Gordon Brown Proposes Third Option For Scotland

gordon brown

Gordon Brown will call for Holyrood to be handed a raft of new powers after Brexit as part of a ''third option'' for Scotland's future.

The former prime minister will say a new form of federal home rule is needed to unite the country and avoid years of ''bitter division''.
 
Mr Brown will give a speech at the Festival Of Ideas in Kirkcaldy, Fife, against the backdrop of a constitutional stand-off between the UK and Scottish governments over the calling of a second independence referendum.
 
He has already pledged to join forces with Scottish Labour leader Kezia Dugdale to campaign for a People's Constitutional Convention to look at how power is distributed across the nations and regions of the UK.
 
Mr Brown, an architect of the 2014 ''vow'' promising Holyrood more powers in the event of a No vote to independence, will propose a range of controls should be passed to the Scottish Parliament after Brexit.
 
These include the setting of VAT rates, the power to sign international treaties, and controls over agriculture, fisheries, environmental regulation, employment and energy.
 
The former PM will also call for the repatriation to Scotland of £800 million of money now spent by the European Union, and propose the Bank of England becomes the Bank of England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland with fully-staffed representation in Scotland ''to reinforce the fact that the pound is for everyone''.
 
Mr Brown is expected to say: ''The third option, a patriotic Scottish way and free from the absolutism of the SNP and the do-nothing-ism of the Tories, is now essential because post-Brexit realities make the status quo redundant and require us to break with the past.
 
''The status quo has been overtaken by events because unless powers now with the European Union are repatriated from Brussels to the Scottish Parliament, the Welsh Assembly and the regions, Whitewall will have perpetrated one of the biggest power grabs by further centralising power.
 
''The patriotic way means that Scotland is not caught between a die-hard conservatism that denies the Scottish Parliament the powers it needs and a hard-line nationalism that throws away the resources we secure from being part of the Union.
 
''Tory and nationalist extremism should not rob us of a third option that can give the Scottish people more powers, offer honest answers about how we can pay for our public services and, faced with the post-Brexit threat to our employment and industry, address the urgent issue of how we create new jobs by exporting and trading successfully with Europe and the rest of the world.
 
''Most of all, a new third option can unify our country and end the bitter and divisive Yes v No conflict that will continue to rip us apart.
 
''It is time to transcend the bitter division and extremism of an inflexible, die-hard conservatism at war with an intransigent and even more hard-line nationalism.''
 
Ms Dugdale said: ''Gordon and I have been working closely together as Labour puts forward an alternative to the constitutional extremes offered by the SNP and the Tories.
 
''Last month, I was delighted to secure the support of party conference for our vision of a federal UK.
 
''Our call for a reformed UK is about meeting the demand for change. One message from the independence and EU referendums was that people wanted more control over their lives. That's why Labour's plan for a People's Constitutional Convention and a federal UK will transform where political and economic power will lie in our country.
 
''We know that together we are stronger when the nations of our United Kingdom work together rather than split apart.
 
''Scottish Labour will vote against a second referendum next week and the Labour Party I lead will never support leaving the UK.''