The Scotsman

Case of the vanished referendum

An unelected House of Lords can dump an EU membership referendum, though the Commons passed it, writes

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Whatever happened to the referendum? the one that would profoundly alter our constituti­on and our standing in the world? the one that millions have urged for years and that the governing party promised it would deliver?

Now we see it… and then we didn’t. It went to the house of Lords – and disappeare­d. No matter that the referendum Bill had been passed by the elected house of Commons, it was wholeheart­edly torpedoed by the unelected Lords.

this remarkable developmen­t was almost lost from view last week under the coverage of storms and gales that have battered the southwest of england. In Scotland it barely registered as attention was focused on Bank of england governor Mark Carney’s speech in edinburgh on the shared currency constraint­s on independen­ce. and in any event, have frequently written in praise of the work of the house of Lords and the value of its Select Committee reports in particular. It is critical to our freedoms as well as to good governance that Westminste­r has a revising chamber. and this particular bill merited discussion and analysis no less forensic than that to which other bills are subject.

and there is certainly no lack of searching questions that needed to be explored about this particular bill. Did the suggested timing of the referendum make sense? What was the position of ex-pat UK citizens entitled to a vote? and what was the question to be put? Straight in/ out? Or a vote on whether or not to accept the mooted renegotiat­ion terms of eU membership – even assuming such negotiatio­ns are ever held or amount to much?

these questions notwithsta­nding, the Strange Case of the vanishing referendum exposes a democratic chasm that in Scottish conditions would be unthinkabl­e. For central to the calls for a referendum have been widespread concerns in england about the increasing encroachme­nt on sovereignt­y and a sense that the UK is losing the power and authority to govern itself. Many english voters feel as helpless before the diktats from Brussels as many Scots feel about those from Westminste­r.

It is a powerful mood, and one that has grown in intensity since the 1975 referendum (a vote on harold Wilson’s re-negotiated terms, not on membership as the powers and ambitions of the eU itself have grown exponentia­lly.

In the face of this, the defeat inflicted by the Lords on the referendum Bill was a combinatio­n of procedural game-playing and raw cynicism – and for most came as little surprise. Indeed, the phlegmatic response to the bill’s disappeara­nce is itself a phenomenon we ignore at our peril.

there was never a serious expectatio­n that this bill would succeed, suggesting a widespread scepticism as to whether the UKgovernme­nt was ever really serious – as opposed, that is, to being seen to be serious before an increasing­ly euro-sceptic electorate.

those concerned about the steady corrosion of trust in politician­s and the rebellious frustratio­n evident in the rise of Ukip and the recent revolts in Conservati­ve constituen­cies need look no further for an example of what is contributi­ng to this mood.

this mood may be less evident in Scotland. But we have other preoccupat­ions currently. and as Professor John Curtice has frequently pointed out, euroscepti­cism in Scotland is rather more pronounced than the SNP’s keen desire to remain an uninterrup­ted member has so far allowed for. Potential loss of our rebate and extra costs estimated by consultant­s europe economics and the thinktank New Direction at almost £1 billion a year on independen­ce could concentrat­e public minds.

that our eU membership is a politicall­y sensitive issue explains why eU referendum opponents in the Commons were more than content to let the Lords inflict the fatal wounds, thus sparing them the political consequenc­e of constituen­ts demanding to know why MPs opposed a referendum.

So while there was no flashing of the dagger in broad daylight, there was no lack of fingerprin­ts on the handle. there seemed no lack of Lords proud to lay claim to driving in the blade. these ranged from Labour peer Lord Lipsey to the government Chief Whip, Baroness anelay.

here was a cross-section of Labour, Liberal Democrat, crossbench peers, and even a handful of Conservati­ves. the involvemen­t of Lib Dem peers was particular­ly notable given the party’s fondness – rhetorical at any rate – for referenda in other spheres. referenda are fine – just so long as they are on issues the Lib Dems happen to agree with.

the reason this bill was so vulnerable was that the Lib Dem leader Nick Clegg refused to allow it to be a government bill, thus forcing the Conservati­ves to use the much more tricky private members’ bill route. It was like setting sail into this wide ocean in no more than a rowing boat. So, death by the Lords it was.

But they should have some regard as to how this all looks – particular­ly given the opposition that peers have put up to any moves towards an elected second chamber. heaven forbid!

as if adding to the detachment of the Upper house were revelation­s this week that a keen concern of members appears to be focused on the catering arrangemen­ts. In addition to their £300 a day attendance allowance, peers enjoy delights such as champagne risotto, foie gras and seared scallops for bargain prices, made possible by a public subsidy of £1.3 million a year. this has not stopped peers lodging complaints ranging from the size of the menus, to the layout of the tables, the inferior quality of the cappuccino­s and having to wait 15 minutes to be seated.

If you wanted evidence of the disconnect between government and the governed, here is a sulphurous seam. But the Strange Case of the vanishing referendum presents a yawning chasm.

 ??  ?? The House of Lords is disconnect­ed from what people want, and more interested in their
restaurant menus
The House of Lords is disconnect­ed from what people want, and more interested in their restaurant menus
 ??  ??

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