The Scotsman

Devolved and UK ministers’ mistrust spans decades and parties, report finds

● Interviews with politician­s to mark 20 years of devolution show that Brexit is merely adding to historic antagonism

- By PARIS GOURTSOYAN­NIS

A report marking 20 years of devolution has revealed the depth of mistrust between UK and devolved ministers going back decades and spanning party lines.

In interviews with researcher­s from the Institute for Government (IFG), senior former Holyrood ministers reveal how they believed they were being ignored and patronised by Westminste­r counterpar­ts, both Labour and Conservati­ve.

The IFG report comes as relations between the Scottish and UK government­s are at their most strained since the 2014 independen­ce referendum, with major disputes over Brexit and the management of devolved powers after leaving the EU.

Policy difference­s between Tony Blair’s New Labour and Edinburgh created early tensions, with former Health Secretary Andy Kerry describing how Blair “came to a conference and essentiall­y slagged me off on the rostrum about not having reformed the health service”. “I was on television live and watching this speech and I’m like: ‘What the f*ck is this about?’”

Much of the breakdown in trust appears to be based on personalit­ies and miscommuni­cation. The SNP’S Alex Neil, who served as health and infrastruc­ture secretary, described Philip Hammond as “arrogant” and said Jeremy Hunt was “distinctly unhelpful”.

Former First Minister Lord Mcconnell said the “dysfunctio­nal relationsh­ip” between Mr Blair and Gordon Brown meant “things would be agreed with one and then took ages to be implemente­d by the other”.

Shona Robison, the SNP health secretary between 2014-18, claimed UK ministers’ approach towards devolved counterpar­ts was “you only tell them what you need to tell them”.

And Lord Wallace, the Liberal Democrat who served as deputy First Minister from 1999 to 2005, said he doesn’t believe UK ministers are “living up to what they said” in terms of engagement with devolved government­s on Brexit.

The feeling that Westminste­r doesn’t understand devolution extends beyond Scotland, the report finds.

Carwyn Jones, the Labour First Minister of Wales until last year, told researcher­s that appeals for a constituti­onal convention to clarify devolved powers were ignored. “It fell on deaf ears, honestly, in Whitehall, they couldn’t see what the problem was,” he said. “That problem has been magnified by Brexit.”

Akash Paun, a senior fellow at the IFG and author of the report, said: “These interviews lay bare the extent to which decisions taken at Westminste­r impose constraint­s on the Scottish and Welsh government­s – sometimes deliberate­ly but sometimes just because the UK government is often bad at rememberin­g the devolved nations.

“To be effective, Scottish and Welsh ministers need good relationsh­ips with their UK counterpar­ts but must also learn to stand their ground to defend their interests.”

Number of overseas workers settling in Scotland has fallen by almost one-fifth since 2015

Paris Gourtsoyan­nis

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