Constitution Of A Country
constitution of a country is a set of rules
regulating the powers of its government and the rights and duties of its
citizens. Many nations have been forced to draw up a written constitution in
response to a revolution, war or as a step towards independence. In contrast,
the United Kingdom which has had a relatively stable history has an unwritten
constitution developed over many centuries with sources of varying importance
which include statute and common law, conventions and traditions, written works
of importance and international law. The UK constitution is often described as
'partly written and wholly uncodified'. A codified constitution is one in which
key provisions are collected together in a single legal document.
Whether written or unwritten, a constitution
must have one supreme power over and above all other power in the state. Under
a written constitution, the highest source of power is the supreme Constitution
as interpreted by the Supreme Court. As the UK has no single written document
as supreme authority, in theory, the highest source of authority in the UK is
the Parliament, and the Acts of Parliament are the highest form of law.
Parliamentary sovereignty and the rule of law were described by the legal
scholar Albert Venn Dicey as the two pillars of the UK constitution.
A V Dicey defined the Parliamentary doctrine
in his book Introduction to the Study of the Law of the Constitution (1885), as
the doctrine where parliament can make or unmake any law on any subject
whatever, without legal restriction, although Dicey was prepared to recognise
that the electorate might have ‘political sovereignty’ by the election of
Members of Parliament, so that the opinion of the people can be legally
expressed through Parliament, and Parliament alone, and no person or body is
recognised by the law as having a right to override or set aside the
legislation of parliament.
The liberal democracies established in
Europe based their constitutions on the principle that ultimate authority was
vested in the people so that they must then be involved in constitutional
change. In constitutional terms, Britain never developed the idea of popular
sovereignty. In the traditional legal doctrine of parliamentary sovereignty,
democracy is not a requirement and the UK Parliament determines the system of
government. The sovereignty of Parliament is simply recognised by the courts as
a rule of the common law, established by ordinary precedents. The political
notion of the ultimate sovereignty of the electorate in Parliamentary
sovereignty must be distinguished from the legal doctrine of the legislative
supremacy, where the courts owe their allegiance to the latter and the courts
will take no notice of the will of the electors. Judicial notions of justice
must generally give way to those expressed by parliament where they are
inconsistent. However the legal authority of statute depends on its
compatibility with the central core of the shared political morality, such as
Acts passed by an unrepresentative Parliament, or Acts which undermined
democracy or even acts which are inconsistent with fundamental ideas if justice
and fairness, as no neat distinction between legal doctrine and political
principle can be sustained at that level of adjudication. Dicey recognised
political reality in what he called constitutional conventions that are united
in character by the possession of a single purpose – to secure that Parliament
is ultimately subject to the wishes of the electorate, where he observed that ‘
if Parliament be in the eye of the law supreme legislature, the essence of
representative government is, that the legislature should represent or give
effect to the will of the political sovereign, i.e of the electoral body, or of
the nation’. Dicey presents conventions as a means of harmonizing legal and
political sovereignty, which remain conceptually distinct. The legal doctrine
of sovereignty is the most fundamental of our constitutional conventions.
Section 4 of the Human Rights Act 1998 has reduced Parliamentary sovereignty to
an extent, so that the courts are now able to declare that legislation is
incompatible with certain rights in the European Convention of Human Rights
which have been incorporated into UK law by that Act. The European Union has a
written constitution in the various Treaties which govern its operation and,
the UK courts must have regard to these when applying EC law. EU law can
override Acts of Parliament, but it is important to remember that all EC law
only has any effect in the UK due to its incorporation via s.2 of the European
Communities Act 1972. In the case of McCarthy’s v Smith (1979) Lord Denning
made the point that if the EC Act was repealed, then EC law would lose its
force as far as the British judiciary were concerned.
The doctrine of the rule of law may be
interpreted as a philosophy or political theory which lays down fundamental
requirements for law, or as a procedural device by which those with power rule
under the law, rather than a precise concept defined by the courts. However,
whereas parliamentary sovereignty is a fully legal concept enforced by the
courts, the rule of law merely pervaded the constitution as an unwritten
principle. The rule of law underlies the entire constitution and acts as a
yardstick for measuring the extent in which the government acts under the law
and the extent to which individual rights are recognised and protected by law.
