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UK constitutional debate
The Scottish independence referendum has got people talking about the broader constitutional situation within the UK. The West Lothian Question, regional assemblies for England, devolution to the cities, House of Lords reform, and many other constitutional questions have been brought to the surface. Given the energy of the nationalist movement in Scotland and the implication that it has for Northern Ireland and Wales, I don't think these questions are going to be going away.
The further devolution promised to the Scottish Parliament is going to make the issue of Scottish MPs voting on English-only issues even more problematic. It seems to me that despite the No victory, the constituent parts of the UK are going to be increasingly going their own way, and this trend will be irreversible if the many anomalies and injustices of the present system are not addressed.
So, this thread is to be for people to discuss just how they would go about constitutional reform within the UK.
As for me, I would make a progressive constitution that settles some of the core issues the separatists have been using to sow discontent - enshrine the right to government-run healthcare and require a referendum on entering/leaving any international organisations. This would silence all the scare tactics the separatists have been using about the NHS/EU.
Abolish the devolved parliaments, and leave the Commons as it is. However, there needs to be big changes in the House of Lords. I would say have 400 seats - 200 taken in the existing way, and 200 to go to elected Lords representing the regions. Divide these into 5 blocks - Southern England, Northern England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland. Each block gets a veto on any constitutional change, to silence the SNP with their NHS/EU scaremongering about what Westminster will do against Scotland's wishes. And finally they will be exposed as separatists at heart and not champions of social justice.
Thoughts?
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Re: UK constitutional debate
I have always had my wacky ideas, but I have always been in favour of a federal British model. However many of the things you bring up would be unfeasible. The exception to this is your idea of a 'Progressive Constitution', this would work and probably appear in some form or another.
- Dissolving the Scottish Parliament is a ship that has long sailed, and the SNP will turn revolutionary, akin to the IRA, if that occurred. The backlash from Scotland and the Scottish people would be enormous.
- A 'north-south' split in England wouldn't happen. It would be the entirety of England or it would be more regional.
- I dislike the Half-way house idea for the House of Lords. It kind of needs a total makeover or simply needs removing/replacing with something else.
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Re: UK constitutional debate
I'm glad you agreed on the constitution point since I know its a bit unorthodox for British politics. As to the points you raised...
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Tiaexz
- Dissolving the Scottish Parliament is a ship that has long sailed, and the SNP will turn revolutionary, akin to the IRA, if that occurred. The backlash from Scotland and the Scottish people would be enormous.
You are right it is not a practical solution. I was thinking of two possible roads to go down when mulling over these proposals:
1. use them as a moderate and progressive unionist solution - in this case, a clause would be used to allow for existing devolution arrangements to continue, and the wider constitution would hopefully allow for longer-term reintegration of Scotland into British politics.
or...
2. adopt them as part of a sort of vanguard position within unionism - by adopting such an anti-devolution stance, the aim would be to redefine the parameters of the debate and shift the mainstream position more towards my own, without expecting my own measures to be fully adopted.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Tiaexz
- A 'north-south' split in England wouldn't happen. It would be the entirety of England or it would be more regional.
I don't see why not. It would allow a distinct voice for the more Labour-leaning north of England. Also, the bonus of splitting up England into two regions is that it denies any sort of recognition of nationhood to the 4 constituent parts of the UK. It represents regions, rather than nations. This deligitimises separatist claims to Scottish/Welsh/whatever and any non-British nationhood.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Tiaexz
- I dislike the Half-way house idea for the House of Lords. It kind of needs a total makeover or simply needs removing/replacing with something else.
I think having non-elected members is a good counter-balance, so long as they are a minority and do not serve in the prime legislative body. It gives an alternative to the tackiness and populism of electoral politics.
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Re: UK constitutional debate
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Originally Posted by
Rhyfelwyr
I'm glad you agreed on the constitution point since I know its a bit unorthodox for British politics. As to the points you raised...
I have suggested a constitution myself. Perhaps not have it as some Holy Grail the Americans have, but have body of laws which set-out and can be amended with popular support. I like having laws and regulations all up to date in many ways. It stops silly arguments like the fight between the Canoeists and the Fishermen, where the Canoe people are pointing to the Magna Carta.
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You are right it is not a practical solution. I was thinking of two possible roads to go down when mulling over these proposals:
1. use them as a moderate and progressive unionist solution - in this case, a clause would be used to allow for existing devolution arrangements to continue, and the wider constitution would hopefully allow for longer-term reintegration of Scotland into British politics.
or...
