© House of Lords 2011 John Turner, Clerk of the Table Office 23 October 2014 Questions in the House of Lords
© House of Lords 2011
John Turner, Clerk of the Table Office23 October 2014
Questions in the House of Lords
© House of Lords 2011
The Table Office
• John Turner, Elspeth Jones and Lisa Bourke• Rotating band of “minute clerks”• Clerk Assistant• Business tabled up to 6pm each sitting day• Everything checked by Clerk of the Table Office,
Clerk Assistant, Clerk of the Parliaments, Government Whips’ Office
• House of Lords Business published overnight every sitting day; written questions e-mailed to departments
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Questions: general principles
• To Her Majesty’s Government• Or Leader of the House or Chairman of
Committees• Self-regulation
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Types of questions
• Oral questions• Secretary of State questions• Private notice questions• Questions for short debate (+ topical QSDs)• Questions for written answer
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Standing Order 34: Oral Questions
• Questions to which a star is attached, indicating that they are asked for information only, may be placed on the Order Paper for any day on which the House is sitting other than a Friday. No debate may take place on such Questions, and supplementary questions must be confined to the subject of the original Question.
1 June 1954
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House of Lords Business
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Oral questions
• Timing – question time is 30 mins at start of business, 4 questions
• Tabling – slots available 4 weeks in advance; queues• Ministers’ replies (75 words) and supplementary
questions• Topical questions:
– Timing– Ballot, drawn 2 days in advance (or on Fri for Tues)– Tests of topicality: Coverage? What’s new? Could it
wait?– “The Clerks discourage members from tabling
questions which are clearly not topical” Companion, para 6.33
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Secretary of State questions (currently not in operation)
• Timing: One Thursday a month, after oral questions
• 3 questions, 20 minutes• Tabling: ballot drawn on the Monday• Proceedings: same as other oral questions
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Private Notice Questions
• Urgent and important• Lord Speaker decides; consultation; no appeal to the
House• Decision taken by 12 noon; question asked at 3 to 3.30• Timing: 10 minutes, after the topical oral question • Number: 8 in 2012-13 (32 requests)• 10 in 2010-12 (52 requests)• Proceedings: much the same as other oral questions• Repetition of Commons Urgent Questions uses same
rules (so 10 mins rather than 40)
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Allowed private notice questions
• Lord Dholakia asked Her Majesty’s Government what action they propose to take to ensure that the security of the United Kingdom is not compromised on 30 November. (28 November 2011)
• Baroness Royall of Blaisdon asked Her Majesty’s Government in the light of the loss of public and commercial confidence in News International and the imminent closure of the consultation period, whether they will suspend consideration of News Corporation's bid to take over BSkyB. (7 July 2011)
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Failed private notice questions
• To ask HMG what is their response to the escalating crisis in Sudan.
• To ask HMG whether they will ensure that there are sufficient copies of the Boundary Commission for England’s Initial Review of Parliamentary Boundaries in England, published on 13 September, available in the Printed Paper Office for the use of all Members of the House.
• To ask HMG, in light of the conflicting public views expressed by senior Cabinet Ministers, whether they continue to support the Human Rights Act 1998.
• To ask HMG whether they will extend the consultation period in respect of their proposal to abolish hallmarking of items made from precious metals.
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Questions for short debate
• Timing: “Dinner break”, last business, Grand Committee
• Tabling: added to list whenever; Government Whip’s Office table them (roughly) in order
• Duration: 1 or 1 ½ hours, strictly time-limited• Although initiating a debate, still a question
rather than motion; no right of reply for initiating member
• Minister’s reply: 12 minutes
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Questions for written answer
• Six per day; 12 per week; no “named day”• Answers:
– Within 10 working days; transfers possible– “Naughty list”; follow-up questions (Lord
Jopling)– Published in Hansard– Sent to member; email
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Highest scorers of 2013-14Maximum possible = 474
• Lord Myners: 154• Lord Roberts of Llandudno: 183• Baroness Tonge: 209• Lord Hylton: 229• Lord Alton of Liverpool: 336 • Top five questioners tabled 1111 questions• Total tabled in the session = 7004 (tabled by 316
members)
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Highest scorers of 2012-13Maximum possible = 426
• Baroness Tonge: 180• Lord Hylton: 219• Lord Myners: 263• Lord Alton of Liverpool: 286• Lord Laird: 382 • Top five questioners tabled 1330 questions• Total tabled in the session = 6808
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Questions: HMG responsibility
• Must relate to HMG’s responsibilities– Not matters devolved to local authorities– Or to devolved institutions– Not internal affairs of another country –
except regarding human rights or matters covered by international conventions to which the UK is party
– Not matters for the Church of England– Not over 30 years old
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Questions: eliciting information
• “The purpose of parliamentary questions is to elicit information from the government of the day, and thus to assist members of both Houses in holding the government to account.”
• So should be asking for information– Not expressing an opinion– Not providing information– Not hypothetical– Not “trivial, vague or meaningless”
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Questions: admissibility
• May not:– Ask the government for a legal opinion– Relate to matters sub judice– Be too broad (initial oral reply in 75 words;
written answer within two columns of Hansard; disproportionate cost for QWAs set at £800)
– Be phrased offensively– Cast reflections on Sovereign or Royal Family– Ask about House of Commons matters
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Wording of questions
• Should be short, clear and focused• House style