Federalism in the United Kingdom explained

Federalism in the United Kingdom should not be confused with Proposed United Kingdom confederation.

Federalism in the United Kingdom aims at constitutional reform to achieve a federal UK[1] or a British federation,[2] where there is a division of legislative powers between two or more levels of government, so that sovereignty is decentralised between a federal government and autonomous governments in a federal system.[3]

The United Kingdom is a constitutional monarchy[4] governed via parliamentary democracy. It is constitutionally organized as a unitary state with some elements of autonomy granted to subnational units.[5] It comprises the countries of England, Scotland and Wales, as well as Northern Ireland.[4] [6] The UK also operates a system of devolution from a central UK parliament and prime minister as head of government, to the devolved legislatures of the Scottish Parliament, Senedd and Northern Ireland Assembly with first ministers. In England, only Greater London, combined authorities, and the counties of Cornwall and Yorkshire, currently have varying degrees of devolved powers, with proposals for an England-wide or regional devolution.[7] [8] While this system of devolved powers, with separate legislatures and different regulatory jurisdictions, resembles and often functions similarly to a federal state, it is not a true federation as all devolved powers ultimately derive from the authority of the central government. The central government can modify or revoke most devolved laws, regulations, and government bodies through an Act of Parliament passed by a simple majority in the House of Commons, of which over 80% of members are from a single country (England).

Compared to the current system of devolution, in a true federal system, autonomy as well as devolved powers would be considered constitutionally protected, requiring more than an Act of Parliament to modify or revoke powers. Autonomy could also potentially be applied uniformly across the entire United Kingdom, compared to the varying levels of devolution at present. The Scotland Act 2016 and the Wales Act 2017 made the Scottish Parliament and Senedd permanent parts of the British constitution, requiring a referendum in each respective country to remove the legislatures, although the UK parliament still retains the sovereign right to adjust devolved powers.[9] [10]

Federalism was first proposed in the late 19th century to address increasing calls for Irish Home Rule, the awarding of autonomy for Ireland within the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. The proposals failed and the Irish Free State was formed instead. Since a system of devolution was implemented in the late 20th century, some have proposed that a transition be made towards a federation or confederation, as an effort by unionists to combat separatism.

History of nation devolution

See also: Devolution in the United Kingdom.

Scotland, Northern Ireland and Wales

See main article: Scottish devolution and Welsh devolution. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, Irish home rule was a divisive political issue. The First and Second Home Rule Bills failed to pass the UK Parliament. The Third Home Rule Bill was introduced in 1912 by Prime Minister H. H. Asquith, intended to provide home rule in Ireland, with some additional proposals for home rule in Scotland, Wales, and areas of England.[11] [12] The implementation of the Bill was delayed by the outbreak of the First World War. At war's end the UK parliament, responding to Northern Irish Protestant lobbying, passed the Fourth Home Rule Bill which divided Ireland into a six-county Northern Ireland and a twenty-six county Southern Ireland, each with its own parliament and judiciary. The Southern Parliament only met once: London acknowledged the sovereignty of southern Ireland as the Irish Free State, within the British Commonwealth, at the end of 1921. The Northern Ireland Parliament remained until 1972 when it was abolished due to sectarian conflict in the Troubles.[13] The Scotland Act 1978 became law on 31 July 1978, requiring 40% of the Scottish electorate to support the formation of an assembly. Although 52% of those who voted supported an assembly, this amounted to 33% of the total electorate and so an assembly was not formed. In 1997 a referendum was held in Scotland on a Scottish parliament which was supported by 74.3% of Scots. In 1998 the Scotland Bill was introduced in the UK Parliament and became law as the Scotland Act 1998 later that year. The Scottish parliamentary elections were held in 1999 and were followed by the re-establishment of the Scottish parliament.[14] In Wales, a referendum on a Welsh assembly was held, also in 1997, and resulted in a 50.3% majority in favour.[15] The Government of Wales Act was passed in the UK parliament in 1998 and the National Assembly for Wales was formed in 1999 in Cardiff. The National Assembly for Wales was renamed Senedd Cymru/Welsh Parliament, with the Presiding Officer, Elin Jones, saying that its renaming represented the increased powers and responsibilities of the Senedd.[16]

In 2014, Scotland voted to remain in the UK, though a plurality of Scots wanted greater autonomy within the UK.[17] This culminated in the Scotland Act of 2016 which declared that Scotland's devolved institutions were permanent, and granted the Scottish Parliament and government powers over taxation and welfare.[18]

The Wales Act 2017 defined the National Assembly and devolved institutions to be a permanent component of the UK constitution, and any abolition of such institutions would require a referendum. The act also changed the model of operation of the devolved institutions from a "conferred powers model" to a "reserved powers model". The Assembly was given the power to decide its own name and voting system of members.

