COMMISSION ON THE POWERS AND ELECTORAL
ARRANGEMENTS OF THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY FOR WALES
MINUTES OF PROCEEDINGS
of the
EVIDENCE OF:
WELSH ASSEMBLY GOVERNMENT MINISTER FOR
OPEN GOVERNMENT
CARWYN JONES
held at
National Museum & Gallery, Cardiff
on
22nd November 2002
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LORD RICHARD: Minister,
thank you very much for coming. The way most Ministers
have been handling it is to open for the first ten minutes
by giving us an overview, and then we will have some
questions. If you would be kind enough to formally introduce
your team for the purposes of the record, that would
be helpful.
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MR JONES: On my right
is Peter Gregory, Director of Personnel, and on my left
is Hugh Rawlings, Director of Open Government and Constitutional
Affairs.
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Could I thank you for the opportunity
to give evidence to this Committee this morning. You
will have, of course, received the written submission
that has been put in in order to inform the Committee
as to the background to the work that I do in the role
that I have at the moment. There is one alteration that
I should bring to your attention, and that is that
in the written submission it does say I am the
Chair of the Equal Opportunities Committee. That situation
has in fact changed. The Assembly took a decision some
two or three weeks ago that the Chair of that Committee
and of another Committee, the European Affairs Committee,
should be held not by a Minister but by a backbencher,
so I will be replaced as the Chair of that Committee
next week.
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I hope that you found the written evidence
that has been submitted useful. Obviously I welcome
the opportunity to discuss the issues that have been
raised there and any other issues with yourselves. As
the written evidence has sought to demonstrate, the
portfolio that I hold is a little different from those
of other Ministers, in the sense that I have no delegated
powers as such; there are no statutory functions that
have been delegated to me. As a result of that, I do
not need to maintain, generally, close links with any
particular Whitehall department or departments, unlike,
for example, the Minister for Rural Affairs, who inevitably
will have a strong link with DEFRA. However, of course,
I do have to have some regard to statutory provision,
and indeed, I do maintain contacts with Whitehall departments,
usually either the Home Office or the Office of the
Deputy Prime Minister, as part of an overseeing role
in terms of the work that they do in Wales. As far as
my statutory duties are concerned, the evidence that
I put in draws attention to the Assemblys specific
duty, governed, of course, by s.120 of the Government
of Wales Act, in relation to equal opportunities, and
that is an area where I have particular responsibilities.
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In terms of open government as a portfolio,
the preamble to our standing orders commits us to having
open, democratic practice, and it is something to which
we attach a great deal of importance. The Freedom of
Information Act, of course, will come into force in
2005, and we have taken steps to be proactive before
the Act comes fully into force. What we are trying to
do is to adopt a more open approach in terms of access
to information, and that is an area where I have responsibility.
In many ways, we are acting as the "pathfinders" in
terms of England and Wales as to how the Act will actually
work, and in order to see what steps may need to be
taken if there are any difficulties that are encountered
between now and 2005.
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Following both my equality of opportunity
responsibilities and my open government responsibilities,
I am usually the point of contact in the Assembly government
with Whitehall Ministers who are developing policies
in the field, as I mentioned earlier, for example in
relation to human rights or the broader equality agenda.
There is another aspect of the open government agenda
which I am responsible for overseeing, and that is the
possible reform of the Ombudsman services in Wales.
I have mentioned that already in my evidence. We are
seeking primary legislation on that point in due course
if the consultation process that we have put in place
confirms that the present structure of three different
Ombudsman should be replaced by a single Ombudsman for
the whole of Wales. In many ways, it is similar to the
Collcutt review that has taken place in England in that
regard. It appears, if the consultation process goes
that way, that we will be looking at a single Ombudsman
dealing with complaints with regard to all tiers of
public administration in Wales. The Local Government
Ombudsman is a full-time appointment. The other two
Ombudsman tend to have a much lighter workload, so there
is no difficulty practically in having one single Ombudsman
for the three subject areas that they would deal with,
but in order to do so, the quickest and most effective
way is for primary legislation to be passed to do that.
The difficulty at the moment is that there is a statutory
bar to all three posts being held by the same person.
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Finally, of course, there is my role
as the Minister in charge of Assembly business, which
is one that the Assembly has to have under its Standing
Orders. I know you have already talked to Andrew Davies
about his experience in that respect, and I would be
happy, of course, to supplement any of the comments
that he has already made, and also to answer any specific
points you wish to ask me as to how the development
and treatment of Assembly business will continue in
the future. Therefore, in many ways, I have a responsibility
to promote many areas of the Assemblys work, such
as equality of opportunity and human rights and so forth,
and this is something that is done not just by way of
moral support to outside organisations who promote that
work, but also in terms of financial support to bodies
such as the Wales Refugee Council and so on. It is not
simply a question of providing supportive words; we
do try and be proactive in terms of assisting organisations
that are attempting to promote on the ground the policies
that the Assembly as a corporate body has a statutory
duty to promote, and also the policies that the Government
of the Assembly would also seek to promote.
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I hope that gives you some insight into
the background of the work that I do in this particular
portfolio. I would be happy, of course, to answer any
questions.
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LORD RICHARD: Thank
you very much indeed. Can I start off by expressing
a thought? You are fortunate in the sense that you have
those powers from somewhere. Where have you got them
from? What is the legal cover, for example, on freedom
of information when you decide to go further than the
Freedom of Information Act?
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MR JONES: The Freedom
of Information Act has to be implemented by 2005.
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LORD RICHARD: But you
go further than that, do you not?
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MR JONES: Indeed, yes.
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LORD RICHARD: You have
reduced the number of days from 20 to 15 and you have
a different test, one of substantial harm.
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MR JONES: Yes. We have,
in many ways, built on the framework of the Freedom
of Information Act. The Freedom of Information Act will
provide a minimum standard in terms of what will need
to be disclosed to the public.
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LORD RICHARD: I do not
want to be too legalistic about this, but does the Act
give you the power to go beyond the provisions of the
Act?
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MR RAWLINGS: No, not
in terms. What we are doing is, the Assembly has adopted
a voluntary code of practice, and that code of practice
is informed by the Freedom of Information Act, but goes
beyond it, as the Minister has said, in certain respects.
It is a voluntary code, and it is one that the Assembly
has adopted to guide its own conduct in these matters.
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LORD RICHARD: And that
is enough, is it?
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MR RAWLINGS: Yes. If
anyone asked the technical legal question, I suppose
I would refer them to s.40, which is the one which says
"The Assembly may do anything which is calculated to
facilitate or is conducive or incidental to the exercise
of any of its functions."
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: Is
it not really the fact that the Government of Wales
Act was drafted and thought of, and the standing orders
of the Assembly were drafted at the time when the manifesto
of the Labour Party in 1997 was still the flag, the
standard, and it was being believed in, and before the
Government in Whitehall went back, which is in fact
what happened, and decided to be rather more conservative
than their manifesto had said? I think that explains
perfectly well why you are more open if you agree
with my analysis or history than is the case
in England.
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MR JONES: I think that
analysis is correct.
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LORD RICHARD: You would
not be the first body to be slightly I would
not say misled, but at least guided by a manifesto which
turned out to be not entirely capable of being implemented.
It is part of political life.
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Can I come back to "substantial harm"?
I seem to remember when the Freedom of Information Bill
was going through there was quite a strong feeling,
at least in government circles, that "substantial harm"
was really not a strong enough test, and that you needed
something more than that. Why do you think the Assembly
came down on the side of the weaker rather than the
stronger test?
