1997 Scottish devolution referendum explained

Scottish devolution referendum, 1997
Do you agree that there should be a Scottish Parliament as proposed by the Government?
Country:Scotland
Flag Year:1997
Location:Scotland
Previous Year:1979
Previous Referendum:1979 Scottish devolution referendum
Next Year:2014
Next Referendum:Scottish independence referendum
Yes:1,775,045
No:614,400
Total:2,391,268
Invalid:11,986
Electorate:3,973,673
Map:Scottish devolution referendum, 1997 Question 1.svg
Scottish devolution referendum, 1997
Do you agree that a Scottish Parliament should have tax-raising powers as proposed by the Government?
Location:Scotland
Date:11 September 1997
Yes:1,512,889
No:870,263
Total:2,391,268
Invalid:19,013
Electorate:3,973,673
Map:Scottish_devolution_referendum,_1997_Question_2.svg
Notes:Saturation of colour reflects the strength of the Yes vote in each Council area.

The Scottish devolution referendum of 1997 was a pre-legislative referendum held in Scotland on 11 September 1997 over whether there was support for the creation of a Scottish Parliament with devolved powers, and whether the Parliament should have tax-varying powers. The result was "Yes–Yes": a majority voted in favour of both proposals, and the Parliament was established following an election in 1999. Turnout for the referendum was 60.4%.

The referendum was a Labour Party manifesto commitment and was held in their first term in office after the 1997 general election, under the provisions of the Referendums (Scotland and Wales) Act 1997. It was the second referendum held in Scotland over the question of devolution, the first being in 1979, and is to date the only major referendum to be held in any part of the United Kingdom where voters were asked two questions in the same plebiscite.

Background

A referendum was held in 1979 under a Labour government which stipulated that a Scottish Assembly would come into being if the referendum had been supported by 50% of votes cast plus a controversial rule whereby at least 40% of the electorate had to vote in favour. Although 51.6% voted in favour, this was only 32.9% of the electorate so the Assembly was not brought into being. Shortly afterwards, the predominantly anti-devolution-led Conservative Party won the 1979 general election.

That government put devolution to one side but it was a policy area that remained on the agenda of the Labour Party. A Campaign for a Scottish Assembly was formed afterwards to continue the campaign. They brought together a committee of "prominent Scots" who drafted the document "A Claim of Right for Scotland". The "Claim" was published in 1988 and signed by most Scottish politicians, local councils, trade unions and churches.[1] It was agreed to form a Scottish Constitutional Convention, made up of existing MPs and councillors.

The Labour Party included the establishment of a Scottish Parliament in its manifesto for the 1997 general election, which they won with a landslide majority of 179.[2]

Referendum questions

The electorate was asked to vote on two sets of statements which corresponded to both proposals.[3]

On the first ballot paper the following appeared:

On the second ballot paper the following appeared:

Campaign

Scottish Labour, the SNP, Scottish Liberal Democrats, and Scottish Greens campaigned for a "Yes" vote for both proposals whilst the Scottish Conservatives opposed both proposals. Labour MP Tam Dalyell opposed the creation of the Parliament, but accepted that it should have tax-varying powers if it were to be established.[4]

The official Yes campaign, Scotland Forward (styled "Scotland FORward"), was headed by the businessman Nigel Smith and came out of the groups that had previously formed the Scottish Constitutional Convention, along with the Scottish National Party. It was supported by the Labour, SNP, Liberal Democrat and Green parties.[5]

The official No campaign, Think Twice, was headed by Brian Monteith, a former employee of the Conservative MP Michael Forsyth. Board members included Donald Findlay, rector of the University of St Andrews and vice-chairman of Rangers F.C., and senior Conservative peer Lord Fraser. However, it struggled to get much business support as they were wary of opposing a project that had such support from the new government which had a large majority.[5]

