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COMMISSION ON THE POWERS AND ELECTORAL ARRANGEMENTS
OF THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY FOR WALES
MINUTES OF PROCEEDINGS
of the
EVIDENCE OF:
TUC Wales
held at
Caradog House, Cardiff
On
FRIDAY 13 JUNE 2003
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In Attendance
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Lord Richard, Chair, Richard Commission
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Ted Rowlands, Richard Commission
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Tom Jones, Richard Commission
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Peter Price, Richard Commission
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Dr Laura McAllister, Richard Commission
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Sir Michael Wheeler-Booth, Richard
Commission
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Paul Valerio, Richard Commission
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Vivienne Sugar, Richard Commission
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Eira Davies, Richard Commission
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Huw Thomas, Richard Commission
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Jeff Evans - PCS
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Graham Smith - Amicus
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Jim Hancock - T&G
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Allan Garley - GMB
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Felicity Williams - Wales TUC
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Proceedings
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Lord Richard
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What we have asked people to do giving
evidence is first of all to identify themselves for
the sake of the record so that we have you all down
on paper and then to open up the discussion, perhaps
5 or 10 minutes, and then we can pursue after that whatever
issues you think would be helpful, if that is all right.
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Felicity Williams
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I am Felicity Williams. I am the Assistant
General Secretary of the Wales TUC.
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Graham Smith
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I am Graham Smith. I am a member of the
Wales TUC General Council and also a regional officer.
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Jeff Evans
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Geoff Evans, I am a member of the
General Council of Wales TUC and executive. My day job
is with the PCS, which is a public sector union represents
civil servants in Wales, including those of the National
Assembly.
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Jim Hancock
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I am Jim Hancock, Wales TUC and I am
also Regional Secretary of the Transport and General
Workers Union.
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Allan Garley
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Allan Garley, member of the Wales TUC
General Council and Regional Secretary of the GMB.
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Felicity Williams
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Hopefully you have all had a copy
of the submission. I would like to start by explaining
the position of the Wales TUC in terms of the Assembly
and devolution, which is that we are and have been all
along very supportive of the principles of devolution
and it has been noticeable since we have had the Assembly
here in Wales that the trade unions in Wales have taken
that on board in terms of the number of motions that
relate to devolved powers and Assembly issues that come
through for our annual conference. Indeed, this year
the vast majority of those motions were related to areas
in which the Assembly has either full devolved powers
or an interest and some influence, and we are very keen
to see that continue and grow here in Wales. We are
very keen to continue to work closely with the Assembly
in whatever form it takes, and I think you see
from our submission it is clear that we do believe there
is room for the Assembly to grow and we have slipped
that particularly into two areas and in terms of the
powers which the Assembly has now and which we would
envisage perhaps it should have in the future.
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There are four points on that particular
aspect, and there are issues that we would have and
perhaps explanation we might want to give on each of
those. Similarly, on the electoral arrangements, I think
our recommendations there are quite clear. They are
different from the existing situation that we have here
in Wales, and there are reasons for that and that has
been a considered position taken by the unions
represented by the Wales TUC. All of this information
is the subject of a special debate that we held at our
annual conference just a couple of weeks ago.
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So the submission that you have is on
behalf of the TUC as an umbrella organisation for the
TUC in Wales. It is an agreed position which all of
the unions affiliated to the TUC have had an opportunity
to consider and to agree, and it does represent the
views of those organisations.
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Lord Richard
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Do you want to run through the four points?
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Felicity Williams
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Certainly.
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Lord Richard
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And then perhaps you could expand on
the paper a bit.
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On point 1, we are particularly concerned
following yesterday's announcements, and we had some
concerns yesterday about the brute force of Parliamentary
bills and ensuring that there was sufficient influencing
opportunity to have that scrutiny and I think that
is perhaps even more of a concern and this has
even more significance following the announcement yesterday
of the reshuffle of the cabinet. We are no clearer I think
than anybody else of exactly what the ramifications
of that announcement yesterday are going to be, but
clearly there will be ramifications for that and it
is our view in the discussions that we had this morning
that it makes it even more important that there is a mechanism,
and a robust mechanism, for prelegislative scrutiny
by National Assembly committees.
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Clearly, we have a concern about
how issues that the Assembly wish to see in legislation
can now be brought to the cabinet table and can be got
on to the statute book, if there is not a direct
cabinet voice representing Wales. It is not clear from
yesterday's announcements, nor certainly from what I have
heard thus far today, exactly what that position is
going to been the future. So we do have some concerns
there.
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Again, on point 2, that has become perhaps
even more unclear following yesterday's announcement.
We have a couple of examples in mind of where we
feel there have been issues where these powers of the
Assembly and the powers of Westminster have become somewhat
confused, and most particularly in the eye of the electorate.
I think it is very difficult for them to understand.
One of the issues that we would quote would be the example
of the foundation hospitals the NHS in England clearly
going down that route and Wales choosing to do things
in a different manner and a lot of confusion
being created amongst the general public, as well as
those of us who would like to think that we understand
these things better about exactly what Wales can do
when the Westminster Government changes their position,
introduces something like foundation hospitals, whether
the Assembly has to follow suit, whether it has to go
through statute to do things differently. There is a lot
of uncertainty about that.
