- Thu Feb 22, 2024 9:35 am
#63021
I'm still a little bit bewildered as to why the Tories decided to chuck their toys out the pram and the SNP walked out and took their ball home.
Okay, it was one of the SNP's opposition days of which they only get three every session, but they had nevertheless tabled their motion for debate. As I understand it, the way a parliamentary debate proceeds is that the original motion is proposed and debated on, then various amendments to the original motion are taken, debated, and voted on. The amendments then either fall, or are taken on board and applied to the original motion. Then either the substantive original motion, or the motion as amended, is voted on by the whole house and either passes or fails.
The speaker chose to select for debate two amendments to the SNP motion, one proposed by the government and one proposed by Labour, in order to facilitate the widest possible debate on the matter. That seems eminently fair and reasonable to me, whether it's in line with precedent or not. It is the speaker's responsibility and function to do precisely this.
So why were the SNP bleating that they would not have been able to vote for their own motion? Clearly, they could vote and probably would have voted against both Labour's and the government's amendment, either of which may have passed, and they would also have been able to vote for or against the final substantive motion, either as amended or not. Similarly, the Tories were not being prevented from voting on any aspect of the motion or on their own, or Labour's amendment.
So, what should have happened that would have kept the Scot Nats and their baldy twat of a parliamentary leader happy? I use the word "happy" advisedly.
"The opportunity to serve our country: that is all we ask.” John Smith, May 11, 1994.