commandlinegamer
Philosopher
First posed by Tam Dalyell in 1977, the West Lothian Question as a term was coined by Enoch Powell.
In a nutshell it pointed out that after devolution a Scottish MP (the example given was for the constituency of West Lothian) would be able to vote on matters pertaining to English voters, but not those in his own constituency due to those matters having being devolved to a Scottish parliament. Nowadays, it is commonly used to refer to the inability of English MPs to affect legislation in Scotland to the same degree that Scots MPs can do so to laws which affect England.
No solution has yet been agreed to this. I would suggest, as others have, that an English-only assembly be created (perhaps even replacing one of the current chambers at Westminster), to introduce legislation which dealt with English-only matters, and that there remain a UK-wide parliament to deal with issues common to Britain and Northern Ireland.
Critics of this suggest it will simply add another layer of bureaucracy and I expect that Westminster might not take too kindly to a potential dilution of its influence.
I'm not convinced by the case for breaking up the Union, but do feel devolution has some way to go; resolving this issue might help.
In a nutshell it pointed out that after devolution a Scottish MP (the example given was for the constituency of West Lothian) would be able to vote on matters pertaining to English voters, but not those in his own constituency due to those matters having being devolved to a Scottish parliament. Nowadays, it is commonly used to refer to the inability of English MPs to affect legislation in Scotland to the same degree that Scots MPs can do so to laws which affect England.
No solution has yet been agreed to this. I would suggest, as others have, that an English-only assembly be created (perhaps even replacing one of the current chambers at Westminster), to introduce legislation which dealt with English-only matters, and that there remain a UK-wide parliament to deal with issues common to Britain and Northern Ireland.
Critics of this suggest it will simply add another layer of bureaucracy and I expect that Westminster might not take too kindly to a potential dilution of its influence.
I'm not convinced by the case for breaking up the Union, but do feel devolution has some way to go; resolving this issue might help.