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COMMISSION ON THE POWERS AND ELECTORAL
ARRANGEMENTS OF THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY FOR WALES
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MINUTES OF PROCEEDINGS
of the
EVIDENCE OF:
Donald Anderson MP
held at
Boothroyd Room, Portcullis House, Westminster
on
THURSDAY 12 JUNE 2003
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In Attendance
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Lord Richard, Chair, Richard Commission
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Ted Rowlands, Richard Commission
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Tom Jones, Richard Commission
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Peter Price, Richard Commission
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Dr Laura McAllister, Richard Commission
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Sir Michael Wheeler-Booth, Richard
Commission
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Paul Valerio, Richard Commission
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Vivienne Sugar, Richard Commission
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Eira Davies, Richard Commission
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Huw Thomas, Richard Commission
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Donald Anderson MP
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Proceedings
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Lord Richard
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Could you identify yourself for the purpose
of the record to start off with?
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Donald Anderson
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Even at this time of the morning I can
just about identify who I am. Donald Anderson.
Is this very formal? Can I just give sort of unprepared
rumblings?
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Lord Richard
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Yes, please.
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Donald Anderson
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First of all, I suppose the question
is is there a mood in Wales for a grand leap
forward or for a tidying operation in terms of
the experience which we have had in respect of the Assembly?
My good friend Ted will know that I was part of the
so-called gang of six in the 1970s, basically because
at some stage you have to come down on one side of the
fence in political matters and I could see a sort
of 60/40 against in the 1970s and I can just about
see 60/40 in favour I guess in the 1980s and 1990s,
but eventually politicians have to decide, so I thought
in general in terms of regional devolution, of decentralisation,
of identity, it made sense to have a focus for
Welsh opinion and I therefore was intellectually
converted to the case for devolution whilst recognising
the dangers that for some it was a rather romantic
exercise to have devolution; a unitary system gave
no easy stopping point along the road, and so those
who were talking about slippery slopes, and so on, had
much to be said in their favour. Inevitably no institution
is static; all institutions are dynamic. Everyone who
is part of an institution, whether it is my friend Peter
Price in the European Parliament, or whatever, everyone
wants new powers, and beyond that the people may be
highly sceptical about these new powers. So the spirit
in which I would approach the next stage of looking
at the constitutional structures in Wales would be to
say, "Well, what have we learnt --
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Lord Richard
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Can I interrupt before we get on
to that and ask you a question. You say you were
converted to the case for devolution. Was that on the
basis Welsh devolution goes along with the Scottish
devolution, or a different system of devolution?
In other words, that Scotland would have different powers
from Wales, in that detail?
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Donald Anderson
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We in the UK do not believe in grand
designs. We believe in responding to particular circumstances,
and I saw no -- whatever academics may have
said -- particular problem in a Spanish type
autonomy situation where Catalonia and Valencia and
the Basque countries wanted to go further on the road
and their identity suggested that that would be appropriate
there, whereas Valencia said there was no demand, or
insufficient demand, but let us go partially along the
road and Spain has managed to live with this "not one
suit fits all", but let us look at local circumstances.
What is absolutely clear from history is that Scotland
had a system of, not only a legal system,
but even a financial basis which we in Wales did
not have and that the demand was clearly greater in
Scotland, and any sensible Government would have responded
accordingly to the demand, and equally sensibly we would
look at the way the dynamics have changed and the way
that demand in Wales would move. Quite properly with
the existence of the new focus for Welsh opinion, although
I say there is always a great danger in Wales
of sinking into our valleys and not looking over the
valley tops and of a sort of unhealthy parochialism,
I think there is a healthy individualism identity
which I am more than happy to see further progressed
by our national institution. So that is the starting
point.
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Ted Rowlands
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You asked the question is there a need
for a grand leap?