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Similarly with issue on top-up fees,
university top-up fees where we have the Minister in
Wales making an announcement on the position for Wales
and in particular the media immediately jumping on the
matter and saying, "Hang on a minute, that is not what
Charles Clarke has said", who is right and who is wrong
and there needing to be a period where clarification
is sought. It is our view that even if that clarification
is subsequently sought that must damage the impact of
those decisions made by the Assembly and has damaged
the impact and perhaps the delivery of those policies
made here in the Assembly, and it will be much more
difficult to get the electorate on the ground to buy
into something that they are not quite sure was made
and a decision that was made in quite the correct
way in the first place and that whole cloud of confusion
can do nothing to make it easier for the Assembly to
work.
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I also feel that it leads to probably
delays in implementation of policy; certainly it can
do, and that if there were much clearer guidelines of
exactly where the powers lay then it would be easier
to get things introduced much more quickly. So we believe
that consideration should be given to extending that
remit and there should be clearer and greater clarity
and delineation.
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If I move on to the third point: where
we have the secondary powers devolved, it is again an
area sometimes of confusion and sometimes of direct
conflict between what the Assembly here in Wales would
like to do and see to be done and what it is possible
to do. For example, if I use maybe what could be
seen as positive and negative examples, when the Children's
Commission post was established here in Wales, very
much welcomed, cross party agreement, and indeed something
that was likely to be copied in other parts of the UK
and indeed other areas of Europe, it was not possible
for the Assembly to do that without having a legislative
route through into Parliament. That inevitably meant
a delay in what was a very important and necessary
post being created and a piece of legislation going
forward.
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I have already talked about education
top-up fees. We are in a position, or it seems
that we will be, of Wales needing to opt out of the
bill in England in order to go along with the route
it wishes to go, and yet education is a devolved
issue. There does not seem to be a great deal of
logic of needing to opt out of the UK bill in order
to pursue an area that is agreed and for which the Assembly
has devolved powers.
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One of the areas when I said a positive
and a negative the issue of GM crops was clearly
one that caused a lot of problems here in Wales
with the Assembly taking a view on GM crops, the UK
Government taking a different view and there being
a lot of confusion over who could and who could
not and whether the Assembly could indeed refuse to
allow GM crops to be planted in Wales. That turned out
not to be the case and, again, an example of where certainly
the public would have been led to believe the Assembly
did not have the powers that it needed in order to achieve
the things that it wanted to see.
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On the fourth point, which is transport,
it is an area that we feel is particularly important;
it is an area that is particular lay relevant to the
economic growth and development that we would wish to
see in Wales, and I think that is recognised not
only by us in trade union organisations but also by
the CBI and other business organisations; it is absolutely
crucial that an integrated transport policy is able
to be implemented in Wales, and it is also crucial that
that will be able to be implemented in line with environmental
policy, because the two things clearly need to go together.
The difficulty that we see at the moment is that the
Assembly is severely cramped because it does not have
any ability to have an all Wales remit. For example,
there is no opportunity to have an all Wales Transport
Commission and an all Wales Transport Commissioner in
order to look at a genuinely integrated and across
Wales transport system that would enable those areas
of economic growth and development to which I alluded
to take place.
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We have particular concerns over the
issues of the Strategic Rail Authority and the lack
of control here in Wales of that very important transport
system, and for all of those reasons we are recommending,
as we have in our paper, that the powers that the Assembly
has should indeed be in most cases clarified and in
some cases increased.
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Do you want to deal with those?
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Lord Richard
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Let us deal with those before we move
on to the elections.
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The sort of thrust to what you are saying,
it seems to me, is that the existing settlement there
are clearly deficiencies in it and those deficiencies
ought to be clarified and they ought to be tidied up.
There is obviously a certain amount of difficulty
in finding out exactly who has the powers to do what,
and sometimes you think it is in London and sometimes
you think it is in Cardiff and nobody is absolutely
100 per cent sure, and that in certain areas
you would actually like primary legislative powers to
be devolved to Cardiff rather than to London.
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Can I press you a bit as to
which areas you would like to be devolved?
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Felicity Williams
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Certainly transport is one of the areas
that we would very much like to see devolved. I know,
Jim, you have a particular interest in that.
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Jim Hancock
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For example, the point that has been
made about the all Wales Traffic Commissioner. There
used to be an all Wales Traffic Commissioner prior to
1986, South Wales, and all areas beyond that and it
went to Wales and the West Midlands Traffic.
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Lord Richard
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Who abolished that?
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Jim Hancock
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It was the 1986 Transport Act when there
was a reduction in the ability of the Traffic Commissioner's
powers. When that was reduced in fact there were a large
number of traffic examiners also reduced, and my union
certainly believes that does not lend itself to good
health and safety policy and transport safety policies,
particularly where some of the contracts for buses are
concerned and the opportunity of examining thoroughly
and those buses may not be what it was prior to 1986:
there is a process of privatisation there as well.
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That is an area of great concern to us
but equally it is of great concern because there are
other issues surrounding that. The opportunity of co-ordinating
and controlling transport we feel would be better were
it under an all Wales Traffic Commission.
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Lord Richard
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What powers would you give it?
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Jim Hancock
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The same powers that they have now, but
the powers purely for Wales, which is to monitor and
police. I think perhaps we might even want to extend
that, the Assembly might wish to extend that, to include
powers that deal with rail and to deal equally with
air and waterways transport too.
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Vivienne Sugar
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Could I just ask a supplementary
there to Jim: we have heard evidence that perhaps it
is the rigidity of the existing system and that the
slowness of response on things like [inaudible] choices,
and so on, and a decision has been made I think
it is in Birmingham where people are not understanding
local circumstances in rural areas; an example was given
of the service in the Snowdonia National Park where
there was a great difficulty in Gwynedd commissioning
a new operator and there was also timescales and
the fact that the Birmingham office was not responsive.