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MR JONES: I suppose
in terms of the strength of the test, it has to be balanced
by the fact that the presumption, of course, is that
the information is actually released. Where there is
a presumption that information is to be released, then
there is an argument for suggesting that the test that
governs the release of that information needs to be
perhaps more flexible than it would otherwise be. If
it were the case that the presumption was that the information
would not be released, there may well then be an argument
for saying that the test should be stronger, but because
the presumption is there, in practical terms
and we have had experience of this now what we
have found is that the test as it stands is a very demanding
test to be satisfied. We have had examples where on
the face of it the test seems to suggest that we should
be releasing, for example, documents such as emails
between officials and documents that I suspect originally
were not foreseen as being subject to release by the
Act.
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LORD RICHARD: Would
a memorandum from Mr Rawlings to you, for example, be
released at all? Could the Assembly not say, "We want
to see this piece of paper"?
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MR JONES: It is liable
for release. We would have to demonstrate that the substantial
harm test could be met, otherwise that document, as
things stand, would have to be released.
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LORD RICHARD: Is that
not going to cause problems between you and Whitehall?
Whitehall will say, "We cant tell anything to
the Welsh Assembly officials or Ministers because of
their Information Act."
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MR JONES: The position
that we have adopted is that documents that are ours
are open to release; documents that are provided to
us, particularly documents that are provided confidentially,
would not be subject to release in that regard. Otherwise,
it would, quite rightly, destroy the relationship that
we would have with Whitehall if documents were provided
by a Whitehall department in confidence and we were
obliged to release those documents. It clearly would
destroy our relationship.
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LORD RICHARD: I do not
want this discussion to be dominated by the Freedom
of Information Act, but can I just ask one further question?
What is the basis for the distinction? I can see the
basis in fact for the distinction between documents
emanating from Whitehall and those emanating from Cardiff,
but once it is in your hands
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MR RAWLINGS: The memorandum
of understanding deals with that.
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LORD RICHARD: Between
who and who?
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MR RAWLINGS: The base
documents between the UK Government and the devolved
administrations set out the basis on which correspondence
is to be released, and you will also find in the standing
orders, either 17 or 21, of the Assembly that documents
which are provided to the Assembly under conditions
of confidentiality are not subject to release.
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LORD RICHARD: That is
in the memorandum?
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MR RAWLINGS: There is
material in the memorandum of understanding about how
correspondence between the UK Government and the devolved
administrations has to be dealt with.
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LAURA McALLISTER: Can
I ask you about the equal opportunities brief, Minister?
What I am interested in is your relationship with the
three statutory equality Commissions. You mentioned
in your paper that there is a UK-initiated review of
that with a view to establishing one integrated Commission.
You are also suggesting in a comment in that paragraph
that that might offer an opportunity to reconsider the
current state of affairs in terms of your relationship,
which is lacking in formal powers and financial connections.
First of all, I just wondered how you fed into that
review, and what your opinion is on that, bearing in
mind that I believe there is some concern amongst the
equality groups in Wales on that. Secondly, should that
happen, should there be an integrated Commission, how
would that impact on Wales? How would it impact particularly
on the Assemblys powers in relation to the equality
agenda?
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MR JONES: It is correct
to say that the relationship we have with the three
statutory Commissions is an informal one. In many ways
it could be argued that they have no need to liaise
with us if they so choose, but the reality is that they
have chosen to do so, and each Commission is represented
on the Equality of Opportunity Committee, and they are
standing advisors to the Committee and take part in
the Committees deliberations, and we welcome that.
It is important for us as an institution to know that
we can have regular advice from the three Commissions,
and it certainly governs the work that we do as an administration.
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We have not yet taken a view about the
single equality body. It is still a matter for consultation.
I am aware of the concerns that have been expressed,
particularly by the Disability Rights Commission, who
naturally are concerned about the position they may
find themselves in. That is something that will have
to be dealt with. If there is a single equality body,
it will be important at least that there is an office
in Wales and that there are more formalised links between
that office and the Assembly.
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LAURA McALLISTER: What
if the UK single Commission wants to pursue a slightly
different equality agenda to that which the Welsh Assembly
government wishes to pursue? If it is only a Welsh office,
without funding and without formal controls, surely
you cannot depart dramatically in terms of operation
of equality issues on the ground with those three groups.
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MR JONES: We cannot
go beyond the primary legislation in any event. Clearly,
we cannot legislate in terms of equality of opportunity
within Wales itself, but we can set examples, with our
own staff for example, and we can also provide advice
and assistance to other organisations using the standing
Commissions as to how they would see themselves in the
future. For example, because of the influence that the
Assembly has as an institution, it is possible to influence
the work of the NHS in Wales, of local education authorities
and so forth. The whole public sector in many ways can
be influenced like that. So despite the fact that the
statutory power would not be there, and inevitably we
cannot depart from the central theme that would be set
by the single Commission, there is scope for us to "value-add"
to that policy in Wales by our own example and by encouraging
others to do the same.
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LAURA McALLISTER: So
if the single Commission had a slightly different agenda,
who would influence the ASPBs, for example, in terms
of their own internal equality agenda? Would it be the
Commission that was based in Wales perhaps, or would
it be the Assembly?
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MR JONES: If it was
a question of policy rather than statutory duty, I would
expect it to be the Assembly, working with the Commissions
office in Wales. If it is statutory duty, of course,
clearly that Commission would have to follow whatever
was laid down in the particular Act. Primary statutory
duty, I should say, rather than secondary duty.
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TED ROWLANDS: Can I
ask a question on the Freedom of Information Act? Do
I understand it that, for example, if an Assembly Minister
wrote to his counterpart in Whitehall saying, "Look,
I would like you to have in the next Bill this bit of
legislation to cover our point," and the reply came
back stamped "in confidence", the Assembly Minister
could not then share the contents of that letter with
any committee or with the Assembly? Is that right?
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MR JONES: That is right.
The contents could not be shared.
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TED ROWLANDS: If Whitehall
took a restrictive view of even correspondence of that
kind, which would be a part of the whole process of
negotiating possible inclusion of clauses in a Bill,
that could actually be very constraining on the way
in which the Assembly could react to Whitehalls
view on it.
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MR JONES: It is a question
of balance. My personal experience has been that Whitehall
departments do not take an overly secretive view.
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TED ROWLANDS: They do
not automatically stamp "in confidence".
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MR JONES: No, to be
fair, they do not do that. From our point of view, we
also have to ensure that if it is provided to us in
confidence, it is kept in confidence. Certainly initially
in the life of the Assembly there was a fear around
Whitehall that whatever they gave to Assembly departments
would be liable to disclosure, because of the corporate
body nature of the Assembly, but that is not the case;
it would seriously damage the working relationship we
have with Whitehall if everything they gave us had to
be released publicly.
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LORD RICHARD: You raise
a point that I wanted to chase, which is the nature
of the corporate body. I have to tell you frankly it
is a concept that I have never really understood, and
I do not know how importantly we should treat it now,
but it does seem to me that there are two areas of disclosure.
One is disclosure by what is now the de facto government
of Wales to the other members of the Assembly, and there
is disclosure by the Assembly as a whole to members
of the public. Are there any cases where you would disclose
things to Assembly members as part of the corporate
body concept but at the same time try not to disclose
it to members of the public?
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MR JONES: That would
be impossible, quite frankly. It cannot be done. We
still have a corporate body structure de facto, but
that has long gone in terms of the way the Assembly
operates.
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LORD RICHARD: It is
still there as a legal background.
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MR JONES: It is.
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LORD RICHARD: You say
you have a memorandum of understanding with Whitehall
on what should or should not be disclosed, but technically
you cannot have an understanding with anybody. The Assembly
as a whole can have a memorandum of understanding with
Whitehall, but once you are dealing with the Assembly
as a whole, presumably the obligation would be to disclose
to the Assembly as a whole. I do not want to probe too
deeply this sensitive issue, but it does seem to me
that there is a huge gap in the legal wall that supports
this particular policy.
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MR RAWLINGS: If you
look at the memorandum of understanding, the first thing
to notice about it is that it is a memorandum of understanding
between the UK Government, the Scottish executive and
Welsh Assembly Ministers. That was the basis on which
it was set up.
