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What is devolution?
The transfer of political power but not sovereignty from central government to subnational government
What is the most powerful of the devolved instituions?
Scotland- has primary legislative powers
What are primary legislative powers?
Authority to make laws on devolved policy areas
What powers does the Welsh Assembly have?
The Welsh Assembly initially had only executive powers, determining how Westminster legislation was implemented in Wales
After 2011 referendum it gained PRIMARY LEGISLATIVEE AUTHORITY
Set to gain tax-raising powers under the Wales Act 2017
What powers does the Northern Ireland Assembly have?
primary legislative powers but only limited powers over tax
Why was devolution introduced?
After winning the election, Labour government Callaghan responded by holding referendums on the creation of legislative assemblies in Scotland and Wales to approve its policy on devolution
What was the 1979 Welsh referendum outcome?
‘no’ - as only 20% backed an assembly
low public suport reflected skepticism about devolution at that time
What was the Scottish 1979 referendum outcome?
52% of those who voted supported devolution
HOWEVER only 33% of the Scottish electorate turned out
required threshold of 40% of the electorate was not met
What happened after the 1997 GE? (devolution demands)
Blair govt held referendums in Scotland and Wales to approve its policy on devolution
1997 Referendum question in Scotland
Voters were asked whether they supported :
A Scottish parliament
Tax-varying powers for the parliament
Outcomes of 1997 Scottish referendum
74.3% supported a Scottish parliament
63.5% supported tax-varying powers
What was the 1997 Welsh referendum question?
Whether a welsh assembly should be formed
What was the outcome/turnout of the 1997 Welsh referendum?
50.3% voted yes to a Welsh Assembly on a turnout of 50.1%
Much of western wales supported devolution but eastern wales did not
Why was devolution introduced?
Devolution was introduced to provide an expression for nationalism, silence calls for independence and satisfy calls for greater autonomy and democracy
Was part of New Labour’s constitutional reform programme to modernise and democratise Britain
Believed that devolution would result in improved public services and economic conditions
How is the Scottish Parliament set up?
Has 129 members (MSPs) elected by additional member system
73 MSPs elected by FPTP
56 MSPs are additional members chosen from party lists
Elected using PR
first minister is the leader of the largest party
2024- John Swinney
What did the Scotland Act 1998 do?
Gave Scottish Parliament primary legislative powers
In a range of policy areas such as :
law and order
health education
transport
the environment
economic development
Westminster no longer makes law on these matters
Also gave the Scottish parliament tax-varying powers:
It could raise or lower the rate of income tax in Scotland by up to 3 pence in the pound
also established reserved powers- powers reserved for Westminster parl
What did the Scotland Act 2012 do in terms of tax powers?
Gave the Scottish parliament the power to set a Scottish rate of income tax higher or lower than that in the rest of the uk
What did the Scotland Act 2016 do?
Devolved control of income tax rates and bands
Gave the Scottish parliament 50% of the VAT revenue raised in Scotland
Block grant from the UK treasury reduced as Scotland raises more of its own revenue
What powers were established by the Scotland Act 1998
RESERVED POWERS- the remain the sole responsibility of Westminster
Uk Constituion
Defence and national security
Foreign policY, Including relations with the Eu
Fiscal, economic and monetary systems
Common market or for British goods and services
Employment legislation
Social security
Broadcasting
Nationality and immigration
Nuclear energy
What can Westminster do even to certain devolved Scottish powers, and what does the Scotland act 2016 say about this?
Westminster retains to right to override the Scottish parliament in areas where legislative powers had been devolved. In theory, it could abolish the devolved instituions
Westminster will not legislate on devolved matters without consent
Scottish parliament and government cannot be abolished unless approved in a referendum in Scotland
Scottish parliament and government are a permanent part of the UK constitutional arrangements
What was the question of the 2014 independence referendum?
Argued that the people of Scotland were best placed to make decisions that affect Scotland and highlighted economic and social policies that an SNP government would pursue
SNP’s vision = independent Scotland that was part of a personal union with the UK
Would retain queen as the head of state
keep the £
HOWEVER it would have its own written constitution and full responsibility over legislation
Which UK parties supported the pro-Union campaign (Better Together)?
Labour
Conservatives
Lib Dems
Outcome and turnout of 2014 referendums
18 September 2014
‘Should Scotland be an independent country’
Result was a 55.3% no vote
44.7% supported independence
Turnout of 84.5%
What was the result of the 2014 independence referendum?
