Text från Mariongst -
English
Urgent and important please :)
- In GB, there are 2 major political parties: the conservative party, actually the majority party, and the labour party, representing the minority party, so the opposition.
- According to Laski’s quotation, a British political theorist of the 20-century and the chairman of the labour party during 1945 to 1946, “only two parties hold serious attention of the electoral body”.
- The opposition is defined as a political party, which doesn’t belong to the majority party and thus opposing it.
- In Great Britain, the opposition has a particular status.
- Indeed, Great Britain doesn’t recognize the parties’ status in term of a constitutional nature because it doesn’t have a written constitution.
- Paradoxically, it’s one of the few democracies in the world to have no written constitution but to have an opposition very institutionalized.
- Through our presentation, we are going to demonstrate that the opposition in GB doesn’t has just a political role but it participates to the well functioning of the legal English system.
- About this case, Vedel, a French public law professor, says that “a democracy in the twentieth century, it’s an executive pressing the nation and controlled by a parliamentary opposition”.
- In this presentation we are going to introduce an overview of the aspects in which the opposition plays a key role in the English legal system.
- Mariongst
October 2013
Rösta nu!
VÄNLIGEN, HJÄLP TILL ATT RÄTTA VARJE MENING! -
English