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Intergovernmental relations in the United Kingdom
AbbreviationIGR [1]
PredecessorJoint Ministerial Committee
Formation1 July 1999; 24 years ago (1999-07-01) (as JMC) [2]
2022 (as Three Tier System)
Type Intergovernmental organisation
Membership
4:
United Kingdom
Scotland
Wales
Northern Ireland
Main organ
Prime Minister and Heads of Devolved Governments Council
Website GOV.UK (Cabinet Office): Intergovernmental Relations

In the United Kingdom, intergovernmental relations are the coordination and engagement between the UK Government, Scottish Government, Welsh Government and Northern Ireland Executive. [3] The Prime Minister and Heads of Devolved Governments Council is where the heads of these administrations meet. [4]

There is also a portfolio-specific Interministerial Standing Committee (IMSC) and interministerial groups (IMG) affiliated to the IMSC. These were established in 2022 following a series of reviews. [1] [5] From 1999–2022, their predecessor the Joint Ministerial Committee (JMC), established by memorandums of understanding, served a similar purpose.

Background

Intergovernmental relations were previously governed by the Joint Ministerial Committee. [6] On 20 January 2020, the Constitution Committee within the House of Lords published a report outlining how the UK Government could improve intergovernmental relations. [7] In 2022, the UK Government and devolved governments came to an agreement on the intergovernmental relations in the UK. [8] [9]

Joint Ministerial Committee (1999–2022)

The JMC was created in 1999 by Tony Blair's Labour government, [2] and sought to act as a focus for the coordination of the relationships between these administrations. The terms of reference for the JMC were: [10]

  • To consider non-devolved matters which impinge on devolved responsibilities, and devolved matters which impinge on non-devolved responsibilities.
  • Where the UK government and the devolved administrations so agree, to consider devolved matters if it is beneficial to discuss their respective treatment in different parts of the UK.
  • To keep the arrangements for liaison between the UK government and the devolved administrations under review.
  • To consider disputes between the administrations.

Membership

Before it was replaced, the membership of the JMC Plenary (JMC(P)) was:

The following may also attend sessions of the JMC:

Meetings

Since its creation in 1999, there had been several different JMC meeting formats. [2] Since 2010, there have been four types: plenary, Europe, domestic and European negotiations (created following the 2016 United Kingdom European Union membership referendum [12] [13]).

The JMC Plenary meetings were intended to occur at least once every year. However, no plenary meetings were held between 2002 and 2008. [2] This was primarily because the UK, Scotland, and Wales governments were all controlled by the Labour Party, and as such ministers from the central and devolved governments could quickly and easily use informal links to coordinate policy. [14] However, following the Scottish National Party's victory at the 2007 Scottish Parliament election this was no longer the case. So JMC Plenary meetings were re-established, though on an ad hoc basis. [2]

Under proposals outlined by Theresa May in October 2016, the JMC Plenary was to meet on a definite annual basis and would have rotated between London, Edinburgh, Cardiff and Belfast. It would have also published an annual report on its work and hoped to foster greater formal and informal links between ministers from each (devolved) government. [15] [16] However, these proposals were vetoed by Sinn Féin's Martin McGuinness. [15]

The last JMC Plenary was convened by Theresa May on 19 December 2018, even though soon after he became Prime Minister in July 2019, Boris Johnson announced his intention to hold a JMC Plenary meeting as soon as possible. [17]

Tiered governance (2022–present)

Prime Minister and Devolved Heads of Government Council

UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and First Minister of Scotland Nicola Sturgeon meeting in Blackpool

The Prime Minister and Devolved heads of Government Council (“the council”) consist of the Prime minister and the Devolved heads of Governments, the council is responsible for:

  • Discussing UK level policies that require cooperation
  • Overseeing the other government organisations and mechanisms within the other tiers.
  • Acting as final arbiter for the UK dispute resolution mechanism. [18]
Prime Minister and Devolved heads of Government Council
Name Representing Council Position
Rishi Sunak   United Kingdom Chair
Humza Yousaf   Scotland Member
Vaughan Gething   Wales Member
Michelle O'Neill
Emma Little-Pengelly
Northern Ireland Member

Meetings

Prime Minister and Head of Devolved Governments Council

Meeting date Location
10 November 2022 Blackpool

Interministerial Standing Committees

The Interministerial Standing Committee is led by the Minister for Intergovernmental Relations and is responsible for discussing areas of cooperation that cannot be discussed at the Portfolio Committee, the committee will have representatives from central government and the three devolved nations and aim to meet monthly. [19]

