensured Protestant succession by designating Electress Sophia of Hanover's line, reinforced judicial tenure during good behavior (removable only by ), and required royal consultation with privy councilors, thereby enhancing accountability and independence in judiciary and executive functions. The Acts of Union 1706–1707 merged the parliaments of and into the , preserving distinct legal systems while centralizing sovereignty and establishing a unified , with provisions for Scottish ecclesiastical independence. The reduced the maximum duration of Parliaments to five years, exempted money bills from Lords' veto, and introduced a delayed veto (two sessions over two years) for other bills, curbing aristocratic obstruction of elected majorities; this was extended by the Parliament Act 1949 to one session over one year. frameworks include the , creating a with legislative competence over devolved matters (e.g., health, education) while reserving foreign affairs and defense to Westminster, following a approving tax-varying powers; analogous acts for (, expanded ) and () dispersed without fragmenting . The Human Rights Act 1998 domesticated the , obliging public bodies to uphold rights like life, liberty, and fair trials, with courts empowered to declare incompatibilities (though Parliament retains ultimate authority to legislate). The Constitutional Reform Act 2005 separated judicial from legislative and executive powers by establishing the (effective 2009), abolishing the Appellate Committee of the , and enhancing Lord Chancellor's guardianship of . Post-referendum, the European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018 revoked the European Communities Act 1972's supremacy of EU law, converting EU-derived rules into retained domestic law (subject to parliamentary override) and facilitating Brexit implementation on 31 January 2020.

Common Law and Judicial Decisions

Common law, developed through judicial decisions over centuries, serves as a primary source of the United Kingdom's uncodified constitution, complementing statutes and conventions. This body of judge-made law, rooted in England since the Norman Conquest in 1066, relies on the doctrine of stare decisis, whereby courts follow precedents set by higher courts to ensure legal consistency and predictability. In the hierarchical court system, decisions of the Supreme Court bind all lower courts in England and Wales, Scotland, and Northern Ireland, though Scotland incorporates elements of civil law tradition. Judicial decisions have articulated foundational constitutional principles, including the , which mandates that government actions must conform to established legal standards rather than arbitrary will. The Case of Proclamations (1610) exemplified this by holding that the could not unilaterally create new laws or offenses via royal proclamation, requiring parliamentary consent to alter or impose restrictions, thereby reinforcing over executive prerogative. Similarly, (1765) ruled that state agents lacked authority for general warrants to search private property without specific statutory or backing, establishing that executive power derives solely from law and protecting against arbitrary intrusion. Through evolution, courts developed , enabling scrutiny of executive and administrative decisions for legality, procedural fairness, and adherence to statutory purpose, without substituting judicial opinion for executive discretion. This mechanism limits potential abuses while respecting parliamentary supremacy, as courts cannot strike down primary legislation but interpret it compatibly where possible, particularly under frameworks like the Human Rights Act 1998. The creation of the on October 1, 2009, under the , further entrenched by separating the apex court from Parliament's legislative functions, previously vested in the Appellate Committee of the . These developments underscore 's adaptive role in maintaining constitutional equilibrium amid changing governance needs.

Conventions and Practices

Constitutional conventions in the United Kingdom consist of unwritten rules and practices that regulate the behavior of political actors, supplementing statutes, , and prerogatives within the . These conventions are not legally enforceable by courts but derive their force from political necessity, tradition, and the expectation of reciprocal observance, ensuring the system's flexibility and adaptability without rigid codification. As articulated by jurist in his 1885 analysis, conventions represent understandings or habits that guide the conduct of the , ministers, and , distinct from enforceable law yet essential to preventing arbitrary exercise of power. A primary convention governs the monarchy's interactions with the executive and . The appoints as the individual who commands the confidence of the , typically the leader of the largest party or after a , rather than exercising personal discretion. Similarly, to bills passed by Parliament has been granted routinely since Queen Anne's refusal in 1708, transforming what was once a legal into a symbolic formality that underscores . The also holds weekly private audiences with the , providing counsel without influencing policy, in line with the convention that the acts on ministerial advice. Executive conventions emphasize accountability and unity. Collective ministerial responsibility requires Cabinet members to publicly support government decisions, resigning if they fundamentally disagree or if the government loses parliamentary confidence, as seen in historical precedents like the 1905 . Individual ministerial responsibility holds ministers answerable to Parliament for their department's actions, including errors by civil servants, obliging them to explain, apologize, or resign as appropriate, though application has varied in modern practice. Parliamentary conventions regulate inter-house relations and . The Salisbury-Addison Convention, established in 1945, stipulates that the refrains from blocking legislation at second or third reading if it implements manifesto commitments of the elected government, preserving the primacy of the while allowing amendments. In devolved matters, the Sewel Convention, formalized in the and Wales Act 2017, provides that the UK Parliament will not normally legislate on devolved areas without consent from devolved legislatures, though its status as a convention limits judicial enforcement, as affirmed in the 2017 Miller case. These practices have evolved through political pressures, such as post-1997 , but remain subject to interpretation and occasional strain during crises like .

International Treaties and Their Limits

The operates a dualist approach to , under which treaties negotiated and ratified by the executive through do not automatically acquire force in domestic law without explicit legislative incorporation. This preserves , ensuring that international obligations bind the government externally but yield to conflicting domestic statutes internally, as affirmed in cases like R (Miller) v Secretary of State for Exiting the (2017), where the emphasized Parliament's ultimate authority over constitutional changes arising from treaty actions. The executive may ratify treaties creating international commitments, but courts cannot enforce unincorporated treaties against individuals or override primary on their basis. The Constitutional Reform and Governance Act 2010 introduced procedural safeguards, mandating that treaties be laid before Parliament for scrutiny at least 21 sitting days prior to ratification, during which either House may pass a resolution objecting, though such resolutions are not legally binding and ratification can proceed regardless. This mechanism reflects the constitution's emphasis on accountability without ceding sovereignty. For instance, the European Communities Act 1972 incorporated EU treaties, granting them temporary supremacy over domestic law—a departure later reversed by the European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018, which ended EU law primacy on 31 January 2020 and converted much of it into "retained EU law" subject to ordinary legislative amendment. Similarly, the Human Rights Act 1998 domesticated the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR), requiring public authorities to act compatibly with Convention rights and courts to interpret legislation accordingly where possible, but prohibiting invalidation of primary legislation; incompatibilities trigger non-binding declarations, leaving remedial action to Parliament. These limits underscore that treaty incorporation is revocable and subordinate to Parliament's will, as demonstrated by post-Brexit reforms enabling divergence from EU-derived rules without tribunal oversight, except where retained (e.g., via the Trade and Cooperation Agreement ratified in 2021). While breaches of unincorporated treaties carry diplomatic repercussions rather than domestic legal ones, incorporated provisions like those under the HRA have prompted debates over sovereignty erosion, with governments occasionally legislating despite rulings, as in the Belmarsh detainees case (2004), where Parliament modified detention powers post-declaration of incompatibility. Overall, treaties influence constitutional practice through political convention but impose no enduring constraints beyond what Parliament consents.

