British Government and Politics (JN302) Devolution.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Politics of the United Kingdom (including Scotland)
Advertisements

Law-making by parliament and subordinate authorities
The St Andrews Agreement – an aid for dialogue and debate Brian Gormally Justice Associates Project supported by the European Union’s PEACE III Programme,
The Northern Ireland Assembly Education Service Welcomes St Paul’s College.
Scotland towards Independence? Or how to dissolve the United Kingdom?
Scottish Parliament/Westminster
Progress check Complete the questionnaire, indicating your level of confidence with each of the key concepts in multi-level governance. Use the (British)
BRITISH POLITICAL SYSTEM
More Women in European Politics
Parties in Britain There is no law governing political parties in Great Britain. Parties are understood as an expression of initiatives born out of society.
Unit 8: Constitutional Reform and Devolution Readings: Norton CH 11 Dunleavy CH 7 and 8.
Scottish devolution Historical background; Political questions; How Parliament operates; Policy outcomes; Public Attitudes.
The Scottish Parliament
British Public Affairs (JN805) Devolution.  1. History of Devolution  2. Scotland  3. Independence Referendum  4. Wales  5. Northern Ireland  6.
Lesson Starter List the five different types of Bills. Choose one and give examples of legislation passed. Why have different types of bills? What is.
What is multi-level governance? Sovereign? The Prime Minister The House of Commons Parliament The Judiciary The UK population The Scottish Parliament The.
The Agenda and Timetable for a UK Constitutional Convention Professor Robert Hazell Constitution Unit School of Public Policy University College London.
Country Review Jeopardy Template Mr. Oakes UK Review.
The Queen Elizabeth II is a constitutional monarch: that is, she is Britain’s head of state, but her executive powers are limited by constitutional rules.
WEEK 8 – IS THE UNITED KINGDOM BREAKING UP?. 2 THE CASE FOR DEVOLUTION … “The United Kingdom is a partnership enriched by distinct national identities.
How Newspapers Differ: Devolution in Northern Ireland How far down the path to devolution is Northern Ireland?
Chapter 27.2 A Profile of Great Britain. A Parliamentary Democracy  Great Britain, or the U.K., is an island nation that includes England, Scotland,
THE UNITED KINGDOM OF GREAT BRITAIN AND NORTHERN IRELAND.
Devolution / Independence Devolution “The settled will of the people” John Smith Labour Leader Was meant to be a block on nationalist ambitions but it.
DEVOLUTION L2- Semester 2.
Devolution and Multi-level Governance Created by Mr Nathan Scott – edited by Mrs W Attewell. Before the lecture ensure that you have read and précised.
The British Political System. Who runs the country? Britain is a parliamentary monarchy where Queen Elizabeth II is the official Head of State. However,
New Labour major constitutional change - devolution for Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland and London Joy Johnson Week 9 Devolution.
The UK Constitutional Arrangement Starter Task 1.Who is the head of state of the United Kingdom? 2.According to British law, one group of people are never.
BRITAIN How Government Works
Overview Parliamentary Law Making – The Political System © The Law Bank The British Political System An overview before we start law 1.
Devolution P You need to know.. Definitions / key terms – comparison of systems Background to devolution At least 2 systems (powers / electoral.
By Noah Sprent THE POLITICAL SYSTEM OF THE UNITED KINGDOM.
STUDENT NOTES 1 CH. 2 – THE UNITED KINGDOM AND GREAT BRITAIN AND NORTHERN IRELAND.
Quick Quiz This is the Scottish Parliament. In which city is it found?
Scotland within the UK and EU: the work and welfare issue.
Devolved matters relate to the powers that have been passed down from central government to the Scottish Parliament. After many years and growing pressure.
FROM THIS…….. AND THIS……. Marty …….TO THIS!! WELCOME TO THE WELCOME TO THE WEIRD AND WEIRD AND WONDERFUL WORLD OF NORTHERN IRELAND POLITICS! WONDERFUL.
Lesson Starter Create a spider diagram which highlights the work of the Committees in the Scottish Parliament.
Devolution and Regional Government. Introduction The nature of territorial management varies between countries and across time Countries invariably require.
 Reformed number of seats from 785 to 736 MEPs  Britain returns 72 seats  Reformed system in 1998, implemented.
British Government and Politics (JN302)
Difficult Democracy in Scotland Questions. Int – Explain, in detail, why some people believe that devolution is the best way to make decisions.
Shifting Agendas Moving toward constitutional change & ‘solutions’ for Northern Ireland.
Lesson Starter Create a spider diagram which highlights the work of the Committees in the Scottish Parliament.
 GOVERNMENT  Member of the UK (England, Wales, Scotland, and NI)  Legislature  Northern Ireland Assembly located in Belfast  Since Good Friday.
British Public Affairs (JN805)
268 Q: How much money does Scotland currently receive from Westminster? A: £30 to £36 billion 267 Q: What is the sum of money called that Scotland receives.
Devolution The disunited United Kingdom. Lesson Objective  As Britain faces trouble from above in the shape of a European Superstate, so does the threat.
British Government Overview unitary state London Britain is a unitary state with political authority centralized in London. three branches of government.
Westminster after Devolution Oonagh Gay, November 2007
Active Citizens How Governments are formed and laws are made in Wales.
The United Kingdom and Northern Ireland Buckingham Palace.
New Labour major constitutional change - devolution for Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland and London Joy Johnson Week 10 Devolution.
United Kingdom. Creation of the “Constitution of the Crown” Sources of authority – Tradition – Ration-legal Magna Carta Bill of Rights Common Law (civil.
Active Citizens: General election v. Welsh Assembly election In May 2015, there was a general election across the whole of the UK. Members of Parliament.
Regional Assemblies. UK examples of Regional Assembles:  The Scottish Parliament  The Welsh Assembly  The Northern Ireland Assembly (‘Stormont’) 
The Case for the Scottish Parliament Learning Intentions By the end of this set of lessons I will: Look at the structure of politics in the UK Identify.
Glenn Verbauwhede Wouter Vandewaetere Tanguy Soubry Matthieu Demeyer.
The UK Constitutional Arrangement
Public Services Ombudsman for Wales
Law Making The Legislative Process in Wales and the UK
Devolution in Scotland and Wales
British Civilization THE UNITED KINGDOM.
Lesson Starter List the five different types of Bills. Choose one and give examples of legislation passed. Why have different types of bills? What is.
Democracy in Scotland and the United Kingdom
The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland CH. 2-1
Her Majesty`s Government
BREXIT and power transfer to the nations
The Scottish Parliament
Presentation transcript:

