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COMMISSION ON THE POWERS AND ELECTORAL
ARRANGEMENTS OF THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY FOR WALES
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MINUTES OF PROCEEDINGS
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of the
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EVIDENCE OF:
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NICK BOURNE,
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LEADER, WELSH CONSERVATIVE PARTY
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held at
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The Courtroom, National Museum of Wales,
Cardiff
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on
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Friday, 28th February 2003
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LORD RICHARD: Thank you very much for
coming. What we have asked witnesses to do is, first
of all, to identify themselves for the purposes of the
transcript - which is the easy bit!
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NICK BOURNE: I am Assembly Member for
Mid and West Wales and Conservative leader in the National
Assembly for Wales.
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LORD RICHARD: And, secondly, really to
open up the subject and perhaps give us your views for
a few minutes, and then if we may we will ask you questions.
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NICK BOURNE: First of all, thank you
very much indeed for the opportunity to give evidence
which I am giving as an individual but also on behalf
of the group so the views will coincide. I will say
perhaps just a little bit about the history, although
I am sure you are pretty well acquainted with it by
now and I am sure you were before, of the party's past
position and present position.
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As a party, though certainly in a tolerant
way because there were many individuals within the party
and some at quite high levels who took a contrary view,
in the 1997 election we opposed the setting up of the
Welsh Assembly. It is fair to say, looking at the outcome
of the referendum, that many people other than Conservative
voters must have also opposed the setting-up of the
Welsh Assembly unless we accept that places like Pontypool
and Newport are natural Conservative havens. It was
not certainly limited to Conservative voters. There
was, as you know, a turnout of some 50 per cent.
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Virtually immediately the outcome was
known, which was a narrow vote in favour, the stance
as set out by the party leader at Westminster, William
Hague, changed. He recognised very early on, and I think
we did in Wales too, that the Assembly was going to
become a fact of life; there was no point in fighting
old battles; the position had now changed, and an enormous
amount of time, effort, energy and money went into setting
up the Welsh Assembly. So I think as a matter of pragmatism
quite apart from anything else it did not make a lot
of sense to oppose it any longer but to try to make
it work for the people of Wales. That has been our stance
as a party from that day and remains so.
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There may be individuals within the party,
as I am sure there are in other parties, who take a
contrary view but the great bulk of the party and certainly
the official position within the party is to make it
work for the good of all the people of Wales.
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Then comes the question of whether it
makes sense to extend the powers in line with Scotland
which seems to be more or less the debate that is being
focused on in Wales - does it make sense to have tax-raising
powers and to have legislative powers?
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If I could deal with them in reverse
order, in terms of legislative powers, I would not say
never - it is very dangerous for politicians to say
that should "never" happen - but I do think at this
stage in its history it is not appropriate. Here we
are, five years on since the referendum, coming up to
six years I suppose now, and barely not yet four years
in the National Assembly, and the same people who say
they want to change the powers are very often saying
that we should not judge the institution just yet because
it has not been there long enough - a view with which
I agree. It is very early days to be writing any sort
of definitive record of how the Assembly is working
and it is too soon to do that, but by the same token
we have to give it time to bed down with its existing
powers and seek to implement those, to demonstrate that
it can make a difference before we can talk about changing
the scenario again. I think it is very dangerous to
have this constant Mao revolution of saying "Things
should change".
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I feel there is an underlying groundswell
within the leadership of certain other political parties
of perhaps scapegoating the institution for some of
the failures that have existed because of the way matters
have been administered - partly the fault of the people
running the institution and partly the fault of a hyping-up
of expectations I think in an almost impossible way;
that after devolution everything would be all right
and that it was only a question of having a devolved
Assembly and suddenly there would be no problems with
the health service, education, roads, jobs or agriculture
any more. Sager counsels would have seen that was not
going to be the case; with the same sort of budget settlement
there were going to be these same problems, and I do
not think the problems we now see in Wales are really
as a result of process but as a result of the way things
are administered.
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I think the supposed reasons for change
are not real. I think I would dispute, and so would
the party, that there is an overwhelming case to change
the powers because of the poor performance of the administration.
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At the margins, and I am sure we will
talk about this, there may be some functions that should
come to the Assembly. As has always been the case it
has been an evolutionary process with powers transferred
to the Welsh Office and I am sure that this will continue,
but I think the seismic shift on legislative powers
that is talked about is inappropriate.
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On the tax raising side, similarly I
feel that that would not be a sensible move. I think
it would only result in taxes going up in Wales which
I think would be detrimental to jobs and ultimately
to public services, because I think jobs will just be
driven out of Wales. We have seen manufacturing jobs
being driven out of Wales now overseas largely, but
if we had differential tax rates compared with the rest
of the United Kingdom they would be driven into England
as well as to Morocco, the subcontinent and so on, so
I think that would be very undesirable.
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They are my thoughts and those of my
party. I am sure they are familiar views to you.
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LORD RICHARD: Thank you very much indeed.
Can I invite you to answer questions about how you see
the Assembly working at the moment? What about communications
between Cardiff and Westminster? At the moment it seems
to me that, where you have administrations at both ends
of the one political party, then there is a degree of
lubrification, if you like, that the process works because
there is much more of a natural contact between the
two. Do you think that could continue if you had different
administrations?