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Donald Anderson
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I would move on and I think
there is not. Although there will be some in the BBC
and the inspectors of schools and the normal chattering
classes in Wales who look to a grand step forward,
it may come; the mood may change, and we will be ready
to respond accordingly, but there is a sort of --
it is a nastiness against politics generally which
we see from the institutions, but I think the Welsh
Assembly has had an unfortunate and undeserved press,
but my own instinct is to look at areas where in the
light of experience we can improve the Welsh input and
that means, I heard Gareth say this morning innovations
like building on prelegislative discussions, putting
it, enshrine it if you will in some new concordat rules
of engagement, and that will be as a matter of
course that there be joint committees. It will be a
matter of course that we accept that legislation can
only be improved if it is not handed down like tablets
of stone from the top of the mountain but is discussed
fully with the representatives at the Assembly level
and Parliament level and we look at ways and means of
doing that and that is my instinct of learning from
experience, having here in Westminster having total
respect for our Assembly colleagues and working with
them in partnership. So that is the sort of first thought.
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I suspect some colleagues may make
too much of this, but in the Assembly elections, rather
like Alice in Wonderland, there are prizes for everyone
and that, although you have lost you have won, and I do
not know how significant it is, but there was a certain
feeling that the legislative choice was devalued by
people who at one moment said, "I am weeping copious
tears because I have lost, I have lost" and
knowing in fact that they are going to win because under
the system they could get by on the list, and perhaps
people should be asked to make a choice of list
or constituency. The contrary argument is that we could
well be losing some talent in Wales as a result
of an alternative system. That is part of our Welsh
delusion. When I was a boy I read the
Welsh folk story somewhere in the hills of Carmarthenshire
a little shepherd boy stumbled into a cave where
there was a sleeping army of Welshmen, and at the
time when the Assembly was set up there was this grand
delusion for us in Wales that somewhere there were lots
of people who would not be attracted to the normal structures
but were likely to march forward on the trumpet
sound and be ready to give their talents to the people
of Wales. There may be people lurking somewhere in the
corners of the BBC, or wherever, who will be ready to
give their talents, and I hope that we can have
them as part of our national union like the little shepherd
boy in the army in the caves of Carmarthenshire. We
have to realise that the reality is that people will
come probably from existing party structures in Local
Government, some alas who did not quite make it to Westminster.
I hope we will come to a time when we might in
the European Parliament when people of ambitions and
will increasingly look to the Assembly as a serious
option. It depends on the interests of individuals,
and there is a very serious danger that while Westminster
still has the cash that people who have a serious
interest in health, in education, realise that their
talents will not be fulfilled in Wales. I do not
know if I am allowed to quote the goodbye letter of
one distinguished member of your panel, but I remember
being very seriously impressed with what one former
Parliamentary colleague said, that part of his job satisfaction
had gone when the Assembly was set up because he could
not answer people's concerns in his constituency on
health and education. So if this is the motivation,
the talent, the experience, the background of individuals
they should go to the Assembly, rather than come to
Westminster. So that mutual respect, built on experience,
and I suppose before you tear me apart, because
I am afraid I am totally unprepared -- this is
just murmurings, I hope from someone who does keep
his feet reasonably well on the ground in Swansea --
and Swansea, as the former Chief Executive knows, is
a border city between Welsh Wales and English Wales
and therefore was the only major city to support the
Assembly in the referendum. So Swansea is fairly representative
and In the referendum the electoral geography was very
clear: the east went against devolution; the west went
for, and Swansea was happy straddling the two, and it
was the only major conglomeration which went for the
Assembly.
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I see no appetite among the people
I try to represent in favour of the great leap
forward, and that I think puts a certain constraint
on those of us who claim to try to represent popular
opinion, and we all say one of the mantras politicians
have to connect with public and that means listening
to people and perhaps in a spirit of humility recognised
that in 1997 when we had the referendum all the parties
in Wales represented at Westminster were strongly in
favour of the proposal. The Welsh media was almost one
hundred per cent in favour of the proposal. The
National Westminster Government, genuinely used its
resources. We were criticised for not being sufficiently
enthusiastic, but certainly people like myself tried
to get our parties motivated, and yet in spite of that
enormous convergence of the right and the good we had
a 50 per cent turnout and 25 per cent
for and 25 per cent against. What conclusions
does one draw from that? Did we fail in terms of our
own missionary work? No. In 1979 there were 4 to 1 against
and that perhaps reflected the unpopularity of the then
Labour Government in 1979, so in referenda we cannot
separate the question from the political context, (as
Mitterand said that the French people always give an
answer to the wrong question in referenda) thus we cannot
divorce them from the context.
