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Article

Coalition and Minority Government in Scotland: Lessons for the United Kingdom?

Details

Citation

Cairney P (2011) Coalition and Minority Government in Scotland: Lessons for the United Kingdom?. Political Quarterly, 82 (2), pp. 261-269. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-923X.2011.02184.x

Abstract
The United Kingdom general election result in 2010 produced a hung or balanced parliament for the first time in over three decades. Since the United Kingdom has limited postwar experience of this outcome, it is natural that commentators have begun to look elsewhere for lessons on the practicalities of minority and coalition government. This article considers the lessons we can learn from the Scottish parliamentary experience since 1999. It outlines two main points of comparison: strength and stability. One might assume that coalition provides more of both than minority government. Indeed, for that reason, it is rare for central or devolved governments in the United Kingdom to operate as minorities through choice. Yet, the Scottish experience shows that the differences between coalition and minority government are not completely straightforward. Much depends on the institutional context and, in many cases, idiosyncratic elements of particular systems. Consequently, one can identify a trade-off in comparative analysis: as the identification of elements specific to one system increases, the ability to draw clear meaningful lessons decreases.

Keywords
coalition government; minority government; devolution; Scotland; Britain

Journal
Political Quarterly: Volume 82, Issue 2

StatusPublished
Publication date30/04/2011
URL
PublisherWiley-Blackwell
ISSN0032-3179
eISSN1467-923X

People (1)

Professor Paul Cairney

Professor Paul Cairney

Professor, Politics

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