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NICK BOURNE: There is nothing to compare
it with at the moment, is there? It was certainly said
during the referendum campaign and during the Assembly
election campaign that Labour in Westminster and in
Cardiff would be able to work well in tandem. I am not
convinced that has been the case. Whether it would be
any different if there were a different administration
in Westminster is problematic. It may work as well,
or better or worse - who knows. There may be more of
an effort to make sure it worked if there were administrations
of different political complexions. There have certainly
been difficulties - partly, I suspect, growing pains;
partly territorial between Westminster and Cardiff -
and they may exist in much the same way if there were
a different party in charge in Westminster. I am not
sure it would be materially different, to be honest.
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LORD RICHARD: Following on from that
argument, there is the argument which says that if you
had a clearer division between the responsibilities
of Assembly and Westminster, and perhaps a clearer way
of doing it would be perhaps the Scottish model where
everything is devolved except that which is reserved
to the centre, then in a sense you would overcome potential
problems if you had different administrations in Cardiff
and Westminster.
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NICK BOURNE: I am not sure I accept that
for two reasons. First of all, the Welsh Office existed
previously and presumably there were no evident demarcation
disputes there - certainly I would not have thought
there was any greater difficulty ---.
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LORD RICHARD: They were always the same
party, were they not, by definition, because the Secretary
of State for Wales was in the Cabinet?
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NICK BOURNE: Admittedly, but we have
established they are the same parties now really so
if we are comparing then and now it is not evident that
the position now should be any different than it was
then. Perhaps it is played in a more public arena, that
is all.
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Secondly, some of this I do not think
relates to clarity. The most recent dispute is on something
where it is quite clear that there is no power in the
National Assembly, where the power resides at Westminster
on top-up fees which is purely territorial, and that
could happen where there is any division because one
side wants something grabbing, or is grabbing back.
So I am not sure it relates to clarity; it relates to
territorial disputes which, by definition, are going
to happen in any devolved settlement.
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PETER PRICE: May I take this up? Thinking
of the way that primary legislation is currently adopted
in respect of Wales, let us just spin this through if
there were to be a change of government and one of very
different colour in Westminster. The bids are put forward
by the Assembly: there are more bids than are likely
to be capable of being accommodated in the Parliamentary
time available in any event: the person who has to argue
for the Welsh legislation (a) to be given priority in
the legislative programme and (b) to argue for it in
Westminster is the Secretary of State. If he were of
a different colour and did not share any of the same
sort of approaches to policy, would he not be in an
impossible position trying to advocate Welsh legislation
in those circumstances?
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NICK BOURNE: He, or indeed she, is a
pivotal figure, that is quite clear, and I accept the
inference of what you are saying though I am not sure
it is your party's stance that I think we do need a
Secretary of State for Wales --
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PETER PRICE: I am not taking a party
viewpoint here. All of us are of independent view.
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NICK BOURNE: Nor am I and I am trying
not to in answering the question. I think it is vital
that there is a pivotal link which is the Secretary
of State for Wales. Conservative Secretaries of State
for Wales have had to work against a background of Labour
domination, and I do not use that in any pejorative
sense, in local authorities in Wales, and by and large
have managed those relations very well. I cannot see
that it would necessarily be any different with a Secretary
of State for Wales who is Conservative and a National
Assembly which is, let's say, Labour or Labour-led.
There would have to be an accommodation but there would
have to be an accommodation, as there is now. Goodness
knows, if you take the St David's Day issue, for example,
the requests made by the National Assembly unanimously
got a pretty dusty answer from a Labour government at
Westminster so I do not see that that the difference
should be looked at as: How do we guard it against a
position where we have presumably, from the inference
of the question, a Conservative government at Westminster
and a Labour-led or a Labour administration in Cardiff
- I do not think it should be looked at in those terms.
It should be: How do we make it work in terms of a devolved
body here and a parent body at Westminster? I would
not accept that the sort of difficulties we have now
would be materially different if there were a Conservative
government at Westminster.
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PETER PRICE: Are there any changes in
the way the system operates that you would think might
be necessary in order to make the system work better
if there were a government of a very different colour
in Westminster?
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NICK BOURNE: There are differences that
I would like to see regardless. I have tried not to
see it in terms of who runs what but perhaps in a more
purist form.
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LORD RICHARD: I am thinking of primary
legislation here.
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NICK BOURNE: In terms of the relationship
between Cardiff and Westminster, I do not think it works
as well as it should do - or not as well as we envisaged.
On the National Assembly advisory group, which I was
on, we saw that certainly the role of the Secretary
of State was much more pivotal and much more proactive
than is the case at the moment. Under the Government
of Wales Act, and I stand to be corrected on this but
I am pretty certain about it, he is entitled to attend
debates on the National Assembly, and there is indeed
- or was - a seat set aside for him in the Assembly
chamber which was the Secretary of State for Wales'
chair. That has now disappeared, rather symbolically,
because he never attends - and I say "he" because it
has always been a he. Other than the visit when the
Queen's Speech was debated, and that was for one day
when was the former Secretary of State and two for the
present one, I do not think he has ever been in the
chamber, never been in Committee, never met with Assembly
members formally or informally, and that to me is a
serious lapse in the way the two institutions get together,
because it seems to be not in the interests of the institution
that we have not had the chance to put questions to
him or for him to ask us how he can make sure the arrangements
work better - many issues that always get aired in the
press and the media but we have never had the opportunity,
formally or informally, to raise them with the Secretary
of State, and that relates not just to primary legislation
but to all sorts of budgetary issues and so on where
we could have the opportunity of perhaps seeing some
of these express trains coming and halting them before
we hit the buffers.
