Table of Contents
- 1 What do people criticize unfair laws of Parliament?
- 2 When can the law passed by the Parliament become unpopular?
- 3 What do citizens do when they disagree with a law?
- 4 What does ping pong mean in Parliament?
- 5 How do people react if Parliament passes laws which turn out to be very unpopular and controversial?
What do people criticize unfair laws of Parliament?
What do the people criticise unfair laws passed by the Parliament? They hold public meeting, write about it in newspapers, report to TV news channels etc.
When can the law passed by the Parliament become unpopular?
1. Unpopular laws: – The laws which are constitutionally valid and hence legal but are unpopular and unacceptable to people because they feel that the intention behind it is unfair and harmful. Eg. Municipal laws.
How many times can the Lords reject a bill?
The result was the Parliament Act 1911, which removed from the House of Lords the power to veto a Bill, except one to extend the lifetime of a Parliament. Instead, the Lords could delay a Bill by up to two years. The Act also reduced the maximum lifespan of a Parliament from seven years to five years.
What is the controversial law?
answered Nov 15, 2019 by megha00 Expert (43.9k points) Laws which are passed by the Parliament by due procedure but are repressive and are opposed by a large section of society are known as unpopular laws. Controversial laws are those which favour one section of the society against the other.
What do citizens do when they disagree with a law?
→ They may fight back for a new law . → They will be doing strikes .
What does ping pong mean in Parliament?
‘Ping-pong’ refers to the to and fro of amendments to Bills between the House of Commons and the House of Lords.
What are unpopular and controversial laws What can people do for such a law?
Laws which are passed by the Parliament by due procedure but are repressive and are opposed by a large section of society are known as unpopular laws. Controversial laws are those which favour one section of the society against the other.
Why do some laws become unpopular?
Sometimes a law can be constitutionally valid and hence legal, but it can continue to be unpopular and unacceptable to people because they feel that the intention behind it is unfair and harmful.
How do people react if Parliament passes laws which turn out to be very unpopular and controversial?
Sometimes the Parliament passes laws that turn out to be very unpopular even though they are constitutionally valid. Hence, they criticise such laws, hold public meetings, write about them in newspapers, report to TV news channels etc.