Recent Articles



































Supremacy of Parliament



         


In British constitutional law, parliamentary supremacy is the principle that the current parliament of the United Kingdom is supreme to all other governmental institutions including the monarch and the courts, and may change legislation passed by previous parliaments. (Theoretically, the monarch is a part of the Crown in Parliament.)

The principle of parliamentary supremacy was established over the 17th and 18th centuries during which time parliament asserted the right to name and depose a king.

Parliamentary supremacy prevents judicial review of local domestic law. However in the late 20th and early 21st century, the theory of parliamentary supremacy underwent erosion from three directions.

However, in each case, there is no theoretical erosion of Parliamentary supremacy. Parliament may abolish any of the devolved legislatures at its pleasure. The European and British Courts have the authority to declare incompatibility or to annul a law only because of an Act of Parliament, which can be repealed by Parliament. Thus, theoretically, Parliament remains almost entirely sovereign. (The qualifier "almost" is provided because in the 1920's, after years of dispute, Parliament finally agreed that it does not have sovereignty over the Church of Scotland, the established church in Scotland.)





  View Live Article   This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License