Proposals for an English Parliament

See main article: West Lothian question. There have been proposals for the establishment of a single devolved English Parliament to govern the affairs of England as a whole. This has been supported by groups such as English Commonwealth, the English Democrats and Campaign for an English Parliament, as well as the Scottish National Party and Plaid Cymru who have both expressed support for greater autonomy for all four nations while ultimately striving for a dissolution of the Union. Without its own devolved Parliament, England continues to be governed and legislated for by the UK Government and UK Parliament which gives rise to the West Lothian question. The question concerns the fact that, on devolved matters, Scottish MPs continue to help make laws that apply to England alone, although no English MPs can make laws on those same matters for Scotland. Since the 2014 Scottish independence referendum there has been a wider debate about the UK adopting a federal system with each of the four home nations having its own, equal devolved legislatures and law-making powers.[19]

In September 2011 it was announced that the British government was to set up a commission to examine the West Lothian question.[20] In January 2012 it was announced that this six-member commission would be named the Commission on the consequences of devolution for the House of Commons, would be chaired by former Clerk of the House of Commons, Sir William McKay, and would have one member from each of the devolved countries. The McKay Commission reported in March 2013.[21] Following the election of a Conservative majority government in the 2015 general election, new parliamentary procedures and a Legislative Grand Committee were enacted to bring it into effect.[22] The measures were subsequently abolished in 2021.[23]

Federation proposals

See also: Constitutional reform of the United Kingdom.

19th and 20th centuries

Federalism was proposed in the 1870s by Isaac Butt and his Home Rule party. Federalism was also proposed by Joseph Chamberlain in the mid-1880s. It gained significant support during the constitutional and home rule crisis in Ireland in particular.[24]

A UK federation government was proposed in 1912 by Winston Churchill, Member of Parliament for Dundee, which also included proposals for English regions governed by a regional parliament as part of a UK federation. Potential areas included Lancashire, Yorkshire, the Midlands and London.David Lloyd George campaigned for Welsh devolution, beginning with the devolution of the Church in Wales which finally came about in 1920.[25] Lloyd George felt that disestablishment, land reform and other forms of Welsh devolution could only be achieved if Wales formed its own government within a federal imperial system. Lloyd George's Government of 1918 also gave considerable thought to a federal government to relieve tensions in Ireland, particularly in combination with conscription for the First World War.[26]

In 1977, Tam Dalyell, then MP for West Lothian, raised the "West Lothian question" on the issue of an English parliament during a debate on devolution of powers to Scotland and Wales.[27]

21st century timeline

David Melding

In September 2013, Conservative MS for South Wales Central, David Melding produced a book for the Institute of Welsh Affairs (IWA) discussing federalism. He suggested that parliaments in a federal UK should all be sovereign and that a balance of powers between a central parliament and the national parliaments would emerge following a new "Act of Union". He suggests that disputes could be resolved in the Supreme Court.[28]

Liberal Democrats

Since March 2014, the Liberal Democrats have been committed to a policy of UK federalism.[29] Their proposal for a federal UK originally included:

In 2021 the Liberal Democrats updated their stance on a federal UK with a policy motion and a background paper calling for regional parliaments throughout England whose powers would approach those of the Scottish Parliament, representing a near symmetric arrangement in which the regions of England would be constitutionally equivalent to Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland as states of the federal union but allowing for a parallel English legislature for English-only affairs, England remaining as a single legal jurisdiction. The policy specifically calls for the House of Lords to be replaced by a federal Senate with representatives from the nations and/or regions and calls for significant fiscal decentralisation: a target of 50% of public spending to be controlled by the subnational governments. Party policy also retains the prior call for a Constitutional Convention with the aim of building a consensus for the drafting of a federal constitution.[31] [32]

Institute of Economic Affairs (IEA)

The think-tank IEA produced a report in 2015 that suggested that the UK should become a federal country. It concluded that responsibilities by and large should be transferred to Scotland and England, Wales and Northern Ireland or Scotland and Rest of UK. It suggested that federal government should have very few functions which would include defence, border control and foreign affairs.[33]

