Reserved and excepted matters


In the United Kingdom reserved matters and excepted matters are the areas of public policy where the UK Parliament has retained the exclusive power to make laws in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.
Each of these three nations has been granted power by the UK Parliament under their respective devolution statutes to legislate in all areas except those which are reserved.
These reserved matters determine which areas are devolved to the three nations and which are not. The powers are set out in three main laws for each of those nations and subsequent amendments which further devolved powers to the respective legislatures:
In Scotland, a list of reserved matters is explicitly listed in the Scotland Act 1998. Any matter not explicitly listed in the Act is implicitly devolved to the Scottish Parliament.
In Northern Ireland, the powers of the Northern Ireland Assembly do not cover reserved matters or excepted matters. In theory, reserved matters could be devolved at a later date, but excepted matters were not supposed to be considered for further devolution. In practice, the difference is minor as Parliament is responsible for all the powers on both lists and must give its consent to devolve them.
In Wales, a list of reserved matters is explicitly listed under the provisions of the Wales Act 2017. Any matter not explicitly listed in the Act is implicitly devolved to the Senedd but prior to this between 1999 and 2017 a list of matters was explicitly devolved to the then known National Assembly for Wales and any matter not listed in the Act was implicitly reserved to Westminster.

Scotland

The Scottish Parliament was created by the Scotland Act 1998, passed by the Parliament of the United Kingdom. This Act sets out the matters still dealt with by the Westminster parliament, referred to as reserved matters.
The legal ability of the Scottish Parliament to legislate on a matter is largely determined by whether it is reserved or not.
Anything not listed as a specific reserved matter in the Scotland Act is automatically devolved to Scotland, including:
This is one of the key differences between the Scotland Act 1998 and the never-implemented Scotland Act 1978.

List of reserved matters

Reserved matters are subdivided into two categories: General reservations and specific reservations.
General reservations cover major issues which are always handled centrally by the Parliament in Westminster:
Specific reservations cover particular areas of social and economic policy which are reserved to Westminster, listed under 11 'heads':
Head C – Trade and Industry
The reserved matters continue to be controversial in some quarters and there are certain conflicts or anomalies. For example, while the funding of Scottish Gaelic television is controlled by the Scottish Government, broadcasting is a reserved matter, and while energy is a reserved matter, planning permission for power stations is devolved.

Northern Ireland

Government of Ireland Act 1920

Devolution in Northern Ireland was originally provided for in the Government of Ireland Act 1920, which stated that the Parliament of Northern Ireland could not make laws in the following main areas:
This was the first practical example of devolution in the United Kingdom and followed three unsuccessful attempts to provide home rule for the whole island of Ireland:
Irish unionists initially opposed home rule, but later accepted it for Northern Ireland, where they formed a majority.

Direct rule

The Parliament of Northern Ireland was suspended on 30 March 1972 by the Northern Ireland Act 1972, with Stormont's legislative powers being transferred to the Queen in Council.

Northern Ireland Constitution Act 1973

The Parliament of Northern Ireland was abolished outright by the Northern Ireland Constitution Act 1973; legislative competence was conferred instead on the Northern Ireland Assembly. The 1973 Act set out a list of excepted matters and "minimum" reserved matters.
The new constitutional arrangements quickly failed, and the Assembly was suspended on 30 May 1974 having only passed two Measures.

Direct rule again

The Assembly was abolished under the Northern Ireland Act 1974, which transferred its law-making power to the Queen in Council once again. The 1974 framework of powers continued in place until legislative powers were transferred to the present Northern Ireland Assembly under the Northern Ireland Act 1998, following the Belfast Agreement of 10 April 1998.

Northern Ireland Act 1998

List of key excepted matters

Excepted matters are outlined in Schedule 2 of the Northern Ireland Act 1998:
Reserved matters are outlined in Schedule 3 of the Northern Ireland Act 1998:
After the suspension of the Parliament of Northern Ireland, policing and justice powers transferred to the UK Parliament and were subsequently administered by the Northern Ireland Office within the UK Government. These powers were not devolved after the Belfast Agreement.
The Hillsborough Castle Agreement on 5 February 2010 resulted in the following reserved powers being transferred to the Northern Ireland Assembly on 12 April 2010:
Some policing and justice powers remain reserved
to Westminster:
A number of policing and justice powers remain excepted matters and were not devolved.
These include:
Northern Ireland has parity with Great Britain in three areas:
Policy in these areas is technically devolved but, in practice, follows policy set by the Westminster Parliament to provide consistency across the United Kingdom.

Wales

Reserved matters

Under the provisions of the Wales Act 2017, matters not reserved are within the legislative competence of the Senedd. These reserved matters are:
Specific reservations cover particular areas of social and economic policy which are reserved to Westminster, listed under 13 'heads':
Head C – Trade and Industry
Prior to the passage of the Wales Act 2017, issues were only devolved if outlined in the Government of Wales Act 1998 or the Government of Wales Act 2006.

Government of Wales Act 1998

The Government of Wales Act 1998 lists the following fields to be transferred to the National Assembly for Wales:
The Government of Wales Act 2006 updated the list of fields, as follows:
Schedule 5 to the 2006 Act may be amended to add specific matters to the broad subject fields, thereby extending the legislative competence of the Assembly.

Legislation

Official guidance (published by the Cabinet Office)

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