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Can I stop my burbling and just come
to this point: so the conclusion I draw from the
actual referendum result in 1997 was that the Welsh
people were very divided, the Welsh people remain divided,
that if there were any attempt to have a great
leap forward it would have to be probably against the
prevailing wind of the people and would certainly demand
another referendum.
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Dr Laura McAllister
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In terms of measuring public opinion,
or any kind of opinion measurement has its own problems,
particularly anecdotal evidence, and our own engagement
with the Assembly we know is more problematic than most,
I am sure you are familiar with a lot of the more
robust opinion polling that has gone on over the past
4 years and in fact, speaking as an academic, we
are in a much more advantageous position to measure
public opinion than we were in the 1970s and I just
wonder what is your take on the fact that if you combine
the options of a Scottish model plus an even greater
measure of independence those two options come out at
over 50 per cent on a consistent basis?
That seems to account for a lot of arguments you
are suggesting you are picking up from your constituency
in Swansea.
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Donald Anderson
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I can only explain, as someone who
likes to think I am in touch. The politicians will take
perhaps the wrong message from going to the post offices
in the constituency and talking to relatives and talking
to people, and I was educated in the University
of Wales I have to say, I was an academic
in the University of Wales for a period. Very many
of my closest friends remain in the University of Wales
and I know that span of opinion, but I also
am, hopefully, sufficiently close to the ground to know
the other spans of opinion, and I cannot answer --
I suspect that opinion polls vary substantially,
but I would be very sceptical about the attention
of most people to the minutiae of these sort of areas.
There may be a generalised view that perhaps we
should move forward, but I would be ready to come
down to the details. My own hunch -- totally irrational
but an honest attempt to put my ears to the ground --
would be that there is no appetite for other than a tidying
operation.
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Lord Richard
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You say there is no appetite, but is
there a need?
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Donald Anderson
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I could have a great academic
seminar on the need, and I personally have no great
argument against moving faster and further along the
road, but I am also a Democrat.
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Lord Richard
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You see, we have had a lot of evidence,
a mass of evidence about sort of jagged edges and
split responsibilities, where Wales is responsible,
Cardiff is responsible for a bit of the subject
and Westminster is responsible for something else and
they do not quite fit together, but do you take the
view that that should be resolved, those problems?
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Donald Anderson
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Yes, I would think it could be resolved
without giving hostages to fortune in terms of something
that might be construed as separatist. You would need
a good partnership, you would need understanding
and respect, and if it can be shown that there are jagged
edges which can be removed; if in the light of experience
we say that by working with the Assembly on a basis
of mutual respect we can move forward in that way, great,
but I do not see any call or need now for serious
constitutional change, and I do apologise, actually,
I did not mean to come this morning. I mean,
I have prepared absolutely nothing and I have
just come from a whole series of meetings on foreign
affairs. This is no more than the prejudices of one
local Welsh Democrat.
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Vivienne Sugar
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Can we perhaps explore your prejudices
a bit more, or those of your constituents and why
in Brynmill there is not an appetite for change?
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Donald Anderson
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That was where I was born and brought
up.
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Vivienne Sugar
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Because it is contrary to the evidence
that we have had from opinion polls, who actually want
greater clarity of powers for the Assembly so that the
Assembly is more able to deliver whatever it is that
Welsh people want to see changed. What do you think
makes up the feelings of your constituents? Is it to
do with the perceptions of the Assembly via the press?
Is it to do with the demarcation between an MP's role,
a constituency Assembly Member's role and a regional
list Assembly Member's role? Can you give us some examples
of what the people are actually saying to you they are
not happy about?
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Donald Anderson
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Yes. I think a lot of it is
fed by the press, which I think gives the Assembly
a very undeserved reputation and all they are concerned
about the cost of the headquarters: "There they go again
taking our money, and using it for their purposes",
and comments like "56 working days until Christmas"
and that sort of nonsense, I can see it straight
away feeds basic prejudice. I only wish that the
press were a little more understanding of the serious
work which the Assembly does and obviously changes in
constitutional structures are not the everyday conversation
of the ladies in the post office or the people in the
pubs and the clubs, so I suppose it is a matter
of coaxing along or saying that the following problems
have arisen and seeking to resolve them.
