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Tag Archives: free speech

The constitution in the 2024 general election manifestos

Posted on June 18, 2024 by Constitution Unit

With just over two weeks to go until polling day, most parties have now released their manifestos. In this post, Lisa James summarises their key pledges on the constitution, covering parliamentary reform, standards, the rule of law and rights protection, elections and public participation, media and democratic discourse, devolution and Europe.

With the 4 July general election fast approaching, political parties are releasing their manifestos. Though much of the election campaign has focused on the economy and public services, several of the manifestos also contain significant constitutional policy pledges. This post summarises the key commitments on the constitution, covering the manifestos of the main parties in Great Britain: the Labour Party, Conservatives, Liberal Democrats, Green Party, Reform UK, Plaid Cymru and Scottish National Party.

Parliament

The most striking commitment in relation to the House of Commons comes from Labour, which proposes a Modernisation Committee charged with assessing procedure, and improving standards and working practices. The party also proposes to grasp the nettle of House of Lords reform, pledging to scrap the remaining hereditary peers, introduce an age limit of 80 and ‘a new participation requirement’, and introduce reforms to ‘ensure the quality of new appointments’ and improve territorial diversity. Longer-term, the party commits to replacing the House of Lords with an ‘alternative second chamber that is more representative of the regions and nations’, and pledges to consult on proposals for doing so.

Lords reform is also pledged by the Green Party, which proposes replacement with an elected second chamber, and the Liberal Democrats (who propose to reform the chamber to have a ‘proper democratic mandate’ but offer no more detail). Reform UK proposes to replace the House of Lords with a ‘much smaller, more democratic second chamber’ – though it leaves further detail ‘to be debated’. The SNP supports abolition. The Liberal Democrats also propose strengthening parliament’s powers in relation to the calling of elections, trade deals, and military intervention. The Conservative manifesto contains nothing on the role of parliament.

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Posted in Brexit, constitutional standards and the health of democracy, Constitutions and constitution making, Devolution, Elections and referendums, Europe, Government, Judiciary and human rights, Parliament, Parties and politicians, Public Engagement and Policy Making | Tagged 2024 general election, 2024 manifestos, BBC, British Bill of Rights, citizens' assembly, Conservative, constitutional convention, devolution, disinformation, ECHR, Elections Act 2022, English devolution, Ethics and integrity commission, EU customs union, EU single market, Europe, European Convention on HUman Rights, european court of human rights, first past the post, free speech, Green Party, House of Commons, House of Lords, house of lords reform, human rights, Labour, Liberal Democrats, Lisa James, manifesto, mayoral combined authority, Media and the Courts, Modernisation Committee, Northern Ireland Troubles (Legacy and Reconciliation) Bill, Online Safety Act, parliament, parliamentary reform, Plaid Cymru, political discourse, proportional representation, protest, Reform UK, rule of law, Scottish Independence, sewel convention, standards, Trade and Cooperation Agreement, voter ID, Welsh independence, Windsor Framework | 4 Comments
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