Explanatory Notes

Scotland Act 1998

1998 CHAPTER 46

19th November 1998

Commentary

SECTION 3: Extraordinary general elections.

Purpose and Effect

This section provides for the holding of extraordinary general elections of members of the Scottish Parliament.

General

This section forms part of the set dealing with the election of members of the Scottish Parliament.

Section 1 requires members to be elected for each constituency and region. Sections 2 and 3 deal with the holding of general elections of members.  Section 2 covers ordinary general elections, which are to be held every 4 years, whilst section 3 covers extraordinary general elections, which are held if the Parliament resolves that it should be dissolved or fails to nominate a First Minister within a set period.

Vacancies in individual constituency or regional seats are dealt with by sections 9 and 10.

Parliamentary Consideration

StageDateColumn
CC28-Jan-98460
LC8-Jul-981342
LC8-Jul-981351
LC8-Jul-981354
LR22-Oct-981640
L39-Nov-98509

Details of Provisions

Subsection (1) provides for an extraordinary general election to be held in two sets of circumstances:

In such circumstances, the Presiding Officer is required to propose a day for the holding of the poll.

Subsection (2) provides that, on such a proposal, Her Majesty may by proclamation dissolve the Parliament, require an extraordinary general election to be held on the day proposed, and require the Parliament to meet within seven days (see section 4 for calculation of the 7-day period).  It will be for the Parliament itself to decide on the precise date, within that 7-day period, on which that meeting should be held.  The Standing Orders of the Parliament provide for this to be determined by the Presiding Officer and notified to members.

Provisions about the form, recording and publication of royal proclamations under this subsection are contained in section 38 and the Scottish Parliament (Letters Patent and Proclamations) Order 1999 (S.I. 1999/737).

Subsection (3) provides that, if the date of a poll under this section is within 6 months of the normal date for the next ordinary general election, that ordinary general election will not be held.  However, by virtue of subsection (4), that will not affect the year in which the subsequent ordinary general election is to be held.

For example, an ordinary general election is held in May 2003.  The next ordinary election would normally be in May 2007.  But an extraordinary general election is held in December 2006.  The next ordinary election will nevertheless take place in May 2011, 4 years from the due date of May 2007.