So I think my question is whether it is an issue of
understanding and responsiveness from the existing system,
or whether you have really made the case for having
an independent Wales separate commissioner.
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Jim Hancock
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I think it is both, but I think
the difference is that if we had an all Wales Traffic
Commissioner, or Transport Commissioner, that the funding
arrangements would be such from the Assembly that they
could ensure that there is an adequate service. I think
the service is now inadequate because of the lack of
funding, because of the reduction in the number of traffic
examiners and equally the number of traffic commissioners.
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Paul Valerio
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I notice you have not mentioned
anything about tax raising powers, obviously transport,
and the budget, the existing budget that is allocated
to it to come over, but unless you had any extra source
of funding the situation is likely not to change materially.
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Felicity Williams
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You are quite correct that the submission
does not make any recommendation for tax raising powers.
As I said when I introduced this, this is
the considered position of the Wales TUC as an umbrella
organisation, and we have not taken a decision
for or against recommending tax raising powers.
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The individual trade unions that the
Wales TUC represents will have their own views on that
issue and, clearly, they may wish to make those recommendations
to the Commission, but we as an organisation are not
making any recommendation on that point at this time.
But I do accept and we accept that what you say
is quite correct, but we are not seeking to make a recommendation
either way on that at this time.
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Lord Richard
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Thank you.
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Peter Price
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Can I ask on transport about how
you would deal with the cross border aspects; and in
particular when you talk about the powers of the Strategic
Rail Authority and the possibility of the Transport
Commissioner having powers which would include rail
and services that would be partially serving England
as well, how would you deal with those issues?
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Jim Hancock
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I think very much in the way that
they are dealt with now. There is a liaison and
there was a liaison prior to the 1986 act. The
Traffic Commissioners do not act totally independently;
they were in liaison with each other prior to the 1986
act and I think that would still apply and I think
that would still apply; I see no reason for that
not to apply.
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Peter Price
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So when you say devolved, for example,
on the Strategic Rail Authority, how would you define
the coverage? Are you talking about services whilst
they are operating within Wales, or how would you define --
how would you draw that line and to whom would you devolve
it?
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Jim Hancock
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I think we would want to devolve
to the Welsh Assembly the opportunity of certainly co-ordinating
the transport within Wales and if that transport
goes beyond Wales, obviously we would need to co-ordinate
that with the Department of Transport, but certainly
within Wales, and there are issues specifically that
are within the office that we do not have that authority
over at this time, and it does cause concern. How, for
example, could we co-ordinate the rail and bus timetables?
We cannot do that, we have no authority to do that,
and we feel there is a need to do that in order
to provide the service that perhaps the people of Wales
deserve.
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Ted Rowlands
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One of the genuine reserved powers that
has not transferred even in all the whole areas of devolved
functions like education and health has been the whole
issue of remuneration of pay, conditions of service
in the public sector. We have received evidence from
some sections of the community saying they should be
transferred, that you cannot run an education policy
without powers over remuneration and conditions of pay
and service, and the same has been maybe argued in the
Health Service. Does the TUC have a position on
this whole question of the transfer of these public
services remuneration issues that have always been traditionally
held in reserve in any transfer of power?
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Jeff Evans
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I represent civil servants who work
for the National Assembly, and to all intents and purposes
we have devolved pay at the moment. The Civil Service
unified pay system was broken up a decade ago and
each individual Civil Service department has its own
pay scheme, so for the National Assembly, for example,
it has its own pay system which is unique to the National
Assembly. From my point of view it is something I would
strongly advocate, because we have been able to tackle
with Assembly politicians the issues which are close
to our hearts, such as equal pay and we have made good
progress.
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As to the view of other unions, I have
to say there is -- national pay agreements are
cherished and I think there is a concern about
regional pay, particularly after the announcement in
the Budget and was repeated again with the Euro, and
I suspect that the general view across the trade
union movement is that national pay should remain in
place.
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Ted Rowlands
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In health, or education, teachers' pay
and health service pay should remain a UK reserved
area of policy?
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Felicity Williams
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Certainly within the Health Service,
the previous system of trusts and GP fundholding practices
did cause and was recognised to cause significant recruitment
problems and retention problems throughout the Health
Service, people moving for money and with the places
that have the most money being able to attract the best
staff and there is a strong argument for having
a national pay agreement and national standards
of pay. There may be supplements as they are for London,
some weighting areas for particular geographical areas,
but they really need to be proved to be necessary to
recruit and retain staff and enable them to live in
those areas because those sorts of services need to
be delivered equally well in all areas of the country
and should not be dependent upon the prosperity or otherwise
of particular geographical areas. Where there is good
expertise it should be able to be employed across the
country. That would be the opinion of the unions in
the Health Service in the main.
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Lord Richard
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But you do end up in a sort of strange
sort of conclusion on this, because if you devolve,
for example, education further than it is at the moment,
you would devolve the possibility of the Assembly doing
something about say top-up fees, or university fees,
or what have you, but you would not be able to on your
sort of approach do anything about teachers' salaries.
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Felicity Williams
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No, no, but we are looking at the provision
of the service of education, and trade unions at a UK
level will be always seeking to improve the salaries
of public sector workers or whatever workers they represent
and --
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Lord Richard
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You might do better out of the Welsh
Assembly.
