|
PAUL VALERIO: Am I
not right in saying that you feel constrained by Europe
rather than by the UK Government, those are your limitations?
|
|
MR DAVIES: I would
not say that necessarily on RSA because we feel that
has been very successful. In fact, the DTI issued figures
earlier this year which showed that Wales is actually
top of the UK league both in terms of numbers and amounts
of grant that have been given. We feel that system works
but it is about the implications of State Aids and competition
rules where we have to work within that framework.
|
|
PAUL VALERIO: Can
I put one last point regarding this. In relation to
other forms of business taxation, the unified business
rate, etc., how do you feel regarding the powers that
are available to you at present? Are they sufficient
or do you feel that you require more scope?
|
|
This does not actually come within
my portfolio, it is Edwina Hart, the Finance Minister,
who is responsible for that. We feel that the powers
that we have in this area actually are suitable for
our needs and we have the flexibility so we can adapt
to Welsh demands.
|
|
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH:
This is a question from profound ignorance. You just
referred to being best in the scale in the UK. That
is on this one scheme but generally how successful is
Wales now being in getting EU money into the Principality
on a comparative basis with England, Scotland and Northern
Ireland and, if you know - just a ball park - with Eire?
|
|
MR DAVIES: In terms
of the Regional Selective Assistance and the non-EU
money, looking at the whole area of inward investment,
I think we have been phenomenally successful. On inward
investment I believe the figures show that at a time
when the UK generally had dropped in terms of both the
number of inward investment projects and the value of
them, Wales had increased their share and also the number
of projects. I think in our area we are able to bring
an increased focus and success. I know it is a hackneyed
phrase but the Team Wales approach is phenomenally successful.
I have some very, very able officials within the ICM
division who are very proactive, who work very closely
not just with business in the private sector but also
the WDA and our other agencies. We have been very successful
in that area.
|
|
On the issue of European money, much
of Wales is now in receipt of significant amounts of
money provided by the European Structural Funds. Two-thirds
of Wales is covered by the Objective 1 programme, and
then there is Objective 2 and 3. It is a very significant
amount of money that we have available over the Objective
1 period of six years from 2000 to 2006. Looking at
other areas of the UK which currently have Objective
1 status, I think we have performed as well as, if not
better than, the other Objective 1 areas in England,
for example Merseyside, South Yorkshire and Cornwall.
|
|
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH:
What is the cost of the Welsh office, whatever it is
called, at Brussels?
|
|
MR DAVIES: Sorry?
|
|
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH:
The annual cost of the Welsh office which acts in conjunction
with or under the shadow of UKREP.
|
|
MR DAVIES: This is
the Wales European centre?
|
|
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH:
Yes.
|
|
MR DAVIES: I believe
it is in the region of half a million pounds.
|
|
MR PRITCHARD: That
is our element of it, local government and others are
out of it.
|
|
PETER PRICE: Before
we go off the previous point about the constraints of
EU competition policy and particularly relating to State
Aids as compared with any additional constraints imposed
by UK primary legislation, would it be fair to say that
almost entirely the constraints are Brussels constraints?
How much are you additionally constrained by UK primary
legislation?
|
|
MR DAVIES: I think
the major constraint is EU. For example, in the recent
case of the steel company in Cardiff, ASW, which went
into receivership, we were forbidden by the European
State Aids rule and the European coal and steel community
rules from giving any direct financial assistance to
ASW. That was purely the State Aids rule. Some of the
other areas where we are in the process of negotiating
with the UK Government are areas like the transfer of
powers for power generation, electricity power generation
over 50 megawatts. We are in ongoing negotiations with
the UK Government on that. I would say largely it is
the constraints within the EU on State Aids rules which
are the major constraint. I would not want to exaggerate
that but I would say that would be the general position.
|
|
PETER PRICE: Are there
any examples of UK primary legislation constraining
you in terms of this whole field of business development
aid because the 50 megawatts case is a totally different
exercise, is it not?
|
|
MR DAVIES: Off the
top of my head I am not aware of any where it has really
inconvenienced us in any way.
|
|
MR PRITCHARD: The
tourism one, Minister, referring to statutory registration
as against that. That is more of an irritant.
|
|
MR DAVIES: We are
very much at the beginning of that stage. The Wales
Tourist Board, which is our tourism arm, which is accountable
to me as a minister, they are very clear that they want
to introduce a statutory registration scheme for accommodation,
hotels and bed and breakfast accommodation, to raise
the quality. They feel the best way to do this is to
have a statutory registration scheme. They have widely
consulted on this, they have now put the scheme to me
and I am considering that and what my and the Government's
response will be to that. If we wanted to introduce
that it would actually require effectively primary legislation
and we are still very much at the early stages of negotiating
with the UK Government, in this case the DCMS, on that.
|
|
LAURA McALLISTER:
When you were talking about the Structural Fund operation
in Wales you said that Wales is currently performing
at a level that is at least comparable with the English
regions. I wonder if you can say a little bit about
how advantageous it has been for Wales to have, for
want of a better term, a new tier of democracy in terms
of operation of the Structural Fund. Clearly areas like
Merseyside do not have the same coherence in terms of
institutional structures, nor the same accountability
links. Given the new structure of multi-level governance
that we have in Wales now, will we be able to utilise
or exhaust all of the potential for accountability links
between local authority level, the new tiers that have
been partly created through post-devolution and the
National Assembly itself, and from there to Member State
level and to the European Commission? There are direct
comparisons that could be drawn pre and post-devolution
in terms of operation of if not Objective 1 then Objective
2 programmes.
|
|
MR DAVIES: Sure. The
previous Structural Fund round reminded me of the distillation
of Schleswig-Holstein question when only three people
ever knew how it worked, one was mad, one was dead and
one had forgotten what it was all about. There was a
complete lack of transparency and accountability, frankly,
in the way that the previous Structural Fund was conducted.