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As to the point of the list system, I supported
the list system, because I thought it was a useful
constitutional device for promoting inclusiveness in
Wales and not shutting out different parties from specific
areas and I know that it would have led to (inaudible)
in Wales, and it has not been as successful as I would
have hoped. One I guess is those who are losing
have become winning, but perhaps that is inevitable.
Part of it is the uncertainty about whom represents
whom, and even, as you will probably know, headmasters
in schools are feeling the need to invite not just the
constituency AM but also the list AM, or AMs, otherwise
they might be accused of partisanship, and so on. Again,
it is part of the political dialogue of temptations
of politicians to make promises, and particularly when
we are not able to deal with them, but there has been
more than a share of that from list AMs.
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I am not sure that one could change the
situation now, because unless there were a very
strong consensus one might be accused of manipulation
for partisan purposes. I think we are stuck.
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All I can say is that the operation
of the list system in Wales has made me less inclined
to support PR at Westminster level.
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Paul Valerio
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That is part of a question I want
to pursue, because it may well come -- it is only
my opinion -- that we will decide that the Assembly
needs to be enlarged, so if the existing system is proving
fractious in relationship with party representatives
then should we seriously consider a totally different
system, a system of having a national list?
I am also delighted to say how pleased I am to
hear you say the people of Brynmill, their views are
virtually the same as the people I quote, which
is the people of Swansea market and I have mentioned
this several times and I am delighted to hear you have
the same --
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Donald Anderson
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I place it in my own constituency,
but I also genuinely -- Paul and I went
to school together, so that is the first connection --
I also have several school friends who run stalls
in Swansea market and I make it a point of
honour every Saturday whenever I can to walk through
Swansea market and talk to genuinely a large number
of the people who are friends from my boyhood and who
are not unrepresentative of Swansea as a whole.
So the prejudices which I do express are those
of a number of people -- I am frankly more
devolutionist and more likely to go along that road
than most of the people to whom I speak. I missed
your point, because essentially if there were greater
numbers do I see the case for changing the system? Clearly
there would then be an intellectually coherent case
for looking at the system which could be done on a consensus
basis without the charge of manipulation which I think
would arise in the current situation, and one would
have to work out a list of criteria of desirable
things, including obviously inclusiveness within Wales,
and we like to think we are part of one great happy
family, and anything which could improve the working
together in Wales should be one of the key criteria
in looking at different electoral systems.
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Peter Price
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I respect your finger on the pulse
because, among other things, you have a very long
political experience, and I would like to just
press this a little further, your post office or
Swansea market, wherever you are talking to people,
the kind of feedback that you are getting, is this negative
about the Assembly, or is it disinterest that they are
not talking about the Assembly? And more significantly,
how does that compare with what they are saying about
Westminster and Whitehall? Because in fact is it not
quite normal that people complain about things, they
do not talk about the things that they regard as positive
and, therefore, if what you hear is negative feedback,
is this not just the typical kind of remark that people
make about any Government structure?
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Donald Anderson
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Peter, you have a good point there,
and I find that the normal talk of MPs is they
are all a bunch who are in it for what they can
get, and yet there is often quite a warm response
to individual MPs. It is exactly the same in respect
of the Assembly; they are there for what they can get,
yet AM X, Y and Z are really good people, we know them,
"they help me. They are really taking to Cardiff the
views that I want. They have done a lot of
very useful work in hospitals, in schools", and therefore
it may be a period of time where if we can just
get away from this constant press besmirching of public
representatives in general we could probably make more
progress in the Assembly. I personally have had
two AMs in my constituency, both of whom come with a different
expertise and have used it extremely well for the benefit
of the constituency. I have worked very closely
with them. When I get any letter, for example,
on health it goes straight down to my AM, and I tell
my constituents, "This is a matter for the AM and
not for myself", and I virtually, because of mutual
respect, I have no sort of demarcation disputes
with my AM, because I respect her enormously. That
goes for both AMs I have had. I concede there
may be problems in the case of other parliamentarians.
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Chairman, I am rumbling and rumbling
and burbling.