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Felicity Williams
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Equally, we might not.
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Jeff Evans
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I think there are arguments for both.
At the moment we appreciate the arguments for and against,
and no doubt this is being talked about by teachers
at this time, and we are aware of the Scottish pay settlement,
for example, but I think at the moment the general
feeling is that the arguments against just outweigh
arguments in favour because of the concerns about the
regional pay.
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Ted Rowlands
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Interestingly, the National Assembly
Membership Service is actually a totally discrete,
now negotiated on pay and conditions, pensions and the
whole lot?
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Jeff Evans
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The National Assembly and its funded
bodies, the quangos, are all separate bargaining units
for the purposes pay and conditions of service, and
it is my job to negotiate on behalf of them.
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Ted Rowlands
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Has it created many variations between
that and your English counterparts in say the Department
of Transport or DEFRA?
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Jeff Evans
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I would say that we now have arguably
one of the best pay systems in the Civil Service, because
we are in tune with the politicians on things like equal
pay which the people in Whitehall have not quite cottoned
on to. There is a real dynamic Equality agenda in Wales
which we can all be proud of. So the National Assembly
is a good example of devolved pay. But, as I say,
I think certain other public sector unions are
not at that position yet.
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Allan Garley
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Can I just reiterate the point Felicity
made that there is certainly -- within the recommendations
to yourself, there is no consideration of moving away
from the national framework and bargaining of pay negotiations.
Again, it is an issue that individual unions may well
have their own views on and they will put those views
to you via the procedures.
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Huw Thomas
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Ted actually went to the main area I wanted
to explore, but I would just like to round off
this discussion in terms of the NHS. The points you
are making earlier about the foundation hospitals was
the foundation hospitals are supposedly to have a greater
freedom terms of pay, and so on. In the NHS, we still
are in the market where if you look at both North East
and South East Wales provision flows across the national
border, and your comments earlier though, you said you
wanted greater clarity in terms of what the Assembly's
powers were in the NHS to opt out or develop its own
policies. Could you just expand on that, because after
all, we have had two bits of major legislation which
the Assembly has seen through changing and reshaping
the NHS in Wales, and I am curious there is still some
sort of confusion around it.
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Felicity Williams
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I think one of the issues has been
around the introduction of foundation hospitals on the
borders between England and Wales and how that establishment
of those hospitals might affect the provision of care
for people who live in Wales and perhaps use those services.
So that is one area that is not clear for people, and
that is certainly an area that is going to continue
to raise its head as that process is delivered, because
we have the policy of health care in Wales being delivered
locally through the local health boards, but we do have
on the fringes the provision of care through other means;
some of those will be foundation hospitals. So that
is an area that has caused confusion. Wales knew where
it was going with the local health board structure and
then the structure in England changes and it clearly
has implications for patients in Wales.
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When the announcement on foundation hospitals
was originally made at the Westminster Parliament, there
was a great deal of speculation, and I accept
that a lot of the speculation is led by the media,
but then that has an effect on the perception of the
Assembly and its role within Wales and it has affects
for organisations like our own that seek to work with
it. There was a great deal of speculation about
whether that would then mean that the Assembly was no
longer able to go ahead with its provision for local
health boards. Would it have to reconsider? When that
provision of local health broad was announced there
was a lot of speculation that that would have to
be agreed by the UK Health Minister and how that process
would work. There very often seems to me to be almost
a playoff between the two areas, where there are
those who when a new policy is announced within
Wales their immediate response to it is not whether
it is a good policy, the right policy for Wales,
what it can deliver for Wales and how it can deliver
for Wales, but whether it is going to be allowed by
the Westminster Parliament, and that is what takes the
precedent when these announcements are made. It is not
a consideration of actually what the policies are
and whether they are delivering in the best way for
Wales, and that takes away from the focus of the initial
announcements and the opportunity for people to really
get on board behind those announcements and put their
weight behind making sure that they do actually deliver
for Wales.
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Huw Thomas
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There seem to be two points you are making
and I just want a clear understanding: one
is of course a fact of life that there will always
be that border difference, and so you are going to get
that play-off between England and Wales as we head down
on devolution. But a second: was it because the
Assembly was not fast enough in saying, "Yes, this announcements
taking place in England but in Wales we will"? In other
words, was it because there was a gap whilst confusion
spread?
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Felicity Williams
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I do not know whether anyone else
wants to, but it is not for me to comment on whether
there is a gap between what the Assembly announced
and what the media presented and produced. I do
not know whether there was a gap between those
two. I do know that there was confusion over that
issue and it is not the first or the any only time that
that confusion has been apparent. What the mechanism
is between that I am not privy to, what the reasons
directly behind that are, but certainly the impression
that one is left with is that for the vast majority
of people in Wales, unless you are the sorts of individuals
-- I had this discussion again earlier this
morning -- who are linked into the processes in
Wales and the Welsh media and the Welsh press and you
take the Western Mail, or whatever paper, every day
you are not going to be up on the developments that
are happening in Wales. What you are going to be
up on are the developments that are happening in England
with maybe a bit of a spin on how it might
affect Wales. Now I do not think that is entirely
because of the way that the Assembly chooses to release
its information, and I realise that the media is
not the purpose of this Commission, but I think
it is a fact that that difficulty is there.