You could say that the present system has an overdose
of scrutiny and transparency but it is a very complex
programme. It is the largest programme that Wales has
ever had to deal with. It was decided some time ago
that the way in which this would be developed would
be on the basis of a combination of local partnerships
based on the 15 local authorities within the Objective
1 area and, as Viv would know as a former chief executive
of a local authority, the local authorities were at
the heart of this process involved with the private
business sector on the one hand but also the voluntary
sector on the other. There is a huge amount of accountability
built into the system. The whole idea is that there
is a large degree of responsibility on the local communities
to come forward with ideas for regenerating the local
communities.
|
|
I am not sure if Wales has more coherence
compared with Merseyside and South Yorkshire but it
could be argued because it is a larger area and the
area of Objective 1 is so diverse; it covers my own
City of Swansea, it covers the former coal mining areas
of the Valleys as well as rural West and North West
Wales. I think because of the scale of the programme
and the diversity of the communities it covers we have
got it right. At one level there is local delivery through
partnerships but also there is a strategic overview
provided by the strategic partnerships within each of
the programmes and also accountability to me as Minister.
It is a huge programme, it is quite complex, but the
evidence is that we are beginning to deliver.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: Could
I go back to inward investment. If I am a Japanese manufacturer,
whatever it is that is currently popular, and I decide
that I want to invest in Wales because it has a good
labour force and all the rest of it, who do I come to
to get my sweeteners?
|
|
MR DAVIES: Personally
I do not have any sweeteners for inward investment.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: You
know what I mean: grants, favourable terms.
|
|
MR DAVIES: Informally
approaches can be made at a political level and official
level. The way it works formally is that the Welsh Development
Agency has lead responsibility for this. It was immensely
successful through the 1970s and 1980s at this. Wales
has been very successful at attracting inward investment,
particularly American companies. American companies
are by far the most significant investors.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: Say
I am an American.
|
|
MR DAVIES: There will
be an account manager within that particular arm of
the Development Agency who will be assigned to work
with that company.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: What
is your accountability? Are you part of the exercise
at all?
|
|
MR DAVIES: Formally
the WDA is accountable to me and I meet regularly with
the chairman and chief executive to review progress.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: Accountable
to you?
|
|
MR DAVIES: Accountable
to me, as is the Welsh Tourist Board. Two of the largest
quangos, ASPBs, are accountable to me.
|
|
HUW VAUGHAN THOMAS:
In relation to the WDA and the WTB, how do you see the
primary powers that we have in Wales on those? Are there
areas in which you would like to see that expanded in
terms of greater control by the Assembly or are they
adequate at present?
|
|
MR DAVIES: I suppose
it shaves into the other paper I gave as the former
Minister for Assembly Business. I think what has been
remarkable has been the transformation and the transition
from the old Welsh Office to the new National Assembly
and Welsh Assembly Government. As I said in my evidence
on my current portfolio, I feel that the powers I have
as a minister are adequate. Obviously there are specific
areas which I have identified where we would want to
have greater powers and we are in negotiation with the
UK Government on that, but generally I am aware across
all the portfolios of very few instances where the current
constitutional settlement has been defective in that
it has not allowed us to do things. The major constraint
often has been whether there would be parliamentary
time for particular legislation, primary legislation,
at Westminster but that would be an issue for any Whitehall
department. If you look at our success rate in terms
of bids and the outturn in terms of Whitehall legislation
then I think we have probably outperformed most Whitehall
departments.
|
|
PAUL VALERIO: That
is something that your colleague ministers have said
all along, there seems to be consistency in this. We
usually respond to them by saying A it is working very
well at the moment when you have a sympathetic government
but how is the situation likely to be if there was not
necessarily a sympathetic political partner on the other
side of it or, indeed, some of the proposals you had
were of a more controversial nature ?
|
|
MR DAVIES: I cannot
foresee the future but all things being equal then I
imagine relationships would not be more problematic.
All I can say, however, is given the scale of the change,
which I think is probably the most significant in terms
of constitutional change since the Reform Acts in the
19th Century and the introduction of universal
suffrage, what I think is quite remarkable is how well
that has been managed and how smoothly it has been managed.
I suspect that would still be the case even if there
was a government of a different political persuasion
at Westminster or vice versa, if the situation was to
change here and there was a Labour Government at Westminster
and another party in power down here. The British constitution
is immensely flexible and I think the present constitutional
settlement has been very flexible. We have gone from
the position of having a minority administration through
to having a majority administration through to a coalition.
The settlement has reflected that change. The point
I want to make is about the corporate body nature of
the National Assembly which is almost unique, certainly
in the UK, and in a way I think that has been one of
the major constraints on the way the Assembly has worked
rather than whether we have more or fewer powers.
|
|
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH:
You said A very well managed , did you mean managed
by civil servants, by politicians, by whom?
|
|
MR DAVIES: I think
everybody.
|
|
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH:
If you had to give the crown of honour to one group,
who would you give it to?
|
|
MR DAVIES: Politicians.
This is Team Wales, both of us.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: Let
us clear one point up. Your powers of accountability
on the WDA or the Welsh Tourist Board are exactly the
same as those exercised by the Secretary of State previously?
|
|
MR DAVIES: That is
right.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: So,
in fact, there are no additional powers and the relationship
and accountability is the same in the sense that you
exercise the same powers and the same legislation on
accountability.
|
|
Yes.
|
|
HUW VAUGHAN THOMAS:
There is a feature in the sense that your area has very
broad powers that you have inherited. You build on the
general competences of local authorities to work with
them, the WDA has broad powers, so has WTB, and yet
some of your colleagues are circumscribed by very tight
bits of secondary legislation. Is there any area - you
have mentioned power generation, perhaps we can return
to that later on - in terms of WTA and WTB in which
you feel yourself circumscribed?
|
|
MR DAVIES: I am not
certainly not aware of any and the WDA have not raised
any specific concerns.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: How
are they more accountable than they were before? The
Secretary of State exercised his powers, he had the
power to direct, he had the power to appoint, he had
the power to send a remit letter, etc., exactly the
same kind of powers that you are exercising. How are
they more accountable now than they were under the Secretary
of State?
|
|
MR DAVIES: You are
quite right in that, Ted, but I want to distinguish
between the formal systems and the informal systems
which I think have affected the whole nature of the
relationship. Certainly my understanding and view of
the situation prior to 1999 was that, yes, the chair
and the board of the WDA were appointed by the Secretary
of State but, almost inevitably, the centre of political
activity was in London, whereas we have 60 or 70 Members
here, a Cabinet of nine, and the whole way in which
the relationship is managed is very different. I think
that is both at a political level but also at an official
level.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: Surely
you are accountable to the Assembly?
|
|
MR DAVIES: Yes.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: As the
Secretary of State is accountable to Westminster. At
the moment if something happens to the WDA then you
are accountable to the Assembly for it but is the Secretary
of State still technically accountable to Parliament,
Westminster, or has the whole responsibility been devolved
down?
|
|
MR DAVIES: Yes.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: Devolved
entirely.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: Totally?
|
|
MR DAVIES: Yes.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: So London
has nothing to do with it?
|
|
MR DAVIES: Under the
former powers of the Welsh Office the Secretary of State
was responsible or accountable to Parliament.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: That
has gone?
|
|
MR DAVIES: In terms
of the WDA, yes.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: Could
I explore further with you this relationship with the
DTI. You quite rightly point out in your paper that
like Jane Hutt or Jane Davidson you have not got the
same relationship because in a sense the powers remain
basically with DTI in primary legislation and they do
not spawn subordinate legislation in the same way and,
therefore, the concordats, the use of concurrent powers,
become more important, let us say. How many concurrent
powers do you have with DTI ministers? When I say that
I mean that they have to have your approval to do certain
things as opposed to consultation.
|
|
MR PRITCHARD: Very
few areas indeed. The only substantive areas - I am
sure there are tiny little ones - are areas such as
regulatory reform affecting functions of the Assembly
where in effect the Assembly is a formal consultee.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: Consultee
or statutory?
|
|
MR PRITCHARD: That
is right. Before Westminster, or DTI in this case, can
reform some regulatory regime that affects Assembly
functions they actually need de facto Andrew
Davies agreement to that. So in a sense there is almost
a reverse accountability.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: You
have a veto power to say the least?
|
|
MR PRITCHARD: Yes.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: De
facto or de jure?
|
|
MR PRITCHARD: I suppose
it is de jure. We do have an effective block
on reform. We would not want to in most cases but that
is the net effect of it if there was a disagreement
or something.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: So any
DTI regulation governing business that could affect
Welsh business has to be approved by you as opposed
to just being consulted, you have to sign off as well?
|
|
MR PRITCHARD: Yes,
if it affects the Assemblys functions
|
|
MR DAVIES: Can I give
another example which was not DTI but a recent example
with the DCMS on the area of tourism where there were
proposals by DCMS to reform the structure of the British
Tourist Association and the British Tourist Council.
There was very extensive consultation with us on the
Wales Tourist Board as well as with our Scots colleagues.
I think the outcome was quite significantly different
from the original proposals as a result of consultation
that took place. We feel that has strengthened the position
of Welsh tourism and Wales Tourist Board and ourselves
in the new arrangements which gave a direct line of
accountability for the British Tourist Association to
us which previously was not there.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: Following
that, the other thing that strikes one is whereas in
the case of education or health, the overwhelming, huge
part of the budget is totally devolved as well. In the
case of your area of functions and responsibilities
DTI spends money in Wales that does not fall within
your budget, is that right?
|
|
MR PRITCHARD: Yes.
Some.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: What
sort of proportion are we talking about?
|
|
MR PRITCHARD: A very
small proportion. They are pretty niche activities to
do with some very specialised technical support systems
and the like. There are some advisory facilities, indeed
the one you were dealing with this morning, Minister,
where it is a partnership basis and it works pretty
well. We get the best of the service across the UK and
we can give it a Wales edge by working and offering
more resources to it.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: What
was this morning?
|
|
MR DAVIES: The Manufacturing
Advisory Service which I launched yesterday in Port
Talbot, in the old research and development facility
at the Corus Steelworks. It was going to be purely a
DTI initiative. This was a UK roll-out of the Manufacturing
Advisory Service. We put the case very forcefully that
we felt there should be a specifically Welsh input into
that involving higher education, in this case Cardiff
University and UWIC, and the DTI accepted our arguments.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: Was
it a DTI budget, entirely financed by them but influenced
by yourselves?
|
|
MR PRITCHARD: We topped
it up.
|
|
MR DAVIES: We enhanced
it to make it work for Wales. We felt we had the best
of both worlds.
|
|
EIRA DAVIES: In your
paper you quoted that the devolution settlement has
clearly provided a framework capable of giving good
government in Wales. The word A framework suggests that
there is something more to be built up on there. We
have also heard in previous evidence the importance
of getting the right tools for the job. Do you feel
that you have got the right tools, all the tools, for
the job of effecting economic regeneration and perhaps
closing the gap between the Wales GDP and the rest of
the UK? Have you got the powers to do that and to move
the agenda forward in Wales?
|
|
MR DAVIES: I think
we do. Obviously I have itemised areas where I think
they may be increased at the margins but certainly in
terms of the mainstream effort in terms of policy development
and implementation, I have the powers and the agencies
who are accountable to me also have the powers to do
it. I think the real challenge is changing the culture
within Wales. We have an economy that was dominated
by the old staple industries, the old smokestack industries,
which have largely gone. We have a much more diverse
economy now. We have a problem, for example, in that
we have generated in the past relatively few entrepreneurs.