Core Institutions

The Monarchy

The United Kingdom operates as a constitutional monarchy, with the monarch functioning as head of state in a largely ceremonial capacity. The powers vested in the Crown—encompassing both the personal monarch and the executive government—are exercised predominantly by ministers accountable to Parliament, reflecting the principle that the monarch reigns but does not rule. Succession to the throne follows a hereditary line restricted to Protestant descendants of Sophia of Hanover, as established by the Act of Settlement 1701, which excluded Catholics and those married to Catholics from inheriting the Crown to secure a Protestant succession amid fears of Jacobite restoration. This framework was partially modernized by the Succession to the Crown Act 2013, introducing absolute primogeniture for individuals born after 28 October 2011, thereby allowing female heirs to precede younger male siblings without altering prior successions. The 's formal powers derive from the royal , a collection of authorities including the conduct of foreign relations, deployment of armed forces, and treaty-making, though these are conventionally executed on the advice of the and Cabinet. In practice, the personal retains limited discretionary authority, such as appointing a during periods of parliamentary deadlock, but historical emphasizes adherence to ministerial counsel to maintain constitutional stability. The Crown's to summon, prorogue, and dissolve was modified by the Dissolution and Calling of Parliament Act 2022, requiring the 's request for dissolution to trigger a , with the 's role reduced to formal approval. , necessary for bills to become law, has not been withheld since 1708, establishing a convention of automatic granting upon parliamentary passage. Additionally, the monarch appoints the of the and Lords Justices of Appeal on ministerial advice, serves as Supreme Governor of the , and holds the position of of the armed forces, with operational decisions delegated to the . The distinction between the personal monarch and as embodying the state is crucial: while the government acts under the name of in legal proceedings and , the personal sovereign enjoys from civil suits and criminal prosecution, a rooted in principles that the king can do no wrong. This immunity extends to exemptions from over 160 statutes in a private capacity, underscoring the monarch's position outside ordinary legal accountability. Challenges to this separation have arisen in cases involving royal estates, where courts have navigated tensions between prerogative immunities and .

Parliament

Parliament forms the core legislative authority in the United Kingdom's , operating under the principle of , which establishes it as the supreme legal body capable of enacting or repealing any law without override by courts, the executive, or other institutions. This sovereignty, rooted in historical developments including the Bill of Rights 1689, asserts that no Parliament can bind its successors, ensuring legislative flexibility while conventions and political realities impose practical constraints. Comprising the , the , and the , Parliament's bicameral structure balances elected representation with expert revision, though the Commons holds primacy in financial and confidence matters. The , the elected lower chamber, consists of 650 members of (MPs), each representing a single-member constituency determined by periodic boundary reviews and elected via first-past-the-post system in general elections typically held at least every five years under the Dissolution and Calling of Parliament Act 2022. MPs scrutinize government policy, initiate most legislation, and control public expenditure through votes on supply, with the executive deriving legitimacy from commanding Commons confidence. The serves as an unelected revising chamber, with 827 members eligible to participate as of September 2025, including life peers appointed for expertise, 92 hereditary peers elected within their groups, and 26 (senior bishops). Its powers are curtailed by the Parliament Acts of 1911 and 1949, which prevent es on public bills—allowing delay of up to two sessions (or one year under 1949 amendments) before Commons approval suffices—and absolute veto on money bills, ensuring Commons dominance while permitting amendments and scrutiny. These acts, enacted to resolve constitutional crises like the 1909-1911 budget dispute, have facilitated passage of key against Lords' opposition on seven occasions since 1911. Parliament convenes in sessions opened by the Monarch's speech outlining government agenda, with bills progressing through readings, committees, and stages in both houses before receiving royal assent, a formality since 1708. Beyond law-making, it debates national issues, ratifies treaties via motions, and holds the executive accountable through questions, select committees, and no-confidence votes, though fusion of powers means government ministers sit in Parliament. Devolution to assemblies in Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland delegates certain powers, yet Parliament retains ultimate sovereignty, as affirmed in statutes like the Scotland Act 1998, which declare reserved matters and Westminster's amending capacity. Post-Brexit, the European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018 and 2020 reinforced this by enabling repeal of retained EU law, ending prior supremacy of EU jurisprudence.

Executive Branch

The executive authority of the is formally vested in , with the serving as , but in practice, it is exercised by His Majesty's Government through the and Cabinet, who are accountable to . This arrangement reflects the UK's unwritten constitution, where executive power derives from a combination of , statutes, and conventions rather than a rigid . The , as , leads the executive and is appointed by the solely on the basis of commanding the confidence of the , typically as leader of the majority party following general elections held at least every five years under the (repealed in 2022, reverting to prerogative dissolution conventions). The Cabinet, comprising the and approximately 20 senior ministers (usually Secretaries of State), functions as the core decision-making body, bound by the convention of , whereby all members publicly support Cabinet decisions or resign. Ministers are appointed by the from members of —predominantly the since the —and oversee departments responsible for policy implementation, with holding them accountable for departmental errors before . Executive powers include both statutory functions (e.g., under acts like the for devolved matters) and surviving royal prerogatives, such as declaring war, negotiating treaties, and granting pardons, though these are exercised on ministerial advice and subject to parliamentary scrutiny, as evidenced by conventions strengthened post-2003 inquiries. The neutral , numbering around 500,000 civil servants as of 2023, supports the executive by providing advice and administering government operations under the principle of permanence and impartiality, insulated from direct political control by the Next Steps agencies model since 1988, which delegates operational delivery to arm's-length bodies. Accountability mechanisms include (weekly in the Commons since 1961) and select committee inquiries, ensuring the executive's dependence on parliamentary confidence; loss of a vote of no confidence triggers resignation or a general election request. This fused system contrasts with presidential models, prioritizing legislative oversight over independent executive mandate, though critics argue it enables prime ministerial dominance, as seen in showing increased centralization of appointments and under recent administrations.

Judiciary

The judiciary in the operates within an , serving as the interpreter of statutes, developer of through , and reviewer of executive actions, while bound by the principle of . Courts across the UK's three legal jurisdictions—, , and —apply these functions independently, with the of the acting as the final for civil cases from all jurisdictions and criminal cases from England, Wales, and Northern Ireland. is constitutionally protected to ensure impartial application of law, upheld through statutory guarantees that prohibit interference by the executive or legislature in specific judicial proceedings. Significant reforms under the enhanced by establishing the on 1 October 2009, replacing the Appellate Committee of the and removing the Lord Chancellor's dual role as speaker and judge. The Act mandates that ministers protect , transferring oversight of judicial administration to the Lord Chief Justice and creating mechanisms to insulate courts from political influence. The , comprising 12 justices including a president and deputy president, adjudicates cases of greatest public importance, such as constitutional disputes, without legislative membership to prevent fusion of judicial and parliamentary roles. Appointments to judicial office emphasize merit and independence, primarily through the (JAC) for , an independent body selecting candidates via open competition and recommending them to the , who holds limited veto power. For Supreme Court justices, an ad hoc selection commission convened by the proposes candidates, ensuring transparency and diversity of experience while prioritizing legal expertise. This process applies to lower courts as well, fostering a insulated from direct political appointment. Under , courts exercise over executive decisions and secondary legislation for legality, rationality, and procedural fairness but cannot invalidate primary Acts of Parliament, which remain supreme. Declarations of incompatibility under the prompt legislative response without binding effect, preserving sovereignty while encouraging compliance with international obligations. This framework balances judicial authority with legislative primacy, as affirmed in cases where courts defer to explicit parliamentary intent, though evolving interpretations have tested boundaries in areas like and .