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TED ROWLANDS: You said earlier on that
in a sense we are in uncharted territory and therefore
we can only test it by kind of devolution wargames,
dare I say, where we work out a possible scenario and
see if the system can sustain it. Let me offer you an
idea, therefore, where a newly elected Conservative
administration at Westminster decides that it wants
to carry much more further forward its market style
of reform in education, for example, vesting powers
in school governors, allowing schools to compete with
other schools for children, and having a financing bidding
structure around that. You can see it coming out as
a policy statement - total anathema to a much more different
character of administration in Wales with full education
responsibilities. The Conservative government of the
day puts through a new piece of legislation which enforces
this and the Assembly government rejects it here and
wants a different kind of legislation, creating a more
collaborative arrangement, so you have two different
philosophical approaches reflected in legislative terms.
Do you not think in that situation it would be justifiable
for the Assembly government to have that power of what
it wants to do within its area of responsibility, and
not have to carry through the reforms that a new piece
of Conservative Westminster legislation would require?
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NICK BOURNE: I do not think you have
put it in unreasonable terms at all but I would say
this: that sort of situation could arise now. Indeed,
the scenario you paint is not vastly different from
the position we are in at the moment, I have to say,
with some of the positions on education and certainly
foundation hospitals, where the position at Westminster
is different from here.
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LORD RICHARD: But there has not been
legislation as such. The Westminster government has
not sought the legislation.
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NICK BOURNE: Exactly. Under the present
position we have the option of not pursuing that course
of action so I would agree with you if what you are
saying is that it depends on goodwill on both sides
and the personal chemistry. My party here disagrees
with my party in Westminster on many issues, and it
may be that the role of the Conservative party in Wales
in the Assembly would become important in bridging some
of the issues if there were a Conservative government
in Westminster trying to liaise with the Labour administration
in Cardiff, but the nature of devolution is that there
are going to be difficulties that arise. I would not
accept that they are more likely with a Conservative
government in Westminster but they are not limited to
that, as we have seen over the last three or four years.
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TED ROWLANDS: Would you not think that
in that case a democratically elected body for which
that area has been totally devolved, and in this case
we are talking about mainstream secondary or primary
education, should have the power to protect its own
policy or develop it in a rather different way from
that emerging at the Westminster end?
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NICK BOURNE: I would not, no. I think
maybe there is a difference between us on this. It is
not the devolution settlement that was voted on in 1997.
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TED ROWLANDS: I am just testing.
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NICK BOURNE: Absolutely, and I think
at this point in our history there is not an appetite
for that and I do not think it would do Wales any favours
going down that route.
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DR McALLISTER: Can I follow this up slightly
and take you back to some of the points you make in
the paper you submitted? You say at the very beginning
that there are a number of key points you want to make.
One of them is to fight to make the National Assembly
work and, secondly, to properly use its existing powers.
Now the tone of your paper is very clearly distinguishing
between the performance of the National Assembly and
the performance of the Assembly government - you make
that very clear. In those statements you seem to be
suggesting that more can be done by the Assembly as
a whole to make the settlement work and you also seem
to be suggesting that as yet it has not properly used
its existing powers.
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Can you elaborate on where it has not
properly used its existing powers and also justify the
point about fighting to make an institution work? It
seems to me something of an anomaly. If you have to
fight to make something work is there not something
wrong with the constitutional settlement as it stands,
bearing in mind this is newly designed?
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NICK BOURNE: Trying to deal with that
first, everybody accepted that in the early days it
is going to take time to establish a new institution.
That is inherent in having a new institution, and I
think it is a fight and we all recognise that. We might
put it in rather sporting or military metaphor but it
is a struggle.
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In terms of looking at how we could improve
the performance of the institution, to take bald statistics
70 per cent of the secondary legislation we implement
is not even subject to debate, and only about 2 per
cent is considered by subject committees. That indicates
to me that we are not performing the job as thoroughly
as we could do and the subject committees have probably
got to be beefed up.
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LORD RICHARD: How would you do that?
With extra members, or with a different structure?
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NICK BOURNE: Certainly better time management.
I do not think extra members are the answer; I do not
think they use their time productively at the moment.
I think they perhaps should be given a greater policy
role in specific areas. A lot of it - and I do not blame
the administration for it - is growing pains. It is
going to be the case in any institution that some of
this will take time before people appreciate exactly
what is necessary. Some of the Committees work better
than others but if they are given specific policy areas
to look at it would be helpful.
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Also, I think a dedicated policy unit
within the National Assembly to set out the powers in
precise terms and to look at policy options and to set
them out for the Welsh Assembly Government would be
helpful. I do think in terms of the constitutional settlement
it would be helpful if the National Assembly were made
a department of state which would then deal with that
corporate entity point because at the moment there is
this great confusion between the government of Wales
and the Assembly, and when you go round Wales it is
particularly irritating to Opposition politicians when
people turn round and say, "What you have done now in
the Assembly?", in a way they would not blame a parliamentarian
for what the government has done. Occasionally we get
credit but there should be a clearer division, and by
making it a department of state, which probably would
require primary legislation, that would be helpful.
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LORD RICHARD: Why? I do not follow that.
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NICK BOURNE: Because it would underline
the fact it is a separate department of state --
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LORD RICHARD: Would it have specific
representation, say, at Westminster, in London?
