COMMISSION ON THE POWERS AND ELECTORAL
ARRANGEMENTS
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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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MS MARI JAMES
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held at
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National Museum of Wales, Cathays
Park, Cardiff
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on
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Friday 25 October 2002
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| In Attendance: |
| Mari James |
| Eira Davies |
| Tom Jones |
| Laura McAllister |
| Peter Price |
| Rt Hon Lord Richard QC, in the Chair |
| Ted Rowlands |
| Vivienne Sugar |
| Sir Michael Wheeler Booth |
| Carys Evans, Secretary |
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LORD RICHARD: Thank you very much for
coming. We are all looking forward very much to hearing
what you have to say. I wonder if you would be kind
enough to introduce yourself for the record.
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MS JAMES: My name is Mari James. I am
managing director of a public affairs company based
in Cardiff called GJW Wales. I was previously, many
years ago - five years ago now, slightly more - vice
chair of the Yes For Wales Campaign and I was
on the National Assembly Advisory Group following that.
More recently I was a member of the Electoral Commission
on Local Government Electoral Arrangements in Wales.
I think that is all that is relevant.
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LORD RICHARD: Thank you very much indeed.
Would you like to open the discussion, please?
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MS JAMES: First of all, thank you very
much, I was very flattered when I got the phone call
asking me to come and give evidence to the Richard Commission.
Having looked at your remit after that, it is so broad
that it is difficult to know where to start. I only
had a few days so I have not prepared a written paper
but I will send something in to you afterwards if it
helps. Now that I have gone through the thought process
it will be cathartic to do that. There are really three
points that I want to touch on, and I will try not to
make it too much my personal views but drawing on some
of the evidence.
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First of all I want to say something
about the subject committees in the Assembly and the
way they work. Secondly I want to say something about
the plenary sessions, and the way it works. Thirdly
I want to say something about what I call loosely the
support structures. I am not sure if you are looking
at electoral arrangements at the moment. There are a
couple of brief comments on that I want to make if there
is time.
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First on subject committees. I think
the subject committees are one of the most innovative
and interesting parts of the Assembly system. I think
this is really where the Welsh way is being delivered
in a new form of governance, if it is happening anywhere.
The points that I think are strongest here are the way
in which the subject committee system militates in favour
of a collegiate approach to the formulation and the
development of policy, and also the way in which they
encourage iterative debate and policy development. These
are comments as well I should add that have come, also,
from some of our private sector clients that we advise
within the company. They have been often very impressed
at the way in which the parties will work together and
produce a collegiate approach to a policy or a response
to an issue from the subject committees. They are not
used to politicians doing that, it does not appear to
be the culture in Westminster. I feel the subject committees
can achieve something in terms of the executive power
that they have.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: Have you looked
at Scotland at all?
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MS JAMES: I cannot say that I know the
Scottish system well enough to be able to comment. I
know it slightly but I would not be able to compare
it on this.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: The Welsh
system and the Scottish system, they are not entirely
dissimilar. They are much more like each other than
they are like Westminster.
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MS JAMES: Yes.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: When you say
Wales has been a great success, I think you have to
possibly couple that with Scotland.
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MS JAMES: I think that is possible. In
none of my comments do I compare this with Scotland
because I do not claim any detailed knowledge of the
Scottish Parliament in that way. Where I do think that
subject committees have helped in policy development
is the way in which not just the parties work together
but the way in which other parties will be brought in
to a policy development discussion, which I know also
happens in Scotland. The physical representation of
this is when one goes to some of those committee meetings
and sees around the table elected members of the Assembly,
officials, being able to take part in the discussion
in a way that, again, is not always usual elsewhere
and also then third parties who might be public bodies,
they might be voluntary groups, they might be companies
but they are able to contribute in a way that is not
adversarial and is not like giving evidence to a select
committee, and is not being dragged in because you have
done something wrong as in Westminster. There may be
comparisons here with Scotland but I think that this
is something which does work well in the Assembly. Sometimes
the process takes too long and I think that is something
the Assembly will learn to get through these. I do think
that one of the roles that the subject committees have
got that they have not taken enough opportunity to use
is their role for development and scrutiny of secondary
legislation. I think there are opportunities in the
future for the subject committees to be able to link
some of their policy development work more closely into
the development of secondary legislation, and to use
those powers of the Assembly.
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I understand that yesterday you had evidence
from one of the ministers, from Jane Davidson, who I
think is in an interesting position because, of course,
also before that she was Deputy Presiding Officer. I
think the Ministers role on the committees is
an interesting one. It was one of the things that I
was never quite sure about how it would work and was
interested in watching, the role of the Minister on
the committee vis a vis the chair of the committee.
I think my view now, and the view of some of my colleagues
with whom I work, is that there are actually as many
models as there are subject committees and that it is
down to the personal dynamic between the Minister and
the chair. How effective the executive feels the committees
are I am not sure, but I think if there is a scrutiny
on the executive it probably happens through those subject
committees rather than in the next issue I was going
to come on to, which is in plenary.
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LORD RICHARD: Can I ask you something
before you leave that first part. You have painted a
picture of a great strive towards consensus politics,
that is the effect of it, but how do you think that
would be affected by a change in the opposite direction,
having the executive slightly detached from the rest
of the Assembly and, if you like, an erosion of the
idea that the Assembly is in fact a corporate body,
which I personally have never understood but that is
another matter? How are you going to run those together?
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MS JAMES: I have never understood how
the Assembly as a corporate body is meant to work. That
was one of the reasons why I highlighted the role of
the Minister as being quite important in the operation
of the committees because I genuinely do not know how
the Welsh Assembly government feels that the committee
either contributes to its own policy development or
might hinder it. Maybe a related question to yours is
how dependent is what I have described on a minority
government and on a coalition government.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: Is it working
better since there is the coalition than it did beforehand?
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MS JAMES: I do not think it is as simple
as whether it is working better or not because I think
this culture was established in the early days of the
Assembly and has not changed in subject committee but
it has changed in plenary since there has been a majority
government. This culture was established in a period
of minority government and therefore maybe was the only
option. The culture has remained in the subject committees.
In plenary where now the government can get a vote through
much more easily than it could before when it had to
build a consensus, now the Welsh Assembly government
has a much stronger control over plenary than it had
during the period of minority government.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: Do you think
that is a good thing?