British Government and Politics (JN302) Devolution

 1. History of Devolution  2. Scotland  3. Wales  4. Northern Ireland  5. London Lecture Outline

 The United Kingdom is a unitary democracy (in contrast to federal democracy).  Statutory transfer of power from central government to the separate nations is known as devolution.  Devolution is a more limited form of autonomy than outright independence. History of Devolution

 Status of United Kingdom under pressure from above and below: influence of EU and devolution.  Historical formation of Britain in 1707 with Act of Union between England and Scotland.  Long-standing Scottish, Welsh and Irish nationalism.  Scottish and Welsh nationalist parties formed in 1920s but without much political impact. History of Devolution

 Violent Easter Rising of 1916 in Ireland led to formation of Irish Free State in 1921 and Northern Ireland. Continued struggle for Irish independence still informs politics of Northern Ireland.  In 1972 after Bloody Sunday when British paratroopers killed 13 unarmed protesters PM Edward Heath suspended Northern Ireland parliament and Northern Ireland came under direct rule from Westminster.  Good Friday agreement in Assembly suspended several times but devolved government occurred in 2007.

 Differing demands for devolution and asymmetrical implementation of devolved bodies.  1979 referendum on Scottish devolution was lost because even though more people voted yes than no (32.5% vs 30.7%) it did not attract the required 40% electoral support for devolution. In Wales only 12% voted yes and 46% voted no.  Scottish constitutional convention talks in 1989 hammered out plans for devolution. History of Devolution

 Former Labor leader John Smith described devolution as “the settled will of the people.”  It was meant to be a block on nationalist ambitions but it hasn’t worked out that way.

History of Devolution  After election of New Labour government in 1997 a referendum voted in favour (74%) of a Scottish Parliament which was officially convened on July 1, Welsh yes vote scraped in.  Labour were the largest party in the first Scottish elections but failed to secure overall majority. Donald Dewar became the initial ‘First Minister’.

Scotland  Scottish Parliament: Holyrood  Unicameral  129 MSPs (Members of the Scottish Parliament)  Current First Minister Alex Salmond (leader of the Scottish National Party)  Annual budget approx £29 billion.