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Vivienne Sugar
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I want to go back to the issue of
primary powers. In the first few months of the Commission
we had all the Welsh Assembly Government ministers come
to give evidence, and the vast majority told us that
the issue of primary powers was not an important one
for them. There were some exceptions to that around
justice and Home Office functions, but in the main they
were saying that they could do, the Assembly could achieve
what it wanted to achieve without primary powers.
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You are making the case that where there
is secondary power now there should be primary power
and quoting education, health and so on. Could you just
give me an idea of what were these resolutions that
have gone to the Wales TUC conference calling on the
Assembly to do things which would need the Assembly
to have primary powers to implement it, just to sort
of bring it alive for me and give me some practical
examples?
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Jeff Evans
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It is difficult for us to comment. We
are not legal experts and we are not experts when it
comes to Government bills and the Welsh Act and we are
perfectly open and honest on that. To some extent, what
we are saying is that there needs to be a fundamental
cultural change in Whitehall in particular. I talk
to a lot of senior civil servants and we get the same
thing coming back: when it comes to drawing up legislation
which affects England and Wales and Whitehall, Wales
is and after thought, and that has to change. The role
of this Commission hopefully would be to put an end
to that, to make sure that when Whitehall civil servants
are determining their policy that Wales is right in
the forefront of their thoughts.
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Lord Richard
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I am sorry for that, but that is not
the function of this Commission. The function of this
Commission is not to say whether Whitehall is doing
its job properly in relation to Wales but to say whether
or not we think Wales should be doing its own job for
Wales.
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Jeff Evans
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I suppose there is a natural
follow-up from that about the clarification of powers
and the additional powers as well.
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Jim Hancock
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One of the examples that we discussed
this morning was social housing and the ability of the
Welsh Assembly Government to say, "Sorry but we are
not taking part in the transport and housing", or whatever
the case might be. We have seen an example of co-operative
housing, but should the Welsh Assembly decide that there
is a mistake; it cannot be transferred for whatever
reason, they do not have that power or ability. We feel
that that should be there. That is a living example.
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Felicity Williams
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I suppose to a certain extent we
have made a great deal of progress locally on the
Assembly with the issues of the two-tier workforce funding
of public schools and hospitals. Those are issues that
come to my mind. Public private partnership, that is
what I was looking for, PFI. Again, an issue that
the Welsh Assembly is seeking to use to the absolute
minimum but does not actually have perhaps as much power
as we would like them to have to be able to take those
decisions, because clearly there are Treasury implications
on that funding, and we have been able to make a great
deal of progress here in Wales and we have been very
pleased with recent announcements on projects that have
not gone down the PPP/PFI route. However, you have asked
for examples of resolutions of our conference. The Assembly
would not have been able to take decisions and that
is another example of that.
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Vivienne Sugar
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Do you seriously think that there is
any prospect of Treasury powers being transferred to
the Assembly, because what you are talking about is
a particular policy about how money is raised.
Primary powers for health, education, or for housing
to the Assembly, you would not necessarily solve your
PFI problem.
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Felicity Williams
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Not necessarily, and it might not be
about how money is actually raised, but it might well
be about how money is used, but perhaps there is room
for more autonomy in how money is used.
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Sir Michael Wheeler-Booth
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Is it not a bit illogical to complain
about this match between Westminster and Cardiff, the
implementation of policies, particularly on the Health
Service, and also to say that you have no view whether
Cardiff should be able to raise additional money? Supposing,
you want to give care to the elderly as they do in Scotland,
well, the provisions under Barnett are not as generous
for Wales as they are for Scotland, and supposing you
really wanted to do it it might mean depending on [inaudible].
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Felicity Williams
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As I said to you earlier, if we
were giving evidence here as individuals or as representatives
of individual unions there would clearly be views that
were expressed on that issue. However, it is not something
that the Wales TUC has taken a view on. That does
not mean that individual trade unions do not have a view
on it; they do, and if they wish to express that view
they have that opportunity, and it certainly does not
mean that we as individuals would not have a view
on that. However, we are not in a position to express
a view on that as the Wales TUC.
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Vivienne Sugar
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I just want to come back and say it would
be very helpful to us if you could give us over the
next week or two any worked up examples where primary
powers would be necessary for the Assembly to implement
something that you are calling on them to do so that
we can go back to the Welsh Assembly Government ministers
and say, "Come on, you told us you didn't need primary
powers. Wales TUC is saying you cannot do this unless
you have them, can you please respond to that" so that
we can take a view about which side is --
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Allan Garley
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If I can comment briefly on that,
while I do not think there is a contradiction
between the Wales TUC outlining in point 3 the
areas where we believe secondary powers could be extended,
or certainly consideration should be given to extending
the powers and the fact that we do not have any formal
policy in relation to tax raising powers, as is already
explained on that point, but just, again, as an example
in relation to I think it was earlier Vivienne
asked about the Wales TUC and any examples, just to
take the issue of public procurement, which is not actually
listed in the Wales TUC submission to you, but it certainly
would be an area where the Wales TUC firmly takes a view
that, I believe it is £9 billion spent in Wales
in obtaining the uniforms for the armed forces, the
uniforms for the fire service and all of the various
uniforms in the NHS, and nurses' uniforms and all of
the subsidiary uniforms required to run the public services,
the vast majority of those garments are presently bought,
and the TUC view is quite simply that if that £9 billion
was spent in Wales by a manufacturer company producing
those uniforms, producing those, that would have the
effect of (1) increasing the number of people employed
in those factories; (2) it would have the effect of
recycling that money into the Welsh economy, and obviously
that would have a very substantial benefit to Wales
in itself.