2. adopt them as part of a sort of vanguard position within unionism - by adopting such an anti-devolution stance, the aim would be to redefine the parameters of the debate and shift the mainstream position more towards my own, without expecting my own measures to be fully adopted.
You could devolve everything to a certain point, make Westminister akin to Washington D.C, and that becomes the 'British only' forum, their the regions take care of themselves in many ways. That would address most of the issues you bring up, and it would be a lot less 'English' and more 'British'.
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I don't see why not. It would allow a distinct voice for the more Labour-leaning north of England. Also, the bonus of splitting up England into two regions is that it denies any sort of recognition of nationhood to the 4 constituent parts of the UK. It represents regions, rather than nations. This deligitimises separatist claims to Scottish/Welsh/whatever and any non-British nationhood.
I don't really see 'North-South' working. The issue isn't much the 'South' other than 'Greater London' due to the high centralisation and focus on that area. You could do a 'Greater London' and 'Rest of England' but then there poses a bunch of other issues, such as making this divide stronger.
I think regions based on population, kind of what was originally proposed would work best. This would allow the regions to develop differently and play to their strengths, leading to a more diversive set up economically which would profit the union even more than the current arrangement. It could hypothetically set up a 'Silicon Valley' in the North West, or 'Agricultural Supercomplex' in the South West, or those kinds of specialisms (those two were random examples).
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I think having non-elected members is a good counter-balance, so long as they are a minority and do not serve in the prime legislative body. It gives an alternative to the tackiness and populism of electoral politics.
I think an appointed or applied 'house' could work, perhaps something like a supreme court where law-makers can go through new legislation to suggest improvements to it. But anything not elected would be powerless in comparison to the commons. If you want a strong 'house of lords', then you are looking at some kind of Senate system the States have. In some ways, your proposal does this.
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Re: UK constitutional debate
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Tiaexz
You could devolve everything to a certain point, make Westminister akin to Washington D.C, and that becomes the 'British only' forum, their the regions take care of themselves in many ways. That would address most of the issues you bring up, and it would be a lot less 'English' and more 'British'.
I don't like this federalist approach because separatism is IMO a logical consequence of federalism/devolution. It is no coincidence that Scotland had this referendum just 15 years after it got devolution.
If the UK is to last, all of the UK has to be politically integrated.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Tiaexz
I don't really see 'North-South' working. The issue isn't much the 'South' other than 'Greater London' due to the high centralisation and focus on that area. You could do a 'Greater London' and 'Rest of England' but then there poses a bunch of other issues, such as making this divide stronger.
I think regions based on population, kind of what was originally proposed would work best. This would allow the regions to develop differently and play to their strengths, leading to a more diversive set up economically which would profit the union even more than the current arrangement. It could hypothetically set up a 'Silicon Valley' in the North West, or 'Agricultural Supercomplex' in the South West, or those kinds of specialisms (those two were random examples).
It's more to reflect the differing political opinions across the regions. The South tends to vote Tory while the north does not, in this regard London has more in common with the north than the rest of the south.
But remember, under my proposals these regional MP's are in the Lords, not the Commons - they are really only there for the constitutional issues where like I said each region would get a veto.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Tiaexz
I think an appointed or applied 'house' could work, perhaps something like a supreme court where law-makers can go through new legislation to suggest improvements to it. But anything not elected would be powerless in comparison to the commons. If you want a strong 'house of lords', then you are looking at some kind of Senate system the States have. In some ways, your proposal does this.
I don't want a powerful House of Lords, more just one to cast a non-partizan eye over legislation. The only real powers that matter in my Lords would only go to the elected regional ones anyway, and I suppose in that sense yeah, it would function a bit like the US Senate.
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Re: UK constitutional debate
Stop caring about the stuff that won't matter, and start doing the things that does matter. England needs decentralization, but that has nothing to do with introducing new elections.
Money is what matters: start moving stuff out of London. Take oil, for example. Don't give Scotland an extra piece of revenue: move the oil industry from London to Scotland. That is the way to retain the oil money.
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Re: UK constitutional debate
Direct democracy. Job done.
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Re: UK constitutional debate
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Originally Posted by
InsaneApache
Direct democracy. Job done.
For those living in a black and white world, that is indeed perfect.
