Title: Week 4'2 The Scottish Executive and the Scottish Parliament:
1Week 4.2 The Scottish Executive and the Scottish
Parliament
- Evidence for the centrality of committees
2Lecture Plan
- Brief discussion of the CSG proposals.
- A comparison of the legislative processes of old
(Westminster ) and new (Scottish Parliament). - A discussion of inputs or the formal
structures/ powers of committees - A discussion of withinputs, or those factors
such as the role of parties, committee size,
legislative load, etc. - which qualify committee
power. - An initial discussion of outputs (inquiries,
bills, amendments, etc.),. - Discussion powers in relation to (a) other
legislatures (b) the executive (for me the most
crucial point) - Brief analysis of amendments process.
3(1) The CSG Proposals on Parliamentary Business
- The CSG approach as a whole used Westminster as a
point of departure, but aims for
executive-legislative relations are not new - Point 6.1 recognises the need for the Executive
to govern legislation and use of budget - No new relationship, just improved role
4Committee Power
- The difference is improved scrutiny based on a
strong committee role - All-purpose committees with combined Standing
and Select Committee functions - Ability to call witnesses and oblige ministers
(and civil servants) to attend - Ability to hold Inquiries
- Ability to initiate legislation
- Committees as the revising Chamber?
- Pre-legislative monitoring role to avoid
draft-Act problems (see Richardson and Jordan,
1979) - But NB no (power sharing) direct Scottish
Parliament role in formulation
5Comparing Legislative Processes
- Westminster (of old? ie NB convergence)
- No formal involvement at pre-legislative stage
- Plenary debate first
- Then standing committees consider amendments
- Committees report to House and more amendments
made - Third reading debate
- Passed to House of Lords if amended, passed
back to Commons
6Comparing Legislative Processes
- Holyrood
- Hands-off monitoring role at pre-legislative
stage - Procedure to introduce bill (PO statement,
finance, policy explanation) - Bill referred to committee before House
- Lead committee takes evidence and reports to
House - House considers general principles
- Back to committee for stage 2 consideration of
amendments - Stage 3 amendments
- (then assessed for competence)
7Differences
- Scottish Parliament Committees are charged with
the scrutiny of the initial consultation process. - They consider the principles of the bill before
it is presented to the House. - They take evidence on the nature and effects of
the bill before considering general principles
and before making detailed amendments. - More committee experience given select committee
role - Non-Executive Bill process was more
straightforward 12 names and the bill goes to
stage 1 - Now 19 names, with restrictions on use of NEBU
- (NB Committee role crucial to members bill
progress)
8 (3) Inputs or the capacity/ powers of
Scottish Parliament committees
- Relatively powerful compared to functions of
other West European legislatures
9The Scottish Parliament has
- (1) Permanent and specialised committees with
relatively small numbers of members - (2) A proportional (by party) number of chairs
selected by a committee - (3) Committee deliberation both before the
initial and final plenary stages - (4) The ability to initiate and redraft bills
and, - (5) The ability to invite witnesses and demand
government documents. - (6) Unique supervisory role
10(4) Withinputs
- Party influence voting majority most
committees,, informal whip (meetings before
meetings) - Turnover of members (high)
- Resource constraints (including committee size)
- Legislative overload bills and amendments
11Effect of input/ withinput discussion
- 2 hypotheses on committees (Arter 2004a)
- EFFECTIVE
- Small size will foster an effective collective
identity and hence committee autonomy. - The combined roles of standing and select
committees will foster policy expertise. - Committees will foster an agenda-setting role
though inquiries which are not in the control of
party managers. - Working practices will be consensual rather than
partisan. - The openness of proceedings will discourage
adversarialism. - INEFFECTIVE
- The committees will be too small to make scrutiny
effective (especially if there are attendance
problems). - High turnover undermines a committee ethos and
the combined roles leads to overload. - The legislative load means that committees have
no time for agenda setting through inquiry work.
- The open process will lead to party posturing
(extending to witness examination which is often
ritualistic). - Committee specialization will also fragment the
House
12(5) Outputs
- Healthy number of Public Petitions
- Inquiries shaping agendas water, mobile phone
masts, free care for elderly, poindings - 11 of 61 Bills 1999-2003 were non-executive
- High proportion compared to other West European
Legislatures - Amendments
13(6) Powers in relation to the Scottish Executive
- NB traditional Westminster relationship- the
government governs. - Scottish Executive has more resources to consult,
research, initiate - If we include SSIs, then most legislation
receives no scrutiny - Non-executive bills are restricted in scope and
can be reversed - Scottish Executive still the main source of
legislation - Committees have traditional scrutiny role
14Outputs revisited?
- There are many petitions, but their practical
effect is limited. - Inquiry work is constrained by legislative load.
Inquiries are too slow to be produced. The
examples of influence are exceptions to the rule. - The emphasis on legislation is misplaced.
Examples
15Non-executive legislation
- Limited scope (e.g. dog fouling, St Andrews,
national galleries) - Reliance on committees to consult after bill
proposed - Wild Mammals took 2 years
- Poindings replaced before enacted
- Committee Bill on children reliant on SPICE and
Welsh
16Conclusion?
- Unusual powers compared to other West European
legislatures - But not in comparison with the Scottish Executive
which has a much larger staff equipped for
research and consultation - Limited policy initiation
- Fairly traditional hands-off relationship with
scrutiny at bill stage
17Effect of bill scrutiny?
- Analysis of amendments
- Did these change the substance of the bill?
- How much change comes from the Scottish
Parliament and its committees? - In other words, is the Scottish Parliament an
actor involved in legislative change or just an
arena for policy change?
18Initial point
- The Scottish Executive appears dominant since it
proposes the majority of the successful
amendments and MSPs propose most of the failed
ones
19Qualification of Scottish Executive success
- Amendments vary in value, from consequential to
detail to substantive - Most successful Scottish Executive amendments are
consequential - The detail is devolved from SP to Scottish
Executive - Most go through on the nod without voting
- There are very few substantive amendments
20Qualification of MSP failure
- Most failed amendments are really withdrawn
(56) - They are often introduced to stimulate debate or
ask questions, not to be won - Many are withdrawn after assurances that the
Scottish Executive ill address the issue - As a result, there is considerable Scottish
Parliament influence over the production of and
inspiration for the most important amendments. - Committees are particularly influential.
21Inspired/ Original Authorship
- Some backbench Labour MSPs are successful with
substantive amendments - Others (LD and opposition) tend to rely on
indirect influence through withdrawal-
reassurance - Latter should not be underestimated (little
difference between 2 styles?) - Aggregate figures 37.2 of all substantive
amendments relate to direct and indirect
non-executive influence - Of the 62 inspired amendments, two-thirds
attributed to committees, while there is no
coalition bias to the remainder
22See table in next slide
- Over half 59 of all substantive amendments
presented at stage 3 can be attributed to
non-executive actors - The committees are central to this process
- Stage 2 is less significant, but the 16.9
inspired element is testament to a stage 1
process envisaged by CSG
23Stage 3 58.9 non-executive
24Qualification to committee influence
- The Scottish Executive still produces and amends
the majority of bills - Evidence of bill change throughout the process?
Note the rules on wrecking amendments - Alternative explanations for figures
- Voting on Scottish Executive amendments few
object because few understand? - Withdrawal makes no difference? Amendment would
be lost anyway?
25Conclusion
- Evidence of traditional Westminster relationship
- No wholesale changes in relationships
- Scottish Parliament has unusual range of powers
compared to other legislatures, not the Scottish
Executive - Some evidence of influence in inquiries and
scrutiny