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300 years too long for adjournment

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Published Date: 05 July 2009
WHEN watching Brian Taylor's interview with Winnie Ewing a few nights ago, I heard for the first time her explanation of why she chose to announce, at the Opening of the Scottish Parliament, that "The Scottish Parliament, adjourned on 23rd March 1707, is hereby reconvened".
Apparently one Robert McIntyre, the first ever SNP member, asked her on his deathbed to make sure this point was made when the Scottish Parliament was opened, because "it was never dissolved, only adjourned".

Now I do realise that when a man is i
mminently dying that is no time to engage him in dispute, and it is kinder to let him pass on with as quiet a mind as possible. But Winnie Ewing is still very much with us, and believes this herself. Today, at the ceremony to celebrate the 10th Anniversary of the Scottish Parliament, Alex Salmond repeated the assertion that it was reconvened.

We have all heard of long adjournments, but 300 years is ridiculous. At no time during the lifetimes of those who had been its members was it reconvened. That Parliament was so different from modern notions of an elected legislature, it is almost a different species. It had three parties, none of which exist today, sent there by a tiny, privileged electorate. It had no working-class male members, and no female ones of any class. I pointed out, during the debate on the Scotland Bill, that back then, if any woman had attempted to seek election to it, she would probably have been burned as a witch.

What is the point of pursuing this notion of a continuity that does not exist, and which contributes about as much to our present day concerns as worrying about where Mary Queen of Scots should be buried?

Maria Fyfe, Glasgow





The full article contains 304 words and appears in Scotland On Sunday newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 04 July 2009 7:38 PM
  • Source: Scotland On Sunday
  • Location: Scotland
 
1

donald,

glasgow 05/07/2009 04:01:21
Four years after the so called "Union" all of the Scottish MPs tried to rescind the Act and were told to their faces that they had been bought and paid for and to be laughed at every time they opened their Scotch mouths.

No change their for the London Sweaty Socks.
2

donald,

glasgow 05/07/2009 04:04:10
The Earl of Mar, who led the Jacobite Rebellion of 1715, complained that his bribe was not big enough. Presumably they knocked back his expenses claim.
3

gus1940,

Edinburgh 05/07/2009 09:50:19
I suppose that will be Maria Fyffe the Labour ex-MP with the squeaky voice.
4

mr broon,

Edinburgh 05/07/2009 09:55:26
Maria Fyfe, the former Labour Member of Parliament for
the Glasgow Maryhill constituency, is really clutching at political and historical straws?

In 1706, IF members of her party had been in power at the old Scottish Parliament there wouldn't have been enough gold in the English Treasury to bribe them all!
5

Colin Wilson,

Aberdeen 05/07/2009 17:25:04
For once, I actually agree with Maria Fyfe.

The current Scottish Parliament is a body that governs on a basis which is strictly limited by the UK authorities.

The Estates of Scotland, adjourned under the Conquest of 1707, was the legislature of a sovereign state. It will be eventually reconvened, and subjected to modern democratic reform, as part of liberation and constitutional renormalisation. For the present, it remains adjourned.
6

Pilrig,

Livingston 05/07/2009 19:48:13
Old Lab Maria speaks. She forgets that the Parliament of which she was a member continues from antiquity and still retains numerous antiquated practices, such as Black Rod, "I spy strangers" and so on.

 

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