| COMMISSION ON THE POWERS AND ELECTORAL ARRANGEMENTS
OF THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY FOR WALES |
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MINUTES OF PROCEEDINGS
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of the
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EVIDENCE OF:
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Win Griffiths MP
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Jon Owen Jones MP
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held at
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Caradog House, Cardiff
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On
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FRIDAY 11 JULY 2003
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In Attendance
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Lord Richard
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Eira Davies
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Vivienne Sugar
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Sir Michael Wheeler-Booth
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Tom Jones
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Huw Thomas
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Ted Rowlands
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Dr Laura McAllister
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Peter Price
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Carys Evans
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Malcolm Horlock
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Win Griffiths MP
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Jon Owen Jones MP
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Proceedings
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Lord Richard
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Firstly, thank you very much for coming.
Secondly, could you identify yourselves for the sake
of the record and thirdly, if you'd like to have five
minutes to open it up. You haven't got identical views.
Then we can discuss it afterwards.
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Win Griffiths
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I am Win Griffiths. I think I ought to
give Jon the honour of starting. I have put in a written
submission.
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Lord Richard
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Jon has.
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Jon Owen Jones
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I thought I had as well!
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Vivienne Sugar
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It was in the Western Mail this morning.
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Win Griffiths
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Even more reason for you to go first!
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Jon Owen Jones
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Thanks Win. I wasn't sure that I was
going to make an individual submission and the reason
I have is because of my recent experience. I think you
have read a number of comments that I have made in a
number of Welsh Bills as they have proceeded through
the House. In general, and in fact in almost every specific
example I have not been content that due scrutiny has
been given to significant Welsh legislation, unfair
to describe it as insignificant Welsh legislation, but
Welsh legislation, and entirely consensual Welsh legislation,
has had huge degrees of scrutiny, been subjected to
scrutiny in draft form by the Welsh Select Committee.
Has been scrutinised by the Welsh Grand Committee, then
gone on to the floor of the House. So we've had scrutiny
perhaps to excess for Bills which are non-contentious.
Whereas highly contentious bills with significant differences
of opinion have been piggy backed either as England/Wales
Bills or on English Bills. The result
of that is that it is very difficult to be able to ask
difficult questions of a Minister and have them answered.
In general, you are asking questions of English Ministers
who have no particular knowledge, or no ownership of
the line of argument that they are expected to defend.
I thought the Bill that restructured the health services
in Wales and brought in local health board was a classic
example of a highly controversial Bill, the consultation
upon which was mixed, to say the least, and yet that
Bill had hardly any real scrutiny and the Bill that
has just finished its House of Commons stages and about
to start the House of Lords stages is just as equally
contentious and important and again it's been treated
as a piggy back Bill and been given very little scrutiny.
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Jon Owen Jones
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My view is that we have achieved a great
step forward in Welsh accountability with devolution,
but we have missed something rather important in the
process. It's now true that policies specifically for
Wales are more accountable to the Welsh population since
the Welsh population have an opportunity to vote on
those things alone, not mixed up with a generality of
policies for the UK. In that sense devolution has improved
accountability greatly. But the legislative process
involves more than just putting forward a manifesto
of policies and getting elected. You elect representatives
to examine in detail how the policies are put into statute.
That process does not work at all in Wales at the moment.
In fact, you could argue that's it's working worse now
than it worked previously. Because in effect what happens
is that the policy line which may be in the manifesto
but not necessarily so, is agreed then put into practical
wording by Welsh Assembly officers, by Civil Servants
working for the Welsh Assembly presumably together with
the Ministers, then it is negotiated with civil servants
in Westminster departments and presumably Ministers
at some point and then the result of that negotiation
is then presented to Parliament. But in Parliament,
in effect, there is not the ability to scrutinise and
amend and improve that legislation. There is at least
in theory that ability to do that about everything else.
