Clause 1

Legislation (Territorial Extent) Bill – in a Public Bill Committee at 9:30 am on 27 April 2011.

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Question (30 March) again proposed, That the clause stand part of the Bill.

Photo of Harriett Baldwin Harriett Baldwin Conservative, West Worcestershire

May I start by seeking your advice, Mr Gale? As you will recall, before the recess, the Committee agreed a sittings order under which we would sit for at least another Wednesday, because we realised that this was a fairly controversial Bill and no amendments had been tabled for that sitting. We were a little surprised about that, because the hon. Member for Rhondda, who speaks for the Opposition, had said on the Floor of the House that he wanted to put forward a range of amendments, but he had not tabled any for the first sitting. During the recess, he tabled a full set of amendments that broaden and deepen the direction of the Bill. Sadly, however, the hon. Gentleman—perhaps while tabling the amendments, I do not know—broke his leg, and he is in hospital in his constituency this morning. I seek your advice, Mr Gale, as to whether it is appropriate to adjourn and sit again next Wednesday, or to continue with the business at hand.

Photo of Roger Gale Roger Gale Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (Substitute Member)

I thank the hon. Lady. [ Interruption. ] Before we go any further, I advise the hon. Member for Stoke-on-Trent Central that he is not allowed hot drinks in the Committee Room. Will he take it straight outside again?

I had, of course, been advised that the hon. Member for Rhondda had suffered an injury and is unable to be with us this morning. I am sure that the first thing that the Committee would like to do is to send him good wishes for his recovery. That said, the business of the Committee cannot depend on the health and well-being of one Member. The hon. Gentleman had the opportunity, if he chose to do so, to seek a deputy from within the membership of the Committee, and it might well be that Members on either side wish to move the amendments in his name on the amendment paper. My advice to the  hon. Member for West Worcestershire and the Committee is that the proceedings should continue. We shall therefore debate clause 1 stand part.

Photo of Harriett Baldwin Harriett Baldwin Conservative, West Worcestershire

Thank you for that ruling, Mr Gale. I certainly want to associate myself with your sincere wishes that the hon. Member for Rhondda should make a speedy recovery from his broken leg.

The clause goes to the heart of what the Bill is trying to achieve. Essentially, it will create a duty on the Secretary of State. The term Secretary of State is chosen carefully, because this Bill is intended to influence Government legislation. When publishing draft legislation, the Secretary of State will have a duty to ensure that the legal and financial effect of that legislation on each part of the United Kingdom is separately and clearly identified.

The clause is also worded carefully to refer to draft legislation because, if it were to go any further than that, it might encroach on the exclusive cognizance of Parliament in respect of legislation. It is saying to the Secretary of State that, when Government legislation is prepared, we want spelt out at draft legislation stage its impact, both legal and financial on each part of the United Kingdom—an effect that we want clearly identified separately. The purpose of the Bill is to ensure that, when legislation is passing through both Houses, everyone examining it will understand both its legal and financial effects throughout the United Kingdom.

Photo of Michael Connarty Michael Connarty Labour, Linlithgow and East Falkirk

I am actually pleased to be back here today. I have no other commitments until 10.30 this morning and can think of no better way to spend the time until then other than opposing the motion that the clause stand part of the Bill. In fact, I oppose the whole crazy Bill. My predecessor in part of my constituency until he retired—Sir Thomas Dalyell of the Binns, known as Tam Dalyell—flagged up the West Lothian question. The reason behind such action was the fact that Tam Dalyell’s school was Eton and, believe it or not, he was head of the Oxford University Conservative Association. It was only when he saw what the policies of successive Conservative Governments had done to his West Lothian homeland when he returned there from Oxford that he realised that he had to switch sides and stand up for people who were oppressed by those Governments who did not care for the miners and others.

Tam Dalyell found out that people who went to Oxford, and others from the shires—who seem to be well represented here today, especially by the hon. Member for West Worcestershire, the presenter of the Bill—were fixated on the machinations of this place rather than the worries of their constituents. I respect Tam’s view. He realised that, under devolution, some backwoodsmen and women would want to ask why parts of the United Kingdom with a devolved Parliament should allow their hon. Members to come here and vote on matters relating to other parts of the UK without devolution. He was right. We now have an example of what happens when we stir up the pot of that little constitutional oddity, the House of Commons.

As I said, I respect Tam’s view because he was opposed to devolution. That is why he thought that the West Lothian question would bring out such interminable arguments and the good thing is that, since devolution  has come about, there have not been lots of Bills such as the one that we are discussing now nor has there been much controversy. As I confirmed in a question to the Deputy Prime Minister, both parties in the present Government oppose the Bill. They do not see it as relevant. They are tackling a task in hand. I do not agree that they are tackling it with some vigour, but it is important to those who are represented by members of the Committee. Tam was right. People would pick at the problem like a sore. Instead of doing what they should be doing, which is looking for solutions to problems in their constituencies by applying their own vigour and looking to the mechanisms of the Government and their own endeavours with the private, public and third sector to solve such problems, they would blame someone else, which is what the Bill is all about.