The Scotland Act 2016:
The leaders of the three main UK parties issued a vow to deliver further devolution in the event of a ‘no’ vote
New powers devolved by the Act :
The power to set income tax rates and bands
Some additional taxes and duties, including air passengerr duty and aggregates levy
Right to receive 50% of the VAT raised in Scotland
Control over certain welfare benefits
Road signs and speed limits
Rail franchises
The franchise for Scottish parliament
Problems with lack of powers devolved to Scottish parliament
The new powers did not go far enough for the SNP and the changes fall short of ‘devo-max’
Where the Scottish parliament would have full responsibility for all taxes, duties and spending (full fiscal autonomy)
How is the Welsh Assembly structuresd?
60 members elected by the AMS
40 members are elected in single member constituencies using the FPTP system
20 members are elected in 5 multi-member regions using the regional list system of proportional representation
1st minister (normally the leader of the largest party in the assembly), heads the government and appoints the cabinet
How often are elections in the Welsh Assembly?
Elections were initially held every 4 years but this was extended to every 5 years by Wales Act 2014
What did the Government of Wales Act 2006 do?
Enabled the assembly to ask for further powers to be transferred (primary legislative powers) from Westminster in the event of a referendum
2011 referendum- resulted in a 64% yes vote
Confirmed that devolution is the preferred constitutional option for Welsh electorate
Following this referendum, the assembly gained the power to make primary legislation in existing 20 devolved areas
Had been specified in the Government of Wales Act 1998 :
Education, health, transport, the environment and economic developent
the Welsh Assembly had only had responsbility over these area, but following the Govt of Wales Act 2006 they obtained PRIMARY LEGISLATIVE POWERS
What is the Silk Commission?
Established by the Conservative- Liberal Democratic UK coalition government to consider the case for the transfer of further powers to the Welsh Assembly
What did the Wales Act 2014 do?
Put into place the first portion of Silk proposals by devolving control of landfill tax and stamp duty
What did the Wales Act 2017 do?
Featured proposals made in Second Silk Report
Renamed the Welsh Assembly the Welsh Parliament
The Act also created a Welsh Rate of income tax
Devolved new matters such as : assembly and local government elections, fracking, rail franchising and road speed limits
What powers does Wales have?
Since the 2017 Wales Act, the Welsh Parliament has gained more powers though it still has fewer powers than the Scottish parliament and NI parliament
Welsh parliament controls:
Health and social service
Education
The environment
Housing
Economic development
Collects 10% of wales income taxes
however it doesn’t control law and order like the Scottish parliamentcan
How is politics and government in Northern Ireland different from elsewhere in the UK? (4)
Communal conflict
Distinctive party system
Security
Separate system of government
How does NI’s communal conflict make it politically different to the UK?
Main political divide is between unionists and nationalists
Unionists want NI to be remain part of the UK
Nationalists wants NI to be united with Ireland
usually unionists= Protestant
Nationalist= catholic
How does NI’s distinctive party system make it politically different to the UK?
Elections are contested between unionists and nationalist parties
Main electoral issue is the constitutional status of NI
Main UK parties tend not to field candidates in NI elections
How is NI’s security make it different to the UK?
Terrorist campaigns by republican and loyalist paramilitary orgs killed a lot of people during the Troubles
British soldiers patrolled the streets for decades
The IRA has adhered to a ceasefire since 1995 but some breakaway groups remain active
How does NI’s separate system of government different to the UK>
Devolution is designed so that unionist and nationalists parties share power
When was power-sharing devolution in Northern Ireland established?
Following the 1998 Good Friday Agreement, with the aim of achieving peace between both parties.
The first minister is usually the leader of the largest party in the assembly
Deputy minister is from the second largest party
This agreement therefore ensures power sharing and means cross community support is required for the government to work
What powers does the NI Assembly have?
In 1998, NI was given primary legislative power over areas not reserved from Westminster
Does not have major tax-raising powers
Corporation tax devolved in 2015
However it , like Wales, has service devolution:
Control over health and social services, education, environment, housing, economic development
How is the NI Assembly structured?
Consists of 108 members
Elected by STV system of PR
Number of assembly members: 90 MLAs (Members of the Legislative Assembly)
Elections held every 5 years but this depends on the maintenance of the power sharing agreement as seen in 2017
Why is the NI government fragile?
There are frequent suspensions when the parties refuse to work with one another
During these suspensions, government functions are decided directly by the government in Westminster, during which some significant changes have been made, including legalisation of same sex marriage
Evidence of fragility of the NI power sharing system
One minister cannot function without the other:
Paul Givan resigned as first minister in 2022 in protest over post-Brexit trading agreements, meaning Michelle O’Neill automatically lost her position as deputy minister
Suspensions:
From 2002-2007→ devolution was suspended and NI was ruled by direct rule from Westminster for 5 years
Because in 2002, there were allegations that unionists were spying on government
2x 24-hour suspensions in 2001
Most frequent NI government suspension?
The Ni government has been suspended since Feb 2022
Potential further reforms
Further devolution is unlikely since catholics oppose it, and catholics outnumber Protestants