It's not just that Welsh MPs are not in a position to
do that job, Welsh AMs can't do it, because when Parliament
has decided what the wording of a Bill will be, Welsh
AMs have no power to change it. So there is a lacuna
here in the system. There are two general ways of dealing
with this lacuna. You either give primary legislation
power to the Welsh Assembly and let the Welsh Assembly
AMs do a job of scrutiny of legislation. Which they
currently don't do. Or you amend the processes of Parliament
so that Parliament is better able to do that. If you
go down the route of primary legislation to the Assembly,
which is the simpler route, well, no it's not the simpler
route, it's more complicated to do but it has greater
benefit of clarity to explain to everybody else what
you have done, if you do that you would have significantly
change the Welsh Assembly. The Welsh Assembly would
not operate as it does, you need more people in it,
you need them to work longer hours, especially a lot
longer hours at scrutiny, you would transform the structure.
It's a different body than we have currently got. I
don't think you can do that without asking permission
of the population to do it. So if you go down that route
you need to have a referendum. If you have a referendum
to set up a much weaker body, you need one to create
a much stronger body and all sorts of considerations
must be taken into account of how the arguments around
that would then occur. There are obstacles there. One
of the things that we have to argue, as we argued for
devolution in the first place, that the results of this
alteration is to improve the way in which people get
services. That's why delivery of services is an issue
in terms of how we devolve powers.
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Vivienne Sugar
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I wonder if you say could say a little
bit more about how scrutiny could be improved by the
MPs if the present situation carries on?
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Jon Owen Jones
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I put forward some ideas. Ian Lucas put
forward some ideas. But basically what you have got
do is deal with piggy back Bills. Get rid of piggy back
Bills. You have got to have the ability for Committees
which must largely be compiled of Welsh MPs to look
in detail at the subject. You have to set up parallel
processes. If you can't deal with them on the floor
in the same way as everything else because Parliament
has limited time to deal with legislation. In fact,
the main power of oppositions is to deny time to Government
to get through their legislation. So if you push in
extra Welsh legislation on the floor in the same way
as the UK legislation you are going to push UK legislation
out. So that's not going to work. You have to have some
parallel structures set up. We could do what Lloyd George
suggested in 1907 and have Committees which comprise
of Welsh MPs to look at the details of Bills. We could
do something like Ian Lucas has suggested and create
some sort of hybrid Committees of AMs and MPs. But you
can't do it within the present arrangements of the Parliament.
You have to change the present arrangements of Parliament
and allow Parliament to have some additional parallel
structure in which Welsh only legislation is looked
at in detail by the Committees which are either wholly
or mainly composed all Welsh MPs and of course, because
it's still part of Parliament, those decisions and the
amendments would then have to be brought before the
whole House for agreement. But what you would have done
is you would have put the legislature into the negotiation.
You would not make it, you would not make it an exclusive
deal between the governments which is the present position,
the Government's are agreeing legislation. But the legislature
either in the Welsh Assembly or MPs have very, very
little say in it.
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Vivienne Sugar
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Wouldn't you be bound by party discipline
not to challenge, if there had already been an agreement
between the Welsh Assembly Government and the UK Government,
the majority of Welsh MPs are in the majority parties.
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Jon Owen Jones
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That's the position anyway. Party discipline.
You might say that the whole process is pointless of
scrutiny through the Committee structures since everyone
is whipped at every stage. In large measure that is
what happens. In large measure party loyalties mean
that Government Members on a Committee hardly ever say
boo or bah and vote Government line. But it's not an
entirely wasted process because that doesn't always
happen. Exceptions occur. Flaws are discovered. Governments
as embarrassed. Arguments are made in Committee and
supported cross party. They are brought up by various
different parties and the Government makes amendments.
Usually it makes amendments in the House of Lords because
it's easier, it loses less face to make the amendments
in the House of Lords. All though I'm sure their Lordships
would prefer it to be the argument that is because they
get greater scrutiny.
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Lord Richard
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It does get greater scrutiny. No question
about that.
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Jon Owen Jones
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Often what happens is arguments are raised
in the House of Commons, if the Bill follows the stages,
they are then developed in the House of Lords and amendments
are made to Bills.