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NICK BOURNE: As you know, I think we
should continue to have the Secretary of State for Wales,
I do not think it would affect that, but in order that
we can implement more clearly the division between the
government of Wales and the National Assembly we need
to get away from the point that the National Assembly
is a corporate body.
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LORD RICHARD: But you do not have to
become a department of state in order to do that. I
am not sure what the effect of becoming a department
of state is.
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NICK BOURNE: Whatever is necessary.
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LORD RICHARD: What you want to do is
break the corporate body - in other words, you have
an executive and a legislature.
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NICK BOURNE: Yes.
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LORD RICHARD: And you would like to formalise
the break?
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NICK BOURNE: Yes.
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DR McALLISTER: May I ask what you mean
by "muscular devolution"?
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NICK BOURNE: It was a phrase that was
picked up by the press which I have used again but what
I do think is that the government has not always been
incredibly imaginative about using the powers we have
got. Everyone wrings their hands and says, "We cannot
do anything about this", for example tuition fees, but
there was nothing to stop the government saying, "We
are going to pay a hardship grant to every student in
Wales in order that they do not have to pay tuition
fees, or in order that tuition fees are reimbursed".
That would have made sure that Welsh students did not
have to pay tuition fees.
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LORD RICHARD: I am not sure what the
courts would have made of that!
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NICK BOURNE: I can tell you now. They
would have said it is highly legal!
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VIVIENNE SUGAR: What are your views on
whether a referendum would be needed if there were to
be any further powers given to the Assembly?
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NICK BOURNE: If we are talking about
powers rather than functions, if we are talking about
transferring powers under the Electricity Act or something
like that you do not need a referendum but if you are
talking about legislative powers or tax raising powers,
it would have to follow in the course of recent history
by convention that there would have to be a referendum.
Scotland had one and it is hard to see why it should
be treated differently in Wales.
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VIVIENNE SUGAR: Do you think there should
be functions transferred?
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NICK BOURNE: Yes, certain ones, and we
have accepted this in the Assembly. This has been a
process that has gone on ever since the Welsh Office
was established. We have certainly supported the transfer
of some animal welfare functions under the Animal Health
Bill at the moment, and the transfer of electricity
generation greater than 50 megawatts which is the subject
of negotiation at the moment and is taking an incredibly
long time. Large wind farms, for example, will come
to the National Assembly. All parties have agreed they
want that and the government has agreed that it should
do. On top-up fees we have said we are open-minded on
the issue in terms of looking at it, and Damian Green
and Iain are quite supportive of that provided there
is a proper financial settlement for Wales within that.
There are lots of questions that need to be looked at
but on that, on a case-by-case basis, we are certainly
willing to look at areas, and the two I have given we
have said yes, we are willing to look at.
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VIVIENNE SUGAR: But are there other areas,
because we are trying to produce a comprehensive list
of those difficult areas that have come out in the last
four years of experience?
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NICK BOURNE: Yes. Police funding would
be a difficult one, and I have spoken to Chief Constables
and others on Committees and so on and I would be loathe
to see that transferred. The fire service may be one
that could be looked at, for example. Broadcasting is
very strange and people would die in the last ditch
rather than just see that transferred - just Welsh language
broadcasting and I can understand their point - so if
broadcasting were transferred it would have to be all
broadcasting, but there may be difficulties. So there
is a taster of one or two but we are open-minded on
it to the extent that often there is a case to be made
for looking at particular areas. That does not mean
yea or nay to those areas.
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TOM JONES: The weakness of that view
might be that it is a reactive view in the sense that
there has to be a public concern in Wales. In one sense
that is fine because you are responding to public concerns,
but in terms of timetabling and getting good efficient
government it means that by the time people have complained
to you about something and you are trying to see where
the powers lie and you have a debate between Cardiff
and Whitehall where the powers lie and then say, "Well,
we probably would support the issue on animal health
and so on", that means that 12 months or even more have
elapsed where concern is great, whereas if we took a
view of saying, "Well, we will transfer everything that
needs to be transferred except for identified items",
that is cleaner, more efficient government.
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NICK BOURNE: I do not agree. I think
there is a great danger in that approach of finding
you have transferred something and then seeing there
is an opposite and that there are good reasons why it
should reside in Westminster. I accept it may be reactive
but I prefer an evolutionary approach rather than a
shopping list of areas saying, "We will transfer these
and hope for the best". It could go horribly wrong.
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HUW VAUGHAN THOMAS: Can I take you to
your views of the Committee structure? When the design
of the National Assembly was discussed, Committees were
seen as having a pivotal role. Taking policy and scrutiny,
from your papers you seem to have doubts as to the ability
of the current committee structure to deliver scrutiny,
certainly of secondary legislation.
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NICK BOURNE: You are right that originally
in the Government of Wales Bill there was an intention
that the committee structure would be much stronger.
Indeed, the original intention was that the chairs of
committees would be the members of Cabinet. That is
how it was originally envisaged and it resulted in committee
on advice from the National Assembly Advisory Group
where there was a vote taken of 12:1 to alter the structure,
but it was pretty overwhelming and was a view that the
then Secretary of State, Ron Davies, accepted. I think
there is a case for beefing up the powers of committees
a little bit so they have a greater role on policy development.
There have been one or two instances of where that has
happened more than on others - for example, the Education
Committee - but that could perhaps be formalised.
