The Nominated Assembly was the first early modern Parliament to include MPs from Scotland, and represents a staging-post between the limited tender union offered in 1652 and the rather more generous union ordinance of April 1654. There was no attempt to involve the Scots in the nomination of members in 1653, and the choice of MPs seems to have been made by Oliver Cromwell* himself, working on information from English officers serving in Scotland. Three of the five MPs had direct connections with Cromwell before 1653.
The two remaining nominated MPs did not have a close connection with Cromwell, but they were attractive to the government for different reasons. Alexander Brodie of Brodie, a former lord of session, was an influential figure among the Protester faction, deemed the most likely to cooperate with the English government. The choice was not a happy one, however, as (perhaps getting wind of his likely nomination), in May 1653 Brodie had resolved ‘in the Lord’s strength, to eschew and avoid employments under Cromwell’ – a resolution that he kept, despite pressure from Jaffray and others.
Returned five members to the Nominated Assembly of 1653
