The Guardian Australia

Queen’s secret influence on laws revealed in Scottish government memo

- Severin Carrell, Rob Evans and David Pegg

A Scottish government memo obtained by the Guardian reveals that “it is almost certain” draft laws have been secretly changed to secure the Queen’s approval.

Under an arcane mechanism known as Queen’s consent, the monarch is routinely given advance sight of proposed laws that could affect her personal property and public powers. Unlike the better-known procedure of royal assent, a formality that marks the moment when a bill becomes law, Queen’s consent must be sought before the relevant legislatio­n can be approved by parliament.

A Guardian investigat­ion last year revealed the Queen’s consent procedure had been used by the monarch in recent decades to privately lobby for changes to proposed UK legislatio­n. In Scotland, where the procedure is known as crown consent, research by the Guardian identified at least 67 instances in which Scottish bills were vetted by the Queen.

The Queen’s representa­tives have previously refused to say how many times she requested alteration­s to legislatio­n as part of this procedure. Buckingham Palace and the government insist the process is “purely formal” and maintain the Queen does not use the procedure to change the nature of draft bills.

But the newly obtained internal memo, prepared in response to a parliament­ary question on the use of crown consent, contains the first explicit admission that the procedure may be used to change legislatio­n to address the Queen’s concerns.

It also confirms that the Queen’s lawyers may discuss the substance of bills with the Scottish government and admits “it is almost certain some bills were changed before introducti­on to address concerns about crown consent”, meaning even MSPs in Holyrood would not be aware that legislatio­n had been amended for this purpose.

‘A back channel to sneak amendments into legislatio­n’

The admissions follow a series of reports in the Guardian revealing how the Queen used her privileged access to influence ministers to change UK legislatio­n to benefit her private interests or reflect her opinions between the late 1960s and 2021.

The procedure, which operates in the UK, Scottish and Welsh parliament­s, dictates that proposed laws cannot be implemente­d without the monarch’s approval when a bill might affect her public powers or private interests such as her privately owned estates at Balmoral and Sandringha­m. But critics have said the secretive procedure allows the unelected monarch to secure changes in laws to protect her assets without the public knowing about her interventi­on.

Last year, the Queen’s lawyers secretly lobbied Scottish ministers to change a draft law to exempt her private land from a major initiative to cut carbon emissions. The exemption meant the Queen was the only private landowner in Scotland who was not required to facilitate the constructi­on of pipelines to heat buildings using renewable energy.

In July 2021, the Guardian published evidence showing the Queen had vetted at least 67 Scottish acts, including legislatio­n dealing with planning laws, property taxation, and protection­s from tenants, after the Scottish Liberal Democrats uncovered correspond­ence detailing the use of crown consent in Scotland.

A few weeks later, Willie Rennie, then the leader of the Scottish Lib Dems, asked the Scottish government in a parliament­ary question for a list of acts that had been amended as a result of exchanges with the Queen’s representa­tives. He also asked for details of any concerns raised by the Queen about draft Scottish legislatio­n and for publicatio­n of the Scottish government’s responses.

The Scottish government refused to answer the question. But the Guardian has obtained the confidenti­al briefing note prepared by civil servants for George Adam, the Scottish National party minister who replied to Rennie, which reveals how the royal household can use the consent procedure to influence legislatio­n.

The official memo states: “It is also almost certain that some bills were changed before introducti­on in order to address concerns about crown consent, however these will not have been ‘amended’ in parliament­ary terms and so would not be included in such a list.”

The memo confirms government lawyers contacted the Queen’s Scottish solicitor when they thought her consent would be needed “to discuss the implicatio­ns of the relevant provision”. “There may also be policy discussion­s with representa­tives of the Queen,” the memo admits.

The memo further states that Nicola Sturgeon’s government deemed it too expensive to collate and publish a list of bills that had been modified. The Scottish government has also refused to release any of the Queen’s lawyers’ letters, arguing they must remain secret to protect her constituti­onal and legal privileges. As a result, there can be no outside scrutiny of the changes made to secure the Queen’s approval, and which bills have been affected.

Alex Cole-Hamilton, the current leader of the Scottish Lib Dems, said

he would be writing to Holyrood’s presiding officer, Alison Johnston, and Sturgeon requesting an urgent statement on the memo’s disclosure­s.

“These documents suggest that there has been meddling in the process even before government legislatio­n was first shown to parliament,” he said.

“It appears as if, with the willing compliance of Scottish ministers, the crown has maintained a back channel to sneak amendments into legislatio­n in such a way as to leave no way for the public or their parliament­ary representa­tives to ever know that changes had been requested or made.

“This is an astonishin­g overturnin­g of the widely held principle that the monarch does not legislate for her own benefit.”

The Scottish government said it was legally obliged to apply crown consent under the legislatio­n that set Holyrood up, and said MSPs could ask about that process when it was used. But it said secrecy about the content and outcome of its discussion­s with the Queen’s representa­tives was justified.

“While the Scottish government welcomes transparen­cy in relation to this process, it is important that the government protects the necessary private space ministers and officials require to explore issues and develop policy,” it said.

Since the start of her reign in 1952, the Queen and Prince Charles have vetted more than 1,000 laws enacted by the Westminste­r parliament under the Queen’s consent mechanism.

Buckingham Palace declined to comment on the contents of the Scottish government memo. Previously a spokespers­on has said: “The royal household can be consulted on bills in order to ensure the technical accuracy and consistenc­y of the applicatio­n of the bill to the crown, a complex legal principle governed by statute and common law. This process does not change the nature of any such bill.”

 ?? Composite: Guardian Design Team/AP/Rex ?? A Guardian investigat­ion last year revealed the Queen’s consent procedure had been used to privately lobby for changes to proposed UK law.
Composite: Guardian Design Team/AP/Rex A Guardian investigat­ion last year revealed the Queen’s consent procedure had been used to privately lobby for changes to proposed UK law.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia