David Millar (civil servant)

{{Short description|Civil servant and parliamentary expert (1929–2016)}}

{{Hatnote|For other people with the same name, see David Millar (disambiguation)}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2024}}

{{Infobox academic

| name = David Millar

| workplaces =

{{Plainlist|

}}

| occupation = Civil servant

}}

David Millar {{Post-nominals|country=GBR|OBE}} (1929 – 2016) was a Scottish civil servant who contributed to the work of three parliaments. His experience of the UK House of Commons (1953-1973) and of the European Parliament (1973-1989) led to his drafting the Standing Orders for the future Scottish Parliament. The draft documentCrick, Bernard; Millar, David (1995). To make the Parliament of Scotland a model for democracy. Publisher: John Wheatley Centre co-authored with Sir Bernard Crick proposed working methods that diverged from the Westminster model, and several of these were adopted by the newly-formed Scottish Parliament in 1999.

Biography

=Early life=

David Millar was born and educated in Edinburgh, attending Melville College and graduating in History from the University of Edinburgh. His obituary notes a life-long friendship with John Mackintosh, a fellow pro-European and advocate of political devolution, whose quotation Millar later suggested for engraving in the Scottish Parliament buildingObituary (2016). [https://www.scotsman.com/news/obituary-david-mcwalter-millar-civil-servant-1467526]. The Scotsman, 12 September 2016. Retrieved 15 September 2016.{{cite web |url=https://archive2021.parliament.scot/visitandlearn/15850.aspx |title=Home: Visit & Learn: Explore Parliament: About The Building: Parliamentary Buildings: Donald Dewar Room |date=6 April 2014 |publisher=Scottish Parliament |access-date=10 April 2021}}

=Civil Service career=

David Millar's professional life centred on the operation of parliaments, helping MPs to navigate the legislative procedures as a clerk in the House of Commons in London until 1973 and, after the UK joined the European Economic Community, rising to become the Director of Research in the equivalent part of the European Parliament, based in Luxembourg.

The transition to direct elections was among his early work for the European Parliament in 1974-76, a project that was led by the Dutch socialist Schelto Patijn.Costa, Olivier (2016). The history of European electoral reform and the Electoral Act 1976: Issues of democratisation and political legitimacy. [http://www.europarl.europa.eu/RegData/etudes/STUD/2016/563516/EPRS_STU(2016)563516_EN.pdf] European Parliamentary Research Service, accessed 18 June 2017 Members elected to national parliaments had previously been appointed to the European level. From 1979, Europeans elected their MEPs directly, marking "a historic step" beyond the commercial focus of the Common Market and towards a political European Union.{{cite web |author=Lewis, Flora |url=http://www.nytimes.com/1976/03/13/archives/european-parliament-is-urging-first-direct-election-by-may-78.html |title=European Parliament is Urging First Direct Election by May 1978 |date=13 March 1976 |work=New York Times |access-date=18 June 2017}}

After retiring to Scotland in 1990, David Millar shared his experience in parliaments at the University of Edinburgh, teaching at the Europa Institute, and publishing on political theory and practice. He was soon planning for a possible Scottish Parliament, while the political momentum for devolution grew in the Scottish Constitutional Convention. An initial paper for the Labour-backed thinktank,Hassan, Gerry; Shaw, Eric (2012) The Strange Death of Labour Scotland[https://books.google.com/books?id=hTurBgAAQBAJ] Publisher: Edinburgh University Press the John Wheatley Centre in 1991Crick, Bernard; Millar, David (1991). Making Scotland's Parliament Work [https://books.google.co.uk/books/about/Making_Scotland_s_Parliament_Work.html]. Publisher: John Wheatley Centre was followed by a fresh commission to draft Standing Orders for a Scottish Parliament in 1995, and by appointment to the Government's Expert Panel on Procedures and Standing Orders in the Scottish Parliament in 1998, advising the Consultative Steering Group.{{cite web |url=http://www.parliament.scot/PublicInformationdocuments/Report_of_the_Consultative_Steering_Group.pdf |title=Shaping Scotland's Parliament |date=December 1998 |publisher=The Scottish Office |access-date=2 January 2019 |archive-date=18 January 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170118052126/http://www.parliament.scot/PublicInformationdocuments/Report_of_the_Consultative_Steering_Group.pdf |url-status=dead }}