We may not have been the most innovative perhaps. I
think the challenge before us is as much cultural as
it is in terms of policy. A lot of my job I see as trying
to change the culture, which is obviously outside the
issue of particular powers.
|
|
One has to put into context as well
that the Chancellor of the Exchequer probably has as
much influence, or more influence, on the health of
the Welsh economy as on the UK economy in what he does
in terms of the taxation regime and other measures that
he might want to introduce.
|
|
VIVIENNE SUGAR: That
leads nicely into my question which is about financial
incentives to business. Other countries have decided
that tax varying powers, credit zones and so on, are
a useful part of the toolbox for the job. You do not
have those powers. It may be the reason that you say
you do not want them at the moment, your powers are
adequate, is because you would not want to exercise
them but you do not have the power to stop somebody
else exercising them. Would you like to comment on that?
|
|
MR DAVIES: I think
the whole area of tax credits is an extremely interesting
one and clearly the Chancellor has been influenced by
the American experience, as I was when I was out there
recently, the use by state governments of tax credits.
I think the imaginative use of tax credits is very interesting.
In fact, we did press the Chancellor for regional R&D
tax credits because, as you may be aware, there is geographically,
spatially, a disproportionate concentration in London
and the South East, or the South East, certainly in
R&D. So we pushed for a regional tax credit system
for R&D. The Chancellor at that time was not persuaded
but he is keeping an open mind and we continue to press
the case for that.
|
|
VIVIENNE SUGAR: I
would like to pursue that further with a more specific
example. Your role includes energy policy. I am not
sure of the extent to which this is coming up against
UK Government policy and how much of it is European
but there has been an issue about gas supply for new
industry in South Wales and seemingly a lack of power
to be able to resolve the issue, to assist with the
level of investment that is needed. Could you comment
on that?
|
|
MR DAVIES: I think
the problem has been the market. There has been a market
failure. We find this in all sorts of particular areas
in Wales. For many operators Wales is not a profitable
market, for example on broadband telecommunications
and that is why I announced back in July a , 100 million
investment into rolling out broadband across Wales because
existing provision was so poor. I think it is the same
with gas supplies. In fact, we are in the process of
discussing with two major suppliers, one multinational
supplier, about the import of liquid natural gas into
the Milford Haven area and working with Transco about
building a pipeline to service that supply. I do not
think it is on the regulatory or statutory basis that
we have had problems. Up until now it has not been a
profitable market but given the decline in gas production
in the North Sea then clearly that is now a very good
prospect for these companies and that is what they are
looking to develop.
|
|
VIVIENNE SUGAR: So
you do have the powers to resolve that issue?
|
|
MR DAVIES: I think
we are in the process of doing so now.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: Regional
tax credits for R&D, does the Scottish Parliament
and Scottish Executive have the power to bring those
about?
|
|
MR DAVIES: No.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: It is
not a power that is devolved at all?
|
|
MR PRITCHARD: It is
Inland Revenue.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: Besides
the electricity one you identified, are there any other
powers the Scottish Executive has in your area that
you do not have?
|
|
MR PRITCHARD: The
examples the Minister has put in the paper are the only
ones that are there. Indeed, in the tourism one the
same constraints apply as in Wales, it is a GB power.
Really where it is sharp is on energy I think, the power
station issue.
|
|
PETER PRICE: Can I
follow up a remark you made a few minutes ago about
the nature of joint regulation made by the DTI and yourself.
In the majority of cases are these UK or are they England
and Wales? You were illustrating how you gain from influencing
the UK or it may be England and Wales joint regulation.
If you were to gain primary powers would this lead to
separate regulation in Wales and no longer having that
influence?
|
|
MR DAVIES: There are
some areas obviously where we would have separate functions,
I need to get details on those. A lot of the regulations
we deal with originate from Europe, for example on the
management of waste we are getting Waste Directives,
like the End of Life Vehicle Directive, and we are looking
in that area at how we might implement that because
obviously there has been a problem with the disposal
of fridges and I think the disposal of cars is going
to be much more problematic. We are looking at proposals
for how we might deal with that. I think it is a combination
of EU derived, or originated, Directives and legislation.