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In terms of scrutiny of legislation the
figures demonstrate that there has been an incredible
scrutiny of legislation by the committees. I have not
got any easy answers to that and I think more should
be done, and that might mean looking at the timetables
of the committees making sure that the time management
of those committees are spent better. Also, I think
we should have a finance committee and the roles of
Committees need to be stronger, and less time needs
to be spent on regional committees and more on the subject
committees.
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HUW VAUGHAN THOMAS: What would you want
to do in terms more of the policy role, because we have
heard others argue that in fact the committees ought
to be much more concerned with scrutinising ministers
than with developing policies?
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NICK BOURNE: There is no reason why they
should not do both but I am not sure at the moment they
are doing either as effectively as they could. Part
of that is growing pains: all of us have not had massive
experience in the National Assembly from definition
so you cannot expect these things to work perfectly
on day one, but I do feel that as people develop expertise
on committees, and that can only happen over a period
of time, it is a shame that that expertise cannot be
used on policy development. Now, that would demand a
partnership there between certainly the chairs of committees
and the government of Wales, and obviously that depends
on personal chemistry, but it seems a great shame for
Wales if we are not able to harness some of the expertise
that is there within the structures we have.
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HUW VAUGHAN THOMAS: Do you think it is
useful to have the minister as a member of the committee?
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NICK BOURNE: It is useful to have them
there, but I am not sure they should be there as voting
members. It is certainly useful to have them there,
though we do tend to compartmentalise everything a little
bit because sometimes these things are not in hermetically
sealed containers, and sometimes there is a case for
perhaps more than one minister being at a particular
committee. I am not sure they need to be members but
they should generally be there for at least some of
the agenda.
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LORD RICHARD: You have talked about "beefing-up"
the committees. How would you do it?
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NICK BOURNE: In terms of the policy development
side I think it demands some sort of approach from the
government of Wales of saying, "We need policy development
in a specific area", secondary education or something
and saying, "We would like the committee within an agreed
timeframe to come up with policy options looking at
how we regenerate rural communities - how we ensure
the language survives, protect small schools, businesses,
things like that - and give a timeframe and a reform
and a full debate in Plenary".
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LORD RICHARD: So considering at greater
length in more detail more general subjects rather than
specific policy on specific issues? You want more general
issues?
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NICK BOURNE: Yes.
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TOM JONES: You mentioned the regional
committees and in your evidence you voiced concern that
the Assembly needs to be loved by everybody in Wales
and this was meant to be one attempt to bring the Assembly
close to different people in parts of Wales, but you
hinted that the system of regional committees was not
working very well. Could you elaborate on that? Have
you any proposals?
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NICK BOURNE: Yes. The regional committees
are provided for in the Act. It says that there shall
be a regional committee for North Wales, and I accept
that. I think we probably spend too much energy on regional
committees; there are too many meetings now and I think
we need less with perhaps more focus and maybe the regional
committee lasting for longer than it does. Taking North
Wales, if you go to a regional committee in Caernarfon
that only lasts two hours it is not terribly sensible,
given the amount of Assembly time, for members and also
officials to go up there.
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Coming to what I would do to try to ensure
wider acceptance, it has certainly been our policy to
say that there should be an annual meeting, at least
in north Wales, over a couple of days in existing council
offices or something where we would look at specifically
north Wales issues. The same could probably be replicated
in west Wales. I think that would be more sensible because
it would give a broader focus, where what happens now
is it tends to be related to the particular community
you are in - which is fine for that community. We have
been to Aberporth which is great for Aberporth but I
am not sure it is of great benefit for the rest of mid
and west Wales which is a very large region, so I think
a longer time spent as the whole Assembly might make
sense in west and in north Wales.
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TED ROWLANDS: I think you would agree
that one thing that did change public opinion to in
favour of an elected Assembly was the unease of the
quango state and the need to light a bonfire - certainly
to make this quango world more accountable. Do you think
the Assembly is achieving this and, if it is not doing
this as public expectation thought, is it because it
has not sufficient power to do so or is it just lack
of will?
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NICK BOURNE: Trying not to be party political,
quangos are not called quangos now but Assembly sponsored
public bodies to make them sound warm and cuddly. The
promise of the bonfire of the quango was never going
to happen because what happened was there was a greater
transfer of numbers into the Civil Service and a cut
down on the numbers in the quangos. I am not sure it
is a lack of political will: I suspect it is partly
a realisation that it is easy enough to come up with
the line but that the reality is a bit different. A
lot of these bodies do effective work, and there are
issues about control of them - indeed, there is one
at the moment in relation to ELWa. One benefit we have
under the Assembly is it comes under the spotlight and
is subject to public scrutiny which we are doing with
ELWa which did not happen before, so we do have that
benefit and that may be a testing ground. There are
other examples I can give you.
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DR McALLISTER: The scrutiny for ELWa
in particular has been rather post hoc really in that
it seems to us that effectively to scrutinise quangos
there needs to be a strategic approach to the scrutiny.
We were told by some subject committee chairs that particular
scrutiny of quangos is very low priority in their workload.
Is that a systemic issue in relation to the committee's
priorities?
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NICK BOURNE: I am a little bit surprised
by that. I do not sit on the subject committee so I
do not have direct knowledge of that, but I would have
thought in terms of, for example, the Welsh Tourist
Board there was probably more effective scrutiny at
the earlier stages. Some of it will be post hoc and
things will always go wrong, but I would have thought
one benefit was that we do manage to do some scrutiny
at the front end.