For normal people, it's nonsensical.
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Re: UK constitutional debate
Gotta love the Scot and the Communist arguing about how to divide England up.
Why not ask the English who they are and how they divide up first?
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Re: UK constitutional debate
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Originally Posted by
Philipvs Vallindervs Calicvla
Gotta love the Scot and the Communist arguing about how to divide England up.
Why not ask the English who they are and how they divide up first?
Pay attention PVC, I'm arguing against carving up the UK ~;)
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Re: UK constitutional debate
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Originally Posted by
HoreTore
Pay attention PVC, I'm arguing against carving up the UK ~;)
Nooooo
You're the Socialist, Beskar is the Communist.
But seriously - asking "North East" England whether they want a regional assembly is pointless - dividing the UK by regions according to population has largely failed, nobody outside Westminster pays much attention - it's like in the 1970's when they tried to break the counties, within 20 years they had brought back "Ceremonial" Counties so that people could have their sense of local identity.
I would say that at least a decade of consultation and argument would be required before we could say how many regional assemblies the UK needed and what areas they should cover.
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Re: UK constitutional debate
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Philipvs Vallindervs Calicvla
Nooooo
You're the Socialist, Beskar is the Communist.
But seriously - asking "North East" England whether they want a regional assembly is pointless - dividing the UK by regions according to population has largely failed, nobody outside Westminster pays much attention - it's like in the 1970's when they tried to break the counties, within 20 years they had brought back "Ceremonial" Counties so that people could have their sense of local identity.
I would say that at least a decade of consultation and argument would be required before we could say how many regional assemblies the UK needed and what areas they should cover.
Politically, England is split between the cities, which are largely Labour, and the counties, which are mostly Tory (and Tory in the old sense). Economically, England is split between London and not-London.
There needs to be some outsourcing of business away from London, and I don't suppose Londoners would mind too much, and would even welcome increasing taxes to facilitate this (and with the distribution of earnings, this falls on Londoners most of all). Probably the greatest issue for Londoners is living costs, which are exorbitant. Having other commercial centres should help bring them down a little.
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Re: UK constitutional debate
Bring back the heptarchy to divide up England, give the western isles back to Norway, and give the Isle of Wight to the Argentinians compensate them for the loss of the Falklands.
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Re: UK constitutional debate
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Originally Posted by
Noncommunist
Bring back the heptarchy to divide up England, give the western isles back to Norway, and give the Isle of Wight to the Argentinians compensate them for the loss of the Falklands.
No.
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Re: UK constitutional debate
Quote:
Originally Posted by
HoreTore
For those living in a black and white world, that is indeed perfect.
For normal people, it's nonsensical.
Ladies and gentlemen, there speaks the true voice from the left. All those lumpen proles eh? What with all their false conciousness. God forbid they may have a say in their lives,
You Sir are a fascist. You just don't realise it.
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Re: UK constitutional debate
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Philipvs Vallindervs Calicvla
Nooooo
You're the Socialist, Beskar is the Communist.
Dang it!
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Philipvs Vallindervs Calicvla
But seriously - asking "North East" England whether they want a regional assembly is pointless - dividing the UK by regions according to population has largely failed, nobody outside Westminster pays much attention - it's like in the 1970's when they tried to break the counties, within 20 years they had brought back "Ceremonial" Counties so that people could have their sense of local identity.
I would say that at least a decade of consultation and argument would be required before we could say how many regional assemblies the UK needed and what areas they should cover.
Regional assemblies are pretty much pointless wherever they they appear...
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Originally Posted by
InsaneApache
Ladies and gentlemen, there speaks the true voice from the left. All those lumpen proles eh? What with all their false conciousness. God forbid they may have a say in their lives,
You Sir are a fascist. You just don't realise it.
What nonsense. Direct democracy is bad because it largely eliminates compromises. I happen to love compromises. How that turns me into a fascist is beyond me.
Direct democracy is happy with a 51% majority(and a forced 51% as well). I'm not happy until the majority is far bigger than that, and that can only be achieved through compromises.
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Re: UK constitutional debate
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Philipvs Vallindervs Calicvla
Gotta love the Scot and the Communist arguing about how to divide England up.
Why not ask the English who they are and how they divide up first?
I am not a communist! I am classed as pretty far on the left, though. Mostly because I am looking forwards into the near future and this is different to the current trend where people keep on struggling with political catch-up with the present. Because those people will be in a big shock when the vast majority of our economy is ran by automatons.
