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Sturgeon: Testing limits of Section 35 veto in court is in the public interest

The First Minister said the Scottish Government was ‘looking at all options’ to challenge the legal veto.

Craig Paton
Monday 23 January 2023 08:46 EST
Nicola Sturgeon has said testing the limits of the Section 35 order is in the public interest (Jeff Overs/BBC)
Nicola Sturgeon has said testing the limits of the Section 35 order is in the public interest (Jeff Overs/BBC) (PA Media)

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Scotland’s First Minister said testing the parameters of the UK Government’s veto on Holyrood legislation in court would be in the public interest, claiming it can currently be used “on a whim”.

Speaking to journalists on Monday, Nicola Sturgeon said her Government was “looking at all options” to challenge the decision by Scottish Secretary Alister Jack to knock down gender reforms passed by MSPs last year.

The Gender Recognition Reform (Scotland) Bill would make it easier for trans people to obtain a gender recognition certificate (GRC), but concerns were raised the process could be abused by predatory men.

Through Section 35 of the Scotland Act, Mr Jack has the power to block Bills he views as impacting on national security or other laws elsewhere in the UK, from receiving Royal Assent, a power he exercised last week.

The First Minister vowed to fight the decision, with the next step likely to be a judicial review at the Court of Session in Edinburgh, but she would not say when a petition for review would be lodged with the court.

According to Ms Sturgeon, there was a public interest in the challenge, not only in the hopes of seeing the Bill passed into law, but to test the parameters of Section 35.

“There is, I think, a real public interest in getting some judicial interpretation of Section 35 and what are the circumstances that it can be used, can’t be used, what tests need to be passed, what evidence does the UK Government need to put forward.”

She added: “Right now, as things stand, as was demonstrated last week, this is a power than can be used pretty much on the whim of the UK Government any time they have a political disagreement with the Scottish Government on a piece of legislation and they can find a spurious ground to invoke Section 35 – that seems to be what can happen.”

The First Minister also said she was worried the invocation of the provision for the first time in the near-25 year history of the Scottish Parliament could lead to it being used more often, citing the UK Government’s repeated passage of legislation without the express consent of Holyrood – known as the Sewell convention – in recent years.

Ms Sturgeon also hit out at Mr Jack and UK equalities minister Kemi Badenoch after they declined invitations to give evidence on the decision.

“I take the view that if you’re going to outrageously and unacceptably ride roughshod over the democratically elected Scottish Parliament and seek to overturn decisions that the democratically elected Scottish Parliament has arrived at, you should at least have the guts to turn up and sit before a committee of the democratically elected Scottish Parliament and set out your reasons for doing so,” the First Minister said.

She added that the pair refusing to appear before committees shows “an absence of confidence they have in their own position”.

I would condemn the way in which those views were expressed and the views that were expressed there

Nicola Sturgeon, First Minister

Meanwhile, the First Minister condemned placards present at a pro-trans rights rally in Glasgow at the weekend,

SNP MPs Kirsten Oswald and Alison Thewliss and MSP Kaukab Stewart were photographed in front of a sign which said “decapitate terfs” – referring to trans exclusionary radical feminists.

The representatives said they were unaware the sign was there.

Questioned on the signs, Ms Sturgeon said she had attended demonstrations where placards were displayed that did not align with her views.

She said: “Certainly, from the images I have seen, I think that was the case at the demonstration on trans rights on Saturday.

“The placards that I have seen in no way – absolutely no way shape or form – accord with my views and I would condemn the way in which those views were expressed and the views that were expressed there.

“And I don’t think it’s fair or credible to suggest that the elected representatives that were there in any way share or condone those views.”

She said she has also seen images about herself from demonstrations against the Bill outside Holyrood that were “offensive and completely unacceptable”.

The decision of Mr Jack to block the gender reform Bill has spurred conversation among legal experts, with former judge Lord Hope saying the statement of reasons from the UK Government was “devastating”, while Lord Sumption said it was “powerful”.

But the First Minister said there had been a “range of legal views” expressed on the issue, pointing to former Lord Chancellor Lord Falconer as someone who voiced his opposition to the use of a Section 35 order.

“You’ll get that variety and division of legal opinion – ultimately only courts can decide,” she said.

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