Orders in council
Orders in the council are made by government and formally approved by the queen and Privy Council, the
Delegated legislation Privy Council are made up of the following types of people, 34 government ministers, senior current and
former politicians including the prime minster, senior judges and the queen, there are 420 members in the
Privy Council.
The Privy Council hold private meetings to discuss matters of
Parliament delegate’s law making is because the Parliaments time governance. At the meeting, the Queen approves any new
is very busy and they would not be able to find the time to analyse and have order that has passed through ministers to enforce them as
a debate on any complex types of rules and regulations, this is why the delegated law of the land. They are used as an alternative to other
legislations saves parliamentary time as they would not need to change the legislative forms when there is good reason for example in an
law themselves as they have delegated powers to other bodies. Parliament emergency, is a result of the terrorist attacks on 11th
delegate’s law making powers through the parent Act. Delegated legislations is September 2011 and the parent act the United Nations Act
created in three different ways, this includes orders in the council, statutory 1946, which allowed them was The Terrorism (United Nations
instruments and bylaws. Measures) Order 2011, which stated that it is an offence to
fund any individual who is involved in any sorts of terrorism
act. Another example of the parent act was the Scotland Act
1998 and the order which was made was to transfer functions
to the Scotland minister and this order was made in 1999, this
includes the transfers of statutory functions to the Scottish
ministers after devolution.
Statutory instruments
These are laws made by the government minister under the consultant of a parent act, but only within areas of their ministerial responsibilities,
these are conscripted by the legal department of the government department, they are also usually used to update the law. Statutory Instruments
are known as ‘regulations’ or ‘orders’. Statutory Instruments used to charge national minimum wage each year, but on the other hand at times the
government minister would be given power to fill out any sorts of important detail which may be too difficult to be combined into the act. The
Education (Nutritional Standards for School Lunches) (England) Regulations 2006 was created as allowed by the parent act of the School Standards
and Framework Act 1998, the new regulations had come into force after it had been reintroduced in 2000 but then again the regulation was
renewed in 2006, these regulations include drinking water must be provided free of charge, there are restrictions on use of salt and students must
be served a minimum of two portions of fruits and vegetables with every meal.