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At the present time the Assembly believes
that they have no powers to make the decision not to
send that £9 billion abroad. The Wales TUC would like
to believe that the Assembly does have the powers to
actually make that political decision to change its
policy, and that is certainly one of the areas that
we would like clarification on that is already referred
to by Felicity and my colleagues, and if the clarification
is not in our favour then we would like the secondary
powers to be increased so that we do have the power
to make that political decision.
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Lord Richard
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That is the problem, is it not? You put
your finger on the root of the limb. You cannot expect
devolution in those areas that you would like. It is
a bit difficult to say, "If we cannot get it out
of the Assembly at the moment then they ought to have
powers to do that". It has to be a rather more
broadly based devolution.
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Allan Garley
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I can only respond on the basis
of I was asked the question and I have answered
it. You are asking for an example of how an extension
of powers --
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Vivienne Sugar
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There was a very good article by
Kevin Morgan in the Western Mail about purchasing food
supplies for school meals which of course is this very
issue when he is arguing that the Assembly is being
overcautious in its interpretation, but I think
it is also bound with Europe, and so on.
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Felicity Williams
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I suppose there also is the point
that evidence was taken from the Assembly Ministers,
I think you said at the beginning of your inquiry.
We would have additional concerns again following yesterday's
announcements as to whether the process that they perhaps
were content with previously might now not be quite
the same process in the future.
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Lord Richard
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I do not think anybody knows yet.
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Felicity Williams
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No, nobody does know, but I think
certainly the submission that -- nothing that has
happened recently would make us any more content about
the powers to do what we want.
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Dr Laura McAllister
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I want to ask you a more general
question, which is really trying to take advantage of
your status as one of the largest representative bodies
coming before us. Can you explain for us a little
bit about where you think the disengagement amongst
your members, assuming they are representative, broadly
speaking of the Welsh population with the Assembly lies?
Is it, given that 62 per cent of the population
did not vote in the elections recently, what kind of
feel do you get from your own membership about where
the disillusion, or apathy or antipathy lies? Is it
based on the limited powers? Is it based on latter of
clarity about the settlement and the policy output?
Is it based on the electoral system? Is it based on
equality of numbers? Can you give us a feel?
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Felicity Williams
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I think it is probably based on
all of those things, and one of the difficulties that
I always face, both as an individual and as a representative
in an organisation, when I am asked, as we quite often
are, about what the issues around disillusionment with
the electoral system is, I am always tempted to say
that I am the wrong person to ask because I am not disillusioned
and I understand it no more than anybody else does.
I think that certainly in terms of the Assembly
elections, this confusion over what exactly it is that
the Assembly is (a) there to do for Wales; and (b) can
and is doing for Wales is having an effect, perhaps
not so much on the younger voters, who seem to be perhaps
disillusioned with politics at all levels, but perhaps
with some of the more established voters who would traditionally
turn out for Local Authority and UK elections, but perhaps
not in the same way for National Assembly elections.
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From a personal point of view I certainly
know that there are a number of people who found --
and I know we will come on to the electoral arrangements
in a moment -- who find the current electoral
system of the list member and the constituency member
extremely confusing, and it seemed to me on poling day
this year that there was no less confusion about what
you did with the great long additional ballot paper
4 years on than there had been the very first time
when I, just as an individual, witnessed a dozen or
so people coming out of the poling booths still clutching
the second paper because they had not a clue what
they were supposed to do with it. So there are issues
there.
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Whether anybody else wants to come in
on the views of their members directly as you would
represent individual members, rather than me as a representative
of an umbrella organisation.
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Jim Hancock
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I think there are a number
of reasons really. First of all, I think the Assembly
had a very difficult birth and I think we all recognise
that. The fact that we had 2 or 3 proposed leaders in
the early days did not help, but I equally believe
that there is certainly inside the last 12 months the
shift in opinion amongst all members, mainly as a result
of the positive things coming from the Assembly. In
particular I would refer to the free bus passes,
or disabled pensions, and we campaigned for those things
for 20 years and when they finally come about people
grab it and say, "That is very nice, thank you very
much" and everything else, but there are certainly changes
in views amongst our members as a result of that.
But there is equally concern that perhaps it has not
got enough authority and powers to deliver the things
that people want to see delivered. I would hope
that this next year will see a substantial shift
and I think the creation of certain Ministry for Social
Justice would help in that direction, because it does
go across a lot of the area and perhaps we can tackle
some of the issues with that particular body. But equally,
as Felicity has said, I think there is total confusion
and concern about the electoral system. People understood
the old system and First Past the Post. It seems to
work very well in Westminster and they cannot understand
why it perhaps did not work within Wales and in the
Welsh Assembly.
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For years that has been the system that
has been adopted; people know who their representative
is and they vote for their representative and identify
them. They are not quite so sure under this system because
they may have 6 representatives in one constituency
and that really is a confused issue and if people
who are active in the political world do not know who
their list members are then obviously people who are
not so active would not know who their list members
are.
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Ted Rowlands
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I think we are heading to the electoral
system. Just one question before we do it. One of the
consequences, if we move too Scottish model, of primary
legislation and in a Scottish Parliament and a Welsh
equivalent is that there would be a reduction of
members at Westminster; that is the quid pro quo. Presumably,
the Wales TUC are sanguine about that as a consequence
of the transfer of power.
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Felicity Williams
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I think certainly in the debate
that we had at conference the unions recognised that
there would be consequences of the sorts of policy that
we are seeking to perform. They recognised that and
have accepted that and agree with our submission on
that.