I do not know about specific examples.
|
|
MR PRITCHARD: I could
not give you a specific answer. We can perhaps come
back to Carys with some numbers on that because some
will be England and Wales, some will be Great Britain,
some will be UK and, as the Minister said, an increasing
number of them are from Europe.
|
|
PETER PRICE: What
is the feeling of the importance of regulations which
are UK as compared with England and Wales? What has
the big impact? What do you feel, is it likely to be
mainly the big impact ones are England and Wales or
UK?
|
|
MR PRITCHARD: Employment
law.
|
|
MR DAVIES: I think
as David just said it is mainly employment law, health
and safety.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: As I
understand it, if I can sum up the general position,
the main constraints on your activities are cash, obviously,
and Europe. In the relationship with Europe you have
got a series of ways of negotiating inside the British
delegation which makes sure that your views get put
properly to the Commission and to the Council of Ministers
and those are the constraints on what you want to do
rather than any legal or constitutional prohibitions?
|
|
MR DAVIES: Certainly
that has been my experience.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: So you
are operating within that particular framework and obviously
from what you tell us it seems to be working. If the
framework was larger do you think your activities would
become greater?
|
|
MR DAVIES: When you
say the A framework , what do you mean?
|
|
LORD RICHARD: If you
had more powers you would still have cash constraints.
|
|
MR DAVIES: I would
like to refer to my other paper.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: Your
Annex 2.
|
|
MR DAVIES: Paragraph
six in my paper as former Minister for Assembly Business.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: Annex
2 on the question of the wind farm. There are two kinds
of problems in these paragraphs, one is you did not
have the power and the other one is you wished you had
the power to overrule local authorities, is that right?
Talk us through Annex 2.
|
|
MR PRITCHARD: Cefn
Croes.
|
|
MR DAVIES: Currently
we have an influence or role in any planning consents
for power stations up to 50 megawatts. Anything over
50 megawatts is decided by DTI. We do not have any formal
role in that because on one level the planning authority
is the local authority and it is the DTI that has the
statutory power. The way in which we respond, like over
Cefn Croes, we have to be very careful in terms of not
impinging either on the powers of the local authority
on the one hand or the DTI on the other. Our powers
in that are fairly constrained.
|
|
PAUL VALERIO: Would
you like more powers?
|
|
MR DAVIES: Yes. That
is something that we have been in negotiation through
the Secretary of State for Wales with the DTI on. We
have had several meetings at political and official
level with Whitehall on these powers. That negotiation
is still ongoing.
|
|
PAUL VALERIO: It occurs
to me that with your other hat, tourism, the proliferation
of wind generating sites also has an impact and it would
be necessary that any powers would be centralised in
one body.
|
|
MR DAVIES: Onshore
wind farms often can be very contentious, especially
in areas like Mid Wales, as the Cefn Croes decision
demonstrated. There is no actual concrete evidence that
it has a direct effect on tourism. It is often stated
that is the case but I am not aware of any research
that shows that is the case.
|
|
HUW VAUGHAN THOMAS:
What I am not sure about is I can see the desire to
tidy it up and to have the same kind of decision making
as in Scotland but what difference would it have made
to the outcome of this?
|
|
MR DAVIES: We feel,
for example, in the area of sustainable energy, renewable
energies production, given the problems with global
warning and carbon emissions that in broad terms there
is a huge capacity in Wales for using renewable energy
sources. We feel it would be much more in line with
our major policy areas, like energy production and renewables,
if we had the power to deal with applications over 50
megawatts. That is not to say we would approve them
necessarily but we feel it would be more appropriate
for us to make other decisions rather than it to be
done by the DTI.
|
|
MR PRITCHARD: I think
the general feeling is that this is an anomaly. Ministers
can make big decisions about whether there is a new
motorway, big infrastructure schemes that impact upon
the economy of Wales, and this one seems to be a big
infrastructure issue that is inappropriately cited outside
of Wales. We are grown up and big enough to be able
to make the decisions.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: If I
had to categorise that particular intervention it is
A please, we have got quite a lot of power now, we think
we can handle quite a lot of power in the future, this
anomaly should not happen.
|
|
MR PRITCHARD: In this
area.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: Do not
look so tentative, Mr Davies.
|
|
MR DAVIES: Sorry,
I thought Sir Michael was going to talk first.
|
|
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH:
You have the comparison with the Scottish position,
which is a very good point, but in practice presumably
you co-operate with those responsible for policy on
energy in Scotland very actively and, in fact, you are
always looking over your shoulder to see if they do
it better, I imagine. This is a question in pure ignorance
but that is what I imagine to be the case.
|
|
MR DAVIES: Yes, we
have a very constructive dialogue with our Scottish
colleagues and friendly competition.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: Is the
playing field even?
|
|
MR DAVIES: I am not
aware within my portfolio where the powers that the
Scots have under the constitutional settlement actually
disadvantage us. As I say, I think there will be issues
which are outside the area of legislation and in primary
powers.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: I am
not clear what we are supposed to infer from these two
paragraphs on Cefn Croes and Rassau. In the case of
Cefn Croes wind farm you point out that the decision
was taken against the recommendation of officials by
the council. You then have a part explaining about the
countryside commissions and then you have got this statement
that the Energy Minister decided to approve. If you
had been the Energy Minister, if you had been the minister
responsible, would you have approved or not approved
this scheme?
|
|
MR DAVIES: It is difficult
for me to say.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: What
was the burden of your evidence?
|
|
MR DAVIES: That was
part of the problem, that because our power was constrained
we had to make sure we did not infringe either the decision
of the local authority or the DTI in this case. It was
trying to walk a very fine tightrope in terms of expressing
a view. It is difficult for me to judge on this particular
case because it has gone but in both cases I think it
was an issue that we were not able to really influence
a decision which we felt was of importance within Wales.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: On the
second case, again I do not think it would be wrong
for any reader to infer from this that you would have
overruled the local planning authority and said A go
ahead because of the regional economic implications
of it. Is that right? But you did not have the power
to do it.
|
|
MR DAVIES: For the
sake of argument we might have said that we felt that
it was of strategic significance for a deprived area
to have a power station.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: And
you did not have a statutory responsibility in either
of those cases to make a decision?
|
|
MR DAVIES: No. Obviously
access to energy is a big issue, as Mrs Sugar has said.
