Scotland Act 1998
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Scotland Act 1998 | |
Parliament of the United Kingdom | |
Long title: | An Act to provide for the establishment of a Scottish Parliament and Administration and other changes in the government of Scotland; to provide for changes in the constitution and functions of certain public authorities; to provide for the variation of the basic rate of income tax in relation to income of Scottish taxpayers in accordance with a resolution of the Scottish Parliament; to amend the law about parliamentary constituencies in Scotland; and for connected purposes. |
Statute book chapter: | 1998 Chapter 46 |
Introduced by: | |
Territorial extent: | Scotland |
Dates | |
Date of Royal Assent: | 19 November 1998 |
Commencement: | Various dates from 19 November 1998 to 1 April 2000.[1][2] |
Other legislation | |
Amendments: | Scottish Parliament (Constituencies) Act 2004 |
Related legislation: | |
Status: Current legislation | |
The Scotland Act 1998 (1998 c. 46) is an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom. It is the Act which established the devolved Scottish Parliament.
The Act was introduced by the Labour government in 1998 after the Scotland referendum, 1997 showed that Scotland was in favour of both of the set questions, firstly for the creation of a parliament for Scotland and secondly, that this parliament should have tax varying powers. The Act creates the Scottish Parliament, sets out how Members of the Scottish Parliament are to be elected, makes some provision about the internal operation of the Parliament (although many issues are left for the Parliament itself to regulate) and sets out the process for the Parliament to consider and pass Bills which become Acts of the Scottish Parliament once they receive Royal Assent. The Act specifically asserts the continued power of the UK Parliament to legislate in respect of Scotland;[3] thereby upholding the concept of Westminster's absolute Parliamentary sovereignty.
The Act also provides for the creation of a 'Scottish Executive' though one of the early actions of the SNP administration that won power in the 2007 elections was to rebrand the Scottish Executive as the Scottish Government. The Scottish Government consists of a First Minister and other Ministers appointed by the Queen with the approval of the Parliament, including the Lord Advocate and the Solicitor General for Scotland.
The Act sets out the legislative competence of the Scottish Parliament. Rather than listing the matters over which the Scottish Parliament does control (devolved powers), it specifies the matters over which it does not (reserved powers).[4] It further designates a list of statutes which are not amenable to amendment or repeal by the Parliament[5] which includes the Human Rights Act 1998 and the Scotland Act itself. Even when acting within its legislative competence, the Act further constrains the powers of the Parliament by inhibiting it from acting in a manner incompatible with the European Convention on Human Rights or European Community law.[6] The same constraints apply to acts of the Scottish Executive.[7]
The Act also sets up mechanisms to resolve disputes over questions about legislative competence of the Parliament and powers of the Executive. The ultimate appeal in such matters lies to the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council. It also allows the powers of the Scottish Parliament and the Scottish Executive to be adjusted over time by agreement between both Parliaments by means of an Order in Council.
The Act was passed on November 17, 1998, and received royal assent two days later on November 19. The first elections were held in May 1999 and the Scottish Parliament and Executive assumed their full powers on 1 July 1999.
The Act was amended by the Scottish Parliament (Constituencies) Act 2004 to end the link between the number of MPs at Westminster and the number of constituency MSPs.
[edit] Footnotes
- ^ Section 130.
- ^ Scotland Act 1998 (Commencement) Order 1998
- ^ Section 28(7).
- ^ Schedule 5.
- ^ Schedule 4
- ^ Section 29(2)(d).
- ^ Section 57(2).
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Official text of the statute as amended and in force today within the United Kingdom, from the UK Statute Law Database
- Text of the Act (Office of Public Sector Information site)
- Associated delegated legislation (Office of Public Sector Information site)
- Scottish Parliament site
- Scottish Government site