[EM] Scotland local govt P.R. story
DEMOREP1 at aol.com
DEMOREP1 at aol.com
Fri Feb 8 21:06:00 PST 2002
FAIRSHARE NEWS RELEASE
18 December 2001
Executive Embrace Voting Reform
The Scottish Executive will forge ahead with plans to introduce
proportional representation for local government elections.
Reports of the contents of today's Scottish Executive statement
on local government reform received a warm welcome from the cross-
party Fairshare campaign.
Chair of Fairshare, Andrew Burns commented:
"It is great to see, finally, the Executive coming up with
concrete proposals for implementing proportional representation for
local government elections.
"This is a significant move in the right direction on an
important Executive commitment.
"Fairshare welcome the inclusive approach which seems to be being
taken: our campaign involves Trade Unions, the voluntary sector, and
many individuals, as well as political parties.
"We hope, therefore, that the consultation process is meaningful
and productive, rather than going over the same old questions again
and again. MacIntosh and Kerley consulted widely, and came up with a
clear plan for what Scotland needs: the Single Transferable Vote to
elect our councillors.
"It is now up to those, like us, who support the reform and
renewal of local democracy to make the case for change. Fairshare
look forward to fair votes legislation, based on the Kerley
report, being in place before May 2003"
ENDS
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
TEXT OF STATEMENT BY SCOTTISH EXECUTIVE
The next steps for PR in local government have been announced by the
Scottish Executive. The proposals, printed below, form an agreement
between the First Minister and Deputy First Minister that have been
accepted by their respective party groups and endorsed by the Cabinet
this afternoon.
18 December 2001
AGREEMENT ON TAKING FORWARD THE RECOMMENDATIONS OF THE KERLEY
COMMITTEE
BACKGROUND
The Partnership Agreement between Labour and the Liberal Democrats in
1999 stated that following the publication of the final McIntosh
Commission report the Scottish Executive would bring forward
a "programme of change including progress on electoral
reform."
To meet that commitment in 1999 the Scottish Executive appointed the
Kerley Committee. It was given a specific remit to advise on the
most appropriate system of election for councils, taking account of
proportionality and the councillor-ward link (amongst other
criteria).
The Kerley Report into Renewing Local Democracy was published in June
2000. Following its publication the Scottish Executive established
the Ministerial Working Group on Renewing Local Democracy to consider
the Kerley recommendations. In the second Programme for Government,
published earlier this year the Executive stated: "We are
committed
to continuing to make progress on electoral reform and the wider
modernisation of local government."
In September 2001 the then First Minister made clear that "the
Kerley principles will be at the heart of our modernisation of local
government". In November the new First Minister repeated that
commitment.
Since Jack McConnell was elected First Minister the Ministerial
Working Group on Renewing Local Democracy has met three times and has
agreed this timetable for the next steps in taking forward decisions
in relation to the Kerley recommendations. In line with the
commitment made in November, that timetable is today being put before
both partnership backbench groups.
The First Minister has made clear his intention for the Labour Party
to conduct its own internal consultation process on governance and
electoral reform in local government, to run alongside the early part
of the process detailed overleaf.
TIMETABLE FOR THE NEXT STEPS
Today we are setting out a timetable for the next steps to take
forward the principles of Kerley, as detailed below:
Before the Parliament's Easter Recess, the publication of a White
Paper on the future of local government based on the principles of
Kerley including future governance, councillors' allowances and
options for electoral reform. This will be followed by a
consultation period lasting 4 months.
Following publication of the White Paper the Executive will instruct
the drafting of appropriate clauses to reflect the options contained
in the White Paper.
During the summer the Executive will analyse the results of the
consultation on the White Paper, and prepare its response, in
consultation with the Labour and Liberal Democrat backbench groups.
Shortly after Parliament reconvenes in September 2002 the Executive
will set out the next steps in relation to legislation and the future
governance of Councils.
The First Minister and Deputy First Minister intend to ensure that
this debate will be set in the context of renewing and supporting
local government as a vital part of our democratic system. They will
emphasise the crucial role of local elected Councillors.
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