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Lord Richard
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That's a polite way of putting it. I
mean that assumes the House of Commons has actually
considered the thing. Half the Bills the House of Commons
has not looked at. Never mind, let's not argue.
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Win Griffiths
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Thats another argument. Could I
add something to what Jon was saying there? Because,
for example, the Children's Commissioners for Wales
Act, I was on the Bill, we did raise certain issues
and there were changes made to the Bill during the course
of its process through Parliament. I can't remember
now whether they were changed in the Lords or at report
stage, but there were changes. So to answer---
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Lord Richard
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Whose the Minister on that? Was it one
of the Home departments.
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Win Griffiths
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There was a home office minister on the
bill. I can't remember who it was now. But there definitely
was an English department involved.
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Lord Richard
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In charge of the Bill?
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Win Griffiths
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Yes, I think actually it might have been,
I am trying to recall, there certainly was an English
Minister. I can't remember if she was/he was in charge.
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Lord Richard
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Wales-only Bill?
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Win Griffiths
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There was a Welsh Minister on the Bill.
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Lord Richard
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Wales-only Bill, that's all.
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Win Griffiths
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Because although the Children's Commissioner
doesn't have direct powers over non-Welsh departments
there was a relationship that had to be developed which
was important for English departments. Also on the issue
of Welsh legislation and English Bills, Jon is pretty
much right there, certainly I wasn't happy with the
way the local health board concept was implemented.
I was happy with the concept indeed I had introduced
it with the local health groups.
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Lord Richard
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Why do you say that the Welsh Health
Bill was not scriutinised properly?
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Win Griffiths
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Not the Welsh Health Bill, it's the Welsh
bits of the Health Bill and the two of them. I think
the simple solution would be to give the Welsh Grand
Committee the power to scrutinise because it's already
there. It would require a change in the Standing Orders
rather than try and set up another type of Committee.
Also what I would say is that whilst I think the relationship
has broadly been a good one between Parliament and the
Assembly, on some of these issues where there is a difference
of opinion developing between what MPs feel and what
the Welsh Assembly Government feels, it is difficult
to get sufficient time to look at the issues in enough
detail. You can argue that maybe the political parties,
and maybe the Labour Party especially, should think
through more about how it can make time available for
AMs and MPs to get together and discuss these issues.
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Lord Richard
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You are talking about time. Not time
in the Parliamentary context?
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Win Griffiths
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No, time overall. Having had the experience
in the European Parliament it is incredibly difficult,
where the Members of different institutions are based
in different places, to get a specific Committee set
up to draw them in for meetings unless you institutionalise
it as the Danes have done.
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Jon Owen Jones
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You have to follow through that the implication
of what the present settlement says. What it says is
that the primary legislation is in Westminster and it
says, though I am arguing and Win is agreeing, that
actually it's paying lip service to proper scrutiny
whenever it is likely to present differences. So if
that scrutiny means anything at all, but it must mean
there must be an ability on the legislators which are
doing the scrutinising to change the Bill. There is
no point in, if you haven't this fictional ability to
look at and scrutinise, if you don't have the ability
to see it right through.
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Sir Michael Wheeler-Booth
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I don't think Government whips would
agree with you.
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Win Griffiths
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There have been lots of opportunities.
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Jon Owen Jones
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This does happen. For example, the Local
health bill had it gone through a Committee of Welsh
MPs who had had opportunity to scrutinise the Bill,
I have little doubt that it would not have emerged in
quite the same way as it finally did emerge, whether
that's acceptable to the Welsh Assembly I'm not sure.
But that is what our legislative structure is meant
to do and we're sort of trying to finesse it and pretend
it has that function and not allow it to experience
it.
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Sir Michael Wheeler-Booth
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One solution would be to say always have
a draft bill. May not be realistic but it would be a
solution.
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Jon Owen Jones
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Not a full solution. Because you still
have to allow the people who look at the draft Bill
to amend the Bill. If you are not prepared to allow
that to happen---
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Sir Michael Wheeler-Booth
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They do amend draft Bills.