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Lord Richard
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Can I sum-up the position on this before
we move on to the electoral arrangements. As I understand
it, and I think it is very important to be clear
about this, that broadly speaking you would be in favour
of extending the Assembly's powers in a way which clarifies
what it is that they are entitled to do and particularly
in areas where at the moment there seems to be confusion
as between the Assembly's powers and Westminster's powers.
Is that right? Thank you very much.
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Right, elections.
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Felicity Williams
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Again, there are four bullet points,
somewhat more sequential perhaps than the previous one
of necessity.
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Our view at the moment, as Jim began
to explain, is that the current system is very confusing
and it is very complex. It is not clear and it is not
easy for people to understand and there is the concern
of what can be termed as the double banking position,
where individuals who wish to stand for election can
choose to stand to vote for their constituency seat
and on the list seat, and I think the problems,
both practical problems and problems of perception that
that can lead to -- and certainly that is not a system
that we feel best represents the people in Wales.
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In our proposals our recommendations
are quite clear. We are recommending that the additional
member list system as it currently stands should be
abolished, that all Assembly Members should be elected
by the First Past the Post electoral system and that
should be from the existing Westminster constituencies.
We believe that that should be 2 members per constituency.
Yes, that would mean an increase in the number of members
at the Assembly, but we believe firmly that that would
give far better representation and would have far greater
accountability than does the current list system where,
as Jim said, in an individual constituency you could
have up to 6 representatives only one of whom actually
has any direct constituency responsibility and any direct
constituency links and has as an individual candidate
been chosen by the electorate in that area.
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We would wish to see equality, the principles
that we have for equality in Wales continued. We do
have equality within the National Assembly, following
the last election. We have an equal number of male and
female representatives but that is actually somewhat
by luck more than by the process, and we would be clear
that in an 80 member Assembly, 2 members per constituency;
each constituency should be represented by one man and
one woman.
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We believe that the proposals that we
have put before you there give a clear and accountable
electoral system. It gives equality, but most importantly
it gives accountability.
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One of the issues of the current system
where you go to the ballot box and you have your ballot
paper, where you elect your constituency representative,
you are in many cases voting as much for an individual
as for a political party and people will make a choice
on the stand very often that the individual putting
themselves up has made and the policies and the discussions
that you may have had with that individual.
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The second vote as it exists at the moment
of necessity has to be for a party. It cannot be
used in any other way. So, for example, it is not possible
for an independent candidate to stand on the list system.
The list system is very much geared towards the political
party mechanism, and we do not believe that that is
the best way to elect our members here in Wales.
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There is and there has been a great
deal of confusion about the role of the regional list
members, about, as I say, their accountability,
about their roles in individual constituencies. It can
cause problems at local levels where you appear to have
2 different Assembly Members representing constituency,
and representing individuals on a constituency
basis and people clearly do not understand who their
individual constituency Assembly member is and they
certainly do not understand what the role of the regional
membership should be.
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So our recommendations are there. I think
that they are quite clear and they do have, as I say,
the backing of the trade unions in Wales.
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Lord Richard
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What about proportionality? Whatever
else that system is, it certainly would not be a proportional
electoral system, would it?
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Felicity Williams
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Clearly, the trade unions across Wales
will have different views on proportionality and individuals
will have different views on proportionality and representation.
The agreed recommendations you have before you are clearly
First Past the Post. One of the issues that I can
perhaps elaborate on, if I return to the list system
and where if you look at true proportionality and the
results of the most recent election, the vast majority
of votes cast on the list system were cast for one particular
political party, yet that political party gained nothing
out of that list system, despite having the largest
number of votes cast in that section because of the
First Past the Post.
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Dr Laura McAllister
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Sure, but, with respect, that is the
nature of that hybrid system where it is a compensatory
mechanism.
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Felicity Williams
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Exactly. For us as an organisation, rather
than to come up with a number of alternative possibilities
and mechanisms that might do otherwise, we have agreed
that what we believe should happen should be an 80 member
Assembly, First Past the Post, 2 members per constituency
and one male and one female. That best represents the
interests of the electorate in our view.
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Jim Hancock
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It does not address proportionality,
and we are not trying to hide the fact that it does;
it simply does not, as does the electoral system for
Westminster; that does not either have proportionality,
and yet when consideration was given to changing that,
it was fairly quickly left alone, and I think that
we have to recognise what the electorate deserve is
a clear simple formula in order to elect their representatives.
There is no accountability, or there is no accountability;
we fail to see any justification in, for example, someone
from Wales who may have come third in an election suddenly
being foisted upon the electorate of that constituency
by the system and that has happened and did happen on
more than one occasion.
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Paul Valerio
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It is against the principles that were
established with the Welsh Assembly that it should be
a more inclusive form of Government, and this is
one of the arguments that they still maintain is one
of the reasons of its alleged success, because it is
truly demonstrable that it had more inclusiveness from
all political representations and the realistic conclusion
is that if you have your proposals accepted that will
be abolished. That is something that you do accept.
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Jim Hancock
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Yes. Can I respond specifically
to that particular point about inclusivity and if we
look at the inclusivity of the first 18 months of the
Welsh Assembly, and I mentioned the difficult birth,
there did not seem much inclusivity there. What was
happening is that there were partisan party battles
going on and the electorate were suffering and the people
of Wales were suffering and were not given the service
that they deserved and that they were funding as a result
of that.