Campaigning in the referendum was suspended between the death and funeral of Diana, Princess of Wales.[6] It was speculated that the Scottish referendum could have been postponed, but this would have required a recall of the UK Parliament and an amendment to the Referendums Act.[6] [7]

Opinion polling

Date(s)
conducted! rowspan="2"
PollsterClientSample
size
YesNoDon't
know
Lead
data-sort-type="number" style="background:#0D6AE8;"data-sort-type="number" style="background:#A07AC5;"
1997 devolution referendum74.3%25.7%N/A48.6%
ICMThe Scotsman63%25%12%38%
MORISTV67%22%11%45%
NOPThe Sunday Times63%21%16%42%
ICMThe Scotsman1,01060%25%15%35%
System ThreeThe Herald1,03961%20%19%41%
System ThreeThe Herald1,03961%23%16%38%
System ThreeThe Herald1,02465%19%16%46%
System ThreeThe Herald97868%21%10%47%
System ThreeThe Herald1,02464%21%15%43%
Date(s)
conducted! rowspan="2"
PollsterClientSample
size
YesNoDon't
know
Lead
data-sort-type="number" style="background:#0D6AE8;"data-sort-type="number" style="background:#A07AC5;"
1997 devolution referendum63.5%36.5%N/A27.0%
ICMThe Scotsman48%40%12%8%
MORISTV45%31%24%14%
NOPThe Sunday Times51%34%15%17%
ICMThe Scotsman1,01045%38%17%7%
System ThreeThe Herald1,03945%31%24%14%
System ThreeThe Herald1,03947%32%21%15%
System ThreeThe Herald1,02454%27%18%27%
System ThreeThe Herald97856%26%18%30%
System ThreeThe Herald1,02453%28%19%25%

Results

The result was "Yes-Yes": the majority voted "I agree" in favour of both proposals.[3] Two council areas had an overall "Yes-No" result – Dumfries and Galloway and Orkney. More votes were cast for the first question than the second in all regions (except Fife), with substantially more spoilt ballots for the second question, perhaps due to voter confusion over the two papers.[8]

Question 1

By council area

Council areaVotesProportion of votes
AgreeDisagreeAgreeDisagree
Aberdeen City65,03525,58071.8%28.2%
Aberdeenshire61,62134,87863.9%36.1%
Angus33,57118,35064.7%35.3%
Argyll and Bute30,45214,79667.3%32.7%
Clackmannanshire18,7904,70680.0%20.0%
Dumfries and Galloway44,61928,86360.7%39.3%
Dundee City49,25215,55376.0%24.0%
East Ayrshire49,13111,42681.1%18.9%
East Dunbartonshire40,91717,72569.8%30.2%
East Lothian33,52511,66574.2%25.8%
East Renfrewshire28,25317,57361.7%38.3%
City of Edinburgh155,90060,83271.9%28.1%
Falkirk55,64213,95380.0%20.0%
Fife125,66839,51776.1%23.9%
Glasgow City204,26940,10683.6%16.4%
Highland72,55127,43172.6%27.4%
Inverclyde31,6808,94578.0%22.0%
Midlothian31,6817,97979.9%20.1%
Moray24,82212,12267.2%32.8%
North Ayrshire51,30415,93176.3%23.7%
North Lanarkshire123,06326,01082.6%17.4%
Perth and Kinross40,34424,99861.7%38.3%
Renfrewshire68,71118,21379.0%21.0%
Scottish Borders33,85520,06062.8%37.2%
South Ayrshire40,16119,90966.9%33.1%
South Lanarkshire114,90832,76277.8%22.2%
Stirling29,19013,44068.5%31.5%
West Dunbartonshire39,0517,05884.7%15.3%
West Lothian56,92314,61479.6%20.4%
Na h-Eileanan Siar (Western Isles)9,9772,58979.4%20.6%
Orkney4,7493,54157.3%42.7%
Shetland5,4303,27562.4%37.6%