Under clause 1, the idea that the Secretary of State, when publishing draft legislation, would ensure that its legal and financial effect on each part of the United Kingdom is separately and clearly identified is complete madness. Let us consider a health Bill, for example. We would have to work out exactly how many people from parts of the UK, other than England, would come to England for operations because the cost of those operations would then have to be charged back to the responsible authority in that part of the country. Let us consider a higher education Bill. What if the funding authority in Scotland that pays the bills for all the students from Scotland were charged £9,000 for every student who came to England? We would have to calculate how many students would come from Scotland and, therefore, the total of their student fees of £6,000 or £9,000, so that it could be charged back to the funding authority in Scotland. That is how ridiculous the clause is.

If what is meant is some sweeping statement, in some small clause as, for example, we usually get in a Bill about the financial or human rights effects—just a statement, with absolutely no facts—then the clause is worthless. If it genuinely means that the Secretary of State, when proposing any legislation, should have to calculate the amount that would fall to every jurisdiction, the task would be an interminable and difficult one. We would have to set up a whole department in the Treasury just to do that. Does the hon. Lady really mean that?

Photo of Harriett Baldwin Harriett Baldwin Conservative, West Worcestershire

I thank the hon. Gentleman for being here today and for giving us such an interesting perspective on the Bill. As a whole, the Bill allows for the possibility that legislation might be described as applying to the whole of the United Kingdom. It might not be possible to separate out in any specific piece of legislation what the effect on particular parts of the United Kingdom might be. However, in the case of legislation that could apply to one particular part of the United Kingdom, the Bill might encourage parliamentary drafters to draft the proposed legislation in such a way that it would be easier to make such a statement.

Photo of Michael Connarty Michael Connarty Labour, Linlithgow and East Falkirk

The great difficulty with that is that the hon. Lady is arguing against her own Bill. The point is to

“ensure that the legal and financial effect of that legislation on each part of the United Kingdom is separately and clearly identified”— not vaguely and possibly identified. The hon. Lady’s statement contradicts the clause. If we have to have a Bill, for goodness’ sake let us get it right—I am sure  there was some advice on the drafting. If the promoter does not mean it, do not put it on paper. Do not pretend that one thing is meant by putting something else on paper that is not meant.

The whole idea seems to be that there might be one or two Acts of Parliament that could be described as entirely relevant to, for example, local government in England and Wales—or in England, since Wales is devolved. Would it not be better to have a Bill that states that about local government legislation, rather than having a Bill that pretends to be something that it cannot be?

Few Bills going through this place do not have some effect on someone in other parts of the United Kingdom. We might decide that we will do something with the armed forces, as we have seen in Scotland recently, with the closure of one RAF base already and Lossiemouth and Leuchars still under threat, and that will affect people in the armed forces. It will affect my local regiment, which is actually based in Kent at the moment—honourable people that they are—and they are part of the UK. That is just the beginning. We would have to define the effect in every such Bill. In that example, therefore, we would have to state the effect on Lossiemouth or on Fife of the closure of Lossiemouth and Leuchars.

That is what the Bill states—that every single Bill would have to be drafted so that it “separately and clearly identified” all the financial effects of the proposed legislation. That is what the clause says. If it does not mean that an armed forces Bill should be treated in that way, then why is it an overarching clause applying to all draft legislation? For goodness’ sake, if it really means only local government and planning in England, the hon. Lady should promote a private Member’s Bill on that issue, not this Bill.

Photo of James Gray James Gray Conservative, North Wiltshire

I am most grateful to the hon. Gentleman for giving way. He is, however, making a slightly obscure point in the sense that the closure of Lossiemouth or Leuchars would not of course be subject to an Act of Parliament and, therefore, there would be no requirement for the Speaker or anyone else—such as the Secretary of State—to make any reference to it. Furthermore, since defence is not a devolved matter, it would not come under the terms of the Bill anyhow. Surely we are only talking about devolved matters, in which the Secretary of State would have an interest in stating whether such a matter particularly affected Scotland, Wales or England. However, defence affects the whole of the United Kingdom and would therefore not really be subject to the Bill, and in any case there is very little legislation on it.

Photo of Michael Connarty Michael Connarty Labour, Linlithgow and East Falkirk

I respect the hon. Gentleman’s interest. He runs the all-party group on the armed forces and we served together on the armed forces parliamentary scheme, but I do not think that he is right. I believe that there are Acts of Parliament relating to the actions of the Ministry of Defence. It is not right to say that Acts of Parliament that have anything to do with the armed forces, or with procurement, for example, are never passed.

If the hon. Gentleman tells me that there are no Acts of Parliament that legislate for what happens in the Ministry of Defence, he has to prove it to me. I am afraid I do not take that as read, because I cannot  understand how anyone can say that we spend so much money on defence without ever having to pass an Act of Parliament.

Photo of James Gray James Gray Conservative, North Wiltshire 9:45, 27 April 2011

Bizarrely, the hon. Gentleman is misquoting me, so it is important that I set the record right. I did not say that there was no legislation attached to defence. Of course there is. The Armed Forces Act is passed every five years, and there is one currently before the House at the moment. That is true, but most defence decisions are not under legislation. No law is passed in Parliament, for example, to close an air base or deploy soldiers overseas. Most defence things happen under of the royal prerogative as decided by Ministers. They are not carried out under legislation in this place, although the hon. Gentleman is quite right to say that from time to time there is indeed legislation, such as the Armed Forces Act. I never said there was none but there is very little. Where there is legislation, it affects the whole of the UK and therefore would not be subject to the Bill.