Access to power is a big issue, electricity in South
West Wales, for example. Power generation is a big issue
and that is one of the reasons why we are delighted
that General Electric are building their new gas fired
power station at the Baglan Energy Park. Obviously more
indigenous power generation within Wales we felt would
be to our economic advantage.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: I think
we ought to move on to the second part of what it is
that we want from you on evidence. That is really the
work of the Assembly as such. I think we have all got
questions about it, the capacity of the Assembly to
cope with what it is doing at the moment and if it is
given other powers would it be able to cope with them.
Let me start with the first one, the corporate body
status. As a lawyer I really do not understand this.
It seems to me absolutely anomalous. It runs against
almost every political current one can think of and
it is inevitable, it seems to me, that it will break
down. What about the relationship between the two, the
Assembly and the executive, the government, how is that
changing?
|
|
MR DAVIES: As I said
in my paper, clearly the original vision as laid down
in the Voice for Wales White Paper was what was then
a local government model for a committee structure but
during the consultation it was clear, particularly from
the business community, that it was felt an executive
form of government was preferable. I am not a constitution
lawyer but I understand under the Devolution of the
Government of Wales Act you can see that the Act changed
quite substantially as it went through. I think an executive
form of government was grafted on to the corporate body
status. It affects the way in which we work at all sorts
of levels, from the Civil Service, the fact that the
Permanent Secretary is the Permanent Secretary accountable
to the National Assembly or is he accountable to the
Assembly Government, the executive, even down to the
level of ----
|
|
LORD RICHARD: What
is the answer to that question?
|
|
MR DAVIES: On a day-to-day
basis then he clearly works to the Government but also
he is responsible ultimately for the staff who work
for the Office of the Presiding Officer. Although de
jure we are still a corporate body, de facto
we have moved to a clearer separation of powers between
the legislature on the one hand and the executive on
the other.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: Do you
not think that ought to be tidied up?
|
|
MR DAVIES: I am sure
the Permanent Secretary will answer for himself but
my own view is that it would make for greater clarity
if there was a clearer separation. I think it has affected
the way the Assembly works in all sorts of ways. Even
down to the situation we have with our e-mail system
where, it may seem bizarre, we have problems because
everybody, including officials, Assembly Members, support
staff and officials, civil servants, is on the same
e-mail system, whereas in Parliament you have a separate
system for Parliament and a separate system for Government.
We are increasingly moving towards a separation, whether
it is in the Office of the Presiding Officer who, having
his own budget now, clearly will be much more responsible
for his own staff.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: The
people who are sitting here with you this afternoon
to help, who are they responsible to?
|
|
MR DAVIES: The officials
who work for David are accountable to me. It has always
been a very grey area actually. If the accounting officer
for the Civil Service is the Permanent Secretary, it
is a very grey area.
|
|
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH:
Who has the ultimate power over performance pay? I do
not want to ask about locally but just, say, the Clerk
to the Assembly or other officials because performance
pay is quite essential. When they brought it in in Whitehall
it was laid down that the Clerks of the two Houses should
be paid like High Court judges so that they did not
have to suck up to the Government or, indeed, to anybody
else.
|
|
MR DAVIES: Obviously
the Assembly Civil Service belong to the British Civil
Service as well and I think that helps in terms of relationships
in Whitehall and the free flow of civil servants from
one to the other. On the specific issue of performance
pay, I presume the Permanent Secretary is ultimately
responsible.
|
|
MR PRITCHARD: Ultimately
the Permanent Secretary. There is not a political judgment
taken about the pay of individual civil servants, it
is the Permanent Secretary who operates that system
within the general framework of the home Civil Service.
|
|
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH:
It does not lead to clarity at all, it cannot do. There
was, for example, an exchange between the Permanent
Secretary and the chairman of one of the committees
of the National Assembly for Wales which was quite outwith
anything that had ever been written in Whitehall, quite
outwith, and it would have just been unthinkable.
|
|
MR DAVIES: The construction
and operation of the subject committees in a way goes
to the heart of the problem in that as a minister I
am a member of the relevant committee, which is the
Economic Development Committee, so I am a full member
but at the same time I am also accountable to that committee.
The committee has a scrutiny role as a select committee
would in Westminster, but they also have a policy role.
In some ways I think that is an advantage but it is
also a disadvantage. For example, committees will have
investigations and develop policy in a particular area
and maybe it is my role as a minister, as it is with
my other colleagues, to respond as government to that.
I have interpreted that on the basis that as a member
of the committee, or formal member of the committee,
I think it is better if I step outside that and then
respond because there are all sorts of problems if you
are part of the committee and you then have to respond
as minister. This is one of the problems we have as
a corporate body and the day-to-day operation of committees
reflects that.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: What
about access? If I was an opposition member of the committee
and your colleague there, I am not sure who he is working
for but he may work for me and would be obliged to make
available to me the benefit of his thoughts, wisdom
and insights, perceptions and, most important of all,
pieces of paper, do I have the right to go to him and
say A What is your advice on x, y and z ?
|
|
MR DAVIES: The system
has evolved.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: Just
as well.
|
|
MR DAVIES: Particularly
when we had a minority administration and it was unclear
who had executive or decision making powers, at that
time the committees in many cases felt they were the
executive or decision making body, at that stage it
was very unclear. That may just be because it reflected
the political reality that no party had a real majority.