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MS JAMES: I have always believed that
devolution is not just about a talking shop for the
Assembly, it is about the governance of Wales. I have
always believed that strong government and clarity about
where the buck stops and who makes the decisions is
important. Yes, there needs to be a strong Welsh Assembly
government policy on issues as well as the policy development
role. I do not see the two as being incompatible. I
think the way in which both the parties - this is not
a party issue - have incorporated the policy development
process that has come through subject committees in
their own policy process has been very helpful. I know
you are talking to various academics and I think the
big question lots of political scientists ask is where
does policy come from. I think what the system has allowed
is that policy can come not just from within the Civil
Service and from within Welsh Government, it can come
from bringing in views, and this is where the iterative
role comes in, and expertise from outside of the government
system as well.
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TED ROWLANDS: May there not be a price
to pay for that certain cosiness, that in fact you have
a cosiness and you do not therefore have any sharp ended
scrutiny in the system?
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MS JAMES: I think that the tendency towards
cosiness is there.
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TED ROWLANDS: A Welsh characteristic.
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MS JAMES: I think that is partly a Welsh
characteristic and partly a characteristic of something
else we need to look at which is the small numbers there
because basically in Wales once we know each we work
together in a different way. One of the things that
people that I bring in from outside comment about the
Assembly is how personal it is, not personal nasty and
not just about using Christian names, but that people
work together, there are alliances that are put together
between people and not just between parties or across
parties. There is a cosiness and an informality that
comes there. I think the other side of it is maybe the
other end of the spectrum then, the pomposity that sometimes
comes out of Westminster. I know there is a view that
we have gone too far in the other direction but I do
not hold that view, I think we have got it about right.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: You used the
word "accountability" earlier and you were saying that
accountability seemed to you to be fairly clear to the
committees and the Ministers here, but surely on some
issues, quite a number of issues, they have not really
been able to do what they wanted either because they
lack the powers or because people in Whitehall or Westminster
would not give them a place in the legislative timetable.
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MS JAMES: I think that is a broader issue.
I have always believed that Whitehall has taken quite
a while to spot that devolution has not just happened
to Wales and Scotland, it has happened to Whitehall
as well. We have been involved in various projects ----
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LORD RICHARD: The DTI?
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MS JAMES: I think it has because some
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LORD RICHARD: They legislate for Wales.
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MS JAMES: Yes, they do, but there are
certain areas that are now the responsibility of the
Welsh Assembly government that were previously the responsibility
of Whitehall. Three years ago one of the commercial
projects that we did was to do with an area that the
DTI thought that it still had control over and they
had been dealing with a company on that basis and it
was only after the consultation deadline had closed
that they became aware that they did not have the responsibility
any more and it had transferred to the Assembly. That
is the kind of thinking that I mean. There is a shift
of some functions maybe from Whitehall rather than from
Westminster to the Assembly. I think the point about
the legislative timetable is perhaps a different one
and perhaps we can come back to that.
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LORD RICHARD: That is a major one.
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VIVIENNE SUGAR: We were told two contradictory
things yesterday about the size of committees. One was
that the size was actually quite ideal for being able
to make people feel involved and deal with the business
but also that there were not enough people to form sub-committees.
I wonder whether you have any comments about the numbers
of Assembly Members available to do this work?
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MS JAMES: I think it is good that they
all have a full-time job as Assembly Members, that is
the first thing I would say. I think this was something
important in the attitude from the Welsh public towards
the Assembly, that it should not be a talking shop of
part-timers, and I do not think it is that. I think
it is important that they do all have functions. It
was always going to be the position that there would
not be backbenchers there because everybody would be
able to have a job. To a certain extent they are creating
more work than they can handle with some of the subject
committees. On the other hand, the experience that we
have of working with Assembly Members is that there
are three days of the week - Tuesday, Wednesday and
Thursday - when they are working long hours in Cardiff
and then the Friday tends to be at home in the constituency
or in committees that are elsewhere in Wales, and that
is a full-time job. Whether there are other things that
could be done if there were more numbers there, I am
not convinced that the Assemblys problems would
be solved if there were more people there. I know that
a lot of the Assembly Members feel that and other commentators
feel that. I do not know exactly why that number was
arrived at, it is small, but I do not think that is
a huge problem.
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EIRA DAVIES: May I ask a further question
about the subject committees. They have a dual role,
they scrutinise and they are also in a position to develop
policy and to be involved in policy development. Some
of the committees do both roles and some only do the
one role. Is there scope to formalise these roles so
that committees can focus on one single role, for example?
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MS JAMES: I do not think so. Part of
the nature of the system and what makes the subject
committees serious bodies within the system is that
they do have several roles. The Ministers role
in the subject committee is a challenging one and there
is the issue of whether the scrutiny happens there.
As practice has emerged there is effective scrutiny
although it is not necessarily in the formal part of
the meeting that is, as it were, put down to scrutiny,
which is the Ministers report and the questioning
of the Ministers report, it is much more in the
fact that the ministers have to get certain decisions
through committee or they have to take the committee
with them so that there is a process of discussion and,
if you like, consensus building before and outside of
the committees. I think that is how the scrutiny works
and I do not think you can divorce it from the policy
development, it is tied up with it.
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LAURA McALLISTER: I was just going to
ask a question which develops the point made there.
What is the most opportune role for the Minister in
relation to subject committees? You answered the question
about problems of scrutiny in the current arrangement
but what about policy variation? If a subject committee
is to function in a way described there as being an
innovative body, surely it needs to be an arms length
relationship with the Minister who also has a different
policy hierarchy.
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MS JAMES: Yes. That comes back to the
point I was asked about is there someone running the
country, is there clear government policy developed.
It is very interesting to identify. We have an online
data base we have produced in the company and there
is a section which is on Assembly policy. It is very
interesting to identify when a policy becomes official
and when it is endorsed by the full Assembly, or whether
it is Welsh Assembly government policy. There are not
two bodies of policies, as is sometimes made out, one
that is endorsed by the Assembly and one that is actually
government policy. What I am trying to say about the
subject committees is that even if it is not something
like the Welsh language review which went through the
committees and then came out and went through the process
of plenary, even if it is something like the health
service reorganisation, it requires an involvement of
the committees in a way that the production of policy
in Westminster, and the split between the executive
and the legislature in Westminster, I do not think happens
in the same way. I favour the view that it is a good
thing to encourage politicians to work together. There
may be disadvantages but from the outside of the government
system I think it is a good thing.
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LORD RICHARD: Who scrutinises the Minister?
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MS JAMES: If I can come on to my points
about the plenary.
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LORD RICHARD: In committee?
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MS JAMES: In the committee, I think,
as I said before, the requirements of the system of
the subject committees meaning that the Ministers have
to take the committees along with them.
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LORD RICHARD: Do they have an obligation
to take any policy to the appropriate committee?
