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Reset UK Government Relationship with Devolved Administrations

Labour · what the evidence says

An independent, source-checked look at Labour’s policy “Reset UK Government Relationship with Devolved Administrations” — what it would actually do across the things that affect your life. Every claim below quotes the source behind it. How this works.

Personal liberty & free speech — Helps

minor · low confidence

This policy would extend the same free-speech protections enjoyed by Westminster MPs to members of devolved legislatures, filling a real but narrow gap. However, the broader package has so far seen little concrete delivery, and the benefit touches only elected representatives, not the general public.

The evidence

Biggest unknown: Whether the free-speech protection pledge will be legislated in this parliament, given that as of April 2026 even the Sewel MoU had yet to reach agreement.

Our reading: O10 scores liberty effects: new or expanded speech protections improve it; coercive or surveillance powers worsen it. This policy has one direct O10 mechanism: extending parliamentary-privilege-style free speech protections to devolved legislators who currently hold narrower protections. That is a genuine, if narrow, expansion of free expression — it removes a current asymmetry that limits what elected representatives in Edinburgh, Cardiff and Belfast can say without legal liability compared to Westminster colleagues. The effect is real but limited in scope: it benefits only a few hundred elected officials, not the general public, so magnitude is minor. A secondary O10-relevant element is strengthening the Sewel Convention, which in principle constrains the central state from overriding devolved choices (a mild reduction in top-down coercion over a layer of democratic government). However, as the evidence shows, the convention has historically been 'thin' and the MoU had not been agreed as of April 2026, so this element carries little weight at present. Implementation risk is the dominant uncertainty: the broader reset package has shown little concrete progress in the first two years of the parliament, suggesting the free-speech extension may also face delay. Confidence is low accordingly, and the time horizon is this-parliament at best. No evidence supports any O10-worsening effect from this policy.

Inequality & fair shares — Little effect

minor · low confidence

This policy is mainly about governance processes between UK and devolved governments, with some additional funding pledged to Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland. While restoring regional control over structural funds and directing extra funding to devolved nations could marginally narrow regional inequality, the mechanisms are indirect, implementation is uncertain, and no concrete redistribution amounts are specified.

The evidence

Biggest unknown: Whether the additional funding and restored structural-funds control translate into meaningful, sustained transfers to less wealthy regions — or remain aspirational commitments constrained by wider fiscal pressures.

Our reading: O14 judges whether the gap between the richest and the rest narrows or widens, with regional inequality as one explicit indicator. This policy has two channels that could reduce regional gaps: restoring structural-funds control to devolved governments (who say current arrangements give them less money and less control), and pledging additional funding to Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland. Both are real, not merely aspirational — the Council of the Nations and Regions has met, and a £235m NI transformation fund has been partially delivered. However, neither channel is large or certain enough to materially shift population-scale regional inequality. The Barnett formula remains the dominant funding mechanism; any 'additional' funding is unquantified and its additionality over the baseline is unclear. The IFS flags Wales faces spending cuts absent new money, and the Resolution Foundation warns fiscal headroom is tight — meaning the promised additional funding may be crowded out. Implementation of governance reforms (the Sewel MoU, structural funds restoration) remains incomplete as of early 2026. The redistributive effect of better intergovernmental governance is indirect at best: improved collaboration could, over time, mean devolved governments better target regional deprivation, but this is a plausible mechanism, not a demonstrated effect. On balance, the policy points marginally toward narrowing regional inequality but the effect is too small and too contingent on implementation to rise above negligible at population scale. The magnitude is scored minor rather than negligible only because the structural-funds channel, if delivered, would restore a mechanism that did shift regional spending patterns. Confidence is low given the implementation gaps evidenced above.

Equal treatment & democratic rights — Helps

minor · moderate confidence

This policy would extend the same free-speech protections to devolved legislature members that Westminster MPs already enjoy, closing a concrete legal inequality. However, the broader democratic-architecture commitments — strengthening the Sewel Convention and the new Council — remain largely undelivered in practice as of mid-2026.

The evidence

Biggest unknown: Whether Parliament will legislate to equalise free-speech protections and whether the Sewel MoU will actually be agreed and enforced, given that as of April 2026 negotiations had not yet reached agreement.

Our reading: O9 covers equal treatment, democratic rights, due process, and minority protections. This policy touches O9 through two main channels. First, the free-speech equalisation is the most concrete O9 gain. There is a documented legal inequality — devolved legislators lack the full protections Westminster MPs enjoy under the Bill of Rights — and the policy directly commits to closing it. This is an equal-treatment improvement in a strict O9 sense: it places elected representatives in devolved legislatures on the same legal footing as their Westminster counterparts. If legislated, the effect is real and targeted. Second, the Sewel Convention and Council of Nations commitments bear on democratic rights and the rule of law for devolved institutions. These are meaningful in principle — a stronger convention would reinforce that devolved democratic mandates are respected, advancing the due-process and democratic-rights indicators. However, the evidence shows these commitments are substantially undelivered: by April 2026 the Sewel MoU had not been agreed, and the Convention's enforceability remains structurally weak given its non-statutory nature and history of override. The Council has met, but its governance integration is unclear and its long-term effectiveness contested. Restoring structural funds control to devolved representatives is more an O13/O14 lever than an O9 one; it bears on democratic self-determination only at the margin, and the evidence shows genuine disagreement over adequacy rather than a rule-of-law violation. On balance, the free-speech equalisation — if enacted — is a genuine, targeted O9 improvement. The broader democratic-architecture reforms are directionally positive for democratic rights but their real-world effect is uncertain given implementation gaps. The direction is 'improves', but magnitude is minor: the free-speech change affects a specific set of elected officials, not the general population's equal-treatment or voting rights at scale, and the larger mechanisms remain undelivered.