I think officials did feel very uncomfortable because
on the one hand they were reporting to ministers but
at the same time they were being requested by committees
to produce papers. I think we have moved to a clearer
separation but often committees will ask for Commission
papers or Commission information and increasingly that
is done through the minister, through myself for example,
and then I will ask officials to do that.
|
|
PAUL VALERIO: How
relevant to the numbers is the maintenance of ministers
on committees? If the ministers were to be removed from
all the committees, would that create problems regarding
the proportion of members on the committees and therefore
make some things unviable?
|
|
MR DAVIES: If that
were to happen I do not think it would actually affect
the amount of work on officials or the pressure on officials.
That is my own view.
|
|
MR PRITCHARD: It is
difficult to say. The practical reality is that - to
make it personal - I work for Andrew but it is within
the Civil Service framework and, if you like, the big
line manager is the Permanent Secretary but day-to-day
the reality is I take my instructions and I am accountable
to Andrew for delivering his agenda.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: Not
the Assembly?
|
|
MR PRITCHARD: I do
not feel that, no. I think that is the arrangement that
has evolved over a period of time. When it comes to
a committee I am clear in my own mind, and my team is
clear, that when we are sitting at the committee, and
I sit next to Andrew on the committee, I am there supporting
Andrew, providing merely information, factual information,
to the committee. We contribute. For example, the committee
has been doing a major study on energy and for that
I have got one of the best energy experts in Wales working
in my team. It would have been silly for that person
not to be able to contribute their expertise to the
work of the committee, but that person's accountability
continues to me and then to Andrew. Increasingly the
committees are developing their own capacity to do research
and that is probably right.
|
|
PETER PRICE: Can I
follow up on the corporate body side of things. You
were saying about the policy development role of committees.
How would it change, and your relationship with the
committee in its policy development role, if it was
clear that the executive was the corporate body?
|
|
MR DAVIES: Sorry?
|
|
PETER PRICE: If the
corporate body structure changed to reflect the reality
as it is now, how would that affect the policy development
role of the committees?
|
|
MR DAVIES: I am open
to correction on this but I understand that the Scottish
Parliament works in a broadly similar way to our committees
in terms of their policy development role and ministers
are not members of the committees there, so they have
a dual role, as we do, in terms of scrutiny and also
policy development. My view is that it would not necessarily
change that. I would not want to see the committees
change into a select committee model where it is largely
scrutiny of government decisions, I think having both
roles is beneficial and has added hugely to the capacity
within the Assembly to make policy.
|
|
PETER PRICE: Are you
saying that such a change would mean that you would
now step outside the committee in terms of membership
of it?
|
|
MR DAVIES: Yes.
|
|
PETER PRICE: If so,
would that not lead to more of this select committee
scrutiny type role rather than participating in policy
formation?
|
|
MR DAVIES: There is
a danger but my understanding of the Scottish system
is that that has not happened, the committees do have
a very clear policy making role.
|
|
EIRA DAVIES: Could
I just follow up with a question on the issue of confidentiality.
As a minister and a member of committee I can appreciate
the need to be open and transparent but there are times
when confidentiality has to be considered. On that basis,
would it be best to remove the minister as a member
of the committee?
|
|
MR DAVIES: I think
on the whole members and the committees themselves would
respect the need for confidentiality. For example, in
my area that is commercial confidentiality and I have
never been aware of cases where that has not been accepted.
We do have a commitment as a government and as an institution,
particularly led by the First Minister, about being
as open as possible in terms of sharing information.
The presumption on our policy is information should
be made available unless there are clear reasons for
that not happening. That is the basis on which we operate.
|
|
VIVIENNE SUGAR: It
seems to me that we might be following different principles
for different tiers of government here. You are saying
that you think there might well be a need for separation
in the Civil Service as to who is accountable to whom
but you would be loath to see separation between scrutiny
and policy development. In local government the senior
officials are appointed by the whole of the council
and are responsible to the council and serve both the
executive and the scrutiny arms and local government
committees now are forbidden from having both a scrutiny
and a policy development role. It seems to me we seem
to be moving on completely different principles for
very similar issues.
|
|
MR DAVIES: I accept
that. I can only really speak from my own experience
over the last three and a half years. I think the corporate
body status we have has been unclear and clearly it
has caused practical problems in decision making.
|
|
LAURA McALLISTER:
This has partly been answered but not entirely. You
mentioned, I think, that members of committees can ask
for information if they do it via yourself to your officer.
Do they get it? If it is not confidential, do they get
it? If we asked the subject committee chairs, in what
circumstances would they not get it? Have you had complaints
from the committees that the information has not been
entirely forthcoming?
|
|
MR DAVIES: I think
I would say it is only in those areas where there may
be issues of commercial confidentiality. Where information
has been asked for, unless there are reasons of commercial
confidentiality for example, we have always provided
that information for committee members.
|
|
MR PRITCHARD: I can
only think of one other area and that is if, in fact,
you have been in correspondence with a ministry in Whitehall
and it is covered by general sensitivity and it would
not be effective outing that sort of correspondence.
|
|
MR DAVIES: We follow
the principle that if, for example, the Secretary of
State for Wales wishes to divulge correspondence then
that is a matter for him but as a matter of course we
would not do it unless we had his express permission.
|
|
LAURA McALLISTER:
Is there an issue of timing because obviously the timing
of the release of information is a pretty powerful mechanism.