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MS JAMES: That is a moot point because
arguably there have been occasions when Ministers have
tried to ignore the Assembly or ignore the committees
and technically, of course, in constitutional terms
they do not have to have the support but politically
it would be very difficult to push a policy through
and why do it. There is opposition. This is one reason
why I hesitated when you said that I was talking about
a happy consensus in the Assembly, there is opposition,
there is not total 100 per cent support, what I was
talking about is not producing that. There are oppositions,
of course, there are votes against policy, but nevertheless
there is an involvement in the process of developing
official policy and what becomes of an executive act
which certainly did not exist before in Wales. I do
not think it exists so far.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: Would it be
possible to see your study or the study you referred
to?
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MS JAMES: Sorry, which study?
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: You said you
had looked at development of various policies within
the Assembly system.
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MS JAMES: Yes. It is not so much a study.
I can produce a list of what we have identified as being
Welsh Assembly government policy and being Assembly
policy. We can produce that list. We do it for the sake
of clarification so that we are able to advise people
whether something which has been discussed in the Assembly
is actually policy or whether it is something that has
been discussed in the Assembly. I can happily produce
that list, it is in the public realm. Shall I carry
on?
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PETER PRICE: If I can just follow through
on this numbers issue that we were raising a moment
ago vis a vis committees. The nature of committees
at the moment is that parties typically may have just
one or two members on the committee. Suppose that we
were looking at enhanced powers for the Assembly, and
they had responsibilities also on primary legislation,
what impact would that have on work volume? Would you
expect, for example, that it would create more demand
for different members of the same party to take on separate
responsibilities in order to cover the territory, that
some of the things which are dealt with currently in
the main committee might need to fall back into a sub-committee
so that the main committee could spend time on primary
legislation? What impact would this have at the end
of the day on the numbers or the numbers which are desirable
for the Assembly to man the committees if they had that
greater role?
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MS JAMES: I think it is a logical link
to say if the Assembly had more functions, more powers,
it would need to have more people to carry that out.
I think that is a bit too simplistic because it depends
what the more functions and more powers are. One can
argue that various functions have transferred to the
Assembly during its life already because of informal
arrangements with Whitehall. It depends also on the
experience of the members there. Again, in simplistic
terms, just to have more people around the table at
a committee would not make any difference if none of
them felt able to make an impact into secondary legislation,
let alone primary legislation. The third point I was
going to make about the support structures comes in
there as well which is why it is not just a numbers
game. I do not know if that helps.
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VIVIENNE SUGAR: Going back to the business
about effective scrutiny, does the party whip apply
to subject committee members when they are actually
into the scrutiny mode?
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MS JAMES: There are votes very rarely
in the subject committees. I cannot think of an instance
of a vote. Presumably there has been in the three years
but, again, that is not the nature of the subject committees.
The culture of them is to build some form of agreement,
even if it is not from all the members, so I do not
know if the whip works because of course there is not
always a majority for the majority party.
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LORD RICHARD: It seems to me that one
possibility is that if, for example, the powers of the
Assembly were increased to give them power over primary
legislation, you would get then a much greater development
of the executive and the legislature. I think then you
would get a deepening of the party divide - this is
one argument - and therefore you change the whole nature
of the Assembly. Do you accept that?
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MS JAMES: I think that is arguable. I
think that the discussion about increased legislative
powers for the Assembly must go alongside the changes
in the way in which Westminster legislation is now being
introduced, especially with things like draft Bills.
The whole process now of there being a wider involvement
in the putting together of the primary legislation,
or at least the discussion on it, I think there are
some very interesting examples, for instance on the
way in which the Health Bill has been discussed in the
Assembly and legitimately and formally in the subject
committee by the Minister. Then taking it back to Westminster
I think another model, but an equally helpful one was
the way in which the Learning Bill in the last session,
essentially the clauses in that for Wales, came out
of the subject committee of the Assembly. I think there
is movement going forward, the whole process of modernising
the parliamentary system is one we must look at while
thinking of the way in which legislation could be introduced
in Wales.
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TED ROWLANDS: Driving down this morning
I was listening to a leaked memo from a senior official
in health, it sounded remarkably good old fashioned
stuff to me in the sense that you had a senior official
no longer reporting his concerns to the Assembly as
a whole or to the committee but reporting entirely to
the Minister that he had seven serious worries about
the way the NHS restructuring was going. That sounds
to me like good old fashioned Westminster politics including
the leaked rather than the Assembly having open, transparent
arrangements.
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MS JAMES: I would never claim that the
old politics is dead and I would never claim that to
a former MP for Merthyr Tydfil. There is still a lot
of it about. What I am interested in is the fact that
devolution in Wales and Scotland and Northern Ireland
has enabled innovations and modernisations in the way
in which we do parliamentary systems of various kinds
in the UK to be looked at and to move forward. That
is happening in Westminster as well. This is a moving
feast that we are dealing with, not just a stable "we
have a system here, shall we move some of the Westminster
system here". There is still politics. The new politics
is still politics.
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TED ROWLANDS: The original idea of the
body corporate was in a sense that there was going to
be openness and transparency, there was not going to
be a cabinet where senior officials would only express
their concerns to a Minister in private moments, that
there would be this openness. It looks to me, following
the Chairmans point, that the more you develop
this division between legislature and Assembly you are
going to have more of the leaked memos and more of the
closing down of policy thinking rather than opening
it up.
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MS JAMES: I do not think it is incompatible
to say that the current Assembly system is much more
open and more transparent than the system was before.
It is not incompatible to say that and that there must
be more transparency and that is a good thing. I am
saying that we must have an effective executive and
cabinet meetings that are allowed to get on with their
work and often need to do that in private without having
public discussions because that is effective government.
To me, one of the things that has happened with the
Assembly system is that the books in Wales have been
opened. A lot of information that previously was not
in the public realm is now in the public realm. Most
people in the policy communities and in other parts
of government, as you know, are struggling to say "It
is open, but what do we do with that information now
we have got it? How can we work with it?"
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I was going to say one of the things
we do not do enough of, but we must not always look
back, is compare what is happening now with what the
Welsh system was like six or seven years ago, which
is not that long ago in constitutional terms, because
there is so much more transparency now and so much more
openness and we just accept it. The large public bodies
go and give evidence to the Assembly, are questioned
in public, on television, and we just take it for granted,
nobody turns up, the Western Mail does not cover
it, the BBC do not cover it, it is my staff and a few
other public affairs people there. We accept that whereas
that was seen as being quite revolutionary five years
in Wales.
