When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. UK Parliament petitions website - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../UK_Parliament_petitions_website

    The UK Parliament petitions website (e-petitions) allows members of the public to create and support petitions for consideration by the Parliament of the United Kingdom. Although the UK Parliament's Petitions Committee considers all petitions which receive 100,000 signatures or more, there is no automatic parliamentary debate of those that pass ...

  3. Online petition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Online_petition

    The UK Parliament petitions website has operated in various guises since 2006. [15] Beginning in 2011, a parliamentary committee considered holding a parliamentary debate for petitions attracting more than 100,000 signatures. [16] In 2015, the process was formalized within Parliament and a permanent Petitions Committee was established. [17]

  4. Election petition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Election_petition

    In 1961, Tony Benn was disqualified from taking up his seat after a by-election by an election court because he held a peerage. In 1982, Seamus Mallon was disqualified from taking his seat in the Northern Ireland Assembly as he was a member of Seanad Éireann, the upper chamber of the parliament of the Republic of Ireland, at the time of his election.

  5. Petitions Committee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petitions_Committee

    E-petitions can be submitted by British citizens and UK residents to the UK Government and Parliament via the UK Parliament petitions website. Petitions must be about something which Government or Parliament is responsible for, and must ask for a specific action from Parliament or Government. An e-petition must be signed by the petition creator ...

  6. Requests and inquiries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Requests_and_inquiries

    Demeter's Manual of Parliamentary Law and Procedure states that requests for any unallowable purpose need unanimous consent, and a single objection defeats consent, unless the organization's laws or the assembly's usual practices allow otherwise. An example might be a request to have a nonmember address the body.

  7. E-petitioner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E-Petitioner

    E-petitioner is an online petition system developed in Scotland, characterised by its integration into the processes of representative democracy.It allows citizens to raise and sign a petition, read background information on the issue, and add comments to an online forum associated with each petition.

  8. Motion (parliamentary procedure) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motion_(parliamentary...

    The Standard Code of Parliamentary Procedure classifies five "bring back" motions under the classification of main motions but lists them under the title of "Restorative Main Motions": [36] Amend a previous action, Ratify, Reconsider, Rescind, and Resume Consideration. This book treats the motion to rescind and the motion to amend something ...

  9. European Parliament Committee on Petitions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_Parliament...

    The Committee on Petitions (PETI) is a permanent committee of the European Parliament to offer a petition process including a web portal to create and admit petitions. Its current chair, elected on 10 July 2019, is Dolors Montserrat, member of the EPP Group. [1] The right to petition is one of the fundamental rights of the European citizen and ...