The ambition of the Crick-Millar proposals, born in part from the contrast between the Westminster and European Parliaments, was notedPage, Alan (2014) A Parliament that is Different? The Law-Making Process in the Scottish Parliament. In Law Making and the Scottish Parliament: The Early Years. EE Sutherland, F Davidson, G Little, K Goodall (eds.). Edinburgh University Press as a system in which the executive "need not and should not have such total domination over the legislative process as has evolved at Westminster". The standing orders were intended to play an important role Hassan, Gerry (1999) A Guide to the Scottish Parliament; The Shape of Things to Come [https://books.google.com/books?id=3zgMAAAAYAAJ] Publisher: Government Stationery Office in taking "a unique opportunity for Scotland to devise procedures more suited to its own civic tradition and the 21st century".

The proposals that were subsequently adopted include:

  • parliamentary committees structured such that "Committee loyalty in short will be stronger than party loyalty." Arter, David (2004) The Scottish Parliament: A Scandinavian-Style Assembly? [https://books.google.com/books?id=BGf0Iri0eVQC] Publisher: Taylor & Francis
  • electronic communications (such as [https://www.scottishparliament.tv webcasting]) to link parliamentarians to the people Megaughin, Emma; Jefferey, Charlie (2009) Introduction: The First Decade in Perspective. In Jefferey, Charlie; Mitchell, James (eds.) The Scottish Parliament 1999-2009: The First Decade. [https://www.hansardsociety.org.uk/publications/reports/the-scottish-parliament-1999-2009-the-first-decade] Publisher: Hansard Society
  • the electronic, public petitions (implemented in the E-petitioner system), admired elsewhere, McMillan, Joyce (2009) The Principle of Power-Sharing, 10 Years On. In Jefferey, Charlie; Mitchell, James (eds.) The Scottish Parliament 1999-2009: The First Decade. [https://www.hansardsociety.org.uk/publications/reports/the-scottish-parliament-1999-2009-the-first-decade] Publisher: Hansard Society and on which Millar was called to provide expert testimony to a House of Lords Select CommitteeLords Hansard (9 June 2004) Hearing on "Parliament and the Legislative Process", HL Paper 173-II [https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/ld200304/ldselect/ldconst/173/4060901.htm]

The Crick-Millar papers were noted as a success and influence of the John Wheatley Centre.

Review of the parliamentary procedures has continued, with substantial changes to the committees,Jefferey, Charlie; Mitchell, James (2009) The Scottish Parliament 1999-2009: The First Decade. [https://www.hansardsociety.org.uk/publications/reports/the-scottish-parliament-1999-2009-the-first-decade] Publisher: Hansard Society and broadly in the 2016 Commission on Parliamentary Reform.

Philosophical and/or political views

Millar supported the Liberal Democrats, once standing for the party as a candidate for election to the European Parliament.

Published works

With Prof Sir Bernard Crick,

  • Making Scotland's Parliament Work. John Wheatley Centre (July 1991).
  • To make the Parliament of Scotland a model for democracy. John Wheatley Centre (November 1995).

Other works,

  • Millar, D. 1990. A Uniform Electoral Procedure for European-Elections. Elect Stud 9:37-44. Doi 10.1016/0261-3794(90)90040-F
  • Millar, D. 1992. Subsidiarity - the Challenge of Change - Proceedings of the Jacques-Delors-Colloquium. J Common Mark Stud 30:371-2
  • Scott, A, Peterson J, Millar D. 1994. Subsidiarity - a Europe of the Regions Versus the British Constitution. J Common Mark Stud 32:47-67
  • Millar, D. 1996. Orchestrating Europe: The informal politics of the European Union 1973-95 - Middlemas,K. Polit Quart 67:279-81. DOI 10.1111/j.1468-5965.1994.tb00484.x
  • Millar, D. 1997. Regional government in England - Constitution-Unit. Polit Quart 68:213-5
  • Millar, D. 1997. Scotland's parliament: Fundamentals for a new Scotland act - Constitution-Unit. Polit Quart 68:213-5
  • Millar, D. 1999. Political theory of European constitutional choice. Polit Quart 70:116-8
  • Millar, D. 2002. Federal union, from Scotland with love [http://www.federalunion.org.uk/federal-union-from-scotland-with-love/] Accessed 17 Sept 2017

Honours, decorations, awards and distinctions

In the 1989 Birthday Honours, Millar was appointed OBE for his work at the European Parliament.

See also

References