THE NEED FOR AN ENGLISH PARLIAMENT
Following the outcome of the Scottish referendum, in which
the Scots decisively voted to remain in Britain, David Cameron made a
commitment that there would be English Votes for English Laws [EVEL] and that
this would be introduced ‘in tandem’ with the further devolution promised to
Scotland at the end of the referendum campaign.
Now, however, it would seem that this commitment is more of
a wish. More recently, the Tories are talking of introducing EVEL after the
next general election. As David Davis, a senior backbench MP and former Tory
leadership contender, has rightly pointed out, either EVEL is introduced before
the general election or it will not be introduced at all.
It is incredible that the Tories have failed to reform the
voting system that so firmly favours Labour. They bungled the much needed
reform of the constituency boundaries and now they are in the process of
chickening out over the introduction of EVEL.
There can be no doubt about this. Labour are totally
dependent upon their Scottish and Welsh MPs to give them a majority in the
House of Commons. As Ed Miliband has made clear, Labour will oppose EVEL –
despite the fact that many Labour MPs actually support EVEL out of a sense of
fairness if not long term self-preservation. Instead, Labour are peddling
regionalization, which was overwhelmingly rejected in a referendum in the North
East of England.
Once Labour take office, they will set up, as they are
openly advocating, some constitutional convention which will carry out its
dignified pondering for a number of years. In the meantime Labour will be in
government and will be able to both rig the membership and terms of the
convention and be able to ignore its findings should it suit them to do so.
EVEL is not the same as a properly functioning English
parliament, but it is at least a start. It at least gives the English some sort
of voice within the UK. It is an arrangement which might develop into an
English parliament. The alternative is to allow the continuance of outright
vote-rigging.
In his speech to the Tory conference, David Cameron fudged the
issue. He, with support from within the Tory party, is prepared to allow the
matter to become the promise of a promise in the next election manifesto as to
what a future Tory government might do should they win the next general
election, which they cannot due to the continuance of the Scots and Welsh MPs
voting on English affairs [as well as the rigged constituency boundaries].
EVEL is either introduced before the general election or it
will never be introduced. It should therefore be a matter to be considered
in tandem with further devolution to Scotland. If Labour and the Liberal
Democrats block it, then David Cameron should give Labour the public
consultation they purport to want: he should immediately hold a
referendum and allow the people of England, Wales and Northern Ireland their
say.