Chuka Umunna

An English parliament as part of a federal UK was suggested by Labour politician Chuka Umunna in July 2015.[34]

Constitutional Reform Group

The Constitutional Reform Group is a group made up of politicians from all parties. Its Steering Committee is composed of Robert Gascoyne-Cecil, 7th Marquess of Salisbury; Robert Rogers, Baron Lisvane; former First Minister of Wales Carwyn Jones; former first minister of Scotland Lord Jack McConnell; and Lord David Trimble, the first and former First Minister of Northern Ireland, among others. The group produced their first draft of a new Act of Union Bill in July 2016. An Act of Union Bill 2018 was subsequently introduced as a Private Members' Bill in the House of Lords on 9 October 2018.[35]

On 24 April 2021, an "Act of Union Bill 2021" was published.[36] This includes:

Central matters to include:

Proposed models

In April 2018, Isobel Lindsay, a board member of Scotland's economic and political think-tank, Common Weal, suggested the following two models:

  1. The Four Nations proposal: A UK Federation composed of England, Wales, Scotland & Northern Ireland
  2. Three Nations plus English Regions: A UK federation composed of Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland & English regions
  3. Council of the Isles: Building upon the British–Irish Council to form a Council of the Isles which could include Wales, Scotland, England, Northern Ireland and the independent Republic of Ireland. This could also allow an independent Scotland to be a part of this council.

England is by far the largest single unit in the United Kingdom by population (84%) and by area (54%) and thus contributes to the justification for a "Three Nations plus English regions" model.[38]

The Federal Union and the Federal Trust

The Federal Union is a pressure group that supports a codified federal constitution for the United Kingdom, arguing that governance remains too centralised. In October 2018, Andrew Blick, of King's College London and the Federal Union, proposed a Federalist Constitution for the UK. He also suggests that a single English parliament would not be effective and that regional federalism of England would be more effective;[39] and that the regions of England, created for statistical purposes, are included in one proposed model for a UK federation. The Federal Trust has also proposed a UK Federation as a potential option for the UK's constitutional future.[40]

Unionists

In February 2020, political analyst John Curtice suggested that the UK's decision to leave the European Union, which was supported by a majority in England and Wales but not in Scotland and Northern Ireland, may have strengthened the Scottish independence movement and proved problematic for the Good Friday Agreement.[41] [42] As such, some people such as the former head of the Department for Exiting the European Union, Philip Rycroft, have proposed federalism as a way of ensuring the Union continues.[43]

Jeremy Corbyn

A report commissioned by the UK Labour Party during the leadership of Jeremy Corbyn was published in February 2021. The report, titled Remaking the British State: For the many Not the few, proposed constitutional reform of the devolved governments of the UK and establishment of a federal UK system.[44] [45]

The report recommended the following:

Welsh Labour proposals

The Welsh Labour Government produced a report update for the reformation of the United Kingdom in June 2021. This report summary outlined a proposed 20 key changes to devolution in the UK. This proposed reform of the structure of devolution for the countries of the UK would build a stronger and more durable UK, according to Mark Drakeford.[46]

The Welsh Labour proposal for "far reaching federalism"[47] are summarised as follows:

Principles
  1. The UK becomes a voluntary union of 4 nations.
  2. Devolution is permanent and cannot be undone without agreement from electorate.
  3. Equalise devolution across nations, to become as devolved as possible.
Law-making
  1. Each parliament/assembly in the UK decides its own size and how members are elected.
  2. The UK Parliament should not legislate on devolved matters without consent.
  3. A centralised source of funding for running costs of devolved parliaments/assembly.
  4. Representation of devolved nations in the House of Commons.
  5. House of Lords reformed to reflect the make-up of the United Kingdom & protects the constitution and devolution.
Inter-governmental relations
  1. Governments must be treated as equals
  2. Ministers are responsible and held to account for duties in their own country without interference from other governments.
  3. The UK government does not fund other governments' responsibilities without consent.
  4. Regular, organised inter-governmental co-operation for benefit of UK.
  5. Devolved governments have a say in international relations and trade.
  6. UK bodies that work for every country in the UK.
  7. Continued impartiality of the civil service serving the Welsh, Scottish & UK governments, working with the Northern Ireland civil service.
Financial matters
  1. Funding based on need. No UK funding outside these arrangements without consent.
  2. Needs-based grant from the UK government to devolved nations (raised by devolved and local taxes and borrowing).
  3. Formation of an independent public body overseeing funding across UK.
  4. Each government determines and is held accountable for tax and spending priorities.
Justice
  1. Justice and policing devolved to Wales (as it is in Scotland and Northern Ireland).
  2. Supreme Court membership reflects the whole of the UK.
Constitution matters
  1. A Constitutional Convention with UK wide membership considering UK governance and inter-governmental relationships.[48]