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VIVIENNE SUGAR: On the back of that,
in the list that you mentioned for making the committee
more effective you did not say anything about support,
access to researchers or people who could help the committee
to be more effective in scrutiny mode. Have you any
thoughts on that?
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NICK BOURNE: Yes, and apologies for not
including them. We have made recommendations through
the Assembly Review of Procedure Committee which I think
is an agreed recommendation but has not been fully implemented
yet to provide additional clerical support and separate
policy clerks for each of the subject committees, who
will then be effectively in the office of the Presiding
Officer area rather than the Civil Service area, and
I think that would be a good investment.
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At the moment the support is a little
bit thin.
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VIVIENNE SUGAR: Over a period of time
will that mean an inevitable separation between the
people employed to support the Assembly and the people
employed in the Civil Service to support the executive?
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NICK BOURNE: Yes. That is happening de
facto now and it is desirable that we do see that sort
of division. It started off in terms of the corporate
entity idea enshrined in the original Bill, that it
was going to be a body where committee chairs were Cabinet
ministers, so initially it was seen that it was much
more all Assembly members participating in the legislature
process. It has become much more like a Westminster-type
body with official opposition and government, and that
is desirable.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER-BOOTH: Mr Bourne,
you referred to the government of the National Assembly
having been lacking in muscularity, I think was your
word, and I think you were party to the setting up of
this Commission which is spending 18 months doing its
work - a lot of work and a lot of money and all the
rest of it. Surely to say, "It is too early for us to
reply; it is too early to have been set up", would have
been pretty unmuscular?
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NICK BOURNE: I was not party to you being
set up. I am very grateful for the opportunity to come
and give evidence here but historically I think there
is no doubt that your being set up was as a result of
the partnership agreement between Liberal and Labour.
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LORD RICHARD: That was the impetus.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER-BOOTH: That was parturition,
but when the baby was being born --
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NICK BOURNE: I was asked to be at the
christening and I accepted, but I had nothing to do
with you being conceived!
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER-BOOTH: But surely
you must admit it would be rather wet not to go for
what, so far as it can be judged at this interval of
time, are seen to be the most appropriate amendments
to the devolution package which most of the evidence
we have received has suggested are not entirely satisfactory.
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NICK BOURNE: That is a leading question,
if ever I heard one. If you are asking me do I think
you should be recommending extra legislative and tax
raising powers, no, I do not. It is not in the interests
of Wales and I do not think it would be at all wet for
you to say so. It would be very dangerous to say you
have been set up therefore you have to come to conclusions
that indicate it was justifiable for you to be set up
in the first place. I am sorry but I feel that very
strongly.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER-BOOTH: Going back
to your reply to Mr Rowlands about the possible difference
between an administration at Westminster and an administration
in Cardiff and the examples he gave of health and education,
at the end of the day under the present Government of
Wales Act the last word is with Westminster because
it can pass primary legislation which does not give
the Assembly the power to carry out the policies it
might wish. This is hypothesis, of course, but it is
perfectly reasonable.
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You say in your paper, "As an institution
the National Assembly for Wales can scarcely be said
to be popular or even respected". Well, that is quite
harsh. One of the recent occasions I was down here hearing
evidence I read the Western Mail and it had a
review of the opinions of AMs about Iraq, and I do not
think there was the same review of what Welsh MPs at
Westminster thought. Really what I am asking you is
where would the democratic centre be in such a situation?
Would a future imaginary Mr Redwood be able to
say, "No, you cannot do these things", or would the
Welsh administration say, "We want this and we ask you
to do it, or allow us to by means of primary legislation
which gives sufficient breadth to the Assembly to carry
out its policies"?
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NICK BOURNE: Taking your first point
about where power resides, granted you are right obviously
the framing of primary legislation rests with Westminster,
but sovereignty also does and it only takes legislation
from Westminster to scrap it.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER-BOOTH: But do you
not think that the result of setting up a devolved Assembly,
despite the Dicey Theory of parliamentary sovereignty,
is that in practice some of the sovereignty has come
down to Cardiff?
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NICK BOURNE: No. I am not sure that sovereignty
is divisible in that way but accepting the basis on
which the British constitution is drawn it must be the
basis on which you are acting because you are accepting
that if there is going to be any extension of power,
it has to be encompassed in Westminster legislation.
Similarly - and I am not advocating it as a good idea
at all - if the Assembly were to be scrapped it would
be scrapped by Westminster legislation, not by legislation
in Cardiff Bay. When you say the last call rests with
Westminster, yes, it does, but a lot of these things
depend on common sense and the attitude of the Westminster
government. Westminster could legislate to have all
blue-eyed babies killed but it will not do it, and similarly
in terms of the devolution settlement I think it is
dangerous to say that we fear there may be another type
of government that could try and unscramble things in
Wales so we had better give more power to the Welsh
Assembly. That is very dangerous.
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What the Western Mail puts on
its front page about what Assembly members have said
about Iraq is scarcely the way to proceed.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER-BOOTH: Finally, you
said earlier that the members of the Assembly do not
use their time as usefully as they might, or words to
that effect, and you also said that there was a lack
of scrutiny of secondary legislation, I think. What
specific proposals have you to improve the work of the
Assembly and of its members, bearing in mind that secondary
legislation is supposed to be carrying out the filling-in
details of primary legislation?
