Law and Parliamentary supremacy: Difference between pages

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imported>Doug Williamson
(Update links.)
 
imported>Doug Williamson
(Amend to 'when the UK joined the EU'. Amend 'cede' to 'surrender'.)
 
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1. ''Legal systems.''
''Law''.


The enforceable body of rules that govern any society.
The historical legal principle in the UK that the UK Parliament was 'supreme' in its law-making powers.


This principle was fundamentally affected when the UK joined the EU in 1973.


2. ''Legal systems.''
Parliamentary supremacy meant that:


One of the individual rules, or classes of rules, making up the body of law.
#The UK Parliament was able to make law for the UK as it saw fit either by repealing earlier statutes, over-ruling case law or by making new law.
#No UK Parliament could bind its successor.  Parliament could not make laws that a subsequent Parliament was prevented from altering or repealing.
#The courts in the UK had to apply the relevant statute law enacted by the UK Parliament.  


When the UK joined the EU, UK Parliamentary supremacy was fundamentally affected and it is no longer true to say that only the UK Parliament has the power to make new law for the UK. 


3.
The effect of the UK becoming a member of the EU was to surrender the UK Parliament's supremacy on certain matters of European Union law which have direct effect on member states.


A principle or model that appears to have high predictive or descriptive value.
The position now is that


For example, the Law of comparative advantage in economics.
#The EU may pass legislation directly for the UK.
#The UK cannot, generally, make laws that conflict with EU law.
#Overall, EU law enjoys supremacy over domestic national law and is applied in priority to domestic law.


Or the Law of large numbers in statistics.


== See also ==
* [[European Union ]]
* [[Sovereignty]]


==See also==
*[[Adjudication]]
*[[Antitrust law]]
*[[Arbitration]]
* [[BCL]]
* [[Boilerplate]]
*[[Cartel]]
*[[Case law]]
*[[Civil law]]
*[[Common law]]
*[[Company law]]
*[[Competition law]]
*[[Criminal law]]
*[[Economics]]
*[[Enforcement]]
*[[European Community law]]
*[[Execution]]
*[[Injunction]]
*[[International law]]
*[[Law of comparative advantage]]
*[[Law of large numbers]]
* [[Legislation]]
* [[PhD]]
* [[Pro bono]]
*[[Public international law]]
*[[Sovereignty]]
*[[State aid law]]
*[[State immunity]]
*[[Suit]]
[[Category:Accounting,_tax_and_regulation]]
[[Category:The_business_context]]
[[Category:Compliance_and_audit]]
[[Category:Compliance_and_audit]]

Revision as of 17:04, 11 March 2015

Law.

The historical legal principle in the UK that the UK Parliament was 'supreme' in its law-making powers.

This principle was fundamentally affected when the UK joined the EU in 1973.

Parliamentary supremacy meant that:

  1. The UK Parliament was able to make law for the UK as it saw fit either by repealing earlier statutes, over-ruling case law or by making new law.
  2. No UK Parliament could bind its successor. Parliament could not make laws that a subsequent Parliament was prevented from altering or repealing.
  3. The courts in the UK had to apply the relevant statute law enacted by the UK Parliament.


When the UK joined the EU, UK Parliamentary supremacy was fundamentally affected and it is no longer true to say that only the UK Parliament has the power to make new law for the UK.

The effect of the UK becoming a member of the EU was to surrender the UK Parliament's supremacy on certain matters of European Union law which have direct effect on member states.

The position now is that:

  1. The EU may pass legislation directly for the UK.
  2. The UK cannot, generally, make laws that conflict with EU law.
  3. Overall, EU law enjoys supremacy over domestic national law and is applied in priority to domestic law.


See also