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Jon Owen Jones
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The only draft Bills that we currently
have been in completely consensual and non-controversial
areas, so you may say we're happy for you to look at
and amend that because we know everybody agrees with
it. But we're not going to let you look at in detail
at amend this because we know it's highly controversial.
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Peter Price
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Is not the distinction actually more
that you have been drawing between Wales only Bills
and piggy back Bills that what you have been saying
is that the Wales only Bills have tended to be less
controversial and have the scrutiny, whereas the real
controversial stuff has been in piggy back bills. Your
remedy about scrutiny by a separate group dealing with
Welsh clauses has one weakness. It's this, that there
are underlying principles in the Bill which the, let's
call it All Bill Committee, the Standing Committee will
have got to grips with. The underlying principles and
lots of aspects which are going to apply in England,
and are then carried through to Wales perhaps in some
altered form. Now, if you have the scrutiny of the Welsh
clauses by an entirely separate group, who haven't participated
in the other debate, are they not in some disadvantage
and are we not setting up a situation in which there
could be unnecessary friction of a three-way character,
possibly between the MPs in the Assembly, but ultimately
between those on the Committees dealing with the Welsh
clauses and those on the Committee dealing with the
rest of it?
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Jon Owen Jones
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There is not a perfect solution. But
I am presenting evidence about how the present system
works and where its weaknesses are. There are some significant
weaknesses, in my view.
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Lord Richard
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Win might want to say something.
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Win Griffiths
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I broadly agree with what Jon has said.
I wanted to talk about secondary legislation---
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Ted Rowlands
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In a sense what we have been doing we
have been trying to categorise Bills. There are thee
types of categories. One, the Wales only Bill. Secondly,
the Bill's where there are substantial Welsh clauses,
eg, the Planning Bill, for example. Then the third are
those where all responsibility is devolved but the England
and Wales legislation is almost uniform. I would like
to look at third category. Let's take the Community
Care Delayed Discharges Bill. I understand from the
exchanges, from the information that we have received,
because we have ask Assembly Government Ministers to
tell us what happened, what their input into the Bills
were. This was a Bill which even if you had primarily
legislative powers probably wouldn't have wished to
have been taken through as a Wales only Bill, or a Welsh
Bill because there was common -- much of it, there was
a lot of common issues in some places, although it then
ran into a lot of trouble. It's almost as important
as the Bill itself. What degree of scrutiny took place
on this Bill? Either of you know? What has happened
as a consequence? This is the third category.
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Jon Owen Jones
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I don't think that any Welsh Members
sat on that Standing Committee of that Bill. Not that
I recall. I remember the debate, I think I spoke on
it, oddly, in the Welsh Health Bill. I raised it in
the Welsh Health Bill. But it's an interesting -- it
empowered the Welsh Assembly to do something the Welsh
Assembly said it clearly didn't want to do. It did other
things as well but that was because the Bill was designed
to deal with bed blocking. I read the day before yesterday
the Wanless report, which conveniently came out the
day after the Foundation Hospital Bill went through
the House of Commons. But that report clearly recommends
to the Welsh Assembly that they bring in the powers
in the Delayed Discharge Bill or something similar.
They are only able to do that because the Bill that
went through the House of Commons gave the Welsh Assembly
a power that they said they didn't want to use. Without
primary legislation your ability to do different things
is extremely constrained. So it's odd that the Welsh
Assembly should at various points say that they didn't
want to take up potential powers which they may want
to use at a later stage.
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Ted Rowlands
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One of the aspects in the agreement was
to actually control the Commencement Orders. That's
what they have done in this case. The amendment that
went through on the Bill was to give the Welsh Assembly
the Commencement Order secondary legislative power,
in other words, to decide how, if it wanted to implement
it, and, if so, when and how.
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Jon Owen Jones
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The same with the Community Health Councils.
The Welsh Assembly has the power to get rid of the Community
Health Councils as England did but chooses not to begin
the Commencement Orders, so it doesn't do it.
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Ted Rowlands
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Did you as Welsh Members have any communication?
