ddt
Mafia Penguin
How could they veto legislation with only 50-odd seats?Won't there be a difference this time, with the Scot Nats being able to veto England-only legislation? If I recall, the nationalist parties last enjoyed influence in the days of the Lib-Lab pact in the 70s but they were very small then and I can't recollect any problems. This will be different because the SNP will be able to claim to 'speak for Scotland' in the UK context, which will be a first.
Look at the small print. There were only 635 seats, so Labour's 319 were in itself a (very small) majority. They had a minority in the earlier February election, with only 301 seats, but there, neither the Liberal's 14 nor the SNP's 7 each alone would help. There was a reason Wilson called for another election.I am prompted to look up the result of the October 1974 election. The SNP held the balance of power then, too (Labour 319 + SNP 11 = 330) but, unfortunately, so did several other parties (Lib 13 alone or Plaid Cymru and other assortments acting together).
In that scenario Labour would still be the biggest party in rest-UK (= UK minus Scotland), but not have the majority. Thus far, no Labour, nor Tory government ever had a majority in the whole of UK but not outside Scotland. So in that sense, there's nothing new.This time, we could have something like this (say):
Lab 290
SNP 50
Con 250
Lib 40
Others 20
And this would be quite new.
