
Published online:
31 January 2012
Published in print:
10 June 2004
Online ISBN:
9780191734755
Print ISBN:
9780197263198
Contents
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The nineteenth-century legacy The nineteenth-century legacy
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Members of Parliament Members of Parliament
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Full-time or part-time Full-time or part-time
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Members and constituencies Members and constituencies
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Members and parties Members and parties
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The organisation of business The organisation of business
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The dominance of the executive The dominance of the executive
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Making the law Making the law
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Standing committees Standing committees
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Restriction of debate: the closure and the guillotine Restriction of debate: the closure and the guillotine
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Delegated legislation Delegated legislation
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Scrutiny of government Scrutiny of government
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Financial scrutiny: the approval of the estimates Financial scrutiny: the approval of the estimates
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The long gestation of the committee system The long gestation of the committee system
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Questions Questions
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Parliament, the United Kingdom and Europe Parliament, the United Kingdom and Europe
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Sovereignty, the Union and the Empire Sovereignty, the Union and the Empire
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Ireland Ireland
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Scotland Scotland
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Wales Wales
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Europe Europe
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The twentieth-century legacy The twentieth-century legacy
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The decline of Parliament? The decline of Parliament?
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Bibliography Bibliography
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Cite
Seaward, Paul, and Paul Silk, 'The House of Commons', in Vernon Bogdanor (ed.), The British Constitution in the Twentieth Century, British Academy Centenary Monographs (London , 2004; online edn, British Academy Scholarship Online, 31 Jan. 2012), https://doi.org/10.5871/bacad/9780197263198.003.0005, accessed 14 May 2025.
Abstract
This chapter examines the history of the House of Commons in Great Britain, discussing the nineteenth- and twentieth-century legacy of the House of Commons. It reveals that, by the end of the twentieth century, the prestige and pre-eminence which Parliament possessed at its beginning was clearly no more. The first signs of a retreat from the principle of parliamentary sovereignty was the passage of the European Communities Act and the Factortame case.
Keywords:
House of Commons, Great Britain, parliamentary sovereignty, European Communities Act, Factortame case
Subject
UK Politics
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