6 points that show why English votes on English Laws will fail to address the English Question

Dear Members and Supporters

The follow points show why English votes on English Laws will fail to address

This is the overview statement for EVEL

Basically English votes on English laws (EVEL) is legislatively weak because it is just a reversible procedural device that can be overturned at any time. It doesn’t address the English Question or rebalance the UK because there isn’t any administration devoted to English policy / affairs.Additionally, The House of Lords, who revise and scrutinise laws proposed by the British government, contains members from across the UK (as do select committees).

Scilla Cullen, the Campaign for an English Parliament’s membership secretary has kindly put together 6 points on why English Votes for English Laws will fail to address the English Question 

for the following points:

  1. It is a procedural device, without the force of legislation, which can be reversed at any time. 
  2. The votes of English MPs can still be overturned as seen when English voting for extended Sunday trading was overturned by the votes of Scottish MPs in the Westminster Parliament.
  3. It does not restrict the ability of a government at Westminster to appoint Ministers for English affairs from other countries of the UK
  4. English laws are still proposed by a British Government and revised and scrutinised by a House of Lords, containing members from across the UK, whereas the laws passed by the devolved administrations are not subject to scrutiny by the Upper House..
  5. There is no administration devoted to English affairs and membership of select committees for English matters include members of the SNP, who can influence decisions on policy for England
  6. It does not address the lack of representation of England per se either within the UK or internationally as in the EU or the British/Irish council.

 

The following article is by Kate Devlin and is shows what a mess English votes on English Laws is having.

 

https://www.heraldscotland.com/news/14837018.House_of_Lords_____English_votes_for_English_laws____risks_damaging_the_Union/

 

House of Lords: ‘English votes for English laws’ risks damaging the Union

The Great Clock, otherwise known as Big Ben, at the Houses of Parliament in London (Steve Parsons/PA Wire)

8 hrs ago / Kate Devlin , UK Political Correspondent /  @_katedevlin

        43 comments

THE House of Lords is warning that the controversial English Votes for English Laws system risks damaging the Union while Nationalists claim it could be used to deprive Scots MPs a say over Brexit.

A report for the Lords Constitution Committee said a planned autumn review of the process – which strips Scottish MPs of the right to vote at certain stages of bills dubbed ‘England only’ – should be delayed until 2020 when the impact of the changes could be fully determined.

Committee chairman, former Tory Scottish Secretary Lord Lang of Monkton, said it was not “ideal” that English Votes for English Laws (EVEL) had failed to secure cross-party consensus when it was introduced last year.

 

His committee’s report concluded that if it were to “strengthen rather than weaken the Union” it was essential EVEL attracted support from all parties while ensuring “the procedures have no demonstrably negative effects on Parliament’s role as the centre of the political union, representing the interests of all parts of the United Kingdom”.

“Attempting to provide a separate voice for England through the membership and institutions of the UK Parliament carries risks,” it warns.

Commons votes relating to Brexit could prove to be a “stress test” for the procedures, the peers said, and if the mechanism is retained the “technical and constitutional” aspects should be examined by a joint committee of MPs and peers after the 2020 election.

The EVEL process is aimed at ensuring that laws can only be passed if they are backed by a majority of MPs from the nations directly affected by the legislation as some measures passed in Westminster do not affect all parts of the UK as a result of the devolution process.

The policy led to claims that Scottish MPs are now “second class”.

Kirsty Blackman MP, SNP spokeswoman on the House of Lords, said the reform created “created two tiers of parliamentarians and has led to SNP MPs being locked out of important debates”.

She added: “The idea that Brexit-related issues will provide an ideal “stress-test” for EVEL is truly baffling and the notion that Scottish MPs representing an area of the UK that voted overwhelmingly to remain in the EU could be denied a vote on important aspects of legislation that impacts the whole of the UK, such as the Great Repeal Bill, is absurd.

 

“The UK Government must urgently establish a set of comprehensive proposals that all parties can support and should be clear that Scottish MPs will be given a voice in all aspects of the UK’s negotiations on the EU so that we can protect our constituents and Scotland’s relationship with Europe.”

A spokesman for the UK Government said it was committed to a stronger Union and a “fair settlement for the whole of the United Kingdom”.

Peers found no evidence that Evel had altered perceptions of a democratic deficit in England.

They said: “It remains our view that it is too soon to know whether EVEL and the ‘devolution deals’, separately or in combination, will provide an answer to the English Question.”

David Cameron faced accusations of betrayal after he announced plans to introduce EVEL less than an hour after Scotland voted to remain within the United Kingdom in 2014.

Critics pointed out that the policy had not been included within the “Vow” offering more powers to Scotland and signed by the Prime Minister before polling day.

 

But the Conservative Government forged ahead arguing that the previous system had been unfair because it permitted Scottish MPs vote on issues that did not directly affect their constituents.