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TOM JONES: You will obviously provide
a service for customers and clients on the work and
detailed workings of the Assembly. How is the relationship
with the Members of Parliament developing? Do you find
it very complex to try and find out who is responsible
for what? You mentioned the Department of Environment
and the Department of Transport earlier consulting before
realising that it was not their responsibility to consult.
Are there any other departments in Westminster that
actually cause you problems when you are trying to provide
information for your clients, the Home Office perhaps
and the media?
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MS JAMES: I never quite know whose home
the Home Office is. The Home Secretary is in Wales today.
The role of MPs has obviously changed, some of the functions
have moved. One of the things that people ask us today
is just to explain their role. On a particular issue
in the past they might just have been talking to their
local MP but "Do I carry on talking to the local MP?
Am I also talking to an Assembly Member? Where do the
officials fit in?" That is not necessarily a problem.
There are additional politicians who have responsibility
and there are additional officials. As far as I can
tell the working relationships between officials in
the Assembly and officials in Whitehall are developing.
Sometimes in one particular area they could be very
good because they have worked together over particular
issues and there has been joint working but in another
area there might not be that relationship because there
has not needed to be. I do not think there is an unhelpful
culture in any of the departments of which I am aware,
but that is not to say that there is not. What does
happen is that when any of the departments have to deal
with Wales they get on with it and it happens, so it
is developing through precedent and through practice
rather than through rules. Again, it is people coming
and working together and getting on with it within the
new system.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: Whitehall
is notoriously secretive, for example. The culture is
inward looking. If you are being so open here, is there
not going to be a tendency, for example, for Home Office
officials to close up and refuse to pass things down
to Cardiff on issues which they are still considering
policy possibilities? How do you get round that?
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MS JAMES: I think that is an area where
the cultures are very different. We had an example about
two years ago of correspondence that was actually going
on on an official consultation process, it was a DTI
decision and the Assembly were official consultees and
it was the First Minister who was the official consultee
and had consulted with the Assembly and with two subject
committees working together. There was correspondence,
there was a formal letter from the committee chairs
to the First Minister and then from the First Minister
to the DTI, all of which were in the committee papers,
were on the Assembly web, were in the public realm in
Wales because that is our system now and were covered
in the Guardian newspaper, I think, which caused
absolute horror in the DTI because they said "The Welsh
have leaked this again", but it was not, it was in the
public realm and the Guardian had taken it from
a website. There was absolutely no understanding that
this kind of correspondence could be in the public realm.
Yes, that was different.
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Again coming back to the moving feast,
that we are not completely out of kilter, that was also
during a time of transition on the freedom of information
legislation because when the Assembly and the Scottish
Parliament were set up some of the rules of the freedom
of information legislation that were due then to be
introduced in the Commons were actually incorporated
into the rules of the Assembly and the Scottish Parliament
in effect before they were introduced in Whitehall and
Westminster. In that way we were moving at a slightly
different speed than Whitehall and Westminster.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: I think you
have reflected more the Labour Party manifesto on the
freedom of information than the eventual Act of Parliament,
because if you remember it was watered down.
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MS JAMES: Yes. On the National Assembly
Advisory Group the secretariat advised us as to what
was going to be in the legislation and that was, I think,
about three drafts, if not more, prior to the actual
legislation that was introduced. It may be that our
rules are still further ahead like that. That culture
is a gap but there are arguments that transparency in
government is moving forward everywhere and that Whitehall
is much more transparent than it used to be. Sometimes
this is just because of the technology, because it is
easier to put things into the public realm on the internet
than it is issuing them in hard copy. Whether people
can find them always on the internet is a different
matter.
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LORD RICHARD: You were going to say something
about plenary and the support structure.
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TED ROWLANDS: Just before that could
I ask one question. Your account of the whole of this
committee and the feel of it is extremely important
to us. In preparing for this I took one 12 months
minutes of a subject committee and just went through
them. Aside from the fact that the record is poor ----
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MS JAMES: Pathetic.
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TED ROWLANDS: We really do need a decent
Hansard if nothing else.
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MS JAMES: Of committees?
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TED ROWLANDS: Yes. You said that you
scrutinised the public bodies. The scrutiny of one of
the largest quangos over the last 12 months, ELWA, by
the Education Committee was lamentable. That is a personal
opinion. I looked at it because I was interested. Do
you not think that what it means is that they flitted
from subject to subject, or that is what the record
appears to show? The picture you presented was a very
different picture from the one that I got reading that
one 12 months account.
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MS JAMES: I absolutely agree with you
that the record of committees is very thin. I think
the minutes of the Bank of England Monetary Committee
are in more detail than those of the subject committees
of the Assembly. They are very thin. I think that is
a shame. I think also that there are occasions on which
the Standing Orders allow for verbatim reports of committees
which are not used, especially when there are outside
bodies giving evidence and it is important with that
evidence that more of it should be verbatim. There is
an allowance in Standing Orders - it was one of the
things we were very concerned with in the National Assembly
Advisory Group - that those should be verbatim as often
as possible, and those opportunities are not taken up,
I think. There are quite a lot of opportunities in the
Assembly which are not taken up. My attitude tends to
be not there are things which are done wrong but there
are opportunities not taken up and I think that is one.
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On how good is the scrutiny, one of the
areas that I have not touched on is the Audit Committee
which again I think is not given enough consideration.
I think that is again something which if you look back
to the Welsh Government six or seven years ago, having
a public Audit Committee like that is revolutionary.
I think in scrutiny of public bodies one should not
leave out the role of scrutiny of that Audit Committee.
It is like having the weight of the PAC here all the
time which is completely different in terms of the attitude
towards public spending in Wales. I am sure there are
issues on which the public bodies could be held to account
at subject committees and on which they are not. The
fact that they are held to account in public I think
is helpful for the culture of compliance within public
bodies but I would always include the Audit Committee
in that for public bodies.
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TED ROWLANDS: I will read the Audit Committee
minutes for the next 12 months.
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MS JAMES: Yes. I do not know that their
reports are any more detailed. The Audit Committee is
covered by the press and the media even less than any
of the other committees because it is seen as probably
being dull and financial and of little interest but
as any one of the government it is probably the most
important committee that there is. It is like having
the powerful PAC of the House of Commons here all the
time and it is an area of the Assembly that is vastly
overlooked.
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LORD RICHARD: Does it work like the PAC
in that they are big on certain activities?
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MS JAMES: Yes, and the Welsh Office brings
papers to it and brings inquiries to it and it can do
its own inquiries.
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LORD RICHARD: Would you like to move
on to the plenary structure.