Photo of Michael Connarty Michael Connarty Labour, Linlithgow and East Falkirk

They say it is grand when one sinner repents. The hon. Gentleman has just agreed that the Armed Forces Act, which we consider every five years, would have to be a completely different Act if the Bill were enacted. It would have to be analysed in a completely different way. The Bill says that the Secretary of State would publish draft legislation and

“ensure that the legal and financial effect…is separately and clearly identified.”

Suddenly, the Armed Forces Act would become a mammoth task in sub-dividing all the expenditure into different sectors of the UK. If that is not the case, why does clause 1 of the Bill ask that we do that?

I remember when I was the leader of a council in Scotland. I had a degree in economics and was fascinated by accounting systems. We brought in a zero-based planned-programme budgeting system and asked people to allocate the use of all the staff and resources to every single thing that they did, and if they could do that, they would get the money that they demanded to fulfil that. The exercise turned into a gargantuan and difficult task and took up lots of resources. It was very difficult. On the scale of those accounts, it was minuscule. On the scale of the United Kingdom and a service such as the armed forces, it would be unbelievably difficult, but it is a good illustration of what we would have to do every five years.

I know that that is not the Bill’s intention. I know that it is really about starting a process so that people can express their grievances against the Scots and the Welsh for coming here and voting on matters to do with their little shires. I know that that is what it is all about. But the consequences of the Bill and this clause are not well thought through. It is a silly Bill. The clause is badly drafted; it has not been thought through and should be rejected. It worried Tam Dalyell, and he was correct to be worried about it, although not because it was a reality. I always said to Tam that his worry about it was because he had been to Eton where he had seen the performances of the people who run this country and who thought they could continue to run it. He knew that the idea that the Scots, following devolution, should then be allowed to also have a say about things in England and cause problems in this strange place—where he served for 43 years—would worry some people. He understood, probably better than I did, that there are  people who would be obsessed with the issue instead of getting on with the business of trying to run the country, generate jobs and look after the social welfare of their constituents.

So, it is a badly thought-out clause. I have heard nothing said by anyone so far to convince me that the clause is well drafted and would not have massive problems for every single Act of Parliament. I will want to know exactly what rights people have. As I have said before, my brother moved to London when he was 16 to work in the civil service. He continued in the civil service, eventually married and lived in Gosport. In Gosport, he had to rely on the health service and the hospital in Portsmouth let him down. It misdiagnosed what was wrong with him. He eventually had a leg amputated and died of a blood clot that was not properly treated by that hospital. My concerns for the people who use the health service in Gosport, Portsmouth or anywhere else are just as important as the concerns of the Members sitting here today supporting the Bill. The expenditure cannot be allocated between areas without substantial inputs.

I had an operation in Glasgow called a radioablation, where one of the two natural pacemakers in my heart was taken out, because they can misfire once people are over 50. People come from over all the UK to Professor Cobbe’s laboratory, as he calls it—he does not even call it an operating theatre—to undergo that operation. I have constituents who have had to come to London for major operations that they could not get in Scotland. People from all over the UK go to Newcastle for heart operations. How would that be allocated to the Scottish budget, to the Welsh budget or the Northern Ireland budget without making a joke of it? Are the supporters of the Bill saying that they want that to go on? This Bill would have a broad sweep of a brush across most Acts of Parliament, but what its supporters really want is something that says that the Scots, the Welsh and the Northern Irish should get their noses out of planning business in the shires. I hope that we reject this clause. In fact, I hope that we throw the Bill out. The Government are right not to support it.

Photo of James Gray James Gray Conservative, North Wiltshire

It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Gale. It is also a great pleasure to follow someone whom I would describe as a close and old friend, as he and I spent two weeks in a tent in Kenya together, among other things. What I do not know about the hon. Member for Linlithgow and East Falkirk is not worth writing down.

I would like to start my contribution by correcting the implication of the hon. Gentleman’s earlier remarks, namely that those of us who support the Bill are somehow or other Eton and Oxford, south of England, county folk desperately trying to do down the Scots. He knows that I attended Hillhead primary school in Glasgow, the High School of Glasgow and the University of Glasgow, and that I am the son of the Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland. To this day, my mother lives but a few miles from the hon. Gentleman’s constituency. I did not leave the borders of Scotland until I was 21, and am therefore proud to describe myself as a thoroughgoing, 100% Scot, but none the less a huge supporter of my hon. Friend’s Bill.

Incidentally, it is perhaps worth mentioning in passing that for a brief time—a record short time—I was appointed by the then leader of the Conservative party to be  shadow Secretary of State for Scotland. Within the first night or two of my appointment I underwent a Paxman interview on “Newsnight”, when he questioned me on some previous remarks I had made on Scottish devolution. I stood by what I had said previously. Lord Howard, the then leader of the party, found it necessary, quite correctly, to dismiss me from my job. Being shadow Secretary of State for six days held the record for shortest ever political appointment. I therefore have a long and distinguished track record in standing up for these particular issues as a Scot representing an English seat.