There are currently two active intergovernmental committees. [20]

No Name of Interministerial Standing Committee
1. Interministerial
2. Finance

Interministerial Groups

There are currently 7 active intergovernmental groups [20]

No Name of Intergovernmental Group
1. Business and Industry
2. Education
3. UK•EU Relations
4. Elections and Registration
5. Environment, Food, and Rural Affairs
6. Housing, Communities, and Local Government
7. COP26

Dispute resolution mechanism

There are six different mechanisms involved in intergovernmental relations in order to avoid disputes between the UK Government and the Scottish Government, Welsh Government and the Northern Ireland Executive. [21] Whilst the Scottish Government and Welsh Government welcomed the changes to intergovernmental relations within the United Kingdom which were implemented in 2022, both governments were critical regarding the UK Government's "attitude towards engagement with the devolved administrations at times". [22]

The review into intergovernmental relations concluded that the governments of the United Kingdom, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland were “committed to promoting collaboration and the avoidance of disagreements". In any instance that a dispute between any government arises, the IGR Secretariat may have that matter referred to them by the government or governments involved. [23]

The IGR Council is the final arbiter in any disputes. [24][ failed verification]

See also

Similar bodies in other countries

References and notes

  1. ^ a b "Review of intergovernmental relations (HTML)". GOV.UK.
  2. ^ a b c d e "Devolution: Joint Ministerial Committee | The Institute for Government". www.instituteforgovernment.org.uk. 11 December 2017.
  3. ^ Paun, Akash; Henderson, Duncan (4 November 2022). "Intergovernmental relations". Institute for Government.
  4. ^ "Prime Minister and Heads of Devolved Governments Council communiqué 10 November 2022". GOV.UK. Retrieved 29 November 2022.
  5. ^ "Dunlop review (November 2019)" (PDF).
  6. ^ Paun, Akash; Sargeant, Jess; Shuttleworth, Kelly (1 July 2020). "Devolution: Joint Ministerial Committee". Institute for Government.
  7. ^ "Lords committee calls for revitalised United Kingdom". Scottish Legal News. 20 January 2022.
  8. ^ "Intergovernmental Relations (IGR) Review aims to strengthen relations between central government and devolved administrations". The Irish News. 14 January 2022.
  9. ^ "Boris Johnson to chair council of UK's devolved administration leaders". Peeblesshire News. 13 January 2022.
  10. ^ "Devolution of powers to Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland". GOV.UK. 8 May 2019.
  11. ^ "DUP: NI First Minister Paul Givan announces resignation". BBC News. 3 February 2022. Retrieved 3 February 2022.
  12. ^ "Joint Ministerial Committee (Plenary) communiqué: 30 January 2017". GOV.UK.
  13. ^ "Brexit: DUP and Sinn Féin attend Theresa May meeting". BBC News. 30 January 2017. Retrieved 30 January 2017.
  14. ^ June Burnham, Fragmentation and Central Control: Competing Forces in a Disunited Kingdom. In Jose Ruano and Marius Profiroiu (ed.), The Palgrave Handbook of Decentralisation in Europe, 2017, ISBN  978-3-319-32437-1, p. 144
  15. ^ a b "Union at the Crossroads: Can the British state handle the challenges of devolution? by Michael Kenny, Philip Rycroft and Jack Sheldon". The Constitution Society. 12 April 2021.
  16. ^ "Theresa May calls for 'grown-up' UK and Wales relations". BBC News. 23 October 2016.
  17. ^ "PM meeting with First Minister Nicola Sturgeon: 29 July 2019". 29 July 2019.
  18. ^ Pooran, Neil (13 January 2022). "Boris Johnson to chair council of UK's devolved administration leaders". Belfast Telegraph.
  19. ^ "New forum for talks between leaders from across UK". BBC News. 13 January 2022.
  20. ^ a b Paun, Akash; Henderson, Duncan (14 November 2022). "Timeline of known IGR committee meetings since the IGR review". Institute for Government.
  21. ^ "The review of intergovernmental relations" (PDF). UK Government. Retrieved 2 April 2024.
  22. ^ "ntergovernmental relations within the UK". House of Lords Library. Retrieved 2 April 2024.
  23. ^ "ntergovernmental relations within the UK". House of Lords Library. Retrieved 2 April 2024.
  24. ^ Henderson, Paun; Duncan, Akash (14 November 2022). "How the UK and devolved governments resolve disputes". Institute for Government.

External links