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NICK BOURNE: I am not sure I accept that
last point firstly; a lot of secondary legislation is
implementing policy in a particularly relevant way in
our context within Wales so I am not sure I would accept
that it is detail. A good operation of the system does
depend on a great deal of discretion being left with
the devolved authority. I accept that.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER-BOOTH: But that is
against the old doctrines of primary and secondary power.
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NICK BOURNE: I am not sure it is. Henry
VIII type clauses and so on give power through these,
but whether it is or not I do accept that you have to
devolve a great deal of discretion.
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On the point about individual members,
I was not being pejorative about individual members
not making good use of their time but as a young institution
it is perhaps inevitable that as we grow up we will
see that time management is not as effective as it should
be, and perhaps some of the debates now are not as meaningful
as they could be. We are not spending enough time scrutinising
the legislation.
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If you analyse what is happening in Plenary
now in the context of what was happening in the last
6-9 months not much time is spent looking at legislation,
and it should be.
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DR McALLISTER: Can I go back to Michael's
first point about testing the performance of the Assembly?
Given we operate in a hugely performance management
climate generally, when would be the most appropriate
time to assess whether the powers of the Assembly as
they currently stand have been fully and rigorously
tested?
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I am sure you know that the Scottish
constitutional convention was seen to be leading to
the creation of the Scottish Act and the Scottish Parliament,
and that met for around a 6-8 year period. Would you
feel that the first term of the National Assembly plus
at least part of the next term would be the equivalent
of a Welsh constitutional convention tested at the current
settlement, and if not can you tell us when you think
we should be able to measure performance?
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NICK BOURNE: I need to be careful not
to be drawn down the line of signing up to a policy
put forward by Ieuan but I think it is far too early
at the moment. Scotland has a separate legal system
so I am not sure it is a terribly meaningful analogy.
Everybody says that this is a young institution and
it has to be given a chance to work; then they turn
round and say, "But let's alter all the powers because
that is what is stopping it working effectively", and
I do not accept that analysis. It can work effectively
within the powers we have and that has to be demonstrated
before you look at what is really a quantum leap. There
are great dangers in meddling with the system.
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LORD RICHARD: What about the Westminster
queue for legislation? Accepting that you may have perfectly
good ideas but in order to get them through private
legislation you have to come back to Westminster, and
with great respect to any Secretary of State for Wales
he is not going to push to the front of the queue, so
the most you can reasonably expect is one bill a year
providing that is not too controversial or too long.
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How can that be satisfactory?
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NICK BOURNE: And miscellaneous issues.
Some of the problem is not in the queue. The queue was
not the problem with the St David's Day legislation,
for example, but that Westminster took a completely
different line - the same as the Welsh Conservatives!
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LORD RICHARD: I think you submitted nine
suggestions for Bills in this session, or was it eight?
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NICK BOURNE: Possibly.
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LORD RICHARD: A fair number, and you
got one, but are you satisfied with the way in which
Westminster legislates on matters that the Assembly
wants, which otherwise it cannot do?
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NICK BOURNE: In terms of the process,
yes, by and large I am. I am not sure that all the things
on that list were things we wanted anyway. From memory,
I do not think they were. Some we certainly signed up
to but not all, and I think we have to accept that that
is the system. Maybe it can be improved but I do not
think that is a good reason for throwing all the toys
out of the pram and saying, "It is not working as effectively
as we want therefore we want all the legislative powers
down in Cardiff".
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LORD RICHARD: But if you take your top-up
fees point where you say, "We have to do this but there
is a way round it", and therefore you produce a way
out of it by I think hardship grounds --
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NICK BOURNE: That was not the top-up
fees; that is existing tuition fees.
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LORD RICHARD: I accept that but your
chances of getting a piece of legislation through Westminster
are pretty slim, are they not?
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NICK BOURNE: Not because of the queue
but because I do not think government would want it
to.
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LORD RICHARD: Both. If the Assembly wanted
to do it, why should it not do it?
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NICK BOURNE: I think it can do. That
is the point I was making.
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LORD RICHARD: But it is a pretty tortuous
way round it.
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NICK BOURNE: But it is the point I am
making. Very often there is a tendency on the part of
the government here to lie back and not push it.
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LORD RICHARD: They should be more inventive
--
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NICK BOURNE: If they say, "Right, we
are going to do this unless you pass the legislation",
then, "Westminster will say maybe we had better pass
the legislation", but there is no evidence of that sort
of approach happening. Rhodri Morgan was brought in
as his unique selling point was that he was supposed
to be standing up to Tony Blair but I have seen little
evidence of it.
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LORD RICHARD: So you want it inventive
as well as muscular?
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NICK BOURNE: Yes.
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DR McALLISTER: Can we probe about when?
Would it be at the end of the next term?
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NICK BOURNE: I have given an answer insofar
as I can. It is not appropriate now, I feel, which is
what you are looking at. If pressed, I think we are
looking at 15/20 years down the line.
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PETER PRICE: That is very interesting.
You were saying a moment ago when the Chairman put to
you that only one of your Bills was accepted that your
party was not signed up to several of the others.
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NICK BOURNE: I do not believe so from
memory but I have not got the list in front of me.
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PETER PRICE: But the implication was
that you could view therefore with equanimity the fact
that the Assembly's list was not implemented.