I am particularly pleased to follow the hon. Member for Linlithgow and East Falkirk, not least because the arguments that he advanced in seeking to undermine clause 1 were so extremely weak as to be hardly worthy of discussion. The notion that my hon. Friend’s Bill falls on detail—it was detail that the hon. Gentleman was discussing—is laughable. In my 15 years in this place, this is the first opportunity I have had to participate in a substantive discussion of the extremely important constitutional issue of the West Lothian question and how it affects the people of England as well as the people of Scotland. Saying that, merely because Tam Dalyell had been at Eton, it was a bad Bill, it was all awful and we all hate the Scots, is absurd.

Incidentally, the hon. Gentleman gave two bizarre examples of why the clause is absurd. The first was in regard to the armed forces, ignoring the fact that there is remarkably little armed forces legislation, as we discussed a moment ago. The second example was particularly bizarre. I am deeply sorry to hear of the unfortunate experience of his brother in the hospital in Gosport. It is extremely regrettable, but it is not an argument for saying that Scottish MPs should have a great deal of say over the national health service in England. After all, my mother has been suffering in Stirling royal infirmary, a few miles from the hon. Gentleman’s constituency. She went on to recuperate in the hospital in Falkirk, which is in his constituency. She is currently in the hands of the national health service in Scotland. That is a matter over which I, as an English MP, have no say. That matter is entirely decided by the Parliament in Edinburgh. The funding for the national health service in Scotland is accounted for entirely separately from that in England. If the system can work that way round, why should it not work the other way round?

Photo of Michael Connarty Michael Connarty Labour, Linlithgow and East Falkirk

Let me correct the hon. Gentleman’s first misapprehension. Tam Dalyell did not say that this kind of Bill would be bad or good. He had long experience in the House and knew the obsessions of people in here. I think he also drew on his experiences with people he had been at school or university with. As chairman of the Conservative Association at university, he knew that people with a certain obsession would pick away at the sore of grievance that Scotland had devolution and that therefore Scots should somehow be excluded. He did not argue for a measure in the form of the Bill that we are considering. Look at the Bill—I was not arguing what the hon. Gentleman claimed, although my brother’s experience brought home to me in a salutary sense that the English health system is important.

My point was about people who have to travel. I shall give another example from my family. My niece’s daughter was born with a damaged liver, which had to be replaced.  The operation was carried out here in London, and she was on life support for six weeks before she got that transplant.

Photo of Roger Gale Roger Gale Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (Substitute Member)

Order. The hon. Gentleman knows the difference between a speech and an intervention. This is supposed to be an intervention; make it brief, please.

Photo of Michael Connarty Michael Connarty Labour, Linlithgow and East Falkirk

That treatment would be charged back to the Scottish budget, because it would be paid for by her local health board. The money would come out of that given to the devolved Scottish Parliament. That is my point. That charge would have to be calculated in the application of a health Bill to English hospitals that carry out operations on people from other jurisdictions.

Photo of James Gray James Gray Conservative, North Wiltshire

The hon. Gentleman has sought once again to focus on absurd details in an attempt to undermine an extremely important Bill. The great Tam Dalyell’s ancestor, General Dalyell of the Binns, was responsible for hanging, drawing and quartering my ancestor, John Parker, at the battle of Rullion Green in 1666. I was prepared to overlook that little historical aberration in support of what he stood for.

The hon. Gentleman is right in saying that Tam Dalyell correctly viewed the matter as a major constitutional worry and, therefore, something that would indeed be picked away at until such time as it was answered. We are discussing only clause 1, which takes one step towards solving the problem that Tam Dalyell correctly highlighted. I am not certain why Tam Dalyell’s views on such matters should necessarily undermine the Bill.

The hon. Gentleman makes an extremely good point against devolution regarding the health service. From memory, he and I tend to agree on devolution, unless I am much mistaken. I know that he his sound on first past the post and I suspect that his views on devolution are sound, too. He makes a good point that if a Scots person is in a hospital in England, their MP in Scotland has an interest. One of my constituents might break a leg in Inverness. I would have an interest in ensuring that the Inverness hospital is a good one, but I cannot do so, because I have no say over that whatever; that is entirely a matter for the Scottish Parliament in Holyrood. That is the nature of the West Lothian question, and we are trying to address it here.

The hon. Gentleman went on to say that he thought that some details of clause 1 were drafted in such a way as to make it almost impossible to implement, and that appallingly complex financial calculations would have to be made for every piece of minor—possibly even secondary—legislation in this place. He may be right. I suspect that my hon. Friend the Member for West Worcestershire might take the view that the precise drafting of clause 1 could be improved, but the purpose behind it is clear, which I shall discuss shortly. Perhaps words could be improved to prevent the kind of administrative and bureaucratic nightmare that the hon. Gentleman has described. However, for that to be the main thrust of his argument to undermine the clause seems wrong.

The purpose behind the clause is perfectly plain and we should support it. Every Bill in this place currently affects different parts of the United Kingdom in different ways. A health Bill affects England; it does not affect  Scotland at all. However, the hon. Member for Linlithgow and East Falkirk can come and vote on that Bill in England. It is the same with education, transport, and all the other devolved matters.

Photo of Simon Hart Simon Hart Conservative, Carmarthen West and South Pembrokeshire

I want to put it on record that, following the referendum on further powers to the Welsh Assembly, the same rules apply now to Wales.

