Sturgeon faces tough hurdles on road to Scottish
independence vote
Analysis: First minister is seeking supreme court
ruling but experts say there is ‘nothing new’ in her request
Libby
Brooks Scotland correspondent
Tue 28 Jun
2022 19.09 BST
There have
always been three routes to a second referendum on Scottish independence and, despite
the buildup and rhetoric around Tuesday’s statement, they remain unchanged – a
section 30 order from the UK government; risking a domestic boycott and
international opprobrium with a wildcat vote; or putting a referendum bill to
the Holyrood parliament and facing down an almost inevitable court challenge.
Nicola
Sturgeon told MSPs on Tuesday afternoon that she had written to Boris Johnson
again, the latest of repeated requests for a section 30 order under the 1998
Scotland Act that would grant Holyrood the competence to legislate for another
referendum. The previous one happened in 2014 and it is a process described as
the “gold standard” by the first minister.
Johnson
responded that he would “study it very carefully and we will respond properly”
but the reply is unlikely to differ from previous iterations: no.
Sturgeon
has repeatedly ruled out a Catalan-style wildcat vote, which leaves the route
set out by Sturgeon in Holyrood but which constitutional experts suggest takes
us little further forward on the key question of whether the Scottish
parliament can legislate for a second referendum when the constitution is
reserved to Westminster.
The
Scottish government on Tuesday introduced a referendum bill and – in a
pre-emptive move that seizes the political agenda and leapfrogs the danger of
Holyrood’s presiding officer ruling the bill out with competence – has asked
the lord advocate, Scotland’s most senior law officer, to raise the matter with
the supreme court.
Sturgeon
told MSPs: “There has been much commentary in recent days to the effect that a
consultative referendum would not have the same status as the vote in 2014.
That is simply wrong, factually and legally. The status of the referendum
proposed in this bill is exactly the same as the referendums of 1997
[devolution], 2014 [independence] and 2016 [Brexit].”
Sturgeon’s
emphasis on the consultative nature of the vote is curious. As Kenneth
Armstrong, a professor of European law at the University of Cambridge, pointed
out: “Every referendum in our constitutional setup is consultative rather than
self-executing, unless the legislation mandates what has to happen if a vote
goes a particular way. Given the experience of the Brexit referendum, there is
an argument for having a propositional referendum (is independence a good
idea?) followed by a dispositive referendum (this is what independence looks
like, is it what you want?) but that’s a different sort of question of
constitutional design.”
According
to James Mitchell, a professor of public policy at the University of Edinburgh,
Sturgeon “ignores the crucial point that while legally her bill might –
depending on supreme court judgment – be the same, it is politically totally
different. And, as she must know, the UK has a ‘political constitution’.”
The most
notable aspect of the statement was that Sturgeon had set the ball rolling on
another campaign, said Mitchell, “but beyond that there is nothing new”.
In terms of
how the supreme court may rule on the lord advocate’s reference, Armstrong said
it must first decide if it is willing to accept it without seeing the final
version of the bill, which has only just been published.
“There is a
risk that it takes the view that the Scottish parliament needs to first pass
the bill so that the issue is not simply hypothetical or advisory.”
Sturgeon
said that if the supreme court did not rule in the Scottish government’s
favour, the Scottish National party would fight the next UK general election on
the question of whether Scotland should be independent.
While this
may well put Scottish Labour in a difficult position in a forthcoming election
campaign, the outcome would have no legal force whatsoever – “just campaign
rhetoric”, as Chalmers puts it. Success would add power to SNP claims of a
political mandate but it would also entirely contradict Sturgeon’s own
assertion that any future vote must be legally valid and internationally recognised.
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário