The National (Scotland)

AHEAD OF KEY VOTE Labour’s bid for early election ‘could backfire’

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especially after the constituti­onal divide hardened following the independen­ce referendum in 2014.

“The curious thing is that Westminste­r was meant to be the home of strong party discipline and whips doing the arm-twisting, but Westminste­r backbench MPs are much more rebellious through the mechanism of parliament­ary committees,” said Parry.

“Committees are pretty active and not afraid to make trouble for the Government whereas at Holyrood even the committees are pretty much under the control of the whips.”

He added that the Holyrood electoral system means that a candidate’s position on the party list becomes “incredibly important” while getting nomination­s for constituen­cy seats is also difficult.

“You have to be on side and once you get into the habit of behaving like that, it is hard to stop because once you are inside the parliament there are ministeria­l jobs to be had,” Parry said.

Political scientist Murray Leith agreed politics in Scotland had become “more fractured and fevered” over the past few years but pointed out that there was still sometimes consensus across party lines, most notably in the Gender Reform Bill recently which received full backing from the LibDems,

Greens, the majority of Labour and even some Tories.

“The Punch and Judy politics which everybody decries on a regular basis can be seen here as well as in Westminste­r but at the same time there is actually cross-party consensus on a number of bills,” said Professor Leith of the University of the West of Scotland.

“We saw this in 2007-2011 when the SNP were effectivel­y able to govern by making issue-to-issue, bill-to-bill decisions. Sometimes one party would vote with them and other parties against, and other times it would be the opposite.”

Despite the regular disputes, Professor Leith pointed out that the Scottish Parliament had achieved a lot of improvemen­ts for society which simply would not have happened if it had not been set up.

“The bottom line is that in a Westminste­r Parliament which legislated for Scotland, there was a limited amount of time and certain bills did not get passed or were challenged in support,” he said. “People in Scotland were not able to make decisions specifical­ly for Scotland.”

Since the Scottish Parliament was set up, he said, Scotland has been able to express itself, and decisions have been made that clearly make it distinct within the UK.

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