Territorial and Devolved Governance

Devolution Frameworks

Devolution in the United Kingdom entails the statutory transfer of specific legislative, executive, and fiscal powers from the Parliament at Westminster to devolved institutions in Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland, without extending equivalent arrangements to England. These frameworks originated with the Scotland Act 1998, Government of Wales Act 1998, and Northern Ireland Act 1998, enacted following referendums in September 1997 that approved devolution in Scotland (74% yes vote on 64% turnout) and Wales (50.3% yes on 50% turnout), alongside the Belfast/Good Friday Agreement for Northern Ireland, which included devolution as a core element. The arrangements are inherently asymmetrical, reflecting historical, cultural, and political differences: Scotland and Northern Ireland received primary legislative powers from inception, while Wales began with subordinate executive functions that expanded to full legislative competence via the Government of Wales Act 2006 and Wales Act 2017. Subsequent legislation, such as the Scotland Act 2012 and 2016, has further devolved tax-varying and welfare powers to Scotland, underscoring an evolutionary rather than static model. Devolved powers generally encompass areas like , , , and environment, while reserved matters—handled exclusively by Westminster—include , defense, , macroeconomic policy, and social security (with partial exceptions post-2016 for ). In , the delineates reserved matters in Schedule 5, covering , EU relations (pre-Brexit), , and , with anything not explicitly reserved deemed devolved. shifted to a reserved powers model under the Wales Act 2017, mirroring by listing Westminster's competencies (e.g., elections, defense) while granting the broader latitude in unreserved fields, though initially more constrained than 's. Northern Ireland's framework, per the , distinguishes "transferred" (devolved) matters like justice (devolved in 2010) from "excepted" (e.g., succession to ) and "reserved" (e.g., policing, subject to change), incorporating mandatory power-sharing and cross-community voting to address sectarian divisions. Fiscal devolution varies: gained limited powers in 1998 and expanded borrowing capacity in 2016; received minor tax levers like land tax in 2017; Northern Ireland relies on a with no independent tax powers beyond rates. The frameworks preserve Westminster's unlimited sovereignty, enabling Parliament to override devolved legislation or reclaim powers at will, as affirmed in judicial rulings like R (Miller) v Secretary of State for Exiting the (2017), which upheld devolution statutes as ordinary acts amendable by simple majority. Political restraint is enforced via the Sewel convention, whereby Westminster will not normally legislate on devolved matters without consent from the relevant assembly—a non-justiciable norm statutorily recognized for in the but not legally binding. This tension has surfaced in disputes over legislative consent, such as Brexit-related bills, highlighting devolution's dependence on rather than entrenched autonomy. Common frameworks, agreed post-Brexit, coordinate policy in areas of shared competence (e.g., agriculture standards) to mitigate divergence while respecting devolved authority.

Scottish Parliament and Independence Pressures

The Scottish Parliament was established by the Scotland Act 1998, which devolved legislative powers from the UK Parliament to a unicameral body in Edinburgh, comprising 129 members elected every five years using a mixed-member proportional system. Devolved matters include health, education, justice, environment, agriculture, and local government, while reserved powers retained by Westminster encompass the constitution, foreign policy, defense, immigration, and macroeconomic policy. This framework, enacted following a 1997 referendum where 74.3% supported a devolved parliament with tax-varying powers, aimed to address longstanding demands for Scottish self-governance within the UK union. Since its inception in 1999, the (SNP) has dominated the , advocating for as a means to fully exercise over devolved and reserved areas alike. The 2014 , authorized by the Edinburgh Agreement and held on September 18, saw 55.3% vote "No" to the question "Should be an independent ?" against 44.7% "Yes," with a turnout of 84.6% from 4.28 million eligible voters. Post-referendum, the SNP secured successive electoral mandates, including 64 seats in the 2021 election—short of an absolute majority but enough to form a pro-independence government with Green support—interpreting these as implicit endorsements for a second . Independence pressures intensified after the 2016 Brexit vote, with the SNP arguing it undermined the 2014 "No" vote's premise of continued EU membership, though polls since have shown support hovering around 45%, without consistently surpassing 50%. Efforts to hold a second , dubbed "indyr ef2," faced legal barriers; in 2022, the UK Supreme Court unanimously ruled that the lacks competence under the Scotland Act to legislate for such a vote without Westminster's via a Section 30 order, as it pertains to reserved constitutional matters. This decision, referenced by then-First Minister , shifted SNP strategy toward international advocacy and referendums via elections, though subsequent leadership under has grappled with internal scandals and declining approval, complicating the push amid Westminster's firm opposition. These dynamics highlight tensions in the UK's unwritten constitution, where grants operational autonomy but reserves ultimate at Westminster, resisting unilateral without mutual agreement. Pro-independence advocates, primarily the SNP, cite democratic deficits and policy divergences—like opposition to nuclear deterrence and preference for Nordic-style —as causal drivers, yet empirical outcomes, including economic modeling debates and post-2014 stability, underscore the union's enduring framework absent broad consensus for dissolution. Recent 2025 polling indicates SNP electoral leads but no resurgence in yes votes sufficient to force constitutional change, reflecting voter prioritization of public services over separation amid fiscal constraints under the devolution settlement.

Welsh Senedd

The Welsh Senedd, originally established as the National Assembly for Wales, originated from the , enacted following a on 18 1997 in which 50.3% of voters approved the creation of a devolved assembly on a turnout of 51.3%. The assembly convened on 6 May 1999 with initially executive devolution powers, handling secondary legislation and administration in areas such as health, education, and economic development, but lacking primary legislative competence. Subsequent reforms separated the executive (Welsh Government) from the legislature via the Government of Wales Act 2006, granting limited primary law-making powers through "Measures" subject to UK Parliamentary oversight or Orders in Council. A 2011 referendum on 3 , with 63.5% approval on 35.2% turnout, empowered the assembly to enact "Acts of the Assembly" in devolved fields without Westminster's prior consent. The Wales Act 2017 shifted to a reserved powers model, akin to Scotland's, allowing on any non-reserved matter and enshrining the and as permanent UK constitutional elements unless altered by ; reserved areas include the , defense, , and macroeconomic policy. The Senedd is unicameral with 60 Members of the Senedd (MSs) elected under the additional member system: 40 from single-member constituencies and 20 from five regional lists, using proportional representation to mitigate majoritarian distortions. The Senedd Cymru (Members and Elections) Act 2024, effective for the 7 May 2026 election, expands membership to 96 MSs across 16 constituencies, each electing six via closed-list proportional representation, lowers the voting age to 16, and eliminates the separate regional vote to simplify the process. Its name changed to Senedd Cymru (Welsh Parliament) in May 2020 under the Senedd and Elections (Wales) Act 2020 to emphasize its parliamentary status. Constitutionally, the operates within the UK's uncodified framework of , where the UK Parliament retains ultimate authority to legislate for , though a Sewel convention requires Welsh consent for matters affecting devolved powers. remains asymmetric: lacks Scotland's full income tax variation rights or Northern Ireland's parity arrangements, reflecting the narrower 1997 mandate and subsequent incremental expansions without fiscal parity. Acts of require but are not subject to UK on merits, only procedural grounds, underscoring retained Westminster supremacy.

Northern Ireland Assembly and Power-Sharing

The , established by the as the implementation of the Belfast Agreement signed on 10 April 1998, serves as the devolved legislature for Northern Ireland, exercising powers over transferred matters such as health, , agriculture, and justice (the latter devolved in 2010). The Assembly comprises 90 members, known as Members of the Legislative Assembly (MLAs), elected every five years via the system of across 18 constituencies, each returning five members. This structure aims to reflect the region's divided polity, with MLAs required to designate themselves as unionist, nationalist, or other upon election, influencing key voting thresholds and executive formation. Power-sharing is enshrined to prevent by either unionist or nationalist blocs, drawing on consociational principles that mandate inclusive executive formation and cross-community safeguards. The Executive, comprising the , deputy First Minister, and up to nine ministers, is formed using the —a sequential proportional allocation formula that divides each party's seat totals by successive integers (1, 2, 3, etc.) to assign ministries based on the highest resulting quotients, ensuring proportionality while favoring larger parties. The and deputy First Minister positions, which hold joint authority over executive decisions, are nominated by the largest unionist-designated and largest nationalist-designated parties, respectively, and elected by a weighted requiring support from both communities (at least 40% from each bloc plus overall approval). affecting key budgetary or constitutional issues demands "parallel consent," meaning simultaneous majorities among unionists, nationalists, and the assembly as a whole, or a petition of concern mechanism allowing a 30-MLA threshold (one-third of members) from one community to trigger cross-community voting. The system has faced repeated suspensions due to breakdowns in trust, particularly over decommissioning of weapons, devolution of policing and , and post-Brexit trade arrangements. Following initial on 2 1999, was suspended four times between 2000 and 2002 before a full collapse until restoration on 8 May 2007 after the facilitated power-sharing between the and . Further instability included a 2017-2020 hiatus over disputes and Irish legislation, and a 2022-2024 collapse triggered by unionist opposition to the , resolved only after the and a UK-Ireland deal enabling restoration on 3 February 2024. As of October 2025, remains operational under the 2022 election results, with of as and of the as deputy, though the petition of concern has been invoked over 180 times since 1998, often criticized for enabling vetoes that stall governance on non-consensus issues like . This mandatory coalition has sustained relative peace but perpetuated ethnic bloc politics, with turnout in 2022 elections at a record low of 63.6% reflecting voter fatigue amid frequent interventions by the .

