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The new National Assembly and its tasks

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Title: The new National Assembly and its tasks


1
The new National Assembly and its tasks
  • Presentation for seminar on The National
    Assembly for Wales as a legislature then, now,
    the future
  • Cardiff, 22 September 2011
  • Alan Trench
  • (University of Edinburgh and the Constitution
    Unit, UCL Author, Devolution Matters blog)

2
Four models of devolution
  • Local administration of distributive functions
    (e.g. health, education, housing, planning)
    according to patterns and policy set elsewhere.
    Grant funding.
  • Self government of matters of local concern
    so determining not just how functions are
    provided but what sorts of services there should
    be. Grant funding, perhaps with limited tax
    powers.
  • Domestic autonomy deciding what government in
    a particular area looks like what services there
    should be, how they are organised and funded, and
    how law is enforced. Implies tax-raising powers,
    a major role in economic development, and control
    over much policing and justice.
  • Full autonomy complete autonomy over matters
    other than foreign relations, defence,
    macro-economy (currency). Cf devolution max.
  • (from Trench Devolution Plus in Scottish
    Affairs summer 2009, no. 68 )

3
Wales and the four models
  • Started out in 1999 somewhere as model 1.
  • Quickly evolved to somewhere between models 2 and
    3 in aspiration, and to a degree in delivery.
  • Institutional framework took a long time to catch
    up, though largely now has.
  • However, Welsh devolution is and always has been
    executive-centric, and based on a dominant
    government rather than a strong legislature
  • Scotland is pretty much in the same place,
    despite formal differences (devolution of
    policing, courts, the legal system)
  • The Scotland bill, if enacted in its present
    form, would push Scotland more emphatically into
    model 3, but not by a huge distance from where it
    is now

4
The impact of the referendum
  • The referendum signals clearly that Wales wants
    to assume wide-ranging control of much domestic
    policy to be free to determine what sort of
    health system, education, planning or cultural
    policies there should be in Wales
  • It also wants adequate funding, meaning (in
    Welsh Govts view) an unconditional block grant
    calculated on basis of relative need, plus some
    small taxes
  • There are strong arguments for greater fiscal
    autonomy, at least along the lines recommended by
    the Holtham Commission
  • There are structural problems with using the
    Barnett formula as the basis for funding this
    level of devolved autonomy (because of the way
    the system of consequentials ties devolved
    spending to that on comparable functions in
    England)

5
The impact of the referendum II
  • There are however significant legal restrictions
    on what the Assembly can do, beyond the limits of
    the principle that the Assemblys powers relate
    only to health, education and other subjects
    listed in Schedule 7
  • From the defined powers model
  • And from the need to secure Secretary of States
    consent for legislative provisions affecting
    functions of UK ministers, or UK public bodies

6
The external environment facing the National
Assembly
  • Scottish constitutional debates
  • Scotland bill enacted by autumn 2012, or not
  • Referendum on Scottish independence 2014-15
  • Devolution max?
  • UK spending restraint and Coalitions reshaping
    of the state
  • Welfare benefits and the universal credit
  • Reshaping of the health service range of
    services, outside providers, and even perhaps
    insurance or co-pays
  • Higher education increasing tuition fees,
    near-abolition of teaching grant for humanities
    and social sciences, visa limits and overseas
    students
  • The West Lothian commission and possible English
    votes for English laws
  • Financial issues for Wales and the Ap Calman
    commission
  • The future of the European Union and the Euro
  • One certainty the UK that we knew in 1997-2007
    will not return, under any circumstances.

7
So ...
  • Wales wants to undertake a much more far-reaching
    sort of devolution to what was offered in 1997.
    That changes the role of the National Assembly.
  • The National Assembly needs to operate in an
    increasingly complex world, and to find its own
    solutions to what it wants.
  • But it will also need to respond to this rapidly
    changing wider world. If it does not seek to
    become master of its own destiny, it will be
    simply the subject of choices made by others.
  • That calls for a wider role for a more assertive
    National Assembly than we have seen up to now.

8
What sort of a National Assembly is that?
  • One capable of more effective scrutiny of
    government
  • One that serves as forum for debate about both
    policy matters, and wider issues of Waless
    future
  • And takes charge of devolved powers that
    ensures that decisions relating to devolved
    matters (or what might be devolved) are
    determined in the legislature, not by executives
  • As well as making Welsh legislation even if
    there isnt actually much of that
  • And dealing with issues relating to individual
    constituents

9
What does the National Assembly need to be able
to do that?
  • Willingness routinely to challenge the Government
  • Tendency to avoid this up to now supporting own
    party (especially with the One Wales
    coalition), or the wider project
  • Misplaced part of showing how modern Welsh
    democracy works
  • Focus on policy
  • Needs a vigorous and robust committee system.
  • Does the system of subject committees plus
    legislation committees get in the way?
  • Committee support?
  • Electoral system
  • Ban on dual candidacy means that parties cant
    count on getting their strongest candidates into
    it
  • And experienced members may be lost as well
  • With re-drawing of Westminster constituency
    boundaries and reduction in number of MPs,
    co-terminosity will be lost, with problems for
    party organisation
  • Both an opportunity to revisit size and electoral
    system used

10
What does the National Assembly need to be able
to do that? II
  • Number of members 60 is very few
  • Even with a small front bench, there are only 47
    members available for committee work (including
    the deputy PO and party leaders)
  • That of course creates the pressures that make
    the subject/legislation Cttee system hard to
    avoid, as AMs time is such a scarce commodity
  • By comparison with other similar legislatures,
    the National Assembly is small

11
The size of the National Assembly parallels from
abroad
Territory Population (millions) Number of elected legislators Number of resi-dents per legislator
Wales 3.0 60 50,000
Scotland 5.2 129 40,310

Schleswig-Holstein 2.8 95 29,474
Rheinland-Pfalz 4.0 101 39,604
Brandenburg 2.5 88 28,409
Saxony 4.1 132 31,061

Flemish Parliament 6.2 124 (Flanders 118) 50,000

Castile Leon 2.5 83 30,120
Galicia 2.8 75 37,333
12
In conclusion ...
  • The referendum result doesnt put an end to
    questions about Waless constitutional
    development. Its the start of a new chapter,
    not the end of a story.
  • That new chapter is less about whether functions
    like health or education should be devolved or
    how much, but rather about the infrastructure
    that surrounds that (finance, organisation of
    executive and legislative branches)
  • Wales will also be affected by the UKs rapidly
    changing constitution, even if it tries to stand
    where it is. These are not debates that Wales
    can opt out of.
  • The National Assembly could serve as the key
    forum for the debates that need to happen and the
    decisions that need to be made
  • As well as embrace the challenges that arise from
    its new role after the referendum, and the
    changes the referendum has wrought
  • But it will need to change in order to do that,
    both in how it works and what AMs do
  • And in its institutional structure and
    organisation.

13
Read more on the Devolution Matters blog
http//devolutionmatters.wordpress.com/
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