A Constitution Unit report by Meg Russell, Hannah White and Lisa James, published jointly with the Institute for Government, provides a menu of constitutional reform options ahead of political parties’ manifesto preparation. Its chapters will be published in summary form on this blog throughout August, with this third excerpt identifying potential changes relating to the territorial constitution.
Recent years have been unsettled ones in UK territorial politics, with structural pressures following the Brexit vote, and other tensions between the centre and the devolved institutions. Meanwhile, the devolution arrangements for England remain an incomplete patchwork.
While wholesale reform may be complex and contentious, much can be done to mitigate the tensions that exist within the existing framework. There is widespread recognition that cooperation between the UK government and devolved institutions could be improved, and some positive steps in this direction have already been taken. With the fiercest battles about the implementation of Brexit now over, opportunities exist for strengthening interparliamentary arrangements. The governance arrangements for England could also be made more transparent and coherent.
(more…)
Filed under Government, Nations and Regions, Parliament, Parties and Politicians
Tags: Barnett formula, Bennett Institute, Brexit, Brown Commission, Cabinet, civil service, Constitution Committee, constitutional convention, devolution, devolution deals, Dunlop Review, England, English devolution, English Devolution Council, Gordon Brown, greater manchester, Hannah White, Hansard Society, House of Lords Constitution Committee, Independent Commission on the Constitutional Future of Wales, Institute for Government, intergovernmental relations, interparliamentary relations, Ireland, Irish government, Lisa James, local government, Lords Constitution Committee, mayoral combined authority, mayors, Meg Russell, metro mayors, ministerial code, muscular unionism, National Audit Office, nationalism, Northern Ireland, Northern Ireland Secretary, PACAC, permanent secretary, Public Administration and Constitutional Affairs Committee, Rebuilding and renewing the constitution: options for reform, Review of Intergovernmental Relations, Scotland, scotland secretary, Scottish government, Scottish Independence, Second Scottish independence referendum, Secretary of State for Intergovernmental Relations, secretary of state for Northern Ireland, Secretary of state for Scotland, Secretary of State for Wales, sewel convention, SNP, The Commission on the UK's Future, Union, unionism, united Ireland, Wales, Wales Secretary, Welsh independence, West Midlands, Working Group on Unification Referendums on the Island of Ireland
3 Comments »