English Localism and Asymmetry

The United Kingdom's devolution settlement exhibits significant , with , , and [Northern Ireland](/page/Northern Ireland) possessing dedicated legislatures empowered to legislate on devolved matters such as health, education, and aspects of , while lacks an equivalent national assembly. This structure stems from the , , and , which granted varying degrees of autonomy to those nations but left subject to direct governance by the UK Parliament at Westminster. Consequently, Members of Parliament from devolved nations can vote on English domestic legislation, a disparity encapsulated in the "" first articulated by in 1977, highlighting the constitutional imbalance where English MPs lack reciprocal influence over devolved policies in , for instance. To mitigate this asymmetry without creating a separate English parliament—which has been deemed politically unfeasible due to England's population dominance (approximately 84% of the UK's total as of the 2021 census)—procedural mechanisms like (EVEL) were introduced in 2015. EVEL restricted voting on England-only bills to English and Welsh MPs, but it was suspended in 2020 amid procedural complexities during the and fully abolished by the in July 2021, reverting to universal MP voting rights. Critics argued EVEL failed to substantively empower English interests and complicated , while proponents viewed its removal as exacerbating the asymmetry. English localism serves as the primary constitutional response to devolution elsewhere, emphasizing decentralized decision-making through local authorities and regional bodies rather than national institutions. Local government in England operates across multiple tiers: two-tier systems comprising 26 county councils and 164 district councils handling services like , social care, highways, and planning; 56 unitary authorities combining these functions; and six metropolitan boroughs in urban areas. Additionally, 10 combined authorities, established since 2011 (e.g., ), coordinate , , and skills across larger regions, often led by elected mayors with limited fiscal powers, such as precepting extra (up to 2% for adult social care as of 2023). These arrangements devolve operational responsibilities but retain central oversight, with local authorities deriving about 50% of funding from UK government grants as of 2023, constraining autonomy. The Localism Act 2011 marked a pivotal shift, granting councils a general power of competence to act beyond explicit statutory permissions, akin to private individuals, and introducing community rights including the right to challenge service provision, bid for assets of community value, and build infrastructure. This legislation aimed to empower localities against central micromanagement, yet implementation has been uneven, with devolved powers varying by region— enjoys broader authority via the 1999 Greater London Authority Act, including transport and policing—resulting in a patchwork governance exacerbating regional disparities. Post-2011, initiatives like the 2022 Levelling Up and Regeneration Act further promoted mayoral devolution deals, transferring budgets and bus franchising to select areas, but empirical analyses indicate persistent institutional weaknesses and fiscal dependence limit growth equalization across English regions. As of 2024, ongoing Labour government proposals seek to standardize and expand these deals, though skeptics highlight risks of replicating prior incoherence without addressing core constitutional fragilities.

Rights, Liberties, and Constraints

Traditional Common Law Liberties

The traditional liberties of the constitute a core element of its , emerging from judicial precedents and emphasizing protections against arbitrary executive or legislative overreach, as distinct from statutory or convention-based rights. These liberties prioritize individual autonomy under the , where no person may suffer punishment or deprivation except for a clear breach of established law adjudicated in ordinary courts. Articulated by in his 1885 work Introduction to the Study of the Law of the Constitution, they derive not from enumerated bills of rights but from the gradual evolution of , ensuring for subjects and officials alike without discretionary privileges or exemptions. This framework underscores causal accountability, holding power to evidentiary standards rather than fiat, and has historically restrained monarchical absolutism through precedents like those in (1610), where Chief Justice Coke asserted that could control acts repugnant to reason. Central to these liberties is the right of personal liberty, embodied in the writ of , which originated in 12th-century practices requiring custodians to produce a detainee before a court to justify custody, predating its statutory codification in the Habeas Corpus Act 1679. This remedy enforces the principle that detention must stem from lawful authority, not whim, and evolved through cases addressing jurisdictional disputes between courts and prerogative bodies like the King's Bench, thereby limiting without . Complementing this is the absolute right of personal security, as delineated by Sir William Blackstone in his 1765–1769 Commentaries on the Laws of England, encompassing safeguards for , limbs, , and against unlawful harm, with prohibiting corporal or capital punishments save for the gravest offenses proven via . Blackstone rooted these in the "primary laws of nature," enforceable through judicial remedies like or , reflecting a first-principles view that state power exists to preserve, not infringe, inherent human inviolability. Property rights form the third pillar of Blackstone's absolute rights, entailing the free use, enjoyment, and disposal of acquisitions without control except by clear , a doctrine forged in medieval precedents against feudal seizures and feudal incidents abolished by statutes like 12 Car. II (1660). These liberties extend to procedural safeguards, such as the and , which Dicey identified as deriving from ordinary courts' precedents rather than special constitutional courts, ensuring no arbitrary conviction and mandating proof beyond in criminal matters. While 's permits legislative override— as in wartime suspensions of (e.g., Defence of the Realm Act 1914)—common law courts have interpreted such encroachments narrowly, preserving residual protections absent explicit repeal, as affirmed in 20th-century rulings upholding Diceyan principles against administrative excess. This resilience stems from the 's inductive method, building liberties incrementally from specific disputes rather than abstract declarations, fostering empirical adaptability while anchoring against ideological overreach.

Human Rights Act 1998 and ECHR Incorporation

The Human Rights Act 1998 (HRA) incorporates the substantive rights contained in the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) into domestic United Kingdom law. Enacted by Parliament, the Act received Royal Assent on 9 November 1998 and the majority of its provisions came into force on 2 October 2000. Prior to the HRA, the ECHR—ratified by the UK in 1951 as a Council of Europe treaty—imposed international obligations enforceable only through the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) in Strasbourg, without direct effect in UK courts under the dualist constitutional tradition. Schedule 1 of the HRA sets out the relevant ECHR Articles, including the (Article 2), prohibition of (Article 3), right to and (Article 5), (Article 6), and right to respect for private and family life (Article 8), along with associated protocols. Section 3 requires UK courts to interpret primary and subordinate legislation "so far as it is possible to do so" in a way compatible with these Convention rights. If incompatibility cannot be avoided, section 4 empowers higher courts to issue a , which does not invalidate the law but signals to the need for under section 10, preserving . Section 6 imposes a duty on public authorities—including courts and government bodies—to act compatibly with Convention rights, rendering unlawful any contrary action subject to remedy through courts. This incorporation enables individuals to enforce ECHR rights domestically without initial recourse to the ECtHR, aligning with the government's aim to "bring rights home" by reducing delays and costs associated with proceedings. courts must take into account ECtHR judgments and opinions of the when determining Convention rights questions (section 2), though they retain interpretive independence. The HRA's framework maintains the UK's ultimate accountability to the ECtHR, as domestic decisions remain subject to review there, with the Strasbourg court able to override inconsistent UK rulings. By 2024, the ECtHR had delivered over 500 judgments against the since ratification, covering issues from prisoner voting to policies, influencing domestic even post-incorporation. While the Act enhances accessibility to rights protections, critics argue it introduces interpretive strains on statutory meaning under section 3 and indirect judicial influence over policy, though retains the power to legislate without regard to Convention compatibility.

