The green paper is a government consultation document asking people affected by the bill for their opinion. The white paper is the final proposal once the green paper is taken into account then goes into the bill. A bill must pass through several stages receiving the consent of both the House of Commons and the House of Lords before it is presented to the queen for her royal assent. A bill may generally start life in either the commons or the lords and pass on to the other house but in practice most public bills start in the commons. Normally the consent of both the houses is required but the Lords lost its right to reject legislation under the parliaments Act 1911 (k & R 13th edition) the lords have no right to veto a legislation. This is a good thing because it means elected members of parliament who was elected to represent the people have the upper hand in
The green paper is a government consultation document asking people affected by the bill for their opinion. The white paper is the final proposal once the green paper is taken into account then goes into the bill. A bill must pass through several stages receiving the consent of both the House of Commons and the House of Lords before it is presented to the queen for her royal assent. A bill may generally start life in either the commons or the lords and pass on to the other house but in practice most public bills start in the commons. Normally the consent of both the houses is required but the Lords lost its right to reject legislation under the parliaments Act 1911 (k & R 13th edition) the lords have no right to veto a legislation. This is a good thing because it means elected members of parliament who was elected to represent the people have the upper hand in