The Assembly Government were conveying the views of
the Assembly Government to Ministers in London. Did
they advise you of their thoughts about the nature of
this Bill?
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Win Griffiths
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No, I don't think we were. We were not
copied into the process. I suppose because of the time,
there was not a lot of debate. There was a bit of a
row about it, but right up to the near the end there
wasn't a lot of debate about it, unlike some of the
other things where we have tried to raise issues that
concerned us, but again because of time, etc, both outside
and within the Parliamentary process it is difficult
to achieve a proper dialogue. I'm not saying it can't
be done, but it is difficult.
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Lord Richard
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I suppose you if you had a different
Government it would be easier in the sense that, well,
if there was a Tory Government in Westminster and a
Labour administration here, Labour MPs would spend a
lot of time putting the Assembly's point of view.
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Jon Owen Jones
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Yes.
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Win Griffiths
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What you have to remember is this issue
about Commencement Orders, etc, that existed with the
Welsh Office, and the two which spring to my mind where
the Welsh Office had the power but these powers were
never used, was on the creation of City Technology Colleges.
No serious effort as far as I know was ever made by
the Welsh Office to create them in Wales. The other
was the very significant differences in the development
of planning guidance in Wales and England which occurred
in, I think, it was the Gummer/Redwood period where
they had quite a different philosophy about these things.
It's not an unusual situation. It's more that it is
more marked now that the Assembly is supposed to reflect
more closely what's happening in Wales. What I was surprised
to find out, in preparation for this session, was what
the Assembly has been doing in it's first four years.
At the time I wrote this submission I didn't have the
information but I did get it this morning. Although
a part of it had been in the press, David Melding's
information about subordinate legislation, secondary
legislation, I was very, very surprised when I saw the
figures. In the information I received actually less
than five per cent of the Assembly's debating time,
business time was spent on secondary legislation. 70
per cent was neither debated nor voted on by the Assembly.
I also just got a list of some of the items which went
through. I reckon about half, I would have thought,
would have been deserving of a look at by the Welsh
Assembly to see if there was some justification for
Wales being different. I was surprised that only five
per cent of time was considered sufficient to look at
the differences that may be needed for Welsh circumstances.
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Lord Richard
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Have you got the Westminster figures
at all?
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Win Griffiths
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For?
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Lord Richard
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Similar figures. How much time is spent
debating Standing Committees?
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Win Griffiths
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It requires - I mean this is partly the
function of the Opposition because this is secondary
legislation - on the whole it requires a prayer from
the Opposition, then through the usual channels decision
are made about what is considered in Committee for an
hour an and a half.
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Lord Richard
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There is only (Inaudible)
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Win Griffiths
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It's probably very tiny in that case.
But here we're looking at something which is specifically
the needs of Wales.
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Sir Michael Wheeler-Booth
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Surely there is not an argument because
Westminster does subordinate very badly that the National
Assembly shouldn't do it at all?
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Win Griffiths
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I wouldn't say Westminster does it badly.
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Sir Michael Wheeler-Booth
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Most outsiders would. They think that
they too do it very badly indeed.
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Dr Laura McAllister
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It's clear from what you said and looking
at the details of the different process which by subordinate
legislation could be scrutinised, it's not doing the
job effectively. What we keep hearing from the Subject
Committee's in particular and individual AMs is that
the Subject Committee's are much more geared up to the
policy development function than the scrutiny function.
Part of our remit is to find out why is that the case.
Why they are falling down on the scrutiny role. I wonder
if you can give us some of your own interpretations
of why that might be the case?
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Win Griffiths
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Interesting because I think that it is
a not only a problem in simply legislative terms, the
fact that the Committee seems to concentrate on policy
development and doesn't look at the implementation of
legislation at the secondary level - can they make changes?
But I think, for example, just to take the development
of policy and implementation on the health side, there
is quite a lot of good work being done on trying to
develop a long-term policy for health, but I think on
the scrutiny of what is actually happening in the health
service there is not the same focus. I suppose Wanless,
to a certain extent, exposes some of these problems
in the report that he did at the behest of the Assembly.