Keir Starmer and Gordon Brown

Keir Starmer, leader of the UK Labour party, also agreed in January 2022 to "quickly" reform the UK if Labour formed the next national government.[49] He also promised a "radical devolution of power" which would include a written constitution. More specific details in Starmer's radical devolvement or federalisation plans were said to be lacking.[50] Starmer also tasked Gordon Brown with heading a "Constitution Commission" for prospective reform of the UK, a commission which would become active under a Labour government.[51] Brown has suggested federalism as a viable option following Brexit and, according to Adam Tomkins, supported "a reformed Britain, a new federal settlement, and further powers for a supercharged Holyrood". Brown proposed:[52] [53]

In September 2022, Gordon Brown's plans were said to include; further devolution of taxation to Scotland, Wales, and England's regions; a new mechanism to "community groups" for the promotion of bills in parliament; constitutional guarantee of social and economic rights; replacement of the House of Lords by an upper house of nations and regions (previously cited in the party's 2015 and 2019 manifestos); minimum of three years' funding to local and devolved governments for longer-term planning.[55] First minister of Wales, Mark Drakeford suggested that Gordon Brown's recommendations would ensure practical ways in which devolution could not be overruled.[56]

New Britain report

In December 2022, a Labour report on the Commission on the UK's Future was published, titled "A New Britain: Renewing our Democracy and Rebuilding our Economy", the following proposals were made:

A League-Union of the Isles

In March 2022, Glyndwr Jones of the Institute of Welsh Affairs produced a document "A League-Union of the Isles" discussing constitutional options for the UK with a preface by former first minister of Wales Carwyn Jones. The author presents multiple potential constitutional options for the UK nations including: devolution, federalism, confederalism, confederal-federalism, sovereignty within the EU and independence. The author settles on confederal-federalism, a union of sovereign nations that stands between federalism and a confederation, with an agreed confederal treaty between national parliaments, which jointly form a "Council of the Isles". The proposed union would include the following:

Independent Commission on the Constitutional Future of Wales

The Independent Commission on the Constitutional Future of Wales is an ongoing commission that will make recommendations about Wales' constitutional future. Having their first meeting on the 25th of November 2021, Professor Laura McAllister and Dr Rowan Williams are co-chairing the commission. Professor McAllister has stated that all options are on the table – including independence.[59] This independent commission was established in 2022 by the Welsh Government and has two broad objectives which include consideration and development of options for reform of constitutional structures of the UK, and progressive principal options to strengthen Welsh democracy and deliver improvements for Wales.[60]

In its interim report of December 2022, The Independent Commission on the Constitutional Future of Wales proposes the following as an option for a federal UK:

Suggested potential benefits

A report by The Federal Trust suggested the following potential benefits of a federal UK:

Political party positions

Members of the UK Labour Party, including their leader Keir Starmer, have supported federalism, but the UK-wide party have not made a commitment. The Liberal Democrats are the only mainstream political party yet to have formally adopted a policy for a federal United Kingdom and which outlines the structure of the proposed federation in line with the "Three Nations plus English Regions" model. Other political parties prefer the status quo or to increase autonomy further than federalism via independence.

UK parties

Scottish parties

Welsh parties

English regional parties

Support a Cornish Assembly.[68]

