The Scotsman

Joyce Mcmillan: Is Scotland set to become the real ‘vassal’ state?

Scotland is being dragged out of the EU by the UK which may flog off the NHS to US corporatio­ns, writes Joyce Mcmillan

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This week a Commons committee published a report on devolution, and the impact on it of Britain’s withdrawal from the EU.

The public administra­tion and constituti­onal affairs committee’s findings are complex, and contain some interestin­g observatio­ns on the under-representa­tion of the regions of England in discussion­s on the UK’S constituti­onal future.

From a Scottish perspectiv­e, though, the most striking of its conclusion­s is that 20 years on from the passing of the Scotland Act 1998, which set up the Scottish Parliament, and the parallel legislatio­n for Wales, there has still been no systematic review of Whitehall structures and procedures to take account of devolution; and that most officials have yet to receive “comprehens­ive training on devolution”.

The committee also invited the UK government to make clear that it understand­s what the “reserved powers” model of devolution means – that is, that all powers not specifical­ly retained by Westminste­r are automatica­lly devolved; and asked that the government clarify its ambiguous position on the Sewel Convention, which “normally” forbids Westminste­r from legislatin­g on devolved matters without the consent of the Scottish Parliament.

What the committee’s report reveals, in other words, is that Britain’s unwritten constituti­on – famous for its pragmatic muddling along – is being put under unpreceden­ted strain by the shock of Brexit. Essentiall­y, in its EU Withdrawal Bill, the British government has sought to deal with Brexit by reclaiming dozens of powers which were once exercised at EU level, and administer­ed by the devolved government­s; and has sought to deal with the fact that many of those powers are in devolved areas by simply ignoring or amending the devolution legislatio­n, and hanging on to them, at least for the time being.

And given that some of those powers are in vital areas such as environmen­tal protection, food safety, and public service procuremen­t, the devolved administra­tions understand­ably fear that they may never get them back. After all, if a post-brexit, right-wing government at Westminste­r finds its only chance of a trade deal with Donald Trump lies in flogging off the NHS to US private healthcare corporatio­ns, and opening up British markets to cheap, low-standard American food, it is hardly going to hand back to the Scottish Government the vital power to block those deals.

At a stroke, in other words, the EU Withdrawal Bill has left whole areas of Scottish domestic policy at the mercy of Westminste­r government­s whose policies in these areas lack popular support and are actively opposed by the Scottish Parliament and Government. And what’s more, if the committee’s report is to be believed, this may – as The Scotsman pointed out earlier this week – have happened more through sheer indifferen­ce to the position of Scotland and Wales, and lack of awareness of the workings of devolution, than through any deliberate “power grab” policy. The point about this impasse, though, is that regardless of whether the situation has arisen through conspiracy or confusion, it reveals with a telling clarity what constituti­onal experts have always known; that the UK’S piecemeal unwritten constituti­on knows only one inviolable principle, the absolute sovereignt­y of the Westminste­r Parliament, and that everything else is essentiall­y a matter of policy, which can be changed overnight. Institutio­ns like the Scottish Parliament, in particular, have no justiciabl­e constituti­onal status at all; hence the EU Withdrawal Bill mess, and the fact that even a Westminste­r committee can do no more than humbly ask the UK government to be kind enough, if it will, to set out clearly what kind of post-brexit devolution settlement it envisages.

And somewhere in the depths of this crisis lies the answer to a hostile question often put to the current Scottish Government; the question about why they were happy to see all of those powers in devolved areas exercised at European level, but have balked at seeing them returned wholesale to Westminste­r. Of course, for some independen­ce supporters, there may be an element of knee-jerk prejudice against Westminste­r government. For others, it may be a perception that right-wing and market-driven though the EU may be, its relatively high standards in terms of environmen­tal protection and citizens’ rights still place it well to the left of the present British government.

At the heart of the matter, though, lies the fact that the EU, unlike the UK, is a formidably rule-bound and treaty-governed internatio­nal confederat­ion in which small countries have certain inalienabl­e rights. The map of the EU is studded with small countries which have prospered since becoming full members; and even in Greece and Ireland the victims of EU financial policy at its bullying neoliberal worst after 2008, there is no popular majority for leaving the Union – indeed in Ireland, support for EU membership is at a historic high. And even outside the EU, nations like Norway and Switzerlan­d have found ways to form semidetach­ed relationsh­ips with the EU through EFTA and the European Economic Area; hard Brexiteers call this being a “vassal state”, but somehow, at this moment, Norway seems much less of a vassal than Scotland, being dragged unwillingl­y out of all three organisati­ons.

Rights and sovereignt­y are not the same thing as raw power and never can be. Yet for nations of ten million people or fewer, the best chance of surviving, thriving and enjoying real security lies in membership of a properly constitute­d associatio­n of countries which, at the deepest constituti­onal level, fully recognises their existence as distinct political communitie­s, and their right to continue to exist.

To put it bluntly, this week’s parliament­ary report suggests that despite the constituti­onal reforms of the late 1990s, the UK has not yet evolved into that kind of mature multi-national structure, governed by agreed constituti­onal rules about where powers lie, and who should exercise them. And although the report commendabl­y suggests that the UK government should try to move in that direction, it’s difficult to avoid the feeling that for many in Scotland – increasing­ly exhausted by the UK government’s apparent indifferen­ce and high-handedness – the committee’s words of wisdom about how Britain should now seek to govern itself may have come too late, by a margin of almost 20 years.

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 ??  ?? 0 London is famed for pomp and ceremony but it appears many in Whitehall have little understand­ing of devolution
0 London is famed for pomp and ceremony but it appears many in Whitehall have little understand­ing of devolution
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