Though, what is amusing is how you exclude me from the title of being 'English', even though I was born and raised here. :laugh4:
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Re: UK constitutional debate
Quote:
Originally Posted by
InsaneApache
Direct democracy. Job done.
InsaneApache, I don't know where you live and I don't know what experiences you have had with direct democracy in politics. But as someone living in California, home of the direct democratic referendum system that allows 50% + 1 person to change the Constitution, it is terrible, terrible to live under. Please take another look at the downsides by seeing some of California's failures with direct democracy.
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Re: UK constitutional debate
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Originally Posted by
a completely inoffensive name
InsaneApache, I don't know where you live and I don't know what experiences you have had with direct democracy in politics. But as someone living in California, home of the direct democratic referendum system that allows 50% + 1 person to change the Constitution, it is terrible, terrible to live under. Please take another look at the downsides by seeing some of California's failures with direct democracy.
Ah California....proof of De Toqueville's sagacity.
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Re: UK constitutional debate
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Tiaexz
I am not a communist! I am classed as pretty far on the left, though. Mostly because I am looking forwards into the near future and this is different to the current trend where people keep on struggling with political catch-up with the present. Because those people will be in a big shock when the vast majority of our economy is ran by automatons.
Though, what is amusing is how you exclude me from the title of being 'English', even though I was born and raised here. :laugh4:
You don't self-identify as English - you've repeatedly suggested a bureaucratic dismantling of the UK so that we can be better integrated with mainland Europe.
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Re: UK constitutional debate
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Originally Posted by
Philipvs Vallindervs Calicvla
You don't self-identify as English - you've repeatedly suggested a bureaucratic dismantling of the UK so that we can be better integrated with mainland Europe.
I have repeatedly suggested a bureaucratic dismantling of the world into a more localised form of governance whilst being unified as a 'world' sharing an agenda/constitution which promotes Liberté, égalité, fraternité. In short, Libertarian Socialism.
Not simply specific to England. We live in a global age, with global issues, with a global economy. We would all be better off if we acted like that, as partners instead of rivals.
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Re: UK constitutional debate
First things first Rhy, PVC, InsaneApache and Tiaexz you gotta make sure your Constitution doesn't allow this garbage:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/ukne...or-police.html
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Re: UK constitutional debate
Quote:
Originally Posted by
a completely inoffensive name
This is from the nation where the courts pass secret edicts requiring companies to give up data about people? When they're not spying accidentally on them - which is apparently OK if they didn't mean to?
In this way, countries are like Enron - they all have high minded sentiments but when it gets down to it they all want to take the money (and in the case of countries strip away every privicy) - in the name of whatever scare works at the moment.
~:smoking:
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Re: UK constitutional debate
Rhy might actually be right about an united 'North'. There is this article from the Mirror.
Most interesting aspect of it, the poll is 81% for yes.
Also, this is a picture of the 'wealth suckage' London has on the North, Wales and Northern Ireland, making Rest of the UK one of the poorest areas of the European Union.
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Re: UK constitutional debate
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Originally Posted by
Tiaexz
Most interesting aspect of it, the poll is 81% for yes.
Yeah, but that's not relevant as anyone in the world can vote in that poll. One "yes" is from me, for example.
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Re: UK constitutional debate
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Originally Posted by
Sarmatian
Yeah, but that's not relevant as anyone in the world can vote in that poll. One "yes" is from me, for example.
That only makes UN approval more likely.
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Re: UK constitutional debate
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Originally Posted by
Tiaexz
I assume that ranking is based on Eurostat, as Groningen is on it.
Groningen is not actually rich; it is one of the poorest in the Netherlands. It's counted as rich because of the huge gas reserves in the soil, but those are controlled and spent by the national government.
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Re: UK constitutional debate
Perhaps, Groningen refers to the city and immediate surroundings, not the entire province... given that Brussels is on the list, too.
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Re: UK constitutional debate
Apparently not
EDIT: nevermind, it depends on wether they're using NUTS-2 or NUTS-3. Brussels and surroundings is counted as one in both.
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Re: UK constitutional debate
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Originally Posted by
Tellos Athenaios
Perhaps, Groningen refers to the city and immediate surroundings, not the entire province... given that Brussels is on the list, too.
It has 'Inner London', so I am guessing it is that way.