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LORD RICHARD: When was
this?
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MR RAWLINGS: 1999.
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LORD RICHARD: So the
concept of Welsh Assembly Ministers was recognised?
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MR RAWLINGS: Yes. The
terminology may be slightly different, but it was something
like "the cabinet of the National Assembly of Wales",
but at that point, that is how the memorandum was set
up.
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LORD RICHARD: So you
are bound but the Assembly is not, the Welsh government.
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MR RAWLINGS: That is
right, because it is about intergovernmental relationships.
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TED ROWLANDS: This might
seem an odd question, saying, "Please tell us what you
cannot tell us in confidence." From your experience,
putting aside commercial confidentiality, what kind
of information in Whitehall is still marked "confidential"?
What is the area that is most sensitive about information
outside commercial confidentiality issues which is a
bar to open government? Give us a flavour.
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MR JONES: It would be
to do with legislation. It would also be to do with,
for example, a negotiating position that the UK Government
wished to share with us but would not want to give away
publicly for fear of undermining our position.
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TED ROWLANDS: In the
context of Europe probably?
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MR JONES: Yes.
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TED ROWLANDS: But this
whole debate that would go on between you and Whitehall
over what could or could not get into a Bill tends to
be put under "confidential" to you?
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MR JONES: Yes. Again,
it would damage our working relationship with any other
department anywhere in the UK if a debate between administrations
was conducted publicly. Clearly that would not work.
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MR RAWLINGS: Given the
fact that formally it is only when the Queens
Speech is announced that the world becomes aware of
what the UK Government is proposing by way of legislation.
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LORD RICHARD: Come on!
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MR RAWLINGS: I did say
"formally".
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TED ROWLANDS: They are
allowed to leak but you are not.
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MR JONES: I could not
possibly comment on that.
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HUW THOMAS: Going back
to the comments that you made about the fact that the
corporate body has long since gone, or words to that
effect, are you still comfortable with the position
of Ministers being both within a committee, participating,
jointly participating, and yet that same committee scrutinising
Ministers?
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MR JONES: It is an anomaly.
What we have is a halfway house between the original
intention, which was to have a committee structure,
and the subsequent intention of having a cabinet structure,
and in the middle we have a committee structure that
also includes a cabinet Minister. I am not aware of
any other government structure in Europe where that
happens. It probably increases the scrutiny of Ministers,
because each subject committee meets every fortnight,
and the Minister is subject to scrutiny by that committee
every fortnight. When I was Minister for Rural Affairs,
typically the Ministers report would be scrutinised
for an hour and a half, so there would be three hours
scrutiny every month. When I would mention this to colleagues
elsewhere in the UK, they were stunned, because they
would attend a committee very infrequently and they
were amazed at the level of scrutiny that was there.
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On the other hand, it is possible for
the Minister to influence the committee by being there
and making representations and to perhaps influence
the committee to go in another direction, which is perhaps
outside the idea of scrutiny that most people actually
have.
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On balance, I would have to say personally
that I find it odd that a Minister should be a member
of a committee that scrutinises that Minister. Despite
the fact that some committees rarely take a vote, there
are some committees that regularly take votes, and that
Minister has the ability to vote on their own performance,
which does not appear to be right on the face of it,
but on the other hand, it does mean a greater level
of scrutiny than would otherwise be the case.
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LORD RICHARD: What about
the other half of the committees deliberations?
We heard from one Minister that she found it useful
to be on the committee because of policy formulation;
in other words, they actually participated in formulating
policy for that Department. Do you find that?
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MR JONES: Of course,
at the moment I do not have a subject committee, so
I am speaking from previous experience. Some committees
are better in that regard, in terms of policy formulation,
than others. There are some committees that are more
akin to a traditional Westminster committee. There are
others that are more consensual and are more willing
to work with their relevant Minister. Practice does
vary.
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LORD RICHARD: How does
it work? Would the Minister produce a piece of paper
with ideas on it for policy which would then be discussed?
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MR JONES: It can work
that way, but the committee can also look at its own
subject areas that it may want to investigate. For example,
one of the first acts that an Assembly committee performed
was to set up an inquiry into the beef on the bone ban.
That was conducted by the committee and it was a worthwhile
exercise, and the result of that inquiry then advised
the Minister as to what decision that Minister should
take. That is a proper function of a committee. But
it varies widely. Some committees will be more proactive
than others in terms of perhaps conducting a long-term
review.
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HUW THOMAS: Does not
the involvement of a Minister in that process serve
to confuse the status of the report that comes out?
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MR JONES: It is a committee
report.
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HUW THOMAS: I appreciate
that, but a Minister has actively participated in the
process of preparing that report.
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MR JONES: That is true.
On the one hand, I suppose one could say that it shows
that there is a greater sense of working together between
the Minister and the committee. On the other hand, a
cynic might say that it shows that the Minister is able
to try and influence a committee at a stage when perhaps
the Minister should not have any influence.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH:
But you have a majority on the committee in political
terms, do you not, since the agreement between the parties?
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MR JONES: That is correct,
which I suppose leads on to the argument that if there
is a majority on the committee, the committee will more
often than not do the Ministers bidding.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH:
Even if one did not put it quite as strongly as that,
it would be rather unlikely that there would be a committee
report that would go totally against Ministerial thinking.
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MR JONES: I would not
go that far.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH:
I thought I was going less far than you had.
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MR JONES: On the one
hand, one can argue that, with a Minister on the committee
and a majority for the governing parties on the committee,
the committees report would be unfairly influenced
by the Minister. On the other hand, there are other
committees and it is difficult to generalise
on this point where there are more independent-minded
backbenchers who might take a different view. There
is no set practice. The committees do vary tremendously
as to how they deal with the Minister and how they work.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: Can
you say why the change from moving the Chairman of the
Equal Opportunities Committee to being just a member
has taken place, and does it have your support?
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MR JONES: It does have
my support, yes. Even though the Equal Opportunities
Committee is not a scrutiny committee as such, as we
would understand it, it does look rather odd that the
Minister chairs the committee, and that the Minister
comes too, in order for the Minister to inform that
committee. It can give the appearance that the administration
is trying by taking the chair of the committee to guide
the committee in a certain direction. It has never actually
happened in practice, but it could be open to that interpretation.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: On
equal opportunities, you have a strange dichotomy. In
the cabinet, I believe you have the highest proportion
of women in any executive in Europe. I believe that
is the case.
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MR JONES: That is true.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: On
the other hand, in the Western Mail yesterday
there was a headline saying, "Women being short-changed
as employers fail to close pay gap." So it looks as
if the committee is more effective within the Assembly,
so to speak, than within Wales as a country.
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MR JONES: The question
of low pay has been there for many, many years, and
it will inevitably take some time to close the gap.
We know that, particularly among part-time workers,
the gap is very marked; it is much more marked than
it is across the rest of the United Kingdom. We have
to look at ourselves to set examples, and we are at
the moment looking at launching equal pay initiatives
in local government, in higher education and in the
NHS as a way of rolling up the agenda that we would
wish to see rolled out. We have a good example in terms
of the Assemblys government, in terms of the proportion
of cabinet members. We have a reasonable proportion
of women Assembly Members themselves, and we would hope
that the example that has been set there will filter
through first of all to other employers, both in the
public and private sector, and we have to be proactive
in getting that message across.
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VIVIENNE SUGAR: I just
wanted to ask about the Freedom of Information Act and
the practice of the staff of the Assembly, both in terms
of disclosing advice to Ministers but also and
I will plug the Western Mail as well, if I might
- the announcement that the Executive Board minutes
are going to be available. I have actually worked in
a local authority where we tried to publish the minutes
of our directors team, and they had to be so sanitised
that nobody believed that that was what we spent three
hours talking about. Can we talk about the difference
of freedom of information as it applies to Assembly
staff?