I am not saying it's a case of dereliction of duty.
It is just a case of getting a better focus.
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Dr Laura McAllister
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Is it a question of time? This is the
other issue that has been raised.
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Win Griffiths
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Could be a question of time. It could
be a question of perhaps not having the right sort of
experience, I wouldn't like to be definitive, I think
you need to ask AMs as to why they don't seem to have
developed this aspect of their work.
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Jon Owen Jones
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You need to understand that scrutiny
is very time-consuming. The Bill was brought in Foundation
Hospitals, that I sat on and Win chaired, took about
60 hours. If you compare that amount of time to the
amount of time Welsh Assembly Committees are sitting.
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Dr Laura McAllister
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Also a question of organisation within
that secondary legislation because some of it may be
relatively straightforward. Of the 700 SIs that it could
have scrutinised, one would assume a big chunk were
not terribly relevant.
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Ted Rowlands
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35 per cent of secondary legislation
that goes to the Welsh Assembly is different from its
English counterpart. So there is an element of scrutiny
required.
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Win Griffiths
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How much of that was already there? Because
what may have happened is that this was just reaffirmation
of existing differences. Are they saying that these
were 35 per cent new changes made? If there were, then
a lot of that must have been done, not as a result of
scrutiny by the Assembly, but by executive decisions
of the Wales Assembly Government. Could I also say whilst
we're on the subject, the Welsh Assembly has done some
very significant things using secondary powers. On free
bus travel, prescriptions, school milk, developing the
Welsh baccalaureat and the ending of key stage one tests.
There are a whole host of these which are significant.
I am surprised they haven't done more.
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Vivienne Sugar
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One of the things that they haven't done
of course is the bonfire of the quangos. I imagine that
quite a lot of your constituency work will involve issues
where people have got concerns about the different agencies
that are operating in Wales. I wondered whether you
would like to give us your views about this?
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Win Griffiths
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I can say that Tai Cymru was wound up
and brought within the orbit of the Welsh Office and
now the Assembly before the deadline that we set for
ourselves. The Welsh NHS Trusts were also reconfigured
and almost half of them went. The Welsh Economic and
Industrial Development Agencies were brought together
into one, three into one. Why? I think you have to ask
the Wales Assembly Government why they have not focused
on reducing the number of quangos. I think there is
a case for reducing them.
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Dr Laura McAllister
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Also a case for better scrutiny of them
because we when we have had ASPBs before us we have
been told that the scrutiny is perfunctory or---
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Win Griffiths
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Maybe that's an issue of the amount of
time the Assembly allows for business. As Jon was saying,
the amount of time we spent on this latest Health bill
was enormous compared with some of the Committee work
in the Assembly.
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Ted Rowlands
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Could I ask you a more general question.
You and the other witness were actually the architect
of the Bill itself. You carried the Bill through the
Commons and were there for a preparatory period and
in a sense shaping the nature of the settlement. We
have had a string of witnesses who have rubbished the
settlement. In your experience looking at the first
four years and observing it at work, do you think that
the experience of the last four years justifies a major
significant change to the settlement?
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Win Griffiths
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As I said in my evidence, really the
Welsh Assembly got off to bad start which had nothing
to do with the settlement itself. Therefore, a year
or more was lost because of that. I do think it's premature
to make a judgment. I think some of the things the Assembly
has done, things I mentioned earlier, indicates in this
settlement there is a lot of potential to do things
differently even though they don't have the primary
legislative powers. But given, again, my introductory
remark about the fact that the settlement we got was
a compromise between those who wanted the primary powers
and those who didn't want any change whatsoever, I think
that we came up with a solution, which despite the difficulties
there have been in the first four years, has shown that
the Assembly can make some significant differences.
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Lord Richard
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Going back to the days when you and I
sat in those Committees, Derry Irvine chairing them,
looking back on this, it does seem to me that if the
two nations had the same basic devolution settlement,
I mean, it might have been much easier.
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Jon Owen Jones
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Can I say something on that because my
role in that period of time and the year developing
the policy going into before the general election and
the year putting it into effect I was the whip. My job
was not policy, my job was to get the policy through.