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NICK BOURNE: That is not what I wished
to say. I was pressed by the Chairman as to whether
I was disappointed, and I was not in the particular
context in relation to all the Bills.
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PETER PRICE: Let us just take this forward
in terms of the situation of a different government
in Westminster and the reliance on a Secretary of State
who does not share the views.
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You have described earlier your approach
as being one where you would see institutionally a need
for accommodation. To the extent that the Assembly is
seeking to do something which is not a slight variation
but philosophically entirely different from the direction
in that policy area, are you saying that there would
have to be an accommodation of a kind that the Assembly
would have to come into line philosophically, or are
you saying that you believe that a Secretary of State
of a different colour could go to Cabinet, could go
before the House of Commons and urge acceptance of a
Bill which was philosophically quite different, however
modified by negotiation?
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NICK BOURNE: The point I have sought
to make, and I come back to the point which I believe
very strongly, is that the nature of devolution is you
are going to have these differences even where you have
parties of the same colour, and we have that at the
moment.
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PETER PRICE: But would they not be greater?
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NICK BOURNE: Possibly, but we have had
it with St David's Day, for example, and we have it
on foundation hospitals. There is a drive for foundation
hospitals led by the Prime Minister and Alan Milburn
in Westminster that is resisted, dying in the last ditch
- Rhodri Morgan and Jane Hart do not want it in Wales
- so, yes, there may be more instances but it is essentially
no different from what is happening now and that is
going to be the nature of the devolution, for Heaven's
sake. If the two bodies are agreeing all the while there
would be scarcely any need for a devolved body.
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VIVIENNE SUGAR: On some of the changes
you would like to see to make the Assembly more effective,
you mentioned the idea of a finance committee. Could
you tell us a bit more about that?
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NICK BOURNE: Yes. Initially it was felt
that because we did not have our own tax raising powers
it was not appropriate to have a finance committee and
I was persuaded by that, but the more I have looked
at this the less I have become convinced about that.
I think it is an important area and it should have a
committee to question the Minister, probe her more than
in Plenary and scrutinise some of the issues like underspends
in particular years and contingency planning - issues
where Barnett is not appropriate. Broadly we think Barnett
should be retained but there are instances where Barnett
does not apply - European funding, issues like floods,
foot and mouth and so on, where you may be wanting to
give the Minister a greater bargaining power.
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If she is able to say, "The all-party
finance committee has backed me on this particular demand,
Chancellor; we do need this money to tackle particular
issues in Wales relating to foot and mouth" - whatever
it is - it might be beneficial to the government as
well as providing scrutiny and the opportunity to raise
questions in a more detailed way than at the moment.
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VIVIENNE SUGAR: Has this idea of the
finance committee and all of the other suggestions you
have made been proposed at the Assembly? Has there been
a debate? If not, when would you propose to do that?
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NICK BOURNE: No. There has been no debate
on that particular issue but it has been raised in the
Assembly by many, not just my party. I do not know whether
it is Plaid policy but it is certainly well known that
there is a feeling, probably across the political divide,
that there should be a finance committee. It was not
I think contained in the Assembly review of procedure
recommendations.
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VIVIENNE SUGAR: So how would you progress
that and the other ideas like the time management issues
and more specialisation and so on?
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NICK BOURNE: That is a fair point. The
forum where they can be raised is probably the business
committee of the Assembly where all parties are represented.
Periodically that looks at issues like this and if there
were then a consensus then the business management would
go away and propose this to Plenary. That is probably
the best way.
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HUW VAUGHAN THOMAS: Some of the responses
we have received to suggestions that committees could
do more are that frankly you cannot squeeze any more
in than at present. There are some committees who would
like to pursue items with more vigour but they cannot
squeeze their meetings in because their members are
on two or three committees. You are proposing to use
the committees more effectively and also introduce another
committee. What is the ingredient that gives that extra
time to Assembly members?
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NICK BOURNE: Partly better time management;
probably also smaller committees. By and large they
are too large at the moment, given the size of the Assembly.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER-BOOTH: Have you been
to Scotland and observed the Scottish Parliament?
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NICK BOURNE: Yes, on two or three occasions.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER-BOOTH: What were
your impressions of it?
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NICK BOURNE: A snapshot obviously and
I have sat in on Plenary but not on committees. I have
had chats with our party there and a couple of other
people - one in the Liberal Democrat party and their
Presiding Officer.
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There are teething problems there, as
we have here, which again you would expect. Many of
the political issues they face seem to be similar to
ours. In some ways the way they operate did not seem
all that different, given these extra powers. This line
between secondary and primary powers is a bit overdone
because it depends on the way the legislation is framed.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER-BOOTH: For example,
on finance they have a finance committee and they also
can move amendments to the budget, and they do so.
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NICK BOURNE: Yes.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER-BOOTH: It is a very
sharp contrast to the lack of procedures.
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NICK BOURNE: Yes. Of course, they do
have tax-raising powers in addition although they have
not utilised them. There are differences in their system,
as you would expect, but there are parallels and the
overwhelming impression I came away with from speaking
to people there was that, again, it was a very new institution
and "Do not judge us on what you see", which is something
I can empathise with.
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LORD RICHARD: Mr Bourne, thank you very
much for coming. You have been helpful, revealing, and
illuminating.
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NICK BOURNE: I have enjoyed it. Thank
you.
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LORD RICHARD: You have been generous
with your time, so thank you again.
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