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MR JONES: I suppose
in staffing terms, staff are aware that we have a more
open policy than has ever been the case, and they have
to be aware that, in terms of the communications they
have, those communications may in the future be liable
to disclosure. We are working on this in terms of what
concrete guidance can be given. There is a request for
information that is active at the moment. We have provided
what we believe is information that satisfies that request
but that request may well end up with the Ombudsman.
We will then be guided by the Ombudsman in terms of
what view the Ombudsman takes as to what will have to
be and what will not have to be disclosed. We take the
view that ultimately it will be for the Ombudsman to
guide us. As I mentioned earlier on in my preamble,
we are in many ways a pathfinder in terms of the whole
question of freedom of information, and inevitably there
will be times when we take a particular view and we
want to have that view either confirmed or altered by
other bodies.
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VIVIENNE SUGAR: What
about protection for civil servants in this position,
where it may be that advice that has been given in certain
circumstances needs to be disclosed? How do you protect
them from the personal publicity as to who were the
authors of particular papers? How does it impact against
their conditions of service and internal disciplinary
codes and so on?
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MR JONES: Individuals
are never named. We have had requests to name individuals
in the past, but we have not done so. My view would
be that that would be most unfair given the fact that
civil servants are not in a position to defend themselves,
nor would it be right in any event for people to subject
to that.
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MR RAWLINGS: If I could
add an addendum to that, it is actually quite difficult,
because you only have to look in the Wales Year Book
to get an organigram of the Assembly, and I think I
am right in say that that, for example, identifies heads
of divisions. It is quite difficult.
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PAUL VALERIO: You mentioned
your desire to have one Ombudsman for the three departments
in Wales. You also said you might be able to improve
the service, but equally you have made it quite clear
that you require primary legislation to carry it out
properly. It is the fact that you have to bid for this,
and you may or may not get it this year or next year.
How do you decide whether you are able to improve the
service without primary legislation? Is this a frustration?
Clearly, it is a pillar of one of your departments,
and it is very important to you. If you are not able
to carry it out, what effect does that have on the Assembly?
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MR JONES: I had better
deal with the specific example of the Ombudsman. If
the consultation, as we suspect it may, comes out in
support of the idea that there should be a single Ombudsman
for the whole of Wales, there are two routes that we
could take. One of them is to bid for primary legislation
not specific and unique primary legislation,
but legislation that would be added to or piggy-backed
effectively on to legislation that is already planned,
which is the quickest and easiest route, or we would
have to go down the route of a Regulatory Reform Order,
which is a difficult route and is much more time-consuming.
Clearly, the preference would be for the first route.
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The point that I should make is this:
that in looking at the legislation that the Assembly
can influence and promote, it is not possible just to
look at Wales-only legislation that is going through
Westminster. There are other areas where legislation
affecting only Wales has in effect been attached to
legislation that is going through Parliament that affects
either England or Wales or indeed the whole of GB or
UK. That is often the easiest way to make a change.
Because there is a statutory bar in terms of the Ombudsman
to all three people holding the same post, it means
we can do nothing until such time as either primary
legislation is passed that removes that bar, or a Regulatory
Reform Order is in place.
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LORD RICHARD: Can you
tell us about Regulatory Reform Orders? I have never
come across that before.
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MR RAWLINGS: It is a
species of secondary legislation, but it is not a power
that the Assembly has. It is something that would be
promoted by a government department; in other words,
in this particular case the Wales Office would promote
it. Its origin lies in the belief that there were impositions
placed on business, and that the statute book needed
to be tidied up and regulations lifted and eased and
whatever. But in fact, the power is much more widely
drawn than that. What we are trying to do with the Ombudsman
is this. There is, as the Minister said, a statutory
bar on one person holding all three posts, and we are
trying to remove that so that when, conveniently, next
year all three posts become vacant, we might be able
to appoint one person to them. But that would still
leave three offices, and in order to produce a single
Ombudsmans office, we would then need primary
legislation to bring the three jurisdictions together
into one.
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TED ROWLANDS: Could
I just ask about your powers over the Ombudsman? I am
not quite clear. It might sound fanciful. If a UK Department
decides to reform the Ombudsman system in a manner and
way which you did not think was particularly appropriate
in Wales, do you have the right to opt out, or is the
Ombudsman directly accountable to the Assembly as opposed
to the United Kingdom Government?
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MR RAWLINGS: You have
to remember there are four Ombudsmen in issue here.
If it were decided to reform something relating to the
Parliamentary Commissioner for Administration, that
would not be relevant to us.
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TED ROWLANDS: Take Local
Government.
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MR RAWLINGS: If it were
the Local Government Ombudsman, it would not be regarded
as appropriate for a Whitehall department to promote
legislation amending the position of the Local Government
Ombudsman in Wales.
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TED ROWLANDS: What about
Health?
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MR RAWLINGS: The same,
because the Health Services Commissioner is actually
funded by us, as indeed is the Welsh Administration
Ombudsman.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: Just
as a matter of fact, is England thinking of also running
the three Ombudsmen together?
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MR RAWLINGS: Yes. This
is the outcome of the Collcutt Report.
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LORD RICHARD: Is that
David Calcott, the lawyer?
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MR RAWLINGS: No. I do
not think it is. I think it is someone else. But that
report was completed, I think, in 2001, and they have
not actually decided how to take it forward yet, but
if they were to take it forward, they would need primary
legislation, and that would provide a vehicle for us
to do what we want to do, once we decide what it is.
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PETER PRICE: A few minutes
ago you drew a distinction between committees in the
Assembly that had a consensual approach and those which
had a much more confrontational, Westminster approach.
Is this largely attributable in your view to the subject
matter, that in some subjects there is a wide political
difference and therefore it is inevitable in those committees
that there will be confrontation, or is it far more
in the nature of either the chairman or the members
of the committee?
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MR JONES: It is a bit
of both really, but it is more to do with the subject
matter. For example, the Economic Development Committee
is particularly renowned for being combative. The Agriculture
and Rural Development Committee was certainly in that
category at one time. Yet there are other committees,
for example, Culture Media and Sport, which are less
so. The subject matter is important. Some of it depends
on who the individuals on the committee are as well.
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PETER PRICE: What impact
does this have on the relationship between Ministers
and the committee in terms of what comes out, the influence
that the committee has on policy and the way in which
scrutiny is conducted?
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MR JONES: The committees
have no formal policy-making powers. The committees
are there to scrutinise, of course. They also have this
extra role in terms of developing policy areas, but
the final say does rest with the Minister. So it is
possible within our system, where the committee may
take a particular view, the Minister is not obliged
to follow that view.
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LORD RICHARD: Who appoints
the committees?
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MR JONES: The committees
are decided upon by meetings of the business managers
of all the parties.
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LORD RICHARD: A bit
like the Westminster system.
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MR JONES: Yes. The numbers
allocated by each party are decided. Personalities are
a matter for each party.
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LAURA McALLISTER: Can
I go back to the equal opportunities agenda? Something
occurred to me, reading your comments about the Race
Relations Act and how that fits into the s.120 of the
Government of Wales Act. You mention there the creation
of a function bringing all of your powers in relation
to equality in line with your statutory obligation under
the Race Relations Act. How might that happen? That
would require new legislation.
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MR JONES: I think it
is fair to say it is too early yet to work out a strategy
in terms of how that might happen, but it is something
we are looking at at the moment.
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LAURA McALLISTER: Is
it a priority? The area of equal opportunities seems
to me to be full of anomalies in terms of how you handle
that brief. Is that one of the priorities for rationalising
that?
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MR JONES: It is something
that is being looked at. I would not like to prejudice
the position at this point, because I know it is something
the committee, for example, will have a strong view
on, and we do need to take account of the viewpoints
of all those who are interested first.