Tensions with Domestic Sovereignty

The (HRA) incorporates the (ECHR) into domestic law, obliging courts under section 3 to interpret primary and subordinate legislation compatibly with Convention rights "so far as it is possible to do so." This interpretative duty has led to criticisms that it incentivizes judicial strain on statutory language, potentially subordinating clear parliamentary intent to evolving ECHR jurisprudence from the (ECtHR) in . While section 4 allows declarations of incompatibility without invalidating Acts of , such declarations exert political pressure on the executive and legislature to amend laws, challenging the orthodox view of absolute where no body can bind successors or override legislation. Moreover, section 2 requires UK courts to consider ECtHR judgments, fostering a "mirror principle" where domestic rulings align with or anticipate , sometimes preempting parliamentary deliberation on sensitive policy areas like and . High-profile cases illustrate these frictions. In Hirst v United Kingdom (No. 2) (2005), the ECtHR ruled that the UK's blanket ban on prisoner voting violated Protocol 1, Article 1 of the ECHR, prompting repeated domestic resistance; Parliament rejected full compliance via votes in 2011 and subsequent elections, yet the unresolved issue led to over 1,000 unremedied judgments by 2017 and ongoing threats of disenfranchisement for affected prisoners. Similarly, in the context of counter-terrorism, the ECtHR's interim measures under Rule 39 delayed the deportation of Abu Qatada to Jordan until 2013, despite UK diplomatic assurances against torture, highlighting how Strasbourg's non-binding but politically influential orders can obstruct executive foreign policy. The UK government's Rwanda asylum policy, aimed at deterring irregular migration, exemplifies acute sovereignty strains post-Brexit. On 14 June 2022, the ECtHR issued a Rule 39 interim measure halting the inaugural flight of asylum seekers to , citing risks under Article 3 (prohibition of ), forcing cancellation despite domestic legal approval. The UK Supreme Court later ruled the scheme unlawful in November 2023, finding insufficient safeguards against refoulement to unsafe third countries, in line with ECHR obligations. In response, the Safety of Rwanda (Asylum and Immigration) Act 2024 declared safe by statute, attempting to override judicial findings, but faced further ECtHR and domestic challenges, with no flights executed by October 2025 amid ongoing litigation and costs exceeding £700 million for zero relocations. Critics, including Conservative leaders, contend such interventions by unelected judges undermine democratic control over borders, where UK policy prioritizes deterrence over expansive rights interpretations not foreseen in the 1950 ECHR. Reform efforts underscore the perceived imbalance. The 2022 Bill of Rights Bill, introduced on 22 June 2022, sought to repeal the HRA, abolish declarations of incompatibility, limit section 2's Strasbourg deference to persuasive rather than binding status, and introduce a "notwithstanding clause" allowing ministers to disapply ECHR in cases, explicitly to restore over judicial creep. However, the bill was withdrawn in June 2023 following parliamentary scrutiny revealing it would not significantly reduce ECtHR oversight while complicating and Northern Ireland's commitments. Despite low overall ECtHR adverse judgments against the —only one in 2024, ranking eighth-lowest among 46 states—the cumulative effect of "living instrument" dynamism in , contrasting 's evolutionary , fuels arguments that HRA incorporation imports alien legalism, eroding domestic causal accountability for policy outcomes like migration surges post-2010. Proponents of retention emphasize HRA's compatibility mechanisms preserve in theory, yet empirical delays in policy execution suggest practical dilution, with governments often yielding to avoid international reputational costs.

Administrative Law and Oversight

Judicial Review Mechanisms

![Supreme Court of the United Kingdom, Court 1 Interior][float-right] Judicial review in the constitutes a supervisory exercised by courts over the actions and decisions of public bodies to ensure they act lawfully, rationally, and fairly, without extending to the invalidation of primary legislation due to the doctrine of . This mechanism, rooted in rather than codified constitutional text, applies to exercises of statutory powers, powers, and decisions affecting rights, as affirmed in the landmark case Council of Civil Service Unions v Minister for the Civil Service AC 374, commonly known as the case. There, the established three primary grounds for review: illegality (acting beyond legal authority or misinterpreting law), irrationality (decisions so unreasonable no reasonable authority could have made them, per the standard from Associated Provincial Picture Houses Ltd v Wednesbury Corporation 1 KB 223), and procedural impropriety (failure to follow prescribed procedures or principles of , such as or lack of hearing). The process commences in the Administrative Court of the King's Bench Division of the High Court, requiring claimants to seek permission to proceed, demonstrating an arguable case with sufficient interest (standing), and typically within a three-month time limit from the decision challenged. Appeals lie to the Court of Appeal and ultimately to the Supreme Court, which, since its establishment under the Constitutional Reform Act 2005 effective 1 October 2009, serves as the final appellate body but upholds parliamentary sovereignty by interpreting rather than overriding statutes. Remedies include quashing orders (nullifying unlawful decisions), prohibiting orders (preventing future unlawful acts), mandatory orders (compelling performance of duty), declarations of unlawfulness, and limited damages, particularly where human rights are engaged. The , incorporating the into domestic law effective 2 October 2000, augmented these grounds by obliging public authorities under section 6 to act compatibly with Convention rights, enabling courts to review decisions for proportionality and substantive rights violations alongside traditional heads. Courts may issue declarations of incompatibility for primary legislation under section 4, prompting parliamentary response without striking down the law, thus preserving sovereignty while encouraging remedial orders via section 10 for urgent fixes. This framework has expanded review's scope, as seen in cases like R (Daly) v Secretary of State for the Home Department UKHL 26, which introduced proportionality as a distinct test for Convention rights, diverging from irrationality. Limits persist: justiciability doctrines exclude non-justiciable political questions or matters where is unreviewable if inherently executive, though clarified reviewability absent explicit ouster. The and Courts Act 2022 introduced presumptions against implied ouster of review and clarified remedies like suspended quashing orders, aiming to balance efficiency with accountability without curtailing core mechanisms. Empirical data from the indicates around 3,000-4,000 judicial review applications annually in recent years, with permission granted in approximately 20-30% of cases, underscoring its role in constraining executive overreach while respecting legislative supremacy.

Ombudsman and Accountability Bodies

The Parliamentary and Health Service (PHSO) serves as the primary national body investigating complaints of causing injustice in UK central government departments and the (NHS) in . Established under the Parliamentary Commissioner for Administration Act 1967, the PHSO operates independently, receiving complaints typically via Members of Parliament for government matters, though direct public access was enabled for certain cases by the Public Administration and Constitutional Affairs Committee reforms in recent years. Its powers include compelling evidence from investigated bodies but extend only to recommendations for remedies, such as compensation or procedural changes, enforced through parliamentary scrutiny rather than legal compulsion. In 2022-2023, the PHSO handled over 15,000 inquiries, upholding around 10% of investigated cases, highlighting its role in identifying systemic failures like delays in state pension notifications. The Local Government and Social Care Ombudsman (LGSCO) addresses grievances against local authorities, care homes, and other providers of public services in , complementing the PHSO by focusing on decentralized administration. Created by the Local Government Act 1974, it investigates faults in service delivery or decision-making after internal remedies fail, with authority to recommend financial redress up to £100,000 per case or service improvements. The LGSCO processed approximately 14,000 complaints in 2023, finding fault in 54% of assessed cases, often involving delays in social care assessments or disputes, thereby enforcing without judicial intervention. Beyond ombudsmen, other statutory bodies enhance administrative oversight, such as the National Audit Office (NAO), which audits central government expenditure and reports findings to the . Independent since the National Audit Act 1983, the NAO scrutinizes value for money, issuing over 400 reports annually that expose inefficiencies, like the £2.8 billion overspend in certain projects identified in 2024 audits. These mechanisms collectively uphold constitutional principles of executive accountability to , providing accessible, low-cost alternatives to litigation while relying on political and reputational pressures for compliance, though critics note limited enforcement powers amid rising complaint volumes. Devolved administrations maintain analogous offices, such as the Scottish Public Services , reflecting the UK's asymmetrical structure but preserving Westminster-level independence.