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MS JAMES: I will not spend so long on
the plenary. The point I want to make about plenary
really is that to the extent that I think subject committees
have succeeded in various ways plenary has not quite
found its role yet. While it is the main auditorium
of the drama of the National Assembly, once one gets
beyond that it is not always very productive in the
process of the Assembly. The television will cover plenary
often when something really interesting has been going
on in committees, and the committees are often good
politics but bad television, whereas the plenary is
often the other way round in that it may be good television
in the same way as a knockabout in Prime Ministers
Question Time can be good television but it is not necessarily
a good political system. There have been some very good
big debates, set piece debates in plenary often - and
you would expect me to say this - coming out of policy
papers which have come through the committee system
but it will not just be the people from that committee
who will contribute, there will be a round of views.
There have been some very good set piece debates. It
is also I think very interesting to see the way in which
the whole national budget is debated in the Assembly
and the way in which plenary handles that I think is
innovative and gives the executive control. It is clearly
a Welsh Assembly government budget that is under discussion
but is under discussion in the larger plenary in that
there is discussion and not just some of the very thin
questions which can come out in the commons system.
I think that question time has developed into occasionally
very effective scrutiny of Ministers which comes back
to the point about scrutiny of Ministers.
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LORD RICHARD: Is there a daily question
time?
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MS JAMES: When the Assembly is sitting,
yes.
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LORD RICHARD: Of course.
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MS JAMES: There is a First Ministers
question time once a week. I had occasion to watch Prime
Ministers question time in the House of Commons
earlier this week and I do not know if that was because
of the two personalities involved but the Prime Minister
was not on the ropes at all there. Often in the Assembly,
maybe because there are fewer numbers, maybe because
it is more personal, maybe because physically it is
more in the round and they are closer, the Ministers
have to defend themselves a lot more and that does seem
to be more effective scrutiny. Having said that about
what works in plenary there is a lot of other time in
plenary that the timetabling certainly just looks as
if the government is really struggling to find fillers
to put in the debates. Plenary often finishes early
which is sometimes really surprising. We will know often
that there is a lot of work to be done but it has not
come to plenary. Whether this is an issue for business
management of the place and whether there is a decision
not to have discussions, I do not know, but there does
seem to be a lot of time that is not filled in plenary
which could be.
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Also I think - the last point I want
to make about plenary - there is not enough consideration
given to legislation there. Secondary legislation for
the most part goes through on the nod. Secondary legislation
is treated as "Oh, this is when I can get up and go
and get a cup of tea. This is when I can pop out for
a few minutes". Ministers will read out some very long
titles of secondary legislation, there will be a few
nods and on it will go. There was an occasion on which
we were involved commercially in a piece of secondary
legislation and we knew there was going to be a debate
on it because there was some controversy about it and
when an Assembly Member wanted to say something on it
a point of order was raised by other Assembly Members
saying "No, you are not allowed to speak on this, you
cannot use this occasion for a speech. This is turning
this into politics." The Presiding Officer ruled it
out of order and said "No, of course, he is allowed
to" but nobody ever does. I think there are lost opportunities
in the plenary session for debating secondary legislation.
That is not to say that all the tiny little rogue orders
that come to it need to go through but there are lost
opportunities there.
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LORD RICHARD: What is plenary seen as
though: the opportunity for expressing views?
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MS JAMES: Yes, that is what the Assembly
is to most people in Wales, I would think. It is the
public front of it, it is the shop front.
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LORD RICHARD: It is more than that.
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MS JAMES: It is more than that, yes,
and it can be even more than that. My point is that
the engine room, the working place, is very much the
committees and not enough the plenary and there is more
of a role for the plenary. There are lost opportunities.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: Do you have
an explanation for these criticisms of plenary? I have
heard that the business committee is supposed to work
well, now the business committee is responsible for
organising business in plenary I suppose. Why is the
situation such as you describe it?
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MS JAMES: I do not know, genuinely I
do not know. I do not know why on some days plenary
finishes early when there are things they could be discussing.
I do not know why sometimes the agenda looks extremely
thin, maybe this is an agreement between business managers.
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LORD RICHARD: I do not believe it is
as formalised as that. People run out of steam or they
do not speak or they have a constituent they need to
see. People do not speak in parliamentary chambers for
all sorts of reasons. They do speak for all sorts of
reasons too actually.
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MS JAMES: Yes.
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LORD RICHARD: I do not think you can
draw any great truths from this.
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MS JAMES: Perhaps one of the points is
the point made over here earlier that you had heard
from other witnesses that there was not enough time
or there were not enough resources in subject committees
for some of the work and enough people to service sub-committees
and things like that. Some of that work can be done
in plenary and yet it is not done there now, I do not
know why. LAURA McALLISTER: To what extent was that
discussed in the internal review of proceedings? We
have seen the final report but we are not privy to some
of the discussions that went on in the actual meetings.
You may or may not be. Was this issue of the relationship
between time in the subject committees and the plenary
agendas of each actually discussed? That may be a critical
thing about the proceedings.
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MS JAMES: It was something that came
up as I remember. I did not follow all of that in detail
but it was something that came up. I think the point
about the debate on secondary legislation came up in
the review of procedure a lot and how secondary legislation
could be handled more and there are recommendations
on different ways in which that can be done after the
next election.
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LAURA McALLISTER: So after the review
of proceedings is the issue of points of order being
raised still a feature? You said that other members
were raising points of order.
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MS JAMES: No. I think there is now an
acceptance that secondary legislation can be debated.
Occasionally we will notice on a particular issue that
one of the short debates, for instance, has been on
an issue that will be treated as a rhetorical political
point, whereas actually there has been secondary legislation
going through on it that the member that is interested
could have been doing something on, positively or negatively,
and has completely ignored it and probably not been
aware of its relevance to a simple political issue.
Whether that is a communication point within the Assembly
I genuinely do not know.
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TOM JONES: Where you have been critical
of the political process, have you got any models from
elsewhere in the world that you think could be adopted?
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MS JAMES: I do not think that there is
a blueprint of "This is the best way to run an Assembly"
or "This is the best way to run a Parliament". We wasted
a bit of time on the National Assembly Advisory Group
looking for the blueprint and there is not one. It also
depends on what works for Wales. Looking at Scotland
and also the Northern Ireland Assembly there are things
to be learned from both in some cases but I do not think
there is necessarily a blueprint to be picked up from
elsewhere, although it would be nice.
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PETER PRICE: If I may pick up briefly
the issue of matters not dealt with that might have
been on the plenary agenda, it would be interesting
to try and tease out whether these fall into any particular
categories. You speculated as to whether this was accident
or design and that I think is relative in terms of the
scrutiny by the plenary which way round those things
are and, indeed, what lies behind in either case. What
sort of examples can you think of maybe in recent days
where the Assembly seems to have run out of steam and
you had in your mind "Gosh, they could have dealt with
that" and what was it?