Supports a Regional Parliament.[69]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Kingston . David . Federal UK . 2022-10-08 . Federal Union . en-GB.
  2. Web site: 2022-07-05 . The United Kingdom is broken. It's time for a new British federation Simon Jenkins . 2022-10-08 . The Guardian . en.
  3. Follesdal . Andreas . 2003-01-05 . Federalism . Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University .
  4. Web site: Toponymic guidelines for map and other editors, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland . 2022-04-15 . GOV.UK . en.
  5. Gamble . A. . The Constitutional Revolution in the United Kingdom . Publius: The Journal of Federalism . 36 . 1 . 2006-01-01 . 0048-5950 . 10.1093/publius/pjj011 . 19–35.
  6. Web site: Standard: ISO 3166 — Codes for the representation of names of countries and their subdivision . 2022-04-15 . www.iso.org.
  7. Web site: The big read: Can federalism ever work in the UK? . 2022-03-10 . HeraldScotland . 22 April 2018 . en.
  8. Web site: Federalism . 2022-03-10 . LII / Legal Information Institute . en.
  9. Web site: Scotland Act 2016 .
  10. Web site: Wales Act 2017 .
  11. News: 13 September 1912 . Local Parliaments For England. Mr. Churchill's Outline Of A Federal System, Ten Or Twelve Legislatures . The Times.
  12. News: 14 September 1912 . Mr. Winston Churchill's speech at Dundee . The Spectator .
  13. Web site: The big read: Can federalism ever work in the UK? . 2020-03-02 . HeraldScotland . 22 April 2018 . en.
  14. Web site: The Scottish Parliament reestablished . 2022-03-10 . www.parliament.scot . en.
  15. Web site: History of devolution . 2022-03-10 . senedd.wales . en-GB.
  16. News: 2020-05-06 . Welsh assembly renamed Senedd Cymru/Welsh Parliament . en-GB . BBC News . 2022-03-10.
  17. Web site: 2011-12-05. Scots back independence – but at a price, survey finds. 2021-02-19. The Guardian. en.
  18. A Powerhouse Parliament? An Enduring Settlement? The Scotland Act 2016. 28 January 2021. Edinburgh Law Review. 2016. 20. 3. 360–61. 10.3366/elr.2016.0367. HeinOnline. McHarg. Aileen.
  19. News: Williams . Shirley . Shirley Williams . 16 September 2014 . How Scotland could lead the way towards a federal UK . The Guardian . 20 September 2014.
  20. News: 8 September 2011 . Answer sought to the West Lothian question . BBC News Scotland . 8 September 2011.
  21. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-21920010 BBC News, England-only laws 'need majority from English MPs' , 25 March 2013
  22. Web site: 22 October 2015 . English vote plan to become law despite objections . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20151023073328/http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-34599998 . 23 October 2015 . 24 October 2015 . BBC News . BBC.
  23. News: 13 July 2021 . Commons scraps English votes for English laws . BBC News .
  24. KENDLE . JOHN . 1971 . Federalism and the Irish Problem in 1918 . History . 56 . 187 . 207–230 . 10.1111/j.1468-229X.1971.tb02019.x . 0018-2648 . 24407170.
  25. Web site: Unit 8 David Lloyd George and the destiny of Wales: View as single page . 2022-03-10 . www.open.edu.
  26. KENDLE . JOHN . 1971 . Federalism and the Irish Problem in 1918 . History . 56 . 187 . 207–230 . 10.1111/j.1468-229X.1971.tb02019.x . 0018-2648 . 24407170.
  27. Web site: West Lothian question . UK Parliament.
  28. Book: Melding, David . THE REFORMED UNION THE UK AS A FEDERATION . iwa . 2013.
  29. Web site: F41: Towards a Federal UK . 2022-04-14 . Liberal Democrats . en.
  30. Web site: The Creation of a Federal United Kingdom . 2022-04-13 . Liberal Democrats . en.
  31. Web site: A Framework for England in a Federal UK . Liberal Democrats . en.
  32. Web site: Framework for England in a Federal UK . Liberal Democrats . en.
  33. Book: Federal Britain The case for decentralisation.
  34. Web site: 2015-07-22 . Chuka Umunna calls for an English parliament and a federal UK . 2022-03-10 . The Guardian . en.
  35. Web site: About the Constitution Reform Group . 2022-04-13 . en-GB . 2022-04-13 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220413020241/https://www.constitutionreformgroup.co.uk/about/ . dead .
  36. Web site: CRG Timeline . 2022-04-13 . en-GB.
  37. Book: Act of Union Bill . Constitution Reform Group . 2022-04-13 . 2022-04-29 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220429193456/https://www.constitutionreformgroup.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/CRG-Act-of-Union-Bill.pdf . dead .