Photo of James Gray James Gray Conservative, North Wiltshire 10:00, 27 April 2011

My hon. Friend is absolutely right. I was using Scotland as an example, but many of the same arguments apply to Wales and Northern Ireland.

The clause provides that, every time the House has to consider proposed legislation, we must assess the effect on different parts of the United Kingdom.

We can do that quite easily. For example, the ruling on a national health service Bill passed in Westminster would be that it has no effect on Scotland or on Wales. With other Bills, assessing the effect might be much more difficult. Others might state that they equally affect all the nations and regions of the United Kingdom—that is quite possible. Devolution Bills, presumably, might only affect Scotland—100%. Leaving aside the detail, including such a statement would not be that difficult.

The proposal seems to be an extremely important first step towards addressing the West Lothian question. We know that something is wrong. We know that 70-odd Scottish MPs coming down to Westminster and voting on English matters is wrong. Why should the people of North Wiltshire have their futures voted on by Scottish MPs when I can have no say whatever on similar matters north of the border? Why should that be the case? That is the West Lothian question that Tam Dalyell enunciated so clearly. Only by dividing up legislation and assessing how it affects constituencies in different parts of the United Kingdom can we take a step towards addressing the problem.

I strongly support my hon. Friend’s Bill and therefore clause 1, which is at its heart. Some aspects or details might need to be improved, but that can be done in another place or in later stages of consideration. However, for the hon. Member for Linlithgow and East Falkirk to attack the Bill and the clause on the slightly dubious ground that Tam Dalyell thought that the question was a sore that would run and run, or because his family had unfortunate experiences in English hospitals, belittles the argument. The argument is vital, and should not be tackled in that way.

Photo of Michael Connarty Michael Connarty Labour, Linlithgow and East Falkirk

The hon. Gentleman keeps rewriting history and attributing to Tam Dalyell things he did not say.

Focusing on the hon. Gentleman’s point about an NHS Bill, he seems to have completely ignored the fact that such services are available to everyone in the UK, but that they are charged back to the respective health budgets in the various places. Presumably, therefore, some general clause would have to state that a proposal could have some effect, which would mean that everyone could pitch in and have the same right to vote throughout the UK, regardless of the Bill being about the NHS in England, or the matter would have to be ignored.

The hon. Gentleman is not doing justice to his arguments in picking the NHS.

Photo of James Gray James Gray Conservative, North Wiltshire

The hon. Gentleman is undermining his arguments by focusing on minutiae rather than on the broad thrust, which is that Bills passed in this place affect different parts of the United Kingdom in different ways. It is right that we should acknowledge that, and that we should seek to find a solution, and my hon. Friend’s Bill goes some way towards doing that.

Finally, another part of the hon. Gentleman’s argument seems to undermine his stance. He indicated that such matters were extremely unimportant. I think he said that a few people in this building are fixated on the issue, that we ought rather to be down in our constituencies doing important things for our constituents and that such silly matters should to be dismissed because they are unimportant. What silly people we are to be sitting here discussing what he kept calling a silly Bill.

I think the hon. Gentleman is absolutely, 100% wrong. The constitution of the United Kingdom is our most precious jewel, and we tamper with it at our peril. It was tampered with significantly when the devolution settlement was introduced, and it is very important that we should get things right. The same applies of course to the alternative vote, on which there is a referendum a week on Thursday, and to the House of Lords. Tampering with the constitution in an unthought-through way is simply wrong, and to dismiss discussions about our constitution as insignificant or silly is fundamentally wrong.

The Bill is important, and the clause is important in it. I strongly support it.

Photo of Iain Stewart Iain Stewart Conservative, Milton Keynes South

It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Gale. I had not intended to speak to the clause, but I must respond to some of the comments and assertions made by the hon. Member for Linlithgow and East Falkirk.

At the outset, I reassure the Committee that, as far as I am aware, none of my ancestors were slain by the ancestors of another hon. Member. However, like my hon. Friend the Member for North Wiltshire, I have to pick up on one point made by the hon. Gentleman. He claims that we are supporting the Bill because of some debating nicety—that it is some wheeze for Members from the shires to pass the time—but it is a real issue that many of our constituents raise. As someone who passionately believes in the Union and its continuation, it is an issue that we had to address.

I am not a knight of the shire; I grew up in Hamilton in the central belt of Scotland during the 1980s. I well remember the political debate at the time, when policies introduced by Conservative Governments were vehemently opposed by the hon. Member for Linlithgow and East Falkirk and his colleagues in Scotland. They were not simply opposed because of the details of the policies, as was their right, but because the policies were thought to be somehow anti-Scottish. It was argued that because the Conservatives did not command a majority of the seats in Scotland, they had no authority to legislate on matters in Scotland. That argument was put vehemently throughout the 1980s and 1990s, and that helped to pave the way for devolution.

But now the situation has turned. Potentially we face a situation in which the Conservatives could command a majority in England but would not form the Government,  and the will of Scotland could effectively override the will of England. I am not saying that that issue is topmost in people’s minds at the moment, but it does raise its head. People do write and say, “Why is this happening?” It will gradually gnaw away at the bonds that hold the Union together if we do not address the issue.

