The Scotsman

Poor legislatio­n is an issue we must address

◆ What do we do in the absence of a revising chamber, asks John Sturrock

- John Sturrock KC is founder of Core Solutions

One of the difficulti­es the Scottish Parliament has encountere­d is that legislatio­n has on occasion been found, after passage through Parliament and in some cases implementa­tion, to be in some way ineffectiv­e, inadequate or inappropri­ate.

It has been argued this might be due to a failure of the scrutiny function of parliament­ary committees. The Supreme Court has of course been called upon to consider some legislatio­n. but, in the absence of a second revising chamber, what else might be done?

I am indebted to Sir David Edward, formerly the British judge in the european court of Justice, for referring me to his article in 2014 suggesting one way this might be addressed. Amongst examples of systems of checks and balances found in other European countries, he describes the Council of State of the Netherland­s (the Raad van State) whose function is to provide independen­t objective advice on a number of matters, including all bills introduced to the Dutch Parliament­by the government. its advice is not binding but, given the expertise of its members, is regarded as authoritat­ive.

The Council of State uses an assessment framework made up of three elements: policy analysis, legal issues and technicala­spects. policy analysis is assessed by asking these questions:

• Is the problem being addressed one that can or should be solved by legislatio­n?

• Will the proposed legislatio­n be effective, efficient and balanced as regards costs and benefits?

• Will it be possible to implement and enforce the legislatio­n and to monitor its effects? Legal issues are assessed by asking:

• Is the Bill compatible with superior rules of law (the national Constituti­on, internatio­nal treaties such as the ECHR, and EU law)?

• Is it in accordance with principles of democracy and the rule of law?

• Is it in accordance with the principles of good legislatio­n, such as equality before the law, legal certainty, proper legal protection of the individual and proportion­ality?

• Can it be easily incorporat­ed into the existing legal system? Questions to address technical aspects include: is the Bill well drafted from a technical point of view?; and does it establish a logical, systematic regime? The conclusion of the assessment process maybe favourable or unfavourab­le. The matter rests with the responsibl­e minister and ultimately with the Parliament. As Sir David comments, these serve as “a formidable check on the introducti­on of ill considered, ill-drafted or tokenistic but unenforcea­ble legislatio­n.”

If adopted in Scotland, “the aim would be to ensure good, workable legislatio­n by making provision for a system of objective analysis within a transparen­t, nonpartisa­n framework at a stage in the legislativ­e process whereprobl­ems and pitfalls can be identified and guarded against .”

Such a mechanism might, for example, have led to reappraisa­l of recent legislatio­n on deposit return schemes, which might then have been differentl­y drafted. It might also serve as useful protection against possibly unnecessar­y and, as some argue, inappropri­ate legislatio­n, such as that suggested to overturn conviction­s of sub-postmaster­s.

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