  38. Web site: Population estimates – Office for National Statistics . 2020-03-02 . www.ons.gov.uk.
  39. Web site: A Federalist Constitution for the U.K. . 2020-03-05 . Federal Union . 13 October 2014 . en-GB.
  40. Book: Federalism: The UK's Future? . The Federal Trust.
  41. News: editor . Severin Carrell Scotland . 2020-02-04 . Scottish independence surveys 'show Brexit has put union at risk' . en-GB . The Guardian . 2020-03-12 . 0261-3077.
  42. Web site: 2018-04-18 . Good Friday Agreement: why it matters in Brexit . 2020-03-12 . UK in a changing Europe . en-GB.
  43. News: 2019-09-09 . Former Brexit chief urges rethink of UK Union . en-GB . BBC News . 2020-03-12.
  44. Web site: Chappell . Elliot . Keir Starmer urged to back radical constitutional reforms by new report . 2022-04-13 . LabourList . February 2021 . en-GB.
  45. Web site: 2021-01-31 . Keir Starmer urged to back radical constitutional reform for UK . 2022-03-10 . The Guardian . en.
  46. Web site: Reforming our Union: Shared governance in the UK June 2021 . 2022-03-10 . GOV.WALES . 29 June 2021 . en.
  47. Web site: Our Nation . 2022-04-21 . movingforward.wales.
  48. Web site: Reforming our Union 2021: summary [HTML] ]. 2022-04-21 . GOV.WALES . 8 July 2021 . en.
  49. Web site: 2022-01-29 . Labour would reform the Union 'quickly' and without a referendum after winning power says Starmer . 2022-03-10 . Nation.Cymru . en-GB.
  50. News: Staunton . Denis . How would a federal UK affect a shared island of Ireland? . 2022-03-10 . The Irish Times . en.
  51. Web site: Starmer: Gordon Brown to lead commission "to settle the future of the union" . 2022-03-10 . HeraldScotland . 29 September 2021 . en.
  52. News: Brown . Gordon . 2017-03-28 . Brexit is an opportunity to make a federal United Kingdom . Financial Times . 2022-03-10.
  53. Web site: Dickie . Douglas . 2022-03-02 . Scottish Unionists warned fighting indyref on 'federalism' will see the Nats win . 2022-03-10 . scottishdailyexpress . en.
  54. Web site: Gordon Brown calls for federalism to determine Scotland's future . 2022-03-10 . www.fifetoday.co.uk . en.
  55. Web site: 'Broon's Brigadoon' SNP blast ex-PM's plan to save the union . 2022-10-22 . HeraldScotland . 26 September 2022 . en.
  56. Web site: 2022-10-25 . Future Labour UK Government will ensure devolution can't be rolled back, says Drakeford . 2022-10-27 . Nation.Cymru . en-GB.
  57. Web site: Pope . Conor . 2022-12-05 . A New Britain: Renewing our Democracy and Rebuilding our Economy . 2023-11-01 . The Labour Party . en-GB.
  58. Web site: Trust . Federal . 2022-03-28 . A League-Union of the Isles – Book Recommendation . 2022-04-14 . The Federal Trust . en-US.
  59. Web site: 2021-11-16 . Welsh Government reveal members of its new Constitutional Commission . 2022-04-13 . Nation.Cymru . en-GB.
  60. Web site: The Independent Commission on the Constitutional Future of Wales . 2022-04-13 . GOV.WALES . en.
  61. Web site: Interim report by The Independent Commission on the Constitutional Future of Wales .
  62. Book: Federalism: The UK's Future?.
  63. Web site: 26 September 2020 . The Creation of a Federal United Kingdom . libdems.org.uk.
  64. Web site: 25 February 2017 . Scottish Labour commits to federalism as Dugdale reaffirms support for Union . labourlist.org.
  65. Web site: 6 March 2017 . Scot Lib Dems launch Federalism drive . scotlibdems.org.uk . 19 October 2020 . 28 July 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180728190941/http://www.scotlibdems.org.uk/scot_lib_dems_launch_federalism_drive . dead .
  66. Web site: Our Nation . 2022-04-14 . movingforward.wales.
  67. Web site: 25 September 2020 . Independence – Not the time, Not the Priority . welshlibdems.wales . 19 October 2020 . 14 January 2023 . https://web.archive.org/web/20230114022108/https://www.welshlibdems.wales/welsh_lib_dem_response_to_plaid_cymru_s_independence_commission_report . dead .
  68. Web site: More power to Cornwall < Policies < Mebyon Kernow - The Party for Cornwall . 2022-04-27 . www.mebyonkernow.org . 2022-05-26 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220526052600/https://www.mebyonkernow.org/policies/policy.php?id=26 . dead .
  69. Web site: Devolution . 2022-04-27 . Yorkshire Party – building a stronger Yorkshire in a fairer UK . en-GB.