Question 2

Question 2 referendum results (without spoiled ballots):
Agree:
1,512,889 (63.5%)
Disagree:
870,263 (36.5%)

By council area

Council areaVotesProportion of votes
AgreeDisagreeAgreeDisagree
Aberdeen City54,32035,70960.3%39.7%
Aberdeenshire50,29545,92952.3%47.7%
Angus27,64124,08953.4%46.6%
Argyll and Bute25,74619,42957.0%43.0%
Clackmannanshire16,1127,35568.7%31.3%
Dumfries and Galloway35,73737,49948.8%51.2%
Dundee City42,30422,28065.5%34.5%
East Ayrshire42,55917,82470.5%29.5%
East Dunbartonshire34,57623,91459.1%40.9%
East Lothian28,15216,76562.7%37.3%
East Renfrewshire23,58022,15351.6%48.4%
City of Edinburgh133,84382,18862.0%38.0%
Falkirk48,06421,40369.2%30.8%
Fife108,02158,98764.7%35.3%
Glasgow City182,58960,84275.0%25.0%
Highland61,35937,52562.1%37.9%
Inverclyde27,19413,27767.2%32.8%
Midlothian26,77612,76267.7%32.3%
Moray19,32617,34452.7%47.3%
North Ayrshire43,99022,99165.7%34.3%
North Lanarkshire107,28841,37272.2%27.8%
Perth and Kinross33,39831,70951.3%48.7%
Renfrewshire55,07531,53763.6%36.4%
Scottish Borders27,28426,48750.7%49.3%
South Ayrshire33,67926,21756.2%43.8%
South Lanarkshire99,58747,70867.6%32.4%
Stirling25,04417,48758.9%41.1%
West Dunbartonshire34,40811,62874.7%25.3%
West Lothian47,99023,35467.3%32.7%
Na h-Eileanan Siar (Western Isles)8,5573,94768.4%31.6%
Orkney3,9174,34447.4%52.6%
Shetland4,4784,19851.6%48.4%

Votes in favour of tax-varying powers still commanded significant majority, when compared to establishing the Parliament per se. A majority voted 'I agree' in every local council, apart from in Dumfries & Galloway[9] and Orkney.[10]

Overall turnout by council area

Council areaTurnout
Aberdeen City53.7%
Aberdeenshire57.0%
Angus60.2%
Argyll & Bute65.0%
Clackmannanshire66.1%
Dumfries & Galloway63.4%
Dundee City55.7%
East Ayrshire64.8%
East Dunbartonshire72.2%
East Lothian65.0%
East Renfrewshire68.2%
City of Edinburgh60.1%
Falkirk63.7%
Fife60.7%
Glasgow City51.6%
Highland60.3%
Inverclyde60.4%
Midlothian65.1%
Moray57.8%
North Ayrshire63.4%
North Lanarkshire60.8%
Perth & Kinross63.5%
Renfrewshire62.8%
Scottish Borders64.8%
South Ayrshire66.7%
South Lanarkshire63.1%
Stirling65.8%
West Dunbartonshire63.7%
West Lothian60.4%
Na h-Eileanan Siar (Western Isles)55.8%
Orkney53.5%
Shetland51.5%

Outcome

In response to the majority voting for "Yes" to both proposals, the UK Parliament passed the Scotland Act 1998. This established a Scottish Parliament for the first time since the adjournment of the pre-Union Parliament of Scotland in 1707. The devolved Parliament convened for the first time in May 1999, following its first election. This was a poll that the Conservative Party had to fight despite losing their "No" Campaign and having no Westminster seats in Scotland after losing the 1997 general election.[11] The Scotland Act 1998 also created the Scottish Executive, later to become known as the Scottish Government.

