13-02-2025
New law to lift ban on Catholics in Church of Scotland role
A new bill lifting the ban on Catholics becoming the King's representative at the Church of Scotland's annual assembly has been introduced at the House of Eilish Angiolini KC has been given the post of lord high commissioner of the church's 2025 general the former lord advocate is a practicing Catholic and legally prohibited from holding the position under laws written in the 19th Church of Scotland (Lord High Commissioner) Act 2025 would revoke that legislation and "make provision for persons of the Roman Catholic faith" to hold the role.
The general assembly has met almost every year since the protestant reformation of meets to make laws and set agendas for the lord high commissioner acts as the sovereign's representative at the event, and delivers the opening and closing role is usually held by a prominent member of Scottish society, including King Charles himself in a provision in the Roman Catholic Relief Act 1829 meant those of the Catholic faith were still barred from the act allowed Catholics in the United Kingdom to retain their faith while serving in parliament and higher it made an omission for the position of lord high commissioner.
'Goodwill and collaboration'
The new Bill, proposed by Labour MP Pat McFadden, will remove that provision in time for Lady Angiolini to take up the job in cabinet office described her appointment as a "significant gesture of unity, goodwill and collaboration" between the Kirk and the Catholic Church in Angiolini, who was born in Glasgow's Govan to a family of Irish catholic descent, served as solicitor general under Jack McConnell between 2001 and was later lord advocate from 2007 until 2011, when she was succeeded by Lord described accepting the position as lord high commissioner as "a great honour" after being appointed to the role in December.