The purpose of law is to enable citizens to live within the law, and the law
must be clear if it is capable of being obeyed. In this respect, it is only
meaningful to speak of the rule of law in a society which features a
democratically elected, responsible and responsive government and it is often
used as a justification for separating legislative from judicial power. The
case of Entick V. Carrington [1765] 19 St Tr 1030, Court of Common Pleas,
validated Dicey's theory on the rule of law that the citizens are free to do
anything that is not specifically prohibited under law, but governmental agents
are prohibited from doing anything that is not specifically allowed by case law
or statute. However, due to Parliamentary Sovereignty, the rule of law does not
limit Parliament which can simply enact a new law and so then rule of law would
then come second place to Parliamentary sovereignty.
The separation of powers is one of the
pervasive principles of the UK constitution. Separation of powers is a
principle set out by Charles Montesquieu where he stated that without a
separation of powers there could be no liberty where liberty means ‘the right
of doing whatever the law permit’. It denotes the premise that there are three
main organs of government, the legislative whose function is for the making of
general rules, the executive whose function is to govern according to the rules
and the judiciary for resolving disputes between parties according to the law
and that there should be a system of checks and balances between each branch.
The most significant perceptions can be accomplished from the political
philosopher John Locke who took the view that protection of the liberties of
the subject required that the government: ‘ought to be exercised by established
and promulgated laws; that both the People may know their duty, and be safe and
secure within the limits of the law, and the Rulers too kept within their due
bounds, and not to be tempted by the power they have in their hands to employ
it to purposes.’ (Two Treaties on Government, Book 2 Chapter XI). The
separation of powers protects liberty to avoid any concentration of power so
that power cannot corrupt and it enables the citizen to be sure that the law
made by the legislature will bind the executive and be applied by the
judiciary. The idea of there being three different areas where the law is
created is in theory so that no one function has too much power, which could
lead to the power being abused and create the risk of tyranny. This concept has
its fullest practical expression in the US constitution that has proven to be a
stable political system, and yet there have been other Presidential systems
that have been open to tyrants and dictators. If we examine the UK constitution
it can be seen to have many violations of the doctrine with a weak separation
of powers where the chief executive who is the Prime Minister, forms a subset
of the legislature (Parliament), as did the judiciary until the establishment
of the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom, and yet the Parliamentary system
has proven a fairly stable form of liberal democracy. Although a fusion exists,
the doctrine does not imply that the branches of government be completely
independent. There are certain checks and balances which are in place, and
these are mainly concerned with the limit to the exercise of executive powers.
They include the independence of the judiciary, the accountability of the
government to parliament, the House of Lords and the system of statute rules
that have constitutional significance e.g. The European Community's Act 1972
and the Human Rights Act 1998 which has made the rights of citizens more simple
and clear.
Often a written constitution will have a
rigid structure that will ‘entrench’ parts to protect important values or the
structure of the constitution, and can only be amended in accordance with a
special procedure. In the UK all that is required for a change in any part of
the law would be an Act of Parliament passed in the ordinary manner (although a
change in EC law requires complex voting requirement). If a party has a
majority in the House of Commons they can change the constitution. The
continued legitimacy of government depends not only on what a constitution
says, but also on its continued responsiveness to shared beliefs and continued
popular consent, and so the UK Constitution is described as flexible. Since the
introduction of devolution measures in 1997, the UK has a unitary Constitution
in that the UK Constitution permits the national legislature to amend a
subordinate constitution of the Scottish Parliament.
If the United Kingdom has a constitution
then its characteristics include: Uncodifed not entrenched, flexible and
unitary. In my view, the UK does have a constitution which may not be as clear
cut as many other nations but it is still acknowledged.
References
Introduction to the Study of the Law of the
Constitution (1885), AV Dicey.
Cases & Materials on Constitutional and
Administrative Law, Allen and Thompson, 9th edition, Oxford. Pages 45, 47.
Constuitutional & Administrative law,
7th edition, Hilaire Barnett, Routledge-Cavendish. Page 73.
Two Treaties on Government, Book 2 Chapter
XI.
The European Community's Act 1972
Section 4 of the Human Rights Act 1998
Entick V. Carrington [1765] 19 St Tr 1030,
Court of Common Pleas.
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