Lords Marshalled List
Purpose of the list
The Lords Marshalled List brings together all the amendments (or Ping Pong motions) tabled to a bill so far (regardless of whether they have been published in Daily Sheets). It assigns numbers to all the amendments and uses black stars to indicate where an amendment has not been previously published. It states the Order of Consideration (the sequence in which the amendments will be debated).
Whereas the Daily Sheet publicises the amendments which are to be moved, the Marshalled List has a procedural function: it states the order in which the amendments will be debated.
Content
The Marshalled List includes a printed Order of Consideration on the first page, in two columns.
All amendments (or PP motions) tabled to a particular version of a bill up until the cut-off date/time are included, irrespective of whether they were published on a daily sheet previously.
Amendments which have an outcome assigned to them (for example, ‘Agreed’) are not included on the Marshalled list.
Ordering
Amendments are sorted by the (user-defined) Order of Consideration.
If no Order of Consideration is defined, the following default order is used:
Amendments to Clauses 1 to the end, of type "insert", "leaveOut", "substitute", "move", or "divide";
Amendments to Schedules 1 to the end, of type "insert", "leaveOut", "substitute", "move", or "divide";
Amendments to the Preamble;
Amendments to the Long title.
Format and Numbering
Proposers and Supporters names appear before each amendment, in capital letters, centre-aligned.
The amendments are numbered; however, note that ‘stand part’ motions at Committee stage (i.e. motions that a clause should or should not be included in the bill) are not numbered.
There are interstitial headings for each Clause or Schedule that the amendments relate to.
There are black stars against some amendments. Black stars appear next to amendments which have not been previously published in a Daily Sheet.
Note on Numbering
When you generate a Lords Marshalled List in Lawmaker, each of the not-yet-published amendments will be assigned a number according to the numbering logic described below. If there are some previously published amendments they will retain the number they have been assigned.
As a result, there is a need to add suffixes to amendment numbers where they appear between already-published amendments. The table below describes the numbering algorithm. In the table:
prevNum is the number of the previous amendment in the list
nextNum is the number of the next amendment that has already been published in the list
newNum is the number to be applied to the amendment being assigned a number
"increment of prevNum" means
if prevNum ends in a numeric value, increase the numeric component by 1, e.g. from "19" to "20" or from "A1" to "A2"
if prevNum ends in a letter, increment last letter to next letter, e.g. from "1A" to "1B" or from "13ZZF" to "13ZZG"
Amendment position | Numbering logic |
---|---|
amendment is the first in the list | If nextNum is 1 then newNum = "A1" |
amendment is in the middle of the list | if nextNum = increment of prevNum then newNum = prevNum + "A" (e.g. between 3BF and 3BG is 3BFA) |
amendment is at the end of the list | newNum = increment of prevNum |