Ian Murray, Scotland’s only Labour MP, said the committee report showed how “short-sighted” the Tory government had been.

 

He said: “EVEL was a knee-jerk reaction by David Cameron to UKIP’s English nationalism and has created two classes of MP for the first time, stoking the kind of resentment that Scottish nationalists thrive on. Even though they were previously great supporters of EVEL.”However, rather than kick a decision into the long grass, EVEL should be scrapped now.

“It’s unnecessary, unworkable and undemocratic and we don’t need another four years to tell us that.”

The report did find that EVEL did not create any constitutional barriers to a Scot becoming Prime Minister in the future.

Peers are calling for a joint committee of MPs and members of the House of Lords be created to undertake a thorough review of EVEL,“including an assessment of its impact on perceptions of fairness in England, and in the other nations of the UK.”

Opponents of the policy have long argued that few, if any, Bills are genuinely “England only” with no repercussions for other parts of the UK.

It created new stages in the legislative process.

All MPs can still speak and vote at the previous stages but only English MPs are allowed to vote in the new phases where the Speaker declares a bill, or part of a bill, is English only.

England’s size creates huge knock-on effects in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, they warn.

Supporters of Evel, however, point to the controversial 2004 vote to increase tuition fees in England, passed with the backing of Scottish MPs.

Evel was designed to answer the ‘West Lothian Question”, famously posed by the then Labour MP for the area Tam Dalyell, who asked why devolution would leave him able to vote on issues like health in the Lancashire town of Blackburn, but not the West Lothian one of the same name.

A UK Government spokesman said:

“The Government is committed to a stronger Union and a fair settlement for the whole of the United Kingdom, and has delivered on the manifesto commitment to introduce English Votes for English Laws. The Leader is grateful for the Committee’s report, and is taking their comments into account as part of the technical review into the procedures that introduced English Votes for English Laws.

4 Comments on "6 points that show why English votes on English Laws will fail to address the English Question"

  1. Stephen McKenzie | November 2, 2016 at 11:04 pm | Reply

    2 “The votes of English MPs can still be overturned as seen when English voting for extended Sunday trading was overturned by the votes of Scottish MPs in the Westminster Parliament”

    Been here before folks.. Why was it overturned?..

    Because the Westminster Government would not guarantee the rights of workers if Sunday trading was introduced in England. So what has this to do with Scotland?..

    In Scotland the rights of workers for “cross borders” companies was already established where Sunday working has been the norm for decades. Without the guarantee of also extending that right to English employees, there was a danger that “cross borders” companies would then try and erode the conditions of Scottish employees..

    Pity the English MP’s didn’t also stand up for the rights of English employees who may have been made to work on a Sunday.

  2. Barry@gmx.co.uk | November 6, 2016 at 4:54 pm | Reply

    The only real way to answer this is to scrap the Scottish Parliament as it was set-up illegally in blatant disregard for the terms of the Act of Union of 1707. Scotland should have had its ‘independence’ in the EU referendum in 1997 instead of a devolution one seeing as devolution on a England-wide basis as in Scotland was never intended by the powers-that-be and devolution has had a constitutional effect upon England and the rest of the United Kingdom. Equality and fairness should be applied to all or to none.

    Luckily, it seems as if some Scots are waking-up to the extreme constitutional damage Bliar done in 1997: http://www.abbup.org

  3. Stephen McKenzie | November 7, 2016 at 1:47 pm | Reply

    Barry,

    Its the Treaty of Union 1707 I think you mean in your posting. The Acts are enablers to support the Treaty (England Act 1706, Scotland Act 1707).

    In Scotland the Parliament was never extinguished, therefore it could never be “set-up illegally”. In March 1707 it was adjourned and then reconvened in May 1999 with agreed devolved powers within it’s remit.

  4. Barry@gmx.co.uk | November 12, 2016 at 6:38 pm | Reply

    The Scottish Parliament pre-1707 (the Estates of Scotland) was extinguished in 1707 as was the then English parliament to form an entirely new British one. The then separate parliaments were effectively merged into one. This is proved by the way the Scotland Act 1998 which set-up Holyrood RESERVES ALL constitutional powers to Westminster including even SPECIFIC enactments such as the Treaty of Union of 1707. Basically, Holyrood is a DEVOLVED parliament OF Westminster whose powers are merely ‘lent’ to it by the constitutionally supreme parliament in Westminster. Holyrood was set-up by a simple act of primary legislation and it’s powers can expand, reduce or even be abolished by the same method. It is also proved by the fact we are not a federal state with inherent powers for sub-national parliaments overseen by a written constitution as in the USA. Westminster can still introduce legislation for Scotland though it normally asks for permission to do this from Holyrood. Despite the passing of the Scotland Act 1998, were are still a unitary state in this way..

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