I read across at SNP Tactical Voting that some Labour activists have enlisted the help of a Lawyer, with a view to derailing any discussion of a referendum on Scottish independence in the Scottish Parliament. Not a good move, not a good move at all. The powers of the Scottish Parliament are one thing. The legal and constitutional position of devolution is another thing. Attempting to stymie legitimate political debate is something entirely more sinister.
There is absolutely nothing in the Scotland Act 1998, or the Standing Orders of the Scottish Parliament, which prevent debate on issues outside the legislative competence of the Scottish Parliament. Indeed, such debates have been conducted before c.f The debates on the Iraq War in 2004, Trident in December 2006 and more recently a Private Members Debate on the Glasgow Passport Office. There are many more besides.
Similarly, the Scottish Parliament and Government can set up as many enquiries/commissions and conversations on issues (reserved or devolved) as it likes, without contravening the principles and reservations of Schedule 5 of the Scotland Act 1998 - which are primarily concerned with. As Schedule 4(2)(1) of the Scotland Act 1998 states: An Act of the Scottish Parliament cannot modify, or confer power by subordinate legislation to modify, the law on reserved matters.
The key issue being "legislative competence" or the ability to pass laws on the "Specific Reservations" listed in Schedule 5 of the Act. (Incidentally this seemingly minor caveat - or legal technicality - is all that separates Scotland from independence!)
Perhaps a technicality with respect to the paragraph above is that any inquiries/commissions/conversations would require public money out of the Scottish Consolidated Fund (SCF) to be enabled. The law on this is quite clear and is dealt with by subsection 2 of section 65 of the Scotland Act 1998 where funds are payable out of the SCF for: (a) meeting expenditure of the Scottish Administration,
(b) meeting expenditure payable out of the Fund under any enactment.
If these commissions/inquiries/conversations were matters arising out of (b) (ie requiring legislative approval) then they clearly would be outside the legislative competence of the Scottish Parliament. But this is not the case for (a) where they would be considered as part of the expenditure of the Scottish Administration, not requiring legislative approval.
What we can all be in agreement on, however, is that the Scottish Parliament has no ability legislate for independence. But no-one has ever seriously considered that anything other than that has ever been the case. I don't see a consulatative referendum stumbling over that pitfall either.
Great expectations for 2025
22 hours ago
1 comment:
Here via your informative comment on SNP tactical voting on the economic situation (and which expresses the nationalist position on the matter more persuasively than the professional politicos have thus far in my view - although they are to a degree hamstrung by some of their previous speeches on the economy).
ON this, I agree that there can be no bar to the position of debating an issue outwith competence. On the referendum bill, I am aware of the executive position in the National Conversation white paper, but would not be prepared to second-guess the presiding officer. When something that seems clearly within competence (Adam Ingram's bill on the right of civil appeal to the House of Lords) is blocked by the presiding officer's office as being contrary to the constitutional reservation I think the question of the referendum may well fall foul of the same office.
What cannot be determined is Lord Davidson's reaction as Advocate General? Is there a possibility that he may challenge an SSI first in order to get some guidance on scope from the courts (the ship to ship transfer provisions seems a potential target)?
A really interesting post, and as your comments elsewhere are also well argued and written I've added you to my blogroll, and hope to see more from you in future.
Best wishes with the blog
Scott
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