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Peter Price
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If I may just briefly take you up
on one other point which you mentioned much earlier,
and that was about Scotland. You said two differences
about Scotland, comparing Scotland with Wales. One was
the separate legal system, that it understood; the second
was you even had a financial basis. That I did
not understand. Could you explain.
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Donald Anderson
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Peter, let me try and explain. There
are other lawyers here. A body called the Bank of Wales,
compare the Bank of Wales with the Bank of Scotland,
the Royal Bank of Scotland and the venture capital groups
in Edinburgh, and the series of self standing groups
in the financial sector and a network which is
there, when you look at the way that devolution has
proceeded at a pace in Scotland since the 1880s
with a substructure of a constitutional basis
which people are used to, it is a very different
basis historically with the underpinning of the financial
structures compared with that we have in Wales.
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Ted Rowlands
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Could I just probe you a little
bit further on the tidying up. You say there is no appetite
for change, but there is a tidying up process. Do you
now think the burden of proof lies with those who resist,
who want to stop further devolution, or with those who
actually want further devolution? In other words, since
the establishment of the Assembly has the burden of
proof shifted? Traditionally, it has been for those
who want to devolve to prove the case. Is it still the
same or is the burden of proof on those who now wish
to resist further devolution?
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Donald Anderson
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I could make that as an intellectual
legal point as to on who now lies that burden of proof?
I have posed my responses more as a Democrat.
My starting point is the Assembly is there.
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Ted Rowlands
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You say you have the democratic, which
I understand, and I appreciate, because that
is where you come from, but when you think about it,
do you think now should Whitehall have to justify holding
on to certain powers or the Assembly justify having
the powers?
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Donald Anderson
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I am not trying to evade, and I would
need probably time properly to consider that. The starting
point is that the Assembly is there, that it is part
of our landscape now established and for ever in Wales,
that the minimalist position which was set at a time
of the Government of Wales Bill will be changed, and
it will only be changed in one direction, because it
was a minimalist structure, but the speed of that
change, the nature of that change, must be done sensitively
and to ensure that there is a reasonable consensus,
so I am not wedded in any way to the existing structure.
There will be changes, but I would have to genuinely
think more carefully about on whom lies the burden of
proof.
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Ted Rowlands
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Could I in that case, there has
been big pitch to the Commission in the recent months
from a lot of the lawyers, from a lot of Justices,
and from Alex Carlile this morning, that the Home Office,
youth justice, criminal justice, the legal system, Lord
Chancellor's powers are right for devolution. How far
would you going you have the lawyer's experience? How
far would you go along with that?
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Donald Anderson
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For the generality of criminal law, for
example, I cannot see how that can be adjusted
to the border between Wales and England in terms of
administration, and for looking at it within police
areas I instinctively would be in favour of having
the greatest possible degree of devolution, having experiments,
and basically having policing to be as local as community
minded as possible, and if necessary the constitutional
structures to do that.
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Ted Rowlands
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You would see as reasonable, or not unreasonable,
for the devolution responsibilities for the police to
be put forward to the Assembly?
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Donald Anderson
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I see no particular problem. There
would clearly have to be a basic minimum common
core. It must quite clearly be that we would want to
recruit from England and we have many expatriate Police
officers there. I would not want to see sort of
walls erected but I would like to see a devolved
local response and I would want to see Local Authority --
from I think our own we have pioneered a number
of interesting community action in that area, and that
is precisely the area which does affect ordinary folk,
because you know far better than I do in many ways
that it is security, law and order which is the basis
of the quality of life of our citizens.
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Ted Rowlands
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How far, on the youth justice side, how
far do you think that can be devolved?
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Donald Anderson
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Well, in terms of core structures, I would
not be against in principle various experiments in Wales
or wherever, but I am not sure that there are such peculiar
problems in Wales that the structures need be different,
but there are worthwhile experiments, the Children's
Commissioner, for example, which might be transposed
to the criminal justice field where we could have pilots,
experiments, which need not be a one size fits
all, but I see no serious reason for looking at
the generality of criminal law or youth justice law,
and that is totally top of the head, because I just
have not given it serious consideration.
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Lord Richard
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Can I thank you very much for coming.
I think it has been refreshing and extremely helpful.
Thank you very much.
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