I think that sort of consideration has to be in your
minds when you write your reports too. It's not simply
what system seems the neatest and tidiest, it's what
system that you can get.
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Lord Richard
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I agree with that. You will be surprised
to hear!
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Jon Owen Jones
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We had immense difficulties in agreeing
what the devolution policy was going to be and getting
it through the party, in getting it through Parliament
and all sorts of deals and conversations went on. I
remember conversation with one of your Members. Conversation
with every single Member just about. My view before
the Welsh Assembly was set up was that we needed an
Assembly which was on the same lines as the Scottish.
My view has not changed, but it is getting from where
we are to getting where we want to be.
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Lord Richard
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Let's be sure where we want to be, that's
all.
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Jon Owen Jones
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We don't always want to be in the same
place.
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Lord Richard
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That's why we are asking you two. It
did seem to me looking at it from the point of view
of administrative tidiness, if you like, the good health
of the governance of the nation as a whole UK as a whole,
I mean, it would have been better if the two settlements
had been broadly similar and based upon the same principles
which is what you devolve and that which you don't devolve
you hand back.
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Win Griffiths
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Would have been more straightforward.
On the other hand Spain has got a multi-staged-regional
government system.
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Lord Richard
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I wasn't arguing for total symmetry.
I was saying that in terms of relationship between the
devolved institutions and Westminster, I mean that would
have been much more comprehensible and accessible if
the settlement had been broadly similar on the Scottish---
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Ted Rowlands
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Even on the executive model couldn't
it have been -- wouldn't it have been simpler to produce
one schedule - here's the fields of devolved responsibility.
Then we went in for an incredibly elaborate item by
item transfer of function. Why couldn't you have devolved
executively the whole field and have the reservations
that you have got in the Scottish Parliament which were
not related to the executive transfer as opposed to
legislative transfer?
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Win Griffiths
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I think the issue was getting certainty.
By listing everything it would be very, very clear and
would avoid constant arguments about whether this or
that should be done. I think that the matter of certainty
was an issue. Ivor is right, it is a complicated system.
It does require a lot of hard work to make it satisfactory.
I think you can say 80 per cent of what's happening
is working satisfactorily.
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Lord Richard
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I put it slight differently. The way
it has been put to us is basically here what you have
got is flawed or quasi-flawed settlement which is being
made to work because a lot of people are putting an
immense of effort into making it work. The administration
in Cardiff and Westminster are broadly moving in the
same direction. If that is the position then one of
the questions we have to consider is would it last?
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Win Griffiths
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I have been thinking about this in the
context of what happened before devolution. Obviously
there was a long period where a conservative Government
was in power and it had little or no representation
in Wales at any level of Government. But even within
that the were these options, like the one I mentioned
on CTC. So there were options allowed. I guess it's
the Conservatives who need to be challenged if they
were ever in Government again. They do seem to be committed
now to the existence of the Assembly, probably they
wouldn't want it to have any more powers than it has
got. Say they came to power and the Assembly remained
a Labour dominated body, one way or the other, I think
they would in principle have to accept that. If they
did thrust certain policies on the Assembly quite how
they would do this, I think that would be a really serious
challenge to the settlement -- I think the system could
break down at that point. Because if the Wales Assembly
Government didn't want to do something, and the Conservative
Government said: we want you to create City Technology
Colleges, for example, there would be an impasse.
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Ted Rowlands
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This constitutional change in Britain
is a very interesting one where some of the biggest
opponents of change have never gone back and overturned
it. If you look and reflect on the whole, I mean even
from the bitter opposition of the Conservative party
to the establishment of the Welsh Office in the first
place, then not only the adoption of it but the enhancement
of it as time went by. In another field in the whole
field of constitutional change I am trying to think
in the 20th century, of all of the major constitutions
how many were reversed by governments even though they
bitterly opposed their introduced.
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Jon Owen Jones
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One of the reasons why I want wanted
to establish the principle of the way in which we deal
with Welsh legislation in the parallel structure is
that we are in danger of setting precedents by our present
system which a different Government which would be more
hostile to different positions in Wales would utilise.