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Allan Garley
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If I can say in addition to that,
inclusivity really does mean a close link between the
Assembly Member and the constituency. Inclusivity does
mean belonging and ownership, and the present system
weakens the close link between the Assembly member and
the constituency, does not provide belonging and ownership
and basically allows individuals to be dependent upon
the party machine, whatever party; for those individuals
to be dependent on the party machine as to whether they
get elected or not.
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I believe, and the Wales TUC believes,
that is one of the reasons why the Assembly in this
area is actually becoming and moving into disrepute,
and possibly is an answer to one of the questions asked
about why people are not interested in the Assembly
and the Assembly electorate, and we do believe that
this is the system itself which has actually played
a great part in putting the public off the Assembly
and the elections.
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Lord Richard
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On your system of double member constituencies,
on the basis of the votes cast on May 1st,
the Assembly would be overwhelmingly a Labour majority
with I am not sure how many Tories there would be. 2.
How many of the Plaid?
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Dr Laura McAllister
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The point that I was making in a
sense is that a party should stick up for any political
party, but the Conservative Party which would gain support
from around 20 per cent of the Welsh population
would not have any, or marginal representation in the
institution, so 20 per cent of votes cast
they would not have a voice directly.
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Felicity Williams
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They might have if a sufficiently strong
candidate stood in a particular constituency. After
all, if you had 2 candidates -- we are talking
possibilities, are we not -- if you had two candidates
standing in a constituency, in much the same way
as in Local Authority elections there was for a long
time a tradition of not only having party elected candidates
and having independent members who successfully stood
and were elected on their personal record in an area
and that is a possibility.
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Tom Jones
|
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How does the male/female ratio kick in
if the poll throws up the first 2 First Past the Post
candidates being 2 females where does the male candidate
come in?
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Dr Laura McAllister
|
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They are paired.
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Tom Jones
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Across all parties. Independents stand
and they will have to find a pair.
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Jim Hancock
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An independent could stand and there
may be no independent on the list. It could be a male
independent and no female independent.
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Lord Richard
|
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When was it that the last independent
got into the House of Commons?
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Ted Rowlands
|
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In Westminster --
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Lord Richard
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I was talking about Wales.
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Vivienne Sugar
|
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Having an increase to 80 representatives
assumes primary powers. The justification for the increase
from 60 to 80 would be because of the extra work that
primary powers had given, so it would be what they do
now.
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Felicity Williams
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Yes. It is the view, as I understand
it -- and correct me if I am wrong -- it is
the view of the Wales TUC that in order to have proper
accountability and representation on a constituency
basis that that would be better served by 80 members,
two elected per constituency than by the current system
of 40 members elected by constituency and 20 from the
additional list.
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Ted Rowlands
|
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Could I ask you, and you understandably,
and being a constituency member I appreciate
the powerful link between the member and the constituency
as being a fundamental basis of our representative
democracy, if the constituency basis is the thing that
compels your case, could you look at a system,
I guess STV where you can have a multi-member
seat, constituency based, but where you have a degree
of proportionality, where the single transferable vote
allows -- it maintains the constituency as a base.
There is no floating regional list members; there is
a constituency based representative system but
in fact builds into it a single transferable vote
system which then would make it rather more proportionate.
Would the Wales TUC see that as an option?
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Felicity Williams
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That system was not part of the consideration
that entered into the submission that we have made here
today. Again, as I said earlier, individual organisations
will have a view on each of the possible solutions
and scenarios that there are, but following the discussions
we had at our conference, our submission at this time
is clearly First Past the Post.
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Ted Rowlands
|
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I just wondered whether STV was
considered, because it does do the business of --
keeps a constituency basis, a representative democracy
system, but as building some kind of proportionality.
I am not advocating, but I am just asking whether it
is a potential answer.
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Jim Hancock
|
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Were you at the conference centre in
fact we have the preferred method of election which
is this preferred method of election, but there was
also consideration given to other -- we recognise
that there are other methods of perhaps looking at this
matter. What we wanted was that this matter be looked
at and investigated, particularly in the light of what
we said about the lack of accountability of the additional
members who have little or no accountability to the
electorate and equally who are very often, more often
than not, actually foisted upon the electorate following
defeat at the ballot box and that really does cause
concern. We feel that under those circumstances what
is happening is that they are not elected, they are
selected by their party to represent Wales and represent
a particular constituency. That in itself cannot
be justified to the electorate and we really do think
that needs good in depth examination.
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Felicity Williams
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The nature of the organisations that
they are is such that in putting together a paper
of recommendations like this, that has gone through
our conference procedure, would mean we would need to
come out with a recommendation which is an agreement.
That is how the process goes. It does not mean there
is not consideration, has not been consideration of
other views and that any suggestions that came out would
not be considered separately.
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What we have done in here is coming to
a view to submit to the Commission is put the questions
through the democratic process and come up with the
consensus view on what the best route would be, but
there clearly are different views across the trade unions
and across the individuals within those unions.
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Lord Richard
|
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So basically it is yes to more powers
and no to the electoral system.
|
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Felicity Williams
|
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No to the current electoral system, yes.
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Lord Richard
|
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Can I thank you very much. That
seems to be what has emerged. Can I thank you very
much for coming. It has been a very useful hour
and it is important that the TUC's views are made clear
to us.
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Felicity Williams
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Thank you for the opportunity to give
the evidence as well as submitting the paper.
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Lord Richard
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Thank you very much indeed.
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