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MS JAMES: I do not have a particular
example in this recent session but I think, for instance,
the budget debate could have been given more time. That
was something of such importance. This is something
that has moved to Wales in recent years with the new
system and that debate could probably have been given
more time. There are other issues coming out from subject
committees and maybe an example, to answer your question,
would be some of the aspects of the energy report, the
energy inquiry, that is being handled by the Economic
Development Committee because one of the ways, I understand
it, that they are doing that is rather than waiting
completely to the end they are producing interim reports
so that policy development in other areas does not have
to be held up and postponed until the whole of the process
is completed. I do not think that there have been debates
on aspects of those reports or any of those interim
findings in plenary as a whole to use plenary as more
of a sounding board.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: Have there
been examples of plenary forcing some reallocation of
money from one area to another?
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MS JAMES: I cannot think of an example
of that as such but that budget reallocation, as I understand
it, tends to happen more within cabinet and also as
a result of the iterative discussions that go into the
budgetary process, so that the Finance Minister will
have discussed with the members of the Assembly balances
between budgets and there may well be pressure to move
monies from one budget head to another but it is not
visibly obvious that that happens in plenary, I would
say.
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VIVIENNE SUGAR: Was there to your knowledge
any discussion in a subject committee or in plenary
about the recent decision to release some reserves?
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MS JAMES: Not that I am aware of but
I could not put my hand on my heart and say there was
not. There is not a Finance Committee as such.
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LORD RICHARD: How would that be decided?
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MS JAMES: Within a cabinet committee.
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LORD RICHARD: It is an executive act
which there is no accountability for.
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MS JAMES: I think so.
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TED ROWLANDS: When you have been advising
your clients or clients have come to you on areas where
there are either concurrent powers with Whitehall or
confusion over respective responsibility of powers,
could you identify any of these areas, because these
are areas that we are concerned about, these so-called
jagged edges of the devolution settlement?
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MS JAMES: I think it is all pretty jagged
in many ways. The nature of the Transfer Orders is such
that in theory it is very specific what the powers are.
It is not always logical because it is historic of what
happened to have been transferred to Orders in Council
or into secondary legislation and then was transferred
to the Assembly. One of the things that we would do,
if required, is to look back at the Transfer Orders
for that guidance and then also to look at the Memorandums
of Understanding with particular departments. Some will
shed light and some will not. Some refer to bodies that
do not seem to exist as liaison bodies, to be honest.
What I think we have found as well is that it is much
more a case of completely silent areas, for instance
on competition policy, which are clearly in the remit
of Whitehall and Westminster, but on which if there
is a Welsh company that is heavily affected the Assembly
has had an interest and then sometimes has had an influence
as well. I think that the way in which we have seen
the new structures develop where the Assembly has an
interest and how it has used its influence has been
as important on developing the relationship between
the Assembly and Whitehall as the actual constitutional
relationships between the two.
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TED ROWLANDS: Can you give us an illustration
of this grey area in Parliament?
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MS JAMES: In some ways I go back to competition
policy again. The prime example there was the proposed
takeover of Hyder which was clearly a DTI policy and
yet the interest and the influence was in Wales. The
way in which that was taken through was that there were
two subject committees that had an interest, Economic
Development and Environment, a slightly different mixture
of portfolios than at the moment, and they discussed
it. That was the example I referred to earlier where
there was formal correspondence that was then in the
public realm in Wales and they could not understand
that in London. There was a full discussion in plenary
with, as it were, the protagonists, with the companies
that were involved coming and giving evidence to the
two committees meeting together in plenary. That was
completely innovative and the Assembly worked out a
way of dealing with that area in which the powers were
clearly in Whitehall and Westminster but the interest
was clearly in Wales and worked out a way of having
influence. Equally on some of the investment decisions
by the Ministry of Defence in Wales which is clearly
a Whitehall and Westminster function but where there
are investments being made in Wales there is an economic
interest in Wales and there are different ways of doing
that. It is not as simple as just where the Transfer
Orders may be jagged but where there are softer interests
that can be used. Again, it is a matter of the different
levels of government working out effective ways of getting
on. I was going to be rude about the Western Mail
again.
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TED ROWLANDS: From that experience have
you anything to recommend to us in the areas that you
have dealing with in relation to how we might smooth
out the jagged areas or are there areas that you have
identified which you think ought to be prime subjects
for transfer?
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MS JAMES: It is a very peculiar way to
have the settlement, the Transfer of Functions Order,
although one can understand that it was the simplest
way also of doing it. I think that what is important
is that when the Assembly comes across an area where
it is not sure and it is a grey area where its powers
lie, the important thing is for it to think about what
it would want to do, what it wants to achieve and then
to go about the most effective way of achieving that,
which is I think what happened on that Hyder takeover.
This is what makes sense for us, this is how we will
communicate to Whitehall. Presumably they went through
that with the relevant part of Whitehall and then got
on with it. I do not think the Assembly on these occasions
or the Welsh Assembly government should sit back and
say "We do not know what the rules are". They should
say "This is what we need to do. What is going to be
the most effective way for us? Is there some reason
why we cannot do it like that in which case we will
get on and do it", so it is setting the precedent all
the time. We have already got three years of precedent.
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PETER PRICE: Just to follow that through
in terms of the external impact of this jagged edge.
You are there as the expert intermediary able to take
the client through the question of who has got the power
and how you get round the system but to what extent
is this system transparent to the clients who arrive
on your doorstep who are themselves probably a great
deal more sophisticated than those who never arrive
on your doorstep?
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MS JAMES: First of all I do not claim
to be an expert on this. I and my colleagues in the
company just probably spend more time on it than most
other people and the difference between us and our clients
who specialise in making widgets or whatever is that
we specialise in trying to understand the Assembly and
knowing about it. We only ever deal with what is in
the public realm. We are members of the Association
of Professional Political Consultants. We are only allowed
to deal with what is in the public realm. We have learnt
how to find it in the public realm more than companies
whose job is not to do that. When a company will arrive
on our doorstep who say "It turns out things are being
done differently in Wales now, can you explain to us,
can you take us through it", it is often very easy to
do that because it does not take long to explain subject
committees or the powers or what the Minister is doing
and, yes, the Minister has got power to do this separately
in Wales. As soon as you have done that they say "We
had no idea, we thought the Assembly was just a talking
shop". That is what is very common, people come to us
saying "We thought it was a talking shop. It is not
a parliament so how come it has got the power to do
anything virtually?" We see public organisations and
private organisations going through this thought process.
