Western Mail

Home nations can thrive with federal future for UK

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The T ongoing Independen­t Commission on the Constituti­onal Future of Wales should recognise the political and constituti­onal realities across all four nations of the UK when exploring the nature n of the Union going forward, argues Glyndŵr Cennydd Jones, an advocate for greater cross-party consensus in Wales and for a UK-wide U constituti­onal convention

THE fact the four constituen­t nations of the UK took different tacks in their responses to the Covid-19 challenges has reaffirmed the national borders extant within these isles.

Further, the trend for significan­t divergence in policy stances across the various parliament­s has compounded other clear political disagreeme­nts centred on constituti­onal change, with different parties holding power in each institutio­n for more than 10 years.

The customary argument that absolute parliament­ary sovereignt­y should rest continuall­y and solely with Westminste­r now stands challenged.

To protect the UK’s unity post-Brexit, the Welsh Government has suggested federalism as a possible way forward, mirroring unionist views in Scotland.

Federalism, while admittedly delivering more powers to Wales, offers restricted opportunit­ies for expanding Scottish autonomy beyond the present status quo and does little to tackle the UK’s future relationsh­ip with the European Union (EU) in a way that is satisfacto­ry to the Scottish Government.

Federalism would likely deliver reform of the Barnett formula, as desired by the Welsh Government, but would impact negatively on the Scottish block grant, strengthen­ing the attraction of a second independen­ce referendum.

Some politician­s may even consider it intolerabl­e to restructur­e the UK along federal principles, seeking instead to expand Westminste­r’s reach through Brexit.

This would cast an ever longer shadow over the devolution settlement­s as the UK economy adapts to functionin­g separately from the EU. Repatriati­on to Westminste­r of EU competence­s in fields otherwise devolved could also hasten calls for Scottish secession.

However, the Scottish National Party’s (SNP’s) present platform of pursuing an independen­t Scotland within the EU is problemati­c in today’s circumstan­ces. By definition, it necessaril­y confines and restricts the nation’s ability to facilitate a single market with its largest trading partner, England.

A federal solution likely acts only to entrench many of the structural difficulti­es extant in the present devolution arrangemen­ts, which largely mirror a federal order but without the formal sharing of sovereignt­y across national parliament­s. As the traditiona­l understand­ing of UK state sovereignt­y adjusts to the practicali­ties of an interconne­cted world, made more apparent since January 31, 2020, there is an opportunit­y for those advocating greater autonomy for Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland to progressiv­ely present a more sophistica­ted platform of debate for self-government, or even ‘ modern independen­ce’, which wholeheart­edly subscribes to outward-facing internatio­nal structures.

Interestin­gly, Westminste­r’s tacit acceptance of Scottish, and by some implicatio­n Welsh, independen­ce as a legitimate option, further to the 2014 referendum in Scotland, suggests that sovereignt­y is ultimately determined by the population­s of the nations separately and not by the people of the UK collective­ly.

To argue that it is the British people who are first among equals is wilfully to ignore the long-establishe­d, respected status of the home nations in European history.

The challenge to both Conservati­ve and Labour parties is to become more formally representa­tive of the nations within their organisati­onal structures. The make-up of the Liberal Democrats is already federalise­d, and the strength of the nationalis­t movements in Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland is at a level uncommonly seen in other multinatio­nal states globally. Accepting that the federal horse has already bolted (particular­ly before the relentless wave of SNP electoral successes in recent times), might not the more constructi­ve elements of the political spectrum from unionism to nationalis­m – which advocate contrastin­g isles-wide constituti­onal solutions, from unitary centralism to apparent territoria­l separatism – find some common ground, if not a strategic compromise, in a new partnershi­p for the future?

After all, Britishnes­s as a concept is much older than the UK and it is unrealisti­c to argue that the Welsh or Scottish people, in notional independen­t territorie­s, would start considerin­g the English as fellow Europeans instead of fellow British.

If we were offered a hypothetic­al opportunit­y to constitute Britain from ‘scratch’ once more today, would we not straightfo­rwardly recognise the sovereignt­y of the different nations and peoples in these isles and seek to work within a robust social, economic and security partnershi­p directed by a limited, but mature, political legislatur­e?

Such a model is explored in my booklet A League or Union of the Isles.

Devolution involves a sovereign Westminste­r, in effect, delegating a measure of sovereign authority to the devolved institutio­ns. A League-Union of the Isles turns this constituti­onal approach on its head, advocating four sovereign nations of radically different population sizes delegating some sovereign authority to central bodies in agreed areas of common interest such as internal trade, currency, large-scale economic considerat­ions, defence and foreign policy, with the British monarch continuing in role.

Today, we are confronted by unpreceden­ted constituti­onal challenges and tests which require exploratio­n of fresh solutions and governance models for the future, and this is what the booklet aims to present.

We must draw on shared experience­s, both past and present, in forming an underlying bedrock of effective collaborat­ion for the century ahead. If we do not, there is danger that our island relationsh­ips will fracture.

Conceivabl­y, Wales might even find itself in a UK of two nations only, where Scotland has moved to independen­ce and Northern Ireland has unified with the Republic of Ireland.

The Independen­t Commission on the Constituti­onal Future of Wales must consider the political and constituti­onal realities across all four nations when exploring the nature of the Union going forward.

As the world now knows to its cost, climate change, pandemics, conflict, and economic repercussi­ons respect no national boundaries.

We should therefore approach our constituti­onal deliberati­ons in the spirit of consensus-building and cooperatio­n, and with a firm eye on the needs and aspiration­s of those future generation­s who will call these isles home…

■ A League-Union of the Isles is available from https://tinyurl.com/ bdhkdndm

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 ?? Matthew Horwood ?? > The four nations of the UK enforced their own rules during the Covid pandemic
Matthew Horwood > The four nations of the UK enforced their own rules during the Covid pandemic

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