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LORD RICHARD: That is
very helpful on your portfolio. I wonder whether you
would mind if we turn to your previous incarnation.
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TED ROWLANDS: Before
we look back, could I ask the Minister to just look
forward, and perhaps even do a modest bit of crystal
ball-gazing in terms of your role as the business manager
of the Assembly? If it were agreed that powers of primary
legislation should be transferred to the Assembly, how
much of an upheaval would that represent in the whole
process of carrying Bills? You have experience in the
concept of working with Whitehall. How do you think
that would change, alter and amend the whole structure
and process of the Assembly itself? Is it an addition,
or could it be rather fundamental?
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VIVIENNE SUGAR: When
you answer that, could you sketch out to us how the
scrutiny of primary legislation is working now?
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MR JONES: We are looking
at a system of joint scrutiny between the Assembly and
parliamentary committees. It is not an ideal system,
because there are occasions when neither institution
is in session, is sitting; for example between March
and June of next year the Assembly will be in the throes
of an election process, whereas the Westminster committees
will be sitting. So it is not ideal, because the electoral
cycles of the institutions are not in synch. It is possible,
I suppose, that they will be synchronised in certain
years, but they are rarely actually synchronised. It
can work but it is not a foolproof system in that regard.
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In terms of what effect the transfer
of primary powers might have on the structure, there
would clearly need to be change. If primary powers were
to arrive on our doorstep this morning, it is fair to
say that there would need to be some fundamental changes
in terms of how that was dealt with, because I think
it is important to remember that while the Scottish
Office and the Northern Ireland Office were government
offices which were used to drafting primary legislation,
and were expected to have a strong policy-making role,
it was never the case that the Welsh Office was in the
same category. So the policy-making, policy development
expertise has had to be built up over the past three
years or so, and that is happening now. The same would
have to be done with the expertise required to draft
and to process primary legislation, so it would need
to be planned carefully, but it could be done.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH:
Can I just ask a supplementary to that? You used a phrase
like "the current joint process of scrutiny" or something
like that, talking of the process at Westminster and
the two houses, and of the Assembly, but my understanding
is that there is not a procedure for joint scrutiny,
and this is one of the problems.
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MR RAWLINGS: That is
right, and there is an element of making this up as
we go along. As I understand it, parliamentary committees
cannot meet jointly with other bodies. For example,
under their standing orders there is no possibility
of the Welsh Affairs Committee meeting jointly with
an Assembly committee.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: They
could be given the authority to do so, but they would
have to be given it specially, as they were in the case
of India in the 1930s, when they were allowed to meet
with Indians.
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MR RAWLINGS: I do not
remember that, but on the other hand, what happens with
our committees is, of course, they can meet and anyone
can join in. So therefore what happened in fact on the
NHS Wales Bill was that the Assembly committee undertook
a process of pre-legislative scrutiny in Cardiff, and
some Welsh MPs, members of the Welsh Affairs Committee,
came and sat in.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH:
They took part, asked questions and so on?
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MR RAWLINGS: Yes, I
believe so, but I am not entirely sure.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH:
Was there a transcript?
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MR JONES: It would be
minuted that they were there. There would probably be
a video.
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MR RAWLINGS: On the
other hand, what then happened was that the Welsh Affairs
Committee conducted its own scrutiny by having both
the Minister for Health here, Jane Hutt, and the relevant
Wales Office Minister, Don Touhig, in front of them
and questioned them. So there was a process of scrutiny
by both committees, but it was not really a joint process,
and that is because there are barriers at the moment
to this happening, but the more we get into the practice
of publishing bills for pre-legislative scrutiny, the
more we are going to have to get this right.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: We
were told yesterday that in the case of the Communication
Bill, where there was pre-legislative scrutiny, there
was a joint committee considering a draft and taking
evidence on it, but we were told by the Minister concerned,
as I understood her, that she thought it right not to
make any representations to that committee because she
was working through the relevant Whitehall department,
and that struck me as very surprising.
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MR RAWLINGS: I do not
know what happened on the Communication Bill. I know
that there was a process of pre-legislative scrutiny,
but it is indicative of the fact that we are right at
the beginning of learning this process that there is
no set pattern as to how this works. At the moment we
have just had pre-legislative scrutiny of two Bills,
of which I am aware, the NHS Wales Bill and the Communication
Bill, but I do not think they followed a consistent
approach.
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TED ROWLANDS: Could
I just pursue a bit further what you said. You said
you thought you could develop the policy capacity to
prepare legislation. My question is are you going beyond
that? As someone who has spent a large part of my parliamentary
life legislating, and I have enjoyed it, it is hugely
time-consuming, and incredibly absorbing. You do not
have to borrow the arcane Westminster parliamentary
legislative processes, but under any legislative process
of proper scrutiny, it is hugely time-consuming and
takes up considerable resources. If one is trying to
visualise carrying, say, six major Bills in a year through
your structures at this moment, the Assembly structures,
how much will it mis-shape or alter the whole nature
and character of the show? I just wonder if anybody
has thought about it. Alongside the policy, the scrutiny
of quangos and the rest of it comes a major new activity.
Could you build that into the committee structure as
it stands? Is there a structure to take it?
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MR JONES: It would be
exceptionally difficult with the present structure to
steer primary legislation through the Assembly. When
comparing the size, the numbers of Assembly Members
with, for example, Northern Ireland, where there are
almost twice as many for a population that is half the
size of Wales, or indeed members of the Scottish parliament,
it would be very difficult to envisage 60 Assembly Members
being able to take on that amount of work.
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TED ROWLANDS: So you
would say an automatic consequence would have to be
an increase in the size of the Assembly itself.
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MR JONES: It would not
be automatic, but it would be difficult. I do not want
to go beyond the argument, but it would be difficult
within the present structure to actually take on those
powers.
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TOM JONES (In Welsh,
then interpreted): I would like to ask a question in
Welsh, if I may, please.
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As the Minister for Open Government,
providing information to the people of Wales is extremely
valuable. What the people of Wales say very often is
that governing is complex, that we in a way have two
governments, two levels of government. In your previous
portfolio, the Rural Development and Agricultural portfolio,
we felt we were dealing with DEFRA one minute and with
the Assembly in Cardiff the following minute. Is there
any way of simplifying the process? Do we need greater
clarity, for example, from your previous portfolio,
where it was difficult to work out what needed to be
done and you did not have the power to do things yourself?
How can we simplify the process?
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MR JONES (In Welsh,
then interpreted): It is very difficult. There were
councils and regional councils, and the public does
not understand them. There is the Assembly, local councillors,
and not just the Westminster government, but also the
European government. There is a difference in the structures
as to who has power over what. To take an example, in
Wales the legal position we had was the fact that we
did not have any powers at all, and although it was
MAFF, and subsequently DEFRA, DEFRA did not have anyone
in Wales apart from the vets themselves, so the Assembly
staff worked with the regional offices throughout Wales
and they linked with the public; they were contacting
the public as agents of DEFRA. For example, they were
familiar with dealing with the Assembly staff. So it
was very complex. A number of organisations were responsible
for different things. There are means of simplifying
these issues.
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TOM JONES (In Welsh,
then interpreted): At that time the Scottish Agriculture
Minister had different powers, and after that there
was the 20-day rule. That was adMinistered differently
in Scotland.
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MR JONES (In Welsh,
then interpreted): But the difference in Scotland is
they have powers over animal welfare and health. We
have those in Wales as regards every animal disease
with the exception of foot and mouth disease, for some
reason. There is no meaningful or sensible reason for
that. The difference it would have made is that it would
have been easier to do things more quickly. It did not
make any difference as regards dealing with the disease
itself. The disease did not spread any further because
of this, but very much more work had to be done because
of the problem that we had, and also, the staff working
in the offices themselves found it very difficult to
work out exactly who they were working for. The structure
we had in place was that every legal decision was made
by Westminster Ministers, and it was only on one occasion
that there was any disagreement or dispute.
