The future prospects of a devolved English Parliament have been raised in relation to the West Lothian question, which came to the fore after
devolutionary changes to British parliaments. Before 1998, all political issues, even when only concerning parts of the United Kingdom, were decided by the
British Parliament at
Westminster. After separate regional parliaments or assemblies were introduced in
Scotland,
Wales, and
Northern Ireland in 1998, issues concerning only these parts of the United Kingdom were often decided by the respective devolved assemblies, while purely English issues were decided by the entire British Parliament, with MPs from Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland fully participating in debating and voting. The establishment of a devolved English parliament, giving separate decision-making powers to representatives for voters in England, has thus become an issue in British politics. During
general elections, all of the
single-member constituencies (seats) that constitute the UK Parliament are subject to separate, simultaneous contests, between several candidates. While these constituencies span the entire UK geographically, because of the way that the
population of the UK is distributed – i. e. the population of England is greater than that of Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales combined – the 533 MPs from English constituencies represent a majority within the
House of Commons. Nevertheless, there are often occasions when the votes of MPs from non-English constituencies have proved to be decisive with regard to England-specific legislation (regarding matters that are devolved outside England). (Examples of this phenomenon since devolution include issues with such as
foundation hospitals,
top-up fees and runways at
Heathrow.) To a limited extent, the
Scotland Act 1998 has reduced the potential for non-English MPs to form decisive regional blocs – that is, Section 81 of the Act abolished the previous system of
apportionment, under which Scottish constituencies required a smaller electoral quota and Scotland was over-represented, relative to the other components of the UK; England now provides more MPs
per capita than Scotland. Surveys of public opinion on the establishment of an English parliament have given widely varying conclusions. In the first five years of devolution for Scotland and Wales, support in England for the establishment of an English parliament was low at between 16 and 19 %, according to successive
British Social Attitudes Surveys. A report, also based on the British Social Attitudes Survey, published in December 2010 suggests that only 29 % of people in England support the establishment of an English parliament, though this figure had risen from 17 % in 2007. One 2007 poll carried out for
BBC Newsnight, however, found that 61 % would support such a parliament being established. While the Conservatives were in government from 2010 to 2015 in coalition with the Liberal Democrats, the coalition government approved the creation of the
McKay Commission to look into the question. The Commission proposed that bills in the House of Commons which affected England solely or differently should require a majority vote of MPs representing English constituencies, a system known as
English votes for English laws (EVEL). In October 2021, a poll by Public First found that 62% of English voters would vote for an English Parliament. Furthermore, an even bigger majority of 'English identifiers' – 72% – want laws that only apply in England to be made by MPs elected in England, whilst 64% of all English voters, including 'British identifiers', thought the same.
Mayoral Council for England , May 2025 In 2002, former prime minister
Gordon Brown proposed the establishment of a "Council of England" which would be chaired by the prime minister and would include leaders of
combined authorities, the
Mayor of London, representatives of
local government and other stakeholders in England. The proposed council would be similar to the
Council for Wales which existed between 1949 and 1966. In 2024, the new Labour government established an England only forum known as the
Mayoral Council for England to bring together ministers from the UK government, the Mayor of London and Mayors of England's Combined Authorities. As the Labour government hopes that combined authorities will be established throughout England, the Mayoral Council would eventually evolve into an all England forum. As of October 2024, 48% of the population and 26% of the land area of England is represented on the Mayoral Council. ==Positions taken by political parties==