Public Sector Duties

Public authorities in the are subject to statutory duties that require them to consider specific factors in exercising their functions, serving as constitutional constraints on . These duties, primarily codified in key , aim to promote fairness, rights protection, and objectives without codifying a single constitutional document. Enforcement typically occurs through , where courts assess whether authorities have complied with the requirement to "have due regard" or act compatibly, rather than substituting their own judgments. The Public Sector Equality Duty (PSED), established under section 149 of the , mandates that public authorities, including government departments, local councils, and bodies performing public functions, have due regard to three aims when making decisions: eliminating unlawful , , , and other prohibited conduct; advancing equality of opportunity between persons sharing a protected characteristic and those who do not; and fostering good relations between such persons. Protected characteristics encompass age, , gender reassignment, and civil partnership, and maternity, race, or belief, sex, and . The duty applies across policy-making, service delivery, and employment, requiring evidence-based consideration rather than guaranteed outcomes, with specific duties in (updated in 2017) obliging publication of equality objectives and information. Non-compliance can lead to , as seen in cases like R (Bracking) v for Work and Pensions (2013), where courts emphasized conscious application of the duty. Under section 6 of the , it is unlawful for a public authority—which includes courts, tribunals, government bodies, and organizations substantially exercising public functions—to act in a manner incompatible with rights protected by the (ECHR), as incorporated into domestic law. This imposes a positive obligation to respect, protect, and fulfill Convention rights, such as the (Article 2), prohibition of torture (Article 3), and fair trial (Article 6), extending to both negative (non-interference) and positive (proactive protection) duties. Courts interpret the duty broadly, holding authorities accountable for omissions, as in R (Pretty) v (2001), where failure to consider rights led to scrutiny. Exceptions apply only where primary legislation requires incompatibility, preserving , though ministers must make compatibility statements under section 19. Judicial remedies include declarations of incompatibility, prompting legislative response without invalidating laws. Additional statutory duties reinforce these, such as the socio-economic duty under section 1 of the , requiring specified public authorities to reduce inequalities of outcome linked to socio-economic disadvantage when making strategic decisions, though its application remains limited and non-justiciable in practice without specific regulations. Local authorities face duties like promoting economic, social, and environmental well-being under the Localism Act 2011, and best value obligations to secure efficient, effective services. These layered duties reflect an uncodified approach, balancing accountability with flexibility, but have drawn criticism for potential conflicts or administrative burden, as noted in government reviews emphasizing proportionality.

Major Controversies

Challenges to Parliamentary Sovereignty

Parliamentary sovereignty, the foundational principle that the UK Parliament holds supreme legislative authority without legal restraint from courts or other bodies, has faced practical and doctrinal tests through statutory delegations, judicial interpretations, and supranational obligations. While theoretically intact—Parliament can repeal any limiting legislation—these challenges have prompted debates over its absoluteness, with courts occasionally asserting interpretive limits grounded in the rule of law. Key instances include the temporary supremacy of EU law and the interpretive obligations under the Human Rights Act 1998 (HRA), both enacted by Parliament itself, illustrating self-imposed constraints rather than inherent erosion. The European Communities Act 1972 (ECA) exemplified a voluntary limitation during UK membership of the European Union, granting direct effect and supremacy to EU law over conflicting domestic statutes. In R v Secretary of State for Transport, ex parte Factortame Ltd (No 2) 1 AC 603, the House of Lords ruled that UK courts must disapply provisions of the Merchant Shipping Act 1988 incompatible with EU regulations on fishing quotas, marking the first explicit judicial acceptance of EU law's precedence. This decision, compelled by the ECA's terms, fueled Eurosceptic critiques of diminished sovereignty, though Parliament retained the power to repeal the ECA, as it did via the European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018 following the 2016 referendum. Brexit thus reaffirmed sovereignty by ending automatic EU supremacy, with retained EU law now subject to domestic amendment, albeit with ministerial powers under the 2018 Act scrutinized by Parliament. The HRA 1998, incorporating the into domestic law, introduced another layer of constraint by requiring courts to interpret legislation compatibly with Convention rights where possible (section 3) and issue declarations of incompatibility for irreconcilable statutes (section 4), without invalidating primary legislation. By September 2023, courts had issued 29 such declarations since 2000, prompting parliamentary responses in cases like A v for the Home Department UKHL 56, where of foreign terror suspects was deemed incompatible, leading to legislative adjustment. While preserving —Parliament is not bound to amend laws—the mechanism exerts political and moral pressure, with critics arguing it empowers judicial oversight akin to , though empirical data shows rare invocations and consistent parliamentary supremacy. Devolution under the , , and delegated legislative powers to subnational assemblies while affirming UK Parliament's retained sovereignty to legislate concurrently or repeal devolution statutes. The Sewel convention, codified in the , stipulates that the UK Parliament will not normally legislate in devolved areas without consent, yet its non-justiciable status was upheld in R (Miller) v Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union UKSC 5, where the ruled it unenforceable as a matter of . Post-Brexit, tensions arose with the United Kingdom Internal Market Act 2020, which enabled Westminster to override devolved regulations on goods and services without consent, as in disputes over Scottish deposit return schemes in 2023–2024, underscoring Parliament's ultimate authority amid political friction. Judicial obiter dicta have further probed sovereignty's boundaries. In R (Jackson) v Attorney General UKHL 56, challenging the Hunting Act 2004's passage via the Parliament Acts, Lords Bingham, Nicholls, and Hope suggested courts might refuse to apply statutes deemed to subvert democratic processes or the rule of law, with Lord Hope stating sovereignty "is no longer, if it ever was, absolute." The Miller litigation reinforced parliamentary primacy over the executive: the 2017 Supreme Court judgment (8–3) required statutory authorization to trigger Article 50 TEU, altering domestic rights without ministerial prerogative alone, while the 2019 sequel (R (Miller) v The Prime Minister UKSC 41) invalidated prorogation of Parliament as unlawful for frustrating legislative scrutiny. These rulings delimited executive actions infringing Parliament's functions but did not curtail legislative omnipotence. More recently, the Safety of Rwanda (Asylum and Immigration) Act 2024 countered the Supreme Court's AAA v Secretary of State for the Home Department UKSC 42 ruling against deportations by deeming Rwanda safe, exemplifying Parliament's capacity to override judicial findings on factual matters. Overall, these challenges reflect evolutionary pressures rather than fatal undermines, with sovereignty's resilience evident in options and post-Brexit restorations, though ongoing disputes and HRA interactions highlight the doctrine's reliance on political restraint over rigid legal entrenchment.

