There have been recent revelations about the use of the Queen’s consent procedure in relation to Government Bills. […]
Category Archive: UK Parliament
To anyone who accepts Britain’s parliamentary sovereignty, Brexit should not make sense. How could a nation committed to […]
The announcement of the UK-EU Trade and Cooperation Agreement (TCA) on Christmas Eve 2020 may have come as […]
For nearly a hundred and fifty years, parliamentary sovereignty or supremacy (the terms are used interchangeably) has been […]
Not since the Blair era has a government been so committed to a significant programme of constitutional reform […]
The United Kingdom Internal Market Act has become law, receiving Royal Assent shortly before MPs and Lords departed […]
Things were different in 2010. If schools closed and households found themselves stuck indoors, or unable to travel […]
Many modern constitutional systems, despite the prevalence of adult suffrage, forbid certain classes of person from participation in […]
On 20 October, the UK Administrative Justice Institute (UKAJI) made available on its website its submission to the […]
The United Kingdom Internal Market Bill is something of an imperfect storm, provoking the ire both of the […]