"Scotland has got a parliament, we understand they can
make rules differently, we did not understand Wales
could. How come this is allowed?" Often we just point
them towards the relevant official or Assembly member
or Minister, whoever it would be. Signposting is what
we do a lot of the time. I do not know if that answers
the question.
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TED ROWLANDS: Are your clients more interested
in divergence or convergence?
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MS JAMES: Sorry, of what?
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TED ROWLANDS: Of policy. Are they mostly
preoccupied because there is a divergence of policy
or are they seeking a divergence of policy?
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MS JAMES: There is not really a common
thread to that. Lobbying is not nearly as glamorous
as it is made out to be sometimes and most of the people
who come to us want to follow what is going on. They
do not view necessarily that they want a particular
thing to happen. For instance, in the health care area
they just want to know there are some different interests
in Wales. Sometimes by default things will happen differently
in Wales because something will be introduced into England
that will not be introduced into Wales. It is just knowing
what is happening and being aware of what is happening
rather than looking for divergence or convergence.
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The third point that I want to make -
actually some of it has come up in what I have been
saying already - is really about - I am not quite sure
what the right nomenclature is here - support structures
of the Assembly. I never believe that a legislature
exists in a vacuum, that its effectiveness is very much
dependent on the civic society around it and on some
of the democratic feedback mechanisms that it has. I
think that for the Assembly system to be effective these
other support mechanisms around it have to be effective.
Some I think are working well in Wales, some are weaker.
Some of the ones I think are working well, and as far
as I know are quite innovative, are the partnership
councils and the statutory obligation to consult with
the voluntary sector and local government and the business
community. I think of those three partnership councils
again there are differences between them but I think
those are a helpful way of building those three areas
into the Assembly system and providing support mechanisms
there.
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I do not know if he has gone, but I would
happily say this with Clive Betts present, I think the
press, the broadcasting and print media in Wales does
not provide the democratic feedback loops that it could
do. My main recent example of this is that I have several
times referred to the Budget debate, there was not one
word in the Western Mail, the self-styled national
newspaper of Wales, of the Assembly Budget debate. This
was the £11 billion that the Assembly has complete control
over and was debating in public and on television. The
Western Mail did not cover one word of it. If
one was only taking what happened in Wales from the
Western Mail you would not have known that was
happening. I think that some of the scrutiny that we
have been talking about, which can come from a culture
of scrutiny and a comment and a knowledge as well, the
Welsh press just does not provide that. Whether that
is a size issue, because there are not the number of
newspapers in Wales, there is not the size of the market
that there is for instance in Scotland, whether it is
because the Welsh press tends to be an adjunct to the
press that comes out of collectively Fleet Street so
that people in Wales tend to read the Western Mail
and a broadsheet whereas in Scotland it is more self-sustaining
or what it is, I do not have a solution on that. What
I do think is that it is the broadcast media that provides
what one would expect some of the print press to provide.
The programme that I think gets it right is a programme
called Manifesto which treats its coverage of
the Assembly both as on the record factual coverage
of what happened that week and a current affairs input
to commentary on it. I think that is a weakness.
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The civic society area and the voluntary
groups and the policy communities I see as having grown
in strength with the Assembly structure. I know that
some of them actually feel that there is too much expected
of them so they are being killed by consultation so
that on the one hand it is good news that they are being
involved in a process and they are being consulted but
on the other hand they do not have the resources necessarily
to be always commenting and getting involved in policy
papers all the time. Some would prefer, I think, almost
the old days when they were told what the view was going
to be and they complained that they had not been involved
in it and they had not been consulted. I think that
civic society has been moving but that is as important
a part of the Assembly structure as the internal mechanisms,
although that may not be something that the Commission
can effect. Those are my final points.
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PETER PRICE: How have those organisations
adapted to try and meet these demands? Presumably they
have not adapted to be able to do a lot more than they
were doing even though they may not be meeting the appetite
for their views on such a wide front.
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MS JAMES: The voluntary sector I think,
very interestingly, has grown. A large number of people
who are now the Assembly liaison officers for the voluntary
sector so that voluntary groups and patient groups and
other charities in England and Wales will have now often
a dedicated person whose job it is to liaise with the
Assembly, to work on policy papers, to select them and
to do that sort of work. It has been quite interesting
to see the way in which the voluntary sector got itself
geared up to do that. As ever, one person is never enough.
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LORD RICHARD: You say to work with the
Assembly, with the Ministers?
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MS JAMES: Yes, with the Assembly or with
the Ministers. The remit of people will be different
in different places.
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LORD RICHARD: With the subject committee?
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MS JAMES: Yes, sometimes they will do
it within the subject committee. They will be, as it
were, in-house lobbyists and activists for that association.
It has been common for some time in Westminster, and
it was interesting to see the voluntary sector getting
itself geared up very quickly in Wales for that.
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LORD RICHARD: They do not appear on a
committee in Westminster.
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MS JAMES: They do not appear on the committees
in Westminster. Also, I think that in Westminster the
system of all-party groups is often the vehicle for
the approach there. Maybe that is the way to do it when
there are so many more members there. Perhaps in Wales
with a smaller number of members that is the way to
do it. There are all-party groups but there are not
nearly so many.
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TED ROWLANDS: Jane Davidson and her official,
Richard Davies, told us yesterday about the way in which
they were innovatively learning to borrow, as it were,
the outside expertise to make up for the internal deficiencies
of the policy making strength. When you transfer something
as fundamental as primary legislative power when you
have got external support it is a huge additional burden
or an additional requirement on the system itself. Do
you think from your observations that the Assembly civil
service could cope with the transfer of primary legislative
powers?
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MS JAMES: No, not at the moment. I think
that one of the areas of the system that has had to
go through the biggest culture shock has been the Civil
Service in Wales. Some of them have responded superbly;
some of them. There were not the skills there because
it was not a job to be done before. There were not the
parliamentary back-up skills. It was always my view,
and I expressed this publicly, that there should have
been more recruitment from outside or service level
agreements with Westminster or whatever to bring more
people in from outside of the old Welsh Office civil
servant structure. For instance, the Clerk, Paul Silk,
is an example of that kind of expertise coming in from
outside. At the moment there is not the expertise there
but is that partly because there is not the job to be
done. There are two issues, the policy development but
also the writing of the legislation, there are not those
skills there and I would favour people being brought
in with those skills from outside.
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LORD RICHARD: When you say no you point
in one or two directions, either you keep what you have
got and do not have primary legislative powers, or alternatively
you do have primary legislative powers and you change
what you have got. As I understand it it is the second
bit rather than the first.