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TOM JONES (In Welsh,
then interpreted): Is that likely to happen?
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MR JONES (In Welsh,
then interpreted): It has happened a number of times.
Work is carrying on at present that Wales should have
the same powers as Scotland, because it does not make
any sense. We saw the Minister in Cardiff being responsible
for what was taking place in Wales, although there was
no legal power in force. The Minister could not stand
back and say, "This is nothing to do with me. It is
to do with London." For example, it is possible at present
that if foot and mouth disease were to come back, the
Minister in Cardiff could tell the DEFRA Minister, "You
cant use the Assembly staff at all." It might
be possible for the Minister in Cardiff to say that,
and then nothing would then happen in Wales as regards
controlling the disease. This is an anomaly. It is not
the only one, but it is a major anomaly as regards how
things happen.
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There was an occasion when those responsible
for disposing of the carcasses of the animals wanted
to use sites in Wales. I remember reading on a Sunday
morning that there had been talk of how the carcasses
had be transported to Trecatti. I went off and said,
"There are no plans. I dont know where this has
come from." The Intervention Board had placed the carcasses
in order to take them to Trecatti, thinking DEFRA was
responsible, but in fact it was the Assembly that was
responsible and nobody had told them. After that, naturally
people did not have very much faith in what I had to
say, and that was a practical problem regarding the
relationship at that point in time between the Intervention
Board and the Assembly.
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TOM JONES (In Welsh,
then interpreted): If those powers were transferred
or if there was a new agreement as to how you should
work, would the funding follow that arrangement?
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MR JONES (In Welsh,
then interpreted): This is an issue for the Minister
at present, to be fair.
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HUW THOMAS (In Welsh,
then interpreted): The example that you have just given
raises the issue that one of the things that came out
of foot and mouth disease was the role of the Assembly,
and I understand that since then there has been a review
in order to see, if the position were repeated, how
the role of the Assembly should change. How do you see
the Assembly developing as a body that has responsibility
for emergency plans in Wales?
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MR JONES (In Welsh,
then interpreted): I cannot say anything about the future.
That is a matter for another person to look at in the
world of agriculture, but the fact of the matter was
last year it was not the Assembly that was responsible
for structuring an emergency plan as regards foot and
mouth disease in Wales. That responsibility lays with
the Intervention Board. They were responsible and they
reported to MAFF. The Assembly did not have any role
whatsoever regarding the preparation of an emergency
plan, but in order to implement such a plan the Assembly
staff had to be used, and the Assembly offices. There
was a weakness there as regards the process of where
the Assembly stood on that. At present, as I understand
it I am saying this from the experience that
I had when I was in the post they are looking
at formulating a new plan, but of course, the only organisation
that can have an organisational plan for foot and mouth
disease is the Assembly, although the Assembly has no
legal powers to do so. This is something for DEFRA.
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MR GREGORY: Could I
add a few things? In the space of the first two to two
and a half years of the Assemblys life we have
had several major emergencies. There has been the fuel
crisis, FMD, floods, and as a consequence of that, the
Assembly has given a lot of attention to improving the
arrangements within the existing statutory framework.
So, for instance, we have a Minister who takes a special
interest in emergency planning. She will be chairing
a national Committee which is intended to bring together
the key stakeholders in emergency matters, including
local government and so on. We have also recently been
doing work on a national emergency plan, a strategic
plan for emergency planning in Wales, which deals with
the high-level issues rather than the detail of each
individual sector, and there has also been some work
done on the extent to which Whitehall understands the
role the Assembly can play. That was particularly important
in the aftermath of the terrorist attacks in America,
which put emergency planning, frankly, on to a new footing
in terms of the importance attached to it. The National
Assembly has been closely involved with the discussions
at a national level closely Ministerially as
well as officially on improvements to emergency
planning and business continuity. The First Minister
has been participating in a Ministerial committee on
that. We are still giving some thought to the need for
greater coherence within Wales in emergency planning
and improved communication with Whitehall and the emergency
services on a UK basis, particularly the police, how
we can improve that and whether there are statutory
implications for that.
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What we do not want to do is superimpose
on an already existing and useful set of arrangements
something that could be in the way of that, so there
is still a dialogue to be had about quite what, if any,
statutory change there should be. But the fact of the
matter is it is anomalous, as the Minister has said,
as to who the organisations and the population of Wales
look to in an emergency for information or experience
and help. It would be difficult to be put in that position
without formally having any statutory role. So an enormous
amount is being done. We have raised the profile. There
has been very strong support, I should say, for this
process from local government, but there are still some
loose ends to be tidied up in respect of the statutory
provision.
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VIVIENNE SUGAR: Minister,
in your reply to Toms question a few minutes earlier
you said that foot and mouth disease was the main anomaly
but not the only anomaly. Would you tell us what the
others are.
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MR JONES: Offhand, there
is one other example which I remember very well, and
this was the question of the policing of offshore waters.
The Scots have responsibility for, if I remember rightly,
0-12 miles out. In Wales I would have to check
the distances we were responsible for 0-6 miles
out, and after that it was England and Wales waters,
for no apparent reason other than the fact that it had
just been missed in the legislative process. We contacted
the Royal Naval vessel, the Lance (?) we call
it the Welsh navy to act as a fisheries protection
vessel within our own territorial waters, but that particular
ship has to double-check if it does find illegal fishing
as to whether it is in Wales or in England and Wales.
There is no reason in logic as to what that should be,
other than the fact that it was missed.
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In terms of the structure that we have
here, we do not have delegated and reserved powers,
so it does make it more complicated. Certainly in the
first year of the Assemblys existence much time
was devoted to finding out exactly what powers we had.
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VIVIENNE SUGAR: Presumably
complicated by the ministries and sea fisheries committees
set up as well.
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MR JONES: The sea fisheries
committees we are not responsible for. They are local
government, and they are staffed in the main by local
government. But they are an anomaly that is there not
as a result of devolution.
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VIVIENNE SUGAR: Would
it not take primary legislation to streamline all that?
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MR JONES: If I remember
rightly, a sea fisheries committee is not needed on
a statutory basis. It is a quasi-voluntary organisation.
If, for example, local authorities decided that they
would no longer fund sea fisheries committees, they
would not be under an obligation to do so. The difficulty
is and this is what happened last year with one
particular sea fisheries committee despite the
fact that local authorities can decide whether or not
they wish to be members of that committee, and they
can decide how much they are going to give that particular
sea fisheries committee, it is for the Assembly to approve
the actual amount that is given. So although the local
authorities are responsible for funding, the Assembly
has the legal difficulty in terms of approving that
funding. So the Assembly is involved in terms of making
an order regarding the structure and financing of that
particular committee, although it does not finance that
committee itself. It is a complicated scenario, as we
discovered last year.
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VIVIENNE SUGAR: If there
are any other anomalies, perhaps you could give us a
note.
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MR JONES: Yes.
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TED ROWLANDS: Mr Gregory
mentioned the fuel crisis and floods. The Minister has
told us how there was a mismatch between the statutory
responsibilities and the operational structures. In
the fuel crisis and floods was any other such mismatch
thrown up which would lead us to think we should be
making new Orders in Council?
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MR GREGORY: No, the
point I was making was that the arrangements which were
put in place I was not in post at the time so
I am relying on third party evidence relied on
a set of relationships between the National Assembly
and statutory and emergency bodies in Wales, and the
role of the Assembly, as it were, evolved as a consequence
of the need to handle the crisis and the goodwill that
went with the obvious necessity to make sure that public
and other services were kept running. The point I was
making was that, in the absence of any explicit statutory
powers to assume that position, there is always the
potential for the Assemblys position to be at
issue. It is not in fact, because the relationships
are very strong. Because of 9-11, the relationship with
Whitehall has been very significantly strengthened because
of the amount of official and particularly Ministerial
interest and participation that there has been in the
deliberations there.
