Committee of Selection (House of Commons) explained

The Committee of Selection is a select committee of the House of Commons in the Parliament of the United Kingdom. Unlike the Commons' other select committees, the Committee of Selection exists by virtue of the House's Standing Orders for Private Business, its rules for bills that affect only specific organizations or individuals.[1] Despite that, the committee is best known for appointing members of committees established under resolutions of the House and the Standing Orders for Public Business.

With few exceptions, notably the Committee of Selection itself, the standards committee, the privileges committee and the Liaison Committee, only members of the committee acting on its behalf may nominate new members to committees or propose the discharge of members. Appointments to select committees are made through motions put before the House of Commons, while appointments to general committees (such as public bill committees) are made by the committee's own authority.[2] With respect to private business, all private bills are automatically referred to the committee, which in turn either refers unopposed bills to the Unopposed Bill Committee and refers opposed bills to committees whose members it also appoints.[1]

Role in the selection of public bill committees

The Committee of Selection performs a crucial, yet often overlooked function in scrutinising legislation. The current structure of the committee is dominated by party whips. This means that the government effectively chooses which MPs will scrutinise its bills. Advocates of reform highlight that the current organisation of the committee means that MPs who are subject specialists or may hold views contrary to the leadership of their party can be kept off public bill committees. Suggested reforms include limiting the number of whips that can serve on the committee and allowing MPs a vote on public bill committee nominations.[3]

Current members

Members are elected at the beginning of each session. As of October 2022 the committee's membership is as follows:[4] [5]

MemberPartyConstituency
Bill Wiggin MP (chair)ConservativeNorth Herefordshire
Jo Churchill MPConservative
Chris Elmore MPLabourOgmore
Nigel Huddleston MPConservative
Lilian Greenwood MPLabourNottingham South
Rebecca Harris MPConservativeCastle Point
Mark Tami MPLabourAlyn and Deeside
Richard Thomson MPScottish National PartyGordon
Craig Whittaker MPConservativeCalder Valley

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200506/cmstords/441/pvtbs15.htm#a123 House of Commons Standing Order (Private Business) 109–111
  2. https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm/cmstords.htm Standing Orders (Public Business) 85 & 86
  3. https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm201314/cmselect/cmpolcon/82/8203.htm House of Commons – Political and Constitutional Reform Committee – Revisiting Rebuilding the House: the impact of the Wright reforms
  4. Web site: Committee of Selection - Membership - Committees - UK Parliament. 2020-09-06. committees.parliament.uk. en.
  5. Web site: Business Before Questions – Volume 720: debated on Tuesday 18 October 2022 . . 18 October 2022 . hansard.parliament.uk . UK Hansard . 19 October 2022 . That Sir David Evennett be discharged from the Committee of Selection and Nigel Huddleston be added..