Reaction to the result

Professor Tom Devine, academic at the University of Edinburgh, dubbed the referendum result "the most significant development in Scottish political history since the Union of 1707".[12] As well as the "Yes" campaign leader stated "it does, I hope, end much argument and dispute". Prime Minister Tony Blair claimed that "the era of big centralised government is over".[13]

The "Yes" campaign leaders Donald Dewar (Scottish Labour) and Alex Salmond (Scottish National Party) held different views over the devolution proposal. However, they put their political differences aside immediately after the vote in celebration. Despite this, the SNP's calls for independence soon reignited with SNP leader Alex Salmond claiming that there would be an independent Scotland within his lifetime. The "No" campaign did not share this optimism and feared that this vote was a catalyst towards the break-up of the Union.[13]

When the Secretary of State for Scotland, Donald Dewar, went back to London to implement the referendum result, he found the Whitehall civil service unwilling to give up powers and doubting that matters over and above those previously handled by the Scottish Office (such as education, health, transport, police and housing) should be politically devolved. Detail was also lacking in that the Scottish Constitutional Convention had failed to address issues such as the role of The Queen or aspects of tax-varying powers.[12]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The most influential document this century . unfit. . Paul H. . Scott . https://web.archive.org/web/20111228030210/http://www.alba.org.uk/devolution/claimofright.html . 28 December 2011.
  2. 10.1093/oxfordjournals.pa.a028782 . The 1997 Devolution Referendum in Scotland . 1998 . Mitchell . J. . Denver . D. . Pattie . C. . Bochel . H. . Parliamentary Affairs . 51 . 2 . 166–181 .
  3. Web site: Scottish Referendum Live – The Results . BBC News . BBC . 28 July 2016 . 14 April 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170414035858/http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/special/politics97/devolution/scotland/live/index.shtml . live .
  4. Web site: Dissent Within the Labour Party . BBC News . BBC . 31 August 2007 . 23 November 2004 . https://web.archive.org/web/20041123092731/http://www.bbc.co.uk/politics97/devolution/scotland/briefing/dissent.shtml . live .
  5. Web site: BBC Briefing . BBC News . BBC . 20 June 2018 . 19 September 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200919032802/http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/special/politics97/devolution/scotland/briefing/scotbrief1.shtml . live .
  6. Web site: Referendum Campaign Is Suspended As A Mark Of Respect . BBC News . BBC . 17 January 2017 . 31 December 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20171231171229/http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/special/politics97/devolution/scotland/news/310897.shtml . live .
  7. News: Secret files reveal William Hague asked Tony Blair to suspend devolution vote . Kathleen . Nutt . . 21 February 2021 . 22 July 2021 . 22 July 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210722150750/https://www.thenational.scot/news/19106361.revealed-tory-attempt-stop-devolution-vote-princess-dianas-death/ . live .
  8. Web site: Results of Devolution Referendums 1979 & 1997 . Richard . Dewdney . 10 November 1997 . . Research Paper No 97/113 . 25 June 2017 . 24 February 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170224160140/http://researchbriefings.parliament.uk/ResearchBriefing/Summary/RP97-113 . live .
  9. News: Result – Dumfries and Galloway . . 1997 . 20 June 2018 . 15 May 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190515235724/http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/special/politics97/devolution/scotland/live/dumfriesgall.shtml . live .
  10. News: Result – Orkney Islands . . 1997 . 20 June 2018 . 15 May 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190515235145/http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/special/politics97/devolution/scotland/live/orkney.shtml . live .
  11. Mitchell, James et al, 1998. "The 1997 Devolution Referendum in Scotland." In Oxford University Press Journals 51, (2): 166.
  12. News: Scottish devolution referendum: The birth of a parliament . Andrew . Kerr . 8 September 2017 . . 3 December 2018 . 29 January 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190129022824/https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-scotland-politics-41189455 . live .
  13. News: Scottish devolution vote from the archive . 11 September 2017 . . 3 December 2018 . 23 November 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20171123153245/http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/av/uk-scotland-41228211/scottish-devolution-vote-from-the-archive . live .