Judicial Overreach and Political Questions

Judicial overreach in the United Kingdom arises when courts extend beyond traditional legal bounds into areas of executive discretion or policy formulation, potentially undermining the inherent in the unwritten . This phenomenon lacks a codified equivalent to the U.S. political questions doctrine, which defers inherently political disputes to elected branches; instead, UK courts assess case-by-case, often engaging high-policy decisions under principles of and . Critics contend this expansion, accelerated by the , erodes by substituting judicial preferences for democratic resolution. A prominent example is the Supreme Court's unanimous ruling in R (Miller) v The UKSC 41 on 24 September 2019, which declared Prime Minister Boris Johnson's advice to prorogue for five weeks unlawful, deeming it an unjustifiable frustration of 's legislative functions during . The judgment emphasized constitutional principles over powers, but faced accusations of political intervention, with leaked government remarks describing it as a "constitutional coup" and overstep into executive terrain. While the Court rejected non-justiciability arguments from the below, the decision highlighted tensions, as prorogation had historically been a political convention unchecked by courts. Former Justice Jonathan Sumption articulated these risks in his 2019 BBC , arguing that judicial supremacy—manifest in interpreting vague rights under the —has encroached on politics, resolving moral and policy disputes unelected judges are ill-equipped to handle. Sumption cited the judiciary's growing role in areas like and , where courts impose outcomes defying parliamentary majorities, fostering democratic deficits. He warned of a "shift in the foundations" of constitutional balance, with law supplanting politics amid declining parliamentary authority. More recently, the Supreme Court's 15 November 2023 decision in AAA v Secretary of State for the Home Department ruled the government's deportation policy unlawful, finding insufficient evidence that would not refoule asylum seekers, in violation of the Refugee Convention and obligations. This blocked flights under the 2022 Nationality and Borders Act, prompting the Safety of Act 2024 to declare safe by statute, though implementation stalled amid further challenges. The ruling exemplified perceived overreach, as it scrutinized efficacy and risk assessment—domains of executive expertise—leading to government vows to reform limits via the 2021 Judicial Review and Courts Bill. These cases underscore ongoing debates: proponents view judicial interventions as vital safeguards against executive abuse, yet empirical patterns of rulings against elected policies on migration and suggest systemic judicial influence on political outcomes, unmoored from explicit statutory warrant. Government responses, including proposed curbs on review scope, reflect efforts to recalibrate, prioritizing political accountability over judicial veto.

Devolution's Impact on Union Stability

Devolution, primarily through the , , and , delegated legislative authority over areas like health, education, and justice to regional institutions while reserving macroeconomic policy, defense, and foreign affairs to Westminster. Proponents argued this asymmetrical arrangement would reinforce Union stability by addressing peripheral grievances without conceding sovereignty, yet empirical outcomes reveal heightened territorial fragmentation, as devolved legislatures have amplified nationalist agendas and policy divergences. In Scotland, devolution enabled the to dominate Holyrood elections, culminating in a 2011 majority that prompted the 2014 independence referendum, where 2,001,926 votes (55.3%) rejected separation against 1,617,989 (44.7%) in favor, on an 84.6% turnout. Post-1999, support for has stabilized at approximately 40-45%, per longitudinal data from the Scottish Social Attitudes survey, with identity-based intensifying rather than dissipating, as supplied separatists with governance experience to critique central authority. exacerbated strains, as Scotland's 62% Remain vote contrasted with the 's overall outcome, fueling demands for a second —demands rebuffed by the Supreme Court's unanimous 2022 judgment that Holyrood lacks competence to legislate such a poll absent Westminster consent. This ruling preserved formal Union integrity but underscored causal risks: 's partial autonomy equips regions with tools to pursue dissolution, inverting pre-1998 dynamics where nationalist support languished below 20%. In Wales, devolution's evolutionary trajectory—transitioning to full legislative powers via the Wales Act 2017—has yielded minimal separatist surge, with independence endorsement averaging under 30% in polls, reflecting weaker cultural distinctiveness compared to . Northern Ireland's model, rooted in the 1998 Agreement's mandatory power-sharing, contends with recurrent suspensions (e.g., 2017-2020) and post-Brexit protocol frictions, where Irish unification support hovers at 35-40% amid economic border concerns, though devolution has stabilized cross-community governance more than fueled outright partition. Asymmetries across nations have provoked English backlashes, such as the , without equivalent devolved countermeasures, contributing to perceptions of systemic disequilibrium. Critics, including UK government analyses, contend devolution risks an "ever looser union" by entrenching veto points and fiscal silos—Scotland now controls 20% of income tax and welfare—eroding shared sovereignty without reciprocal shared-rule mechanisms. Empirical stability persists, as no devolved entity has seceded and public attachment to the Union remains majority in aggregate (e.g., 52% in per 2023 SSA data), yet causal realism points to devolution as a vector for incremental erosion, with nationalist incumbency normalizing independence rhetoric and judicial interventions like the 2022 ruling merely deferring referenda rather than extinguishing momentum. Ongoing disputes over , such as gender recognition reforms blocked in 2023, illustrate how devolution amplifies intergovernmental friction, testing Westminster's ultimate authority.

Influence of Supranational Bodies Pre- and Post-Brexit

Prior to , the exerted significant influence on the United Kingdom's through the supremacy of EU law over conflicting domestic , as established by the European Communities Act 1972, which incorporated EU treaties, regulations, and directives into UK law upon accession to the on 1 January 1973. This framework qualified , requiring UK courts to prioritize EU law in areas of EU competence, as affirmed in the Factortame litigation (R v , ex parte Factortame Ltd (No 2) 1 AC 603), where the disapplied sections of the Merchant Shipping Act 1988 to comply with EU fisheries policy, marking the first instance of judicial disapplication of primary legislation due to external obligations. The Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) held interpretive authority, issuing preliminary rulings binding on UK courts under Article 267 TFEU, which cumulatively shaped constitutional norms by limiting legislative freedom in , , environment, and domains, with over 20,000 EU-derived measures in force by 2016. Post-Brexit, following the UK's formal exit from the EU on 31 January 2020 and the end of the transition period on 31 December 2020, the European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018 preserved continuity by converting applicable EU law into "retained EU law" on the domestic statute book, but stripped it of automatic supremacy, allowing Parliament to amend or repeal it without external veto. The Retained EU Law (Revocation and Reform) Act 2023 further diminished EU-style interpretive principles, renaming retained law as "assimilated law," abolishing the supremacy doctrine for post-2020 cases, and lowering the threshold for UK courts to depart from pre-Brexit CJEU precedents, thereby restoring unqualified parliamentary sovereignty over these areas. CJEU jurisdiction ceased entirely for UK matters after the transition, except in narrow exceptions such as enforcement of citizens' rights under the Withdrawal Agreement and application of EU law in Northern Ireland via the Windsor Framework, where dynamic alignment and CJEU oversight persist to avoid a hard Irish border. The (ECHR), administered by the —a separate supranational entity from the —continues to influence UK constitutional practice post-Brexit, as the UK ratified the Convention in 1951 and incorporated it domestically via the , obliging courts to interpret legislation compatibly where possible and declaring incompatibility otherwise, without granting supremacy akin to EU law. (ECtHR) judgments, while persuasive and often followed under the "mirror principle," lack direct effect or binding force on , preserving ; the UK faced only one adverse ECtHR ruling in 2024, the eighth-lowest among 46 member states. The UK-EU Trade and Cooperation Agreement () mandates adherence to ECHR standards for ongoing trade privileges, sustaining indirect influence, though political debates since 2022 have considered derogations or withdrawal—particularly on immigration—to enhance , without implementation by October 2025. Unlike the EU's integrative supranationalism, the ECHR's framework emphasizes remedial oversight rather than legislative preemption, imposing fewer constraints on core .

Reform Debates and Prospects

Arguments for Codification

Proponents of codifying the United Kingdom's constitution argue that the current uncodified arrangement, comprising statutes, conventions, common law, and treaties, creates unnecessary obscurity and risks executive dominance, particularly under strong parliamentary majorities. A single written document would consolidate these elements into a unified, authoritative text, facilitating consistent interpretation by courts, legislators, and the public. A central advantage cited is improved accessibility and public comprehension. The fragmented nature of the existing renders it comprehensible primarily to legal experts and political insiders, limiting democratic engagement; codification would render fundamental rules explicit and approachable, empowering citizens to hold government accountable and fostering informed participation in political processes. Political scientist has articulated this as citizens' entitlement to understand the "rules of the club" governing their , especially amid evolving democratic expectations. Codification would also enable entrenchment of core principles against transient majorities. Under , constitutional elements like the or settlements can be altered via ordinary legislation, potentially enabling self-interested reforms by incumbent governments; a codified framework could mandate supermajorities, referendums, or for amendments, thereby prioritizing over legislative whim and stabilizing governance. Additionally, advocates emphasize strengthened and balances. By delineating institutional roles—such as limits on executive powers or clearer separation between and —a written would curb potential abuses, enhance , and promote efficient , contrasting with the reliance on mutable conventions that have strained under modern pressures like disputes and post-2016 political volatility. This alignment with practices in most liberal democracies, where codified texts underpin and unity, further underscores the case for to reflect the UK's transformed constitutional landscape. Public opinion polls indicate limited support for adopting a codified constitution. There are no major polls from 2025 or 2026 showing strong backing, and recent surveys up to 2024 reveal mixed views with generally low majority support, typically around 30-45% in earlier polls from 2018-2020, accompanied by significant undecided responses and opposition. No recent data from 2023-2025 demonstrates overwhelming public demand for codification, positioning it as a non-priority issue.