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TED ROWLANDS: As a result
of the fuel crisis, for example, there has been no consideration
of applying for an Order in Council of the kind that
is being sought in the case of foot and mouth disease?
|
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MR GREGORY: Consideration
has been given to whether the Assembly should have a
power to co-ordinate, but that would have to be as a
consequence of primary legislation.
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EIRA DAVIES (In Welsh,
then interpreted): With the nature of the relationship
between Assembly Members and Members of Parliament in
assisting the Assembly to steer legislation, and also
if the Assembly were to gain additional powers, how
would you envisage the functions of MPs in relation
to the Assembly?
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MR JONES (In Welsh,
then interpreted): It is very difficult to talk of the
relationship between individuals, and there are differences
of opinion between MPs and Assembly Members. It depends,
of course, on political parties, so it is very difficult
to talk of what sort of relationship exists between
individuals on both sides in that way. In my experience
as a Minister, I have to say, if I can talk of the relationship
with the Wales Office, that that relationship has been
very strong and very supportive. My experience during
the foot and mouth crisis, and also in dealing with
the issue of GM crops, was that the Wales Office were
extremely supportive. They did present the Assembly
governments view in Westminster, and that was
very important in creating that link between both institutions.
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My personal opinion is that it would
be a great loss if the Wales Office were to come to
an end. That is an exceptionally important office in
creating that link between both institutions. Without
the Wales Office, it would be very difficult to know
exactly in what way we can have an influence on legislation
in Westminster without there being some sort of link
there actually in Parliament in Westminster. With the
situation as it stands, that legislation is made in
Westminster, and it is very important that we do have
someone who will represent us and the people of Wales
indeed in Westminster. It is exceptionally important.
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LORD RICHARD: If you
have a problem in co-ordinating Assembly policy with
Westminster, you go direct to the Minister; you do not
go to the Wales Office.
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MR JONES: Normally,
again drawing from experience under my previous portfolio
in Rural Affairs, the link would be directly with the
Minister, that is correct. Certainly there still is
a meeting every month of all the Rural Affairs Ministers
across the UK to look at and discuss the line that the
UK itself will take at the subsequent European Council
of Ministers meeting in Brussels, but where, for example,
there is a need to influence at UK level, for example,
if there is an impasse or a disagreement between the
Whitehall department and the Assembly department, then
the Wales Office is particularly important in terms
of assisting in representing the Assemblys case.
So, for example, if it were the case that representations
were made by the Assembly department to a Whitehall
department, consideration would obviously be given to
that representation, but it is extremely useful for
the Wales Office to be there in order to provide day
to day support regarding the case that may be made by
the Assembly department. Without that, my fear would
be that the amount of influence, especially in respect
to primary legislation, would be much worse.
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LORD RICHARD: If you
got primary legislation here, presumably you would not
need the Wales Office muscle?
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MR JONES: It is correct
to say that in many areas that influence would no longer
be required, but of course, there would still be many
areas, for example, criminal justice and Home Office
functions, which are not devolved in any way, where
there would still need to be support expressed for the
viewpoint in Wales. It is for other Ministers to discuss,
of course, how that viewpoint would be expressed.
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PETER PRICE: I would
like to ask about the process of bidding for primary
legislation. Presumably the process starts with the
various departments here in Cardiff working out what
they themselves would like, and then that leads to some
filtering before the cabinet decides what it would like
to put forward to Whitehall and Westminster. What is
the process of filtering? What sort of numbers of bids
start the journey forward as compared with what actually
ends up in the bid put to Whitehall?
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MR JONES: There is no
formal process in the departments so far as I am aware.
Departments will look to see what primary legislation
would be useful. The final decision as to what legislation
or what bids are made is for the cabinet. The cabinet
certainly last year did not prioritise bids. They made
bids for I could not give you the exact number
offhand but I think it was in single figures
maybe seven in terms of the Bills that would be required.
We are talking, of course, about Wales-only Bills in
that regard. In terms of England and Wales Bills, there
are other considerations that come into play. Certainly
my personal experience and I cannot speak for
other Ministers in that regard is that the number
of Bills that are submitted will inevitably be tempered
by the expectations of those Bills being accepted. I
suppose it is a hypothetical question as to whether,
if primary legislative powers were resident in Cardiff,
there would in fact be more primary legislation because
people would have greater expectations in that regard.
It is hypothetical; it is difficult to answer that question.
We have to be realistic. If we were to submit a great
number of Bills, we know there would not be enough time
in Parliament for them to be accepted.
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PETER PRICE: Is the
process of filtering very much an informal process of
the Minister talking to, say, her civil servants, and
informally to colleagues, or do you get a list of, let
us say, 21 proposals that comes to the cabinet, and
it whittles it down to six or seven?
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MR JONES: The process
within departments is, in my personal experience, informal.
Certainly the cabinet does not necessarily whittle down.
I suppose it depends on the number of bids that are
actually made, but we would obviously try as a government
to put in as many realistic bids as we could.
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MR RAWLINGS: Could I
just add an addendum to that? You should perhaps bear
in mind the provisions of the standing orders here,
because standing order 31, I think it is, requires the
Assembly cabinet each year to put forward proposals
to the Assembly in plenary as to what Bills it is seeking.
The way that the standing order is worded makes it look
as though what is being sought is a whole series of
Wales-only Bills, and, as the Minister said, these look
like Wales-only Bills but in practice one can be fairly
confident that, provided that the decision is taken
to approve the policy represented by those Bill proposals,
quite a few of them could be taken forward in England
and Wales legislation. To give you an example, earlier
this year, in January or February, one of the seven
proposals that went forward to plenary was a request
to abolish the referendum on Sunday drinking. As it
was presented to the Assembly, that would have been
the Sunday Polls Drinking Abolition Bill or some such
title, but in fact, there will not be such a Bill simply
because we have persuaded DCMS to include the relevant
provisions in the Licensing Bill which they are bringing
forward anyway.
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LORD RICHARD: Yes, but
that is not an answer to this, because it seems to me
you have identified at least seven areas in which legislation
is needed in some form or another.
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MR RAWLINGS: Yes, absolutely.
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LORD RICHARD: Is it
possible for us to have a list in some detail as to
those seven?
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MR RAWLINGS: Yes, absolutely.
It is a document which was actually laid before plenary
and plenary approved it.
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LORD RICHARD: Can we
see that, and see where the gaps in the legislation
were?
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MR RAWLINGS: Yes.
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LORD RICHARD: But the
situation is that you have at least seven things that
need legislating about. You are applying for a Welsh-only
Bill in the Queens Speech, and you might get one
if you got two, it would be a miracle
and the rest of it you then try and piggy-back on the
back of other Bills or see if you can find a way round
the fact that responsibility for primary legislation
does not lie here in Cardiff.
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MR RAWLINGS: Absolutely,
but if you take another example, which was planning,
we undertook here a consultation process about the reform
of the planning system, and that was done parallel with
what was being done in England, but it was done separately
and differently. The proposal then came forward as one
of the seven Bills last January or February, a Planning
(Wales) Bill, but it was done in the fairly confident
knowledge that in fact there would be a Planning Bill
anyway because it would be implementing the England
Bill, and so therefore we had an England and Wales Bill.
In other words, I think the point is, it is not how
many Wales-only Bills you get; it is how much of the
legislation you want that you get.
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LORD RICHARD: It is
not just a mechanistic thing; it is what you need.
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MR RAWLINGS: It is what
you need, exactly.
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PETER PRICE: But the
examples that you are quoting really show a sense of
priorities determined in Westminster, for example, on
the abolition of the referendum on Sunday drinking.
That is not the sort of thing that would have had a
high priority had you not known that Westminster was
putting forward a Licensing Bill.
