Talk:Primary and secondary legislation
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Text and/or other creative content from this version of Primary legislation was copied or moved into Primary and secondary legislation with this edit on 31 October 2015. The former page's history now serves to provide attribution for that content in the latter page, and it must not be deleted as long as the latter page exists. |
Text and/or other creative content from this version of Delegated legislation was copied or moved into Primary and secondary legislation with this edit on 31 October 2015. The former page's history now serves to provide attribution for that content in the latter page, and it must not be deleted as long as the latter page exists. |
This article is written in British English, which has its own spelling conventions (colour, travelled, centre, defence, artefact, analyse) and some terms that are used in it may be different or absent from other varieties of English. According to the relevant style guide, this should not be changed without broad consensus. |
Hybrid instruments
editThe sentence: Hybrid instruments - statutory instruments which need to be approved by both Houses and affect some members of a group (whether individuals or bodies) more than others in the same group may be incorrect. Are they not a special form of primary (not secondary) legislation? Arrivisto (talk) 15:36, 10 January 2016 (UTC)
Devolved parliaments
editDescribing Acts of the devolved parliaments as secondary legislation is both misleading and contrary to every reference I have ever seen outside of the Human Rights Act (where they are so defined as used *in that act*, where there are specific reasons that you'd want to define them as such). What sort of sources do you need to show that this absolutely needs to change? 2A00:23C0:C217:9C00:B0E2:93D2:F07D:A518 (talk) 05:10, 2 August 2019 (UTC)
- See Wikipedia:Reliable sources. It would be helpful for you to elaborate on the "specific reasons", also with a citation. — Scott • talk 13:13, 14 August 2019 (UTC)
UK’s definition of ‘EU tertiary legislation’
editThis concept EU tertiary legislation [1] in retained EU law after Brexit [2] needs to be mentioned. – Kaihsu (talk) 12:42, 28 June 2022 (UTC)