House of Lords and Upper Chamber Reform

The House of Lords' composition has evolved through incremental legislative changes, primarily targeting hereditary membership to align with democratic principles while retaining expertise for legislative scrutiny. The curtailed the Lords' veto power over money bills and limited delays on other legislation to two years, followed by the Parliament Act 1949 reducing the delay to one year. The enabled the creation of non-hereditary life peers, shifting the chamber toward appointed experts. The marked the most significant reform to membership, excluding most hereditary peers from sitting and voting, with 92 exceptions retained temporarily via an amendment to facilitate by-elections within parties until full reform. This reduced aristocratic dominance but left the chamber unelected and oversized, with over 800 members by 2024, prompting ongoing debates about legitimacy, size, and democratic accountability. Subsequent measures included the Reform Act 2014, which permitted expulsion for serious misconduct, automatic removal for non-attendance after a session, and voluntary retirement, addressing absenteeism without altering core structure. Efforts for comprehensive overhaul, such as the 2012 Coalition government's bill for an 80% elected chamber, failed due to internal divisions and lack of cross-party support. In 2024, the Labour government introduced the (Hereditary Peers) Bill to eliminate the remaining 92 hereditary seats, fulfilling a commitment and expected to pass by mid-2025, resulting in a chamber composed mainly of life peers and 26 bishops. Additional proposals include capping membership at 800, imposing an 80-year retirement age, and scrutinizing appointments, though implementation remains phased. Public surveys indicate 60% support for hereditary removal but broader calls for size limits and elected elements, reflecting tensions between tradition and representativeness. Critics argue that without addressing appointments' politicization, reforms risk entrenching government influence, while proponents emphasize enhanced scrutiny over the elected .

Electoral and Party Funding Changes

The Elections Act 2022 introduced mandatory photographic identification for voters at polling stations in Great Britain for parliamentary elections, local government elections, and police and crime commissioner elections, effective from May 2023 local elections onward, aiming to enhance electoral integrity by aligning UK practices with those in over 40 other democracies. The Act also restricted postal and proxy voting eligibility to prevent abuse, requiring a history of such voting or specific justifications like disability, while mandating digital imprints on digital campaign materials to increase transparency in political advertising. These provisions addressed vulnerabilities identified in prior elections, such as the 2016 EU referendum's postal vote irregularities, though critics argued they could disproportionately affect lower-income and minority voters, despite pilot data showing rejection rates under 0.5% in 2023 by-elections. Earlier reforms under the Electoral Registration and Administration Act 2013 accelerated the shift to individual electoral registration (IER), fully implemented by 2018, replacing household-based systems to improve accuracy and reduce fraud, resulting in over 7 million new individual registrations by December 2015. Building on the Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act 2000 (PPERA), which created the Electoral Commission to oversee compliance, these changes centralized electoral administration while devolving some responsibilities to local authorities, reflecting the UK's uncodified constitution's reliance on statutory evolution rather than wholesale codification. Post-2022, the government proposed reviewing voter ID implementation and expanding automatic registration linked to public services like HMRC data, as outlined in the July 2025 democracy strategy, potentially enfranchising up to 8 million unregistered voters without compromising security. On party funding, PPERA 2000 marked a pivotal shift from pre-1883 practices, imposing disclosure requirements for donations over £500, permissible donor rules excluding foreign entities, and national campaign spending caps of £30,000 plus £10,000 per constituency for general elections. The Political Parties and Elections Act 2009 further tightened controls by mandating quarterly donation reports, banning loans without commercial terms, and authorizing the Electoral Commission to prosecute undeclared funds, reducing opacity that had enabled controversies like the 1990s "cash for questions" scandal. Despite these, major parties remain reliant on large individual and corporate donors—Conservatives received £23.5 million and Labour £13.2 million in reportable donations during the 2019-2024 —prompting ongoing debates over donation caps (proposed at £10,000-£50,000) and limited state funding, rejected in 2013 Committee on Standards in Public Life recommendations due to taxpayer burden concerns without addressing union influence on Labour. Following the 2024 election, the incoming Labour government committed to strengthening donation rules against foreign circumvention, though no caps were enacted by October 2025, preserving private funding's role amid evidence that spending correlates weakly with vote share gains under existing limits. These reforms underscore tensions in the UK's constitutional framework, where electoral safeguards bolster parliamentary legitimacy against fraud claims—substantiated by 1,000+ electoral offences prosecuted annually—yet funding transparency fails to equalize parties, as smaller ones like Greens report under £1 million yearly versus majors' tens of millions, fueling calls for proportionality absent in first-past-the-post systems. Proposals to lower the to 16, advanced in 2025 consultations, would expand the electorate by 1.5 million without altering funding dynamics, potentially shifting incentives toward youth-focused policies but raising maturity concerns echoed in Scottish and Welsh pilots showing modest turnout increases. Overall, incremental statutory tweaks prevail over radical overhaul, maintaining the constitution's adaptability while exposing persistent asymmetries in democratic access.

Recent Developments (2023–2025)

In September 2024, the newly elected Labour government introduced the (Hereditary Peers) Bill, fulfilling a commitment to eliminate the remaining 92 hereditary peers' right to sit and vote in the upper chamber. The bill passed its second reading in the on 15 October 2024 and completed all remaining stages there on 12 November 2024 before proceeding to the Lords for scrutiny. By October 2025, the legislation had advanced through initial Lords stages, marking the first substantive reform to composition since the 1999 House of Lords Act, though critics argued it fell short of broader democratisation needs, with public polling indicating support for elected elements or term limits. The government also proposed measures to address non-participation and age in the Lords, including expulsion of peers attending fewer than a minimum number of sittings annually and a of 80, as outlined in 2025 announcements. These steps aimed to reduce the chamber's size, currently exceeding 800 members, amid ongoing debates on its democratic legitimacy, though implementation faced resistance over procedural and seniority concerns. In parallel, devolution within England accelerated under Labour's agenda. The English Devolution White Paper, published on 16 December 2024, set foundations for expanded local powers in , , , and skills, prioritising Level 3 or 4 deals by decade's end while prohibiting unsolicited new metro mayors. The subsequent English Devolution and Community Empowerment Bill, introduced in 2025, mandated audit committees for local authorities and streamlined combined authority formations, with six regions—Norfolk and Suffolk, Hull and East , North East, Greater , and , and West —scheduled to elect mayors by May 2026. These changes built on prior trailblazer deals but emphasised consensual reorganisation, requiring interim local plans by March 2025 to mitigate fragmentation risks. Earlier in 2024, under the preceding Conservative administration, the Safety of Rwanda (Asylum and Immigration) Act received on 24 April, declaring a safe third country for asylum removals and curtailing of related decisions, directly countering the UK Supreme Court's November 2023 ruling against the policy on refoulement risks. The Act's provisions, including non-reviewability clauses under sections 2(3)–(4), provoked constitutional debate over versus and principles, with legal scholars warning of potential disapplication crises if courts encountered irreconcilable statutory conflicts. The Labour government later abandoned flights in 2024, redirecting funds, but the legislation underscored tensions in executive attempts to constrain judicial oversight on facts.

References

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