Dunno about Walse, Hope;
However the procedures for administering the Scots Parliament were enshrined in the Scotland Act 1999, and the chamber is run without the flourishes, flummery, daft courtesy titles and other rubbish which infests Westminster. Liz has visited the parliament on four occasions, one of which was when it vacated its' then temporary home to make way for the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland (who owned the building).
On the three occasions when Liz opened Parliament as queen of Scots, the only things which remained in common were the fact that the honours of Scotland (the Scots crown, which Liz has never worn) were present, and the monarch sat on a level, or slightly below, those elected by the people.
That was a hark back invented by Donald Dewar, to show that the Scots parliament regarded the sovriegn as one among equals (as it did pre 1605) rather than as one to be exalted or set apart.
As for the rest?
The opening is usually finished with a song...and I well remember the very first song sung in 1999 - my friend folk singer Sheena Wellington singing "A man's a man for a; that", whicch ridicules the aristocracy, monarchy and states that
"The man o independant mind
he looks, and laughs at a that!"