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MR RAWLINGS: No, because
it was put forward the previous year as well in plenary.
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PETER PRICE: To what
extent is it important for you to know what Westminster
are going to put forward and therefore to be able to
seize these opportunities of piggy-backing? How big
a part in your legislative programme does that play?
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MR JONES: If it is not
possible for a Wales-only Bill to be brought forward,
then clearly we have to be in this position: we have
to look to see whether there are other Bills going through
Parliament which we can attach ourselves to, as it were,
in terms of passing legislation.
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PETER PRICE: My point
is really the chicken and the egg and what comes first.
There inevitably must be a considerable amount of reflection
of what is going through in Westminster and looking
at where that has some impact on Wales and therefore
joining in, rather than you encountering primary legislative
needs and putting forward bids, largely because that
would need a whole series of Wales-only Bills, and you
know you cannot get them.
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MR JONES: There are
some aspects of policy where a Wales-only Bill is appropriate.
There are other aspects where as a matter of policy,
an existing Bill can be taken through. I think pragmatically
we look for the quickest route.
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TED ROWLANDS: I do not
know how much this list of seven is a wish list or whether
the seven Bills represent really solid demand. In the
Westminster legislative process any Bill coming forward
has to have attached to it a financial memorandum on
the public expenditure consequences on spending. Are
these seven Bills at least worked up to the point that
you know the resource consequences and the Assembly
is aware of what it is committing itself to when it
says, "We want to do this"?
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MR RAWLINGS: The short
answer is not in the sense of having a draft financial
memorandum. There are several steps behind the scenes
before the Bill is produced with a financial memorandum,
and one of the steps is that all Whitehall departments
are asked initially to present their bids for Bills
on short pro formas. The Wales Office will be one of
those departments, and so each year the Wales Office
will need to consider what Bills it wants to propose.
The Assembly will have a view on the basis of its earlier
discussions, for example about the seven Bills, of which
Bill or Bills it wants to propose, and there is then
a process of discussion.
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LORD RICHARD: Can I
come back to the seven? Cabinet here arrives at a distillation
of the whole thing and says, "These are the seven we
want." How many others are there which were considered
and did not make the seven, but which nevertheless reveal
a need for primary legislation?
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MR JONES: There would
be, I suspect, a system of prioritisation within departments.
It may be the case that consideration is given to a
small number of possible Bills because of the reality
that only a small minority of those Bills will ever
come to fruition. As I mentioned earlier on, it is a
very difficult question to answer as to whether if primary
powers rested in Cardiff there would then be more Bills
presented, because there would be more time and certain
people would feel there was greater opportunity. It
is difficult to assess how much of a brake that actually
acts as in peoples minds, but certainly in terms
of the legislation, a lot of it is important, and is
important particularly in Wales. I will use one example,
again, from my previous portfolio. There is an ongoing
problem in terms of common land grazing, which is peculiar
to Wales and peculiar to one common in particular, allegedly.
The way to deal with it is via primary legislation but
of course, it is very difficult to find time in Westminster
to take that Bill through because it is peripheral,
yet it is a problem in Wales and can only be resolved
by primary legislation. So it is not a question of a
wish list, but clearly the last thing that any institution
would want would be to present a list of fanciful and
perhaps optimistic Bills to Westminster, so the Bills
that are put forward are Bills that are intended to
be practical.
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LORD RICHARD: One of
the things the Commission has to try and do is identify
where the need is for primary legislation. You have
told us that after it has all been distilled down, you
end up with seven bids for primary legislation. Presumably
there is a weeding process which arrives at seven. You
must start off with 22 or whatever it is which you then
distil down.
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MR JONES: That process
would normally take place within departments.
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LORD RICHARD: So if
we asked each individual Minister about his Department,
as to where there was a need for primary legislative
powers identified, presumably that information would
be available, particularly in view of the Freedom of
Information Act?
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MR JONES: Yes, I would
say so. I am sure that information could be made available.
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VIVIENNE SUGAR: I wanted
to ask how the ordinary members of the public could
find out what the Assembly had tried to achieve over
the last three years, what had ended up as Wales-only
Bills and what had been piggy-backed, so you could get
a quick picture of what the difference has been.
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MR JONES: We have just
launched a publication scheme which makes it easier
for people to access information via not just the internet
but also the local public libraries as to what the Assembly
has actually done. Within that information there would
be, I suspect, information as to primary legislation,
certainly in terms of Wales-only Bills, but I have not
looked at it yet so I could not be 100 per cent certain
in terms of providing the public with information as
to what has actually been done.
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VIVIENNE SUGAR: So we
need to look at the website.
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MR JONES: The information
is certainly available and could certainly be made available
to this Commission.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH:
Can I ask a question on business arrangement? We are
told that the business committee is one of the real
successes of the Assembly, but a committee cannot arrange
the business of the Assembly. One person has a chart
with days and what things are going to be done. In the
two houses, there is one official in the Commons and
one official in the Lords who do this. Of course, it
is subject to political controls and the whips argue,
but there is one person. Who actually does it in the
Welsh Assembly?
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MR JONES: It is the
Minister for Assembly Business, myself.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH:
So you have a chart and you can flag such and such an
order down a week or two because you want to discuss
a flood in North Wales or something.
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MR JONES: The responsibility
for bringing business before the Assembly is my responsibility.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH:
But do you do it yourself rather than with help from
an official?
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MR JONES: No. The officials
will draw up a grid. I do not personally sit down and
write it out myself. The way it operates is that at
every business committee meeting there will be two documents
generally presented: first, the draft business statement
for the week, and second, the forward look, which usually
takes us up to about three weeks. So the business committee
are aware of what is being proposed. There are alterations
that take place every week according to the need to
make statements and occasions when something is not
quite ready and so forth. That draft business statement
will be discussed at the Business Committee. At that
stage it is common for other business managers to make
requests for certain items to be debated or statements
to be brought forth, but in the Business Committee there
is no vote of any kind in that regard; it is an informal
sounding-board. Every Tuesday the business manager has
the responsibility of bringing before the Assembly the
draft business statement. Again, it is common for opposition
business managers to put in the public domain what they
had originally argued in the Business Committee, and
then they have the right to refuse to adopt the business
statement, in which case there is a vote on it.
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LORD RICHARD: So your
"usual channels" are published?
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MR JONES: Yes.
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LORD RICHARD: The "usual
channels" in the Westminster sense, where it is all
agreed between the parties.
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MR JONES: It is often
the case that a request is made to the business manager
in plenary session when the draft business statement
is presented that has not previously been made.
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LORD RICHARD: Does it
ever succeed?
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MR JONES: Not now, because
there is a majority within the chamber itself. It certainly
was the case before that there were occasions when the
business statement was altered.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: But
in practice, you are more open and accountable by far
than the business managers at Westminster.
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MR JONES: We would like
to think so.
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HUW THOMAS: Can I just
go back to the seven or indeed however many more there
were before the seven? Many of the illustrations you
have given almost seem like short, one-clause Bills.
By the time the draftsmen have got it I am sure they
will grow. Has any consideration been given to a "miscellaneous
provisions", an annual round-up of the anomalies that
are being worked out?
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MR JONES: The anomalies
can usually be dealt with by Orders in Council or by
other means, so it would not normally be the case that
an Act of Parliament is required to iron out an anomaly.
It can usually be done far more easily than that. So
in terms of the Bills, they are aiming to be substantial
in their effect, but the last thing we want to so is
simply present Bills that are, as you put it, one-liners
when there are other alternatives that can be used that
are both faster and more practical.
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LORD RICHARD: Minister,
thank you very much indeed. You have been very generous
with your time and with your comments. I have learned
a lot, and I think everybody in the Commission
has learned a lot. We have explored some of the more
arcane corridors of the National Assembly, and I think
it has been interesting and useful.
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MR JONES: Thank you
very much indeed.
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