Photo of Michael Connarty Michael Connarty Labour, Linlithgow and East Falkirk

I do not recall it that way, and I was involved in that debate as a member of the Scottish Constitutional Convention. I have to ask the hon. Gentleman where it stops. London has a separate ability to legislate for the control of its services. It has better policing than most of the counties of England and most of the parts of Scotland. When do we stop excluding people in this process? At the moment, the clause refers to parts of the United Kingdom. Do we have to state how it affects London as opposed to other parts of England?

Photo of Iain Stewart Iain Stewart Conservative, Milton Keynes South

I do not think that that argument does the hon. Gentleman any credit. Four nations make up the United Kingdom. It is perfectly clear that that is what we are talking about, not about further devolution. I must challenge him. Throughout the 1980s, the constant cry from the Labour party in Scotland—and other parties—was that the Conservative Government measures were anti-Scottish, and there was no democratic legitimacy for what they were doing. That was one of the reasons why we ended up with devolution. I am not going to revisit whether that was right or wrong, but devolution has happened. Now the situation is reversed and the people of England—I say this as a Scot who now represents an English constituency—have a perfectly legitimate claim to say that if a measure affects only England, only English Members should determine that.

Photo of Michael Connarty Michael Connarty Labour, Linlithgow and East Falkirk

Could the hon. Gentleman define one of the issues that affect only England on the basis of what I said about everyone being able to use services across borders?

Photo of Iain Stewart Iain Stewart Conservative, Milton Keynes South

My hon. Friend gives a perfect example. There are issues that are solely territorially distinct. Look through the Scotland Bill at all the issues that are specifically reserved and those that are devolved. There are issues that affect only parts of the United Kingdom. But the important point is that clause 1 does not specify the mechanism by which the English voice should be heard. It is merely the first step to defining whether a Bill applies to the whole United Kingdom or to different parts of it, and the financial effects on it. I warmly welcome the introduction of the Bill by my hon. Friend the Member for West Worcestershire, which may be amended at a later stage. The purpose of Committee and Report stages is to make sure that the detail of a Bill is correct, but the principle behind clause 1 is absolutely sound. Anyone who claims to be a supporter of the Union should back the Bill.

Photo of Mark Harper Mark Harper The Parliamentary Secretary, Cabinet Office

I will not dwell on the West Lothian question in general for long, given that we are discussing clause 1 of the Bill. I am sure you, Mr Gale, would rule me out of order if I did. However, it is worth saying at the  beginning that, on that issue, the hon. Member for Linlithgow and East Falkirk is absolutely wrong. It is a real issue, and my hon. Friend the Member for Milton Keynes South put his finger on it. It is not the case now, but as I said on Second Reading, if a Government who had a majority in the United Kingdom, but who did not have a majority in England, started implementing policies in England using that majority from elsewhere, this would become a very live issue, very quickly.

Photo of James Gray James Gray Conservative, North Wiltshire

As an example of precisely what he is describing, what would happen if, in next week’s referendum, the people of England voted no, but overall the answer in the United Kingdom was yes, because of Scottish votes?

Photo of Mark Harper Mark Harper The Parliamentary Secretary, Cabinet Office

I was happy to answer my hon. Friend, but there has been a clear ruling from the Chair.

This is an important issue and it is better if we tackle it now, when it is not live and at the top of the political agenda, rather than waiting until we are in that scenario and are then plunged into the debate. It is important to solve the West Lothian question, which is exactly why the Government, made up of the two coalition parties, who come from different perspectives on this issue, have said that we will set up a commission to look at it and bring forward a solution. We will announce the details of that commission this year. It will work on this subject to bring forward some proposals.

Photo of Michael Connarty Michael Connarty Labour, Linlithgow and East Falkirk

Does the Minister recognise that the Government are opposed to the Bill? The point I was making was against the Bill and clause 1, rather than against the principle that people should look at how the constitution of the UK develops in the future.

Photo of Mark Harper Mark Harper The Parliamentary Secretary, Cabinet Office

I accept that. The hon. Gentleman did not let me get past my opening remarks. I thought it was worth mentioning the commission. He is right; the Government, on Second Reading, did not support the Bill and we still do not support the Bill. I did not, however, want to describe it in the same intemperate way that the hon. Gentleman has. He belittled the issue. The Bill raises an important issue about the West Lothian question, which is raised on the doorsteps by many electors in England. Indeed, many Scots MPs think that it is relevant. Members of the Scottish National party who sit here do not vote on things that do not affect Scotland or are devolved to Scotland, because they recognise that this is an issue and that those are things they should not be voting on. It is something that the Government take seriously and we will address it when we announce the details of the commission. That is worth saying.

Having said that, I do share some views with the hon. Member for Linlithgow and East Falkirk. We cannot support the Bill. I said on Second Reading that the main problem was that the Bill would put extra burdens on the Government and on Ministers, without a commensurate increase in clarity and information for our constituents. As my hon. Friend the Member for  West Worcestershire has explained, clause 1 states that the Secretary of State, when publishing draft legislation—this applies to both draft primary and secondary legislation—has to

“ensure that both the legal and financial effect of that legislation on each of the United Kingdom is separately and clearly identified.”