Devolved powers on day to day issues:  Law & Order  Health  Housing  Education  Environment  Farming & Food Scotland

Not devolved:  Foreign affairs & defence  Main economic, fiscal & financial issues  International development  Social Security & employment Scotland

 Westminster – 59 MPs represent Scottish constituencies.  Barnett Formula – mechanism for the per capital allocation of public spending across Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.  West Lothian Question: raised by Labour backbencher Tam Dalyell in the 1970s – unfair that Scottish MPs could vote on matters that have no bearing on their own country but directly affect England and Wales, while English and Welsh members have no say over particular issues in Scotland. Scotland

 SNP won overall majority in May 2011  In October 2012 there was agreement between Cameron and Salmond on a referendum in 2014 about Scottish independence. Scotland

 Referendum Question: Should Scotland be an independent country? Yes/No.  Better Together vs Yes Scotland  Yes campaign release of white paper:  mond-scottish-independence-white-paper-bargaining mond-scottish-independence-white-paper-bargaining Scotland

 White Paper covers range of issues including:  Trident nuclear weapons, currently based on the Clyde, removed within the first parliament.  Housing benefit reforms, described by critics as the "bedroom tax", to be abolished, and a halt to the rollout of Universal Credit.  It would be in Scotland's interest to keep the pound, while the Bank of England would continue as "lender of last resort".  BBC Scotland replaced at the start of 2017 with a new Scottish broadcasting service, continuing a formal relationship with the rest of the BBC.  Basic rate tax allowances and tax credits to rise at least in line with inflation. Scotland

 Debates over what independence would mean for:  EU/Nato membership?  Currency?  Distribution of national debt?  Labour’s chances of holding power in Westminster? Scotland

 m/news/politics/top- stories/scottish- independence-poll-backs- more-devolution m/news/politics/top- stories/scottish- independence-poll-backs- more-devolution

 Useful websites:  ?utm_medium= &utm_campaign=Latest+from+The+Conversation+for+3+July+2013&utm_ content=Latest+from+The+Conversation+for+3+July+2013+CID_ b7c730a210ce77c23ae3f4e6 f&utm_source=campaign_monitor_uk&utm_term=Scottish%20independence%20simple%20question %20-%20but%20no%20easy%20answers      Scotland

 Initial support more for preservation of Welsh culture and language than self-government.  New Welsh assembly had weaker powers than Scottish parliament – no tax raising powers, no right to pass primary legislation. Vote in 2011 extended full law making powers over the devolved functions of the Assembly. Wales

 Welsh Government and Assembly  Currently Labour-led  First Minister: Carwyn Jones (Lab)  60 AMs (assembly members)  Annual budget: £15.3 bln.

Devolved powers on day to day issues:  Health  Education  Social services  Farming & rural issues  Local government  (Unlike Scotland it has no tax-varying powers) Wales

Northern Ireland  Northern Ireland Assembly in Stormont led by First Minister & Deputy: Peter Robinson (Democratic Unionist Party) & Martin McGuinness (Sinn Fein) – equal power.  They preside over Executive Committee (= Cabinet)  35 DUP MLAs; 27 Sinn Fein MLAs  108 MLAs (Members of the Legislative Assembly)

 Powers established by 1998 Good Friday Agreement. Transferred powers on:  Health, education, social security, environment, farming  Policing and criminal law Non-transferred powers on:  Taxation, foreign and defence policy Northern Ireland

Current issues:  Polarised leadership  Continuing sectarian violence  northern-ireland northern-ireland  Pressures for further transfer of powers  Scandal over pardons granted to IRA suspects:  s/2014/feb/27/northern-ireland-crisis- ira-fugitives-lord-trimble s/2014/feb/27/northern-ireland-crisis- ira-fugitives-lord-trimble

London  1998 Greater London Authority Referendum  Mayor of London: Boris Johnson  Runs Greater London Authority  London Assembly with 25 AMs (Assembly Members)  Budget approx. £3 billion  Financed mainly by central government grants and by charge added to every Londoner’s council tax bill  32 London Boroughs

Mayor & Greater London Authority, limited Powers:  Policing  Transport  Regeneration & Development  Olympics/cultural Events  Acts as“Ambassador” of London London Assembly:  Scrutinises and questions Mayor’s policies and actions London