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MS JAMES: I was answering the question
as an economist. If it was a given that a decision had
been made to have primary legislation powers there is
not the expertise and the wherewithal to deliver that
within the current staffing.
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LORD RICHARD: So you need more expertise
to do it?
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MS JAMES: Different expertise from what
is there.
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TOM JONES: In fairness it is not a point
for us but in terms of debating the value of external
expertise as opposed to building up and deepening the
internal, there is an advantage in using external expertise
because of the dynamics that external expertise brings
in because people there are involved at the cutting
edge of whatever the issues will be, whether it is business
or the voluntary or public sector. It is not as simple
to say just double or treble the strength of the internal
expertise and that will solve all the problems, I think
the external, the combination with internal, provides
a more useful way forward. If the Assembly has developed
that in recent years then I think it should be encouraged
to do more of that.
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MS JAMES: It is not just a numbers game,
it is not just quantitative, it is qualitative as well.
One of the things we often notice in business is if
we are dealing with something in Wales and in Whitehall
the lines of decision making are so much shorter in
Wales than in Whitehall. It takes Whitehall so long
to achieve something, and we can think about the tanker
slowing down and turning in the other direction, but
you can do stuff quicker in Wales because the area between
the coal face and the actual expertise and the Government
Minister can be very short.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: On this issue
of support, two points. The first is that when I came
to be interviewed to be on this Commission I read the
Western Mail that day and there was an advertisement
for, I think, 12 posts to work for the Assembly and
they were being paid medium rank full-time to help the
committees. That suggested to me that there is a major
effort being made to provide more staff and of course
the cost is going to be considerable. The second point
is in the House of Lords, which I used to work for,
the select committees are made to work partly by the
expertise of some of the Members of the House, scientists,
employers and so on, and partly by specialist advisers
brought in, of which a rather disproportionate amount
are Welsh or Scottish professors from Cardiff and elsewhere
and they are very good value for money. They do it because
of the interest and because of the input that they can
make to policy formation but they do provide most admirable
help to the committees. There was a Professor Edwards
on the Environmental Sub-Committee of the European Committee
in the 1980s who was a particular friend of Lady White
but he provided some very good papers.
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MS JAMES: I think the role of special
advisers in committees is now being taken up by the
Assembly. On the adverts that you referred to I think
the question to be asked is why they are there now and
not three years ago. It took the subject committees
quite some while to be able to argue for more support
and for more staffing for themselves and allowances
for the chairs and things like that. They are beginning
to get that.
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TED ROWLANDS: Was it the assumption that
officials were going to do that and with the growth
of an executive the officials are answerable to the
executive much more than the Assembly committees and
that is why now you are having to buttress the advice
system to the committees?
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MS JAMES: It is possible. My reading
of it was much more that it was difficult at the time
to make decisions so it would not have been politically
helpful to make decisions to employ a large number of
people who probably would have been called bureaucrats
to staff the Assembly, a jobs for the boys in Cardiff
sort of argument, and that was difficult. So some of
the new areas like the staffing of committees were overlooked.
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TED ROWLANDS: Do you think that the cost
argument for devolution has gone away?
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MS JAMES: No, I do not think that the
Welsh Tory Party will let it go away. I do not think
that costs of democracy should ever be overlooked. I
tend to think that not enough money is spent on the
democratic system and on the Assembly. One of the things
that I think we have got right there, which is not procedural
but is about support, is the facilities for members
there. It is one of the things that I am proud to point
out to people about the Welsh Assembly compared with
what I think in some cases are sometimes dreadful facilities
for members in both Houses in Westminster. The Assembly
Members have proper rooms, they have proper offices.
There are allowances for staff. The offices are such
that there is a meeting table there, they have got a
proper working environment. I remember discussions at
the time that the civil servants were absolutely horrified
that this was going to happen and we were being told
that they did not need research assistants, why on earth
should Assembly Members have research assistants because
what research would they be doing. If the research that
they would be doing was factual then they could get
that from the Civil Service because the Civil Service
could provide them with the facts, and if it was not
factual then it was clearly political and therefore
it could not be paid for out of the public purse. They
did not need secretaries either because they were going
to have full IT kits so they could do their own typing.
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LORD RICHARD: It sounds exactly like
the House of Lords.
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TED ROWLANDS: That did not happen.
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MS JAMES: And there should not be a library
there because whoever heard of a library for just 60
people. Those arguments were being made at the time
but when that was the debate that was the culture within
which the debate was had about staffing the committees
as well. It was a ratchet process, you got on one and
moved forward one.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: But with the
plenary not everybody can see the chair, there is a
column.
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MS JAMES: Yes, it is a difficult building.
I think the worst part of Crickhowell House unfortunately
is the plenary room, the actual chamber. The columns
there are a great shame. I think the rest of Crickhowell
House in terms of facilities provided for members is
good. I think there should be a new chamber.
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PETER PRICE: On this committee staffing,
what impact has the low staffing or almost totally inadequate
staffing, because they have people just to run the very
basics of pulling the meeting together, what impact
has that had in terms of the selection of items from
the agenda? Normally a secretariat which is able to
ferret around can help the chairman as to what issues
need to be put on the agenda and what priority they
have. That is one of the key functions. Have you seen
an impact in terms of the very uneven planning of what
committees tackle and to what extent has the advertisement
that Sir Michael was referring to earlier, and the staff
now coming on stream, remedied completely this staffing
issue?
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MS JAMES: I think there are two or three
questions there. The clerks to the subject committees,
that is an interesting cohort of people who are in my
experience of them very professional and do provide
good support in the way you are talking about, the provision
of agendas and forward planning. They have all got too
much work to do and I think some of the adverts that
you saw probably some of the support needs to be there.
In some of them now there are deputy clerks and they
have support for themselves.
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The other issue is what Sir Michael was
referring to which is the policy support. The clerking
of the committees and the organisation of subject areas
is one issue and then the policy support and expertise
is another. Special advisers are used on some inquiries
but for the most part there are not full-time, as it
were, special advisers for committees. In Westminster
one is aware of special advisers for select committees
who will be subject specialists in that area and who
will be distinct from the people who work in the ministry,
the relevant department. There is not that particular
cohort in the Assembly.
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LORD RICHARD: Can I thank you very much
indeed for coming. When you started off you said - I
noted it down - what was happening was a new and Welsh
way of delivering the new governance. Splendid phrase.
What we have to do in this Commission I think is examine
the validity of that. Thank you very much indeed for
all your help. It has been extremely helpful.
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MS JAMES: Thank you for asking me.
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