The hon. Member for Linlithgow and East Falkirk suggested that the same problem applied to sub-dividing England, but clause 2, which is about interpretation, sets out that for the purposes of the Bill, parts of the United Kingdom means England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. It does discuss sub-dividing England. The hon. Gentleman did raise the issue of London and matters that are under the control of the London assembly and the Mayor. The definition in clause 2 of “separately and clearly identified” means

“with regard to legal effect, that there is a statement in the draft legislation setting out the legal effect on each part of the United Kingdom of each of the clauses and schedules of the bill”.

The concern that the Government have is that it is not particularly clear what “legal effect” or “financial effect” mean. Is “legal effect” simply a requirement to say to which part of the United Kingdom the law extends or, where the legislation extends to England and Wales—which are, of course, one legal jurisdiction—in which one it applies if it only applies in one of them? If that is what it means, it does not add a great deal to the information contained in the extent clause of a Bill or statutory instrument, or in the detailed notes that go with them to explain their territorial extent. If that is not what it means, I am not clear what it does mean. Given that it is not particularly clear, the duty may be very wide ranging, which I think was the point raised by the hon. Gentleman, and it may impose significant burdens on a Secretary of State and be unnecessarily burdensome when they were introducing draft primary and secondary legislation.

Photo of Harriett Baldwin Harriett Baldwin Conservative, West Worcestershire 10:15, 27 April 2011

I am grateful to the Minister for acknowledging the intentions behind the Bill. Would he be able to amend the wording in any way to bring it closer to what the Government see as acceptable?

Photo of Mark Harper Mark Harper The Parliamentary Secretary, Cabinet Office

The problem is that if the wording is clear, or it can be made clear, and it refers simply to the territorial extent of legislation, that information would already be included in the extent clause of the Bill or statutory instrument, in which case the provisions add nothing to the information available to Members of Parliament and our constituents and they are unnecessary. The Government certainly do not want to impose unnecessary legislation that brings no benefit.

Photo of Harriett Baldwin Harriett Baldwin Conservative, West Worcestershire

Would the Minister acknowledge that such an extent clause—obviously, there is one in the Bill, in clause 5(3)—is included only because of civil service guidance? The Bill would strengthen that arrangement and put it on a statutory footing.

Photo of Mark Harper Mark Harper The Parliamentary Secretary, Cabinet Office

The point is that Bills already have extent clauses in them. They might be there only as a result of guidance, but that guidance works perfectly well. If  Ministers introduced legislation that did not adequately set these things out, we would be pulled up by Members on both sides if we brought it before the House; in fact, we probably would not even get past our internal processes.

Photo of Michael Connarty Michael Connarty Labour, Linlithgow and East Falkirk

Would the Minister also like to put it on record that the House does in fact debate and vote on Bills that cover Scotland? Sewel motions extend Bills, as was the old practice. If something is not a matter of controversy, it is usually passed by this House, even though it will affect Scotland.

Photo of Mark Harper Mark Harper The Parliamentary Secretary, Cabinet Office

The hon. Gentleman is correct. One thing that came up in our earlier discussion was that we need to be clear about the language we use. We have to be careful when we talk about Bills that apply to different parts of the United Kingdom and about Bills that deal with devolved matters, and those are not necessarily the same thing. In other words, a Bill might apply only to England, but might cover an issue that is not devolved. Similarly, when colleagues talk about the West Lothian question, they are really talking about issues that are devolved to the Scottish Parliament, the Welsh Assembly and the Northern Ireland Assembly, not just things that apply to them. It is already the case that legislation could apply across the United Kingdom, in the sense that a Bill’s extent covers the whole United Kingdom, but it might apply only in certain parts of the country, and that is an important distinction.

The second thing that clause 1 talks about is the duty in relation to the Bill’s financial effect, which was one of the issues that the hon. Member for Linlithgow and East Falkirk raised when he talked about defence matters. Under the present arrangements, all new UK-wide legislation must already specify its financial impact, and it must be drafted within Departments’ existing spending plans. If a piece of legislation is brought forward, it cannot have any Barnett consequentials, because it must be within existing plans that have been agreed by the Treasury in financial legislation.

Again, the Government are not clear what “financial effect” means. If it meant what the hon. Gentleman suggested, it would indeed be incredibly complicated to set out. However, I am not sure that it does, and that is part of the problem with the Bill. My hon. Friend the Member for West Worcestershire has done the House a service by giving us the opportunity both on Second Reading and in Committee to debate such an important matter and to tease out some issues.

Photo of James Gray James Gray Conservative, North Wiltshire

I sense that the Minister is beginning to wind up. Does he agree that, if the Government support the principle behind the Bill but are worried about some of its details and consequences, it should be incumbent on them to table amendments to the Bill in Committee? The fact that no such amendments have been tabled to the Bill show that the Government are either not content with the principle behind it or have been slack in not tabling amendments.

Photo of Mark Harper Mark Harper The Parliamentary Secretary, Cabinet Office

If the hon. Gentleman remembers, we did not support the Bill on Second Reading. We did not support its principles, but I acknowledged again in the debate that the hon. Member for West Worcestershire had done the House a service by bringing forward a Bill  that enabled us to debate the West Lothian question. Although the Bill is related to the West Lothian question, the particular approach adopted by the hon. Lady is not one that we thought was particularly helpful. We therefore did not support the Bill on Second Reading nor did we support its principle

Photo of Mark Harper Mark Harper The Parliamentary Secretary, Cabinet Office

The hon. Gentleman is correct. The Government, whom I speak for, did not support the Bill. The House did support it on Second Reading, which is why we are in Committee debating it. Although I have great sympathy for the issue raised by the hon. Lady and acknowledge that she has done the House a service by enabling us to debate it, I am explaining why the Government do not consider the Bill to be helpful. I urge hon. Members on both sides of the House not to support the Bill, but I ask those who think that the West Lothian question is worth dealing with to support the Government’s proposals when we announce them this year at our commission. Regretfully, I advise colleagues not to support the clause standing part of the Bill.