For example, using the Welsh Select Committee even for
less contentious issues rather than the Welsh Grand,
the difference between the two Committees is everyone
has the right to sit on the Welsh Grand, but the people
who sit on the Welsh Select will be determined largely
by the Government. So we're setting precedents which
if the Tory party were in power in England, but not
in Wales would be able to take benefit of.
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Sir Michael Wheeler-Booth
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What is the remedy?
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Jon Owen Jones
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To set different precedents.
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Sir Michael Wheeler-Booth
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Like what?
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Jon Owen Jones
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If you establish a precedent that all
Welsh Members, the precedent is already there, if you
enact that precedent that Lloyd George set up it would
be much more difficult for an incoming Government to
remove that precedent then.
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Sir Michael Wheeler-Booth
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But it's totally unusual to have a Committee
in the House that does not have a Government majority.
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Jon Owen Jones
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It's unusual but it exists in the Standing
Orders of the House.
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Sir Michael Wheeler-Booth
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It's not used.
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Jon Owen Jones
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We're talking about something which is
unusual, are we not?
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Dr Laura McAllister
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I want to ask you about the second area
of our brief which is the electoral system and the numbers
issue generally. I think you have both said that if
the Assembly was to acquire primary powers you would
imagine there would be a related increase in numbers,
possibly with or without a decrease in numbers of MPs.
Can you give us some of your views on that and how you
might see those additional Members being elected if
there were to be primary legislative powers granted?
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Win Griffiths
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I do think that if the Welsh Assembly
does become a Parliament it would require more Members.
Probably there would need to be some legal constitutional
changes in its institutional nature (which I couldn't
focus on here without doing a lot of work on it). But
more Members are needed because I think 60 is not sufficient
if you are getting into Parliamentary legislative scrutiny
mode. How those extra ten or s would be elected - we'd
need at least ten Members - whether they should be elected
by some form of proportionality or not (it would be
easier to do it within our proportional system). I also
believe that if you increase the number of the Members
of the Assembly, or Parliament, if it became that, there
would be a good case for decreasing the number of Welsh
MPs at Westminster. It might not necessarily need to
be a ten for ten swap but there would need to be some
sort of a change. Though that would mean a redrawing
of the Westminster boundaries obviously and it would
give us chance to review the issue of proportionality.
As I say in my evidence, when we developed the system,
basically what we were saying was that we wanted to
recognise the need for some proportionality. I mean
it is ridiculous that a party could get 20 per cent
of the votes and have no representation. We wanted to
recognise that in some way, but not to do away with
a possibility of a party which gets good support across
the country being able to govern. The situation we landed
up with in the Assembly in the first, and to some extent
in this term, I believe is a self inflicted wound by
the Labour Party. Looking at our Westminster results
we could have expected to have had, in the context of
60, we could have expected to have had a comfortable
majority in normal circumstances. It didn't turn out
that way, but I wouldn't blame the proportional system.
I would blame ourselves. If you had 30 first past the
post seats in a Wales Parliament situation maybe you
could in fact have two Assembly Member representation
i.e., male and female for each constituency, then perhaps
another 10+ elected on a proportional basis. I am only
throwing these ideas into the melting pot. I wouldn't
say that I strongly would go for that particular system
but I am just saying that there is potential to think
things through again.
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Huw Thomas
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Why do you make the assumption that there
should be more AMs? What we've been hearing they have
only got two and a half days when they concentrate their
activity on the Assembly. You criticised as well some
of the nature of what they are doing during that period.
So why not just refocus and spend more time?
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Win Griffiths
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Because I think that you need a larger
pool of people to draw on when you get involved in developing
legislation because, I mean, proportionately you have
got to have more back benchers, and I just feel that
you do need a bit of a wider pool to draw on if you
are getting into it something which is seriously legislative.
I mean there is an issue about hours as well, I think,
but that's something that needs more consideration.
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Lord Richard
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Genuinely, it has been interesting. |
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