Photo of Harriett Baldwin Harriett Baldwin Conservative, West Worcestershire

In recommending that the clause stand part of the Bill, I wish to reassure the hon. Member for Linlithgow and East Falkirk about several issues. I feel myself to be an embodiment of the Union. As I said on Second Reading, my grandmother, Flora McLean McLeod Morison, was born in Dunbar to a general practitioner from the Isle of Mull so I have strong family roots in Scotland. I promoted the Bill from the perspective of someone who cares passionately about the Union and who is worried that, through the process of devolution—which I also support and thus differ from the hon. Gentleman’s predecessor—more issues have been devolved and thus more legislative matters are likely to be brought forward in this Parliament that apply to only parts of the United Kingdom. That was the motivation behind my introducing the Bill. About 100 hon. Members can vote on issues that would not apply in their constituencies.

I assure the hon. Member for Linlithgow and East Falkirk that I am proud to represent West Worcestershire, which I regard very much as the heart of England and the heart of the shires. There is no question about that. I was pleased to hear the Minister echo such sentiments. The issue is raised on the doorstep, so to say that we are not listening to our constituents when debating such matters does us a disservice. Both the hon. Gentleman and the Minister asked about the wording of the clause, but I regret that they have been unable to propose alternative wording that would satisfy them.

The clause will put the requirement to spell out the territorial extent of legislation on a statutory footing, as opposed to relying simply on civil service guidance. Doing that will require drafters to think more carefully, when they draft legislation, about ensuring that it can be clearly identified in that way. The importance of that was discussed on Second Reading: it is possible that the House might ask the Speaker to certify that a Bill applied to a particular part of the United Kingdom and, unless it were set out in the measure, that might put the Speaker in an awkward position and politicise his role. Having it on a statutory basis and subject to discussion in the House is extremely important.

Photo of Michael Connarty Michael Connarty Labour, Linlithgow and East Falkirk

I respect the hon. Lady’s motivation, but the points raised by the Minister and me have not been answered. The clause does not provide for general statements about where financial and legal implications will have effect. I hope that the hon. Lady, if she was listening, accepts that people use the NHS in England and that that is charged back to Scotland, and that even the effect of the decision on tuition fees, which are paid by the Scottish Funding Council for every Scottish student going to an English university, will affect the education budget back in the devolved parts of the United Kingdom. Therefore, the detail for which she asks is different from the principle, and the detail is flawed.

Photo of Harriett Baldwin Harriett Baldwin Conservative, West Worcestershire

I do not really want to ask for the indulgence of the Chair and move on to clause 2, which starts to define all the different meanings, but that will go a long way towards allaying the hon. Gentleman’s concern about clarifications.

Photo of Mark Harper Mark Harper The Parliamentary Secretary, Cabinet Office

The problem is that, having looked ahead to it, clause 2 does not explain in any more detail what those terms mean. To go back to what happens with legislation, it is already the case that Bills spell out their territorial extent. I know that the hon. Lady says that that is in the guidance that officials use for drawing up legislation and that Ministers use before introducing a measure, but that seems to work perfectly well. I have not heard any argument about that process being broken. If it is working well and there is no problem, the House should not pass another Bill to do it.

If the hon. Lady can explain where the territorial extent clauses in Bills are broken and do not work, we can look at whether that can be rectified without the need to pass another piece of legislation. If that is not the case, the Bill might make sense, but I have not heard any reason or explanation about why what we do already is not sufficient.

Photo of Harriett Baldwin Harriett Baldwin Conservative, West Worcestershire

The crucial point is that when civil service guidance is followed and civil servants work with the Secretary of State to prepare draft legislation, they often state the territorial extent in the Bill, but they are not required to do so by law. There is simply guidance, which future Secretaries of State might choose to dispense with unless it is put on a statutory footing.

The other reason, which I have just mentioned, is that the Speaker might be put in a politicised position should the description of territorial extent be used in the future, with the House’s agreement, to inform Standing Orders and their application by the Speaker, and should the Government of the day—whichever political party they represented—be the only people who, through their civil servants, had put such an indication in the draft legislation, without its having gone through a statutory process, which is outlined later in the Bill, of effective scrutiny by the House.

Question put, That the clause stand part of the Bill.

The Committee divided: Ayes 5, Noes 3.

Division number 2 Decision Time — Clause 1

Aye: 5 MPs

No: 3 MPs

Aye: A-Z by last name

No: A-Z by last name

Question accordingly agreed to.

Clause 1 ordered to stand part of the Bill.

Photo of Michael Connarty Michael Connarty Labour, Linlithgow and East Falkirk

I apologise for having to leave. I note that the Stewarts who were not murdered by Black Tam Dalyell are supporting the Bill.