We have read the literature and we have already seen
some members of the committees complaining that they
do not see material when they want to see it. I am not
suggesting that you deliberately delay the dissemination
of information but in terms of the actual timetable
of meetings, plenaries and so on, is that a practical
problem?
|
|
MR DAVIES: I think
if there are delays it is largely down to capacity,
it is just sheer volume of work. David can speak as
a civil servant but certainly my impression, and before
I took this job I had regular meetings with all policy
divisions, I used to go and talk to civil servants from
the top of the Civil Service right down to the administrative
officers and just get their views and this was a clear
story that came through, that officials did feel under
huge pressure given the scale of change where the Welsh
Office was responsible for three politicians, the Secretary
of State and two junior ministers, who spent much of
their week not in Cardiff but in London, and now there
are 60 or 70 Members, nine ministers and a committee
cycle where subject committees meet every two weeks,
you have other standing committees, so the volume of
work on civil servants is immense. I think if there
are any delays it is almost exclusively down to the
fact that----
|
|
LAURA McALLISTER:
We need more civil servants is the sub text of that.
|
|
MR DAVIES: I think
there are issues and it comes back to the point I made
that the Civil Service previously was not largely a
policy making body.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: However
well intentioned that you want to be more open, if you
move towards a full scale cabinet system of government,
which is what you are going to do, then there is an
inclination at least, if not a tendency, to become more
closed, to control information more to the Assembly.
For example, we have been told that if ministers apply
for legislation in Whitehall and there is correspondence
between yourself and Whitehall ministers about getting
a piece of legislation, this is all now hush-hush, this
is already part of the closed world. Is there not a
danger that gradually more and more this will happen?
|
|
MR DAVIES: No. As
I said, we have a commitment to freedom of information.
We publish cabinet minutes and, as far as we are aware,
this is the only case where cabinet minutes are published
six weeks after the meeting. Wherever possible our code
of conduct is that we will publish information.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: Say
you made a bid for legislation to a minister in Whitehall,
you would be in a position to divulge this to the committee
and the ministerial response from Whitehall would be
available to the committee?
|
|
MR DAVIES: Effectively
we make our bid for inclusion in the Queen's Speech
public knowledge and the gist of the bids that we make
as part of the Queen's Speech are in the public domain.
What may not be in the public domain are individual
items of correspondence unless the specific Whitehall
minister is content for that to be in the public domain.
|
|
HUW VAUGHAN THOMAS:
I can see in a sense that you are participating in a
committee for which, if I can simplify, you have at
times not to disclose information, therefore in a sense
you are already not sharing in the committee. Equally
that committee may be structured in such a way that
it is pursuing or wishes to examine a policy which you
may not wish to examine or you may not wish to accept.
In that circumstance is it possible for a minister to
be both a committee member and to be scrutinised by
that committee?
|
|
MR DAVIES: Obviously
it is a very unique situation to be in. You have to
be aware of your dual role, or our dual role, in that
situation. My practice, as I am sure is that of my other
colleagues, is to be as open as possible, to provide
as much information as possible within the character
we have established. Clearly there are areas where we
would not want to divulge information for all sorts
of reasons, particularly commercial confidentiality.
A recent example was the ongoing negotiations regarding
the attempt to keep ASW in production and subsequently
when it went into receivership the negotiations that
had been between the receivers, ourselves and potential
purchasers, we obviously would not want that to be in
the public domain.
|
|
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH:
In a way you are saying that you are practising the
freedom of information policy along the lines of the
Labour Party Manifesto of 1997 rather than along the
lines of the Freedom of Information Act when they changed
their mind under pressure from the Home Office in 1999
or whenever it was. I think that is what it comes down
to, is it not? That is going to lead to difficulties
with Whitehall.
|
|
MR DAVIES: If it is
I think it is more of a perception than a reality. I
am not aware of any communications or any negotiations
between us and Whitehall that have been leaked or made
available. We have gone beyond the 1997 commitment on
Freedom of Information in terms of making information
available. I think we are far more open than maybe the
other legislatures in the UK.
|
|
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH:
More open than Scotland also?
|
|
MR DAVIES: We are
always looking to see what we can do in terms of making
information available wherever it is practicably possible.
In general terms we do not feel that freedom of information
is a barrier to government, in fact we feel it helps
the government.
|
|
MR PRITCHARD: Can
I just make one point to illustrate that. One of the
things that we will be doing, and I am sure it is ahead
of what other parts of the UK are doing, is on a very
regular basis Andrew will get advice from officials
on a whole range of issues and what we are piloting
at the moment ahead of going live with it is that advice
will in essence be publishable. Certainly the basic
analysis supporting that advice will be publishable.
The bit that will not be publishable, because it will
be counterproductive, will be specifically the judgments
and the advice on the evidence and that information
will be covered by protocol that is ahead of the rest
of the UK. As a civil servant who has worked for many
years in the Welsh Office I can only tell you what it
feels like and it feels entirely different when it comes
to sharing information and being comfortable with that.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: Sir
Humphrey is getting transparency.
|
|
MR DAVIES: Sir David
is.
|
|
MR PRITCHARD: Sir
David, in my case, would be nice.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: Can
we move on to the next issue, the assembly of the legislature.
|
|
PETER PRICE: I am
interested in pursuing the advantages of dealing with
things in primary legislative form rather than secondary.
You have drawn attention already to the wide scope of
the secondary legislative powers but the normal hierarchy
is that you find the principles in primary legislation
and you only need to delve into secondary legislation
for the detail. If the Assembly has only secondary legislative
powers and acquires more and more opportunities to encompass
the principles in the secondary legislation, does that
not lead to opacity in legislation?
|
|
MR DAVIES: Clearly
there is a potential for that. I have never worked in
Westminster but my impression, my close observation
on it, is that primary legislation is the engine that
drives the House of Commons and Parliament. Secondary
legislation does not have the same generative power
within the Assembly for all sorts of reasons. I spent
a lot of time as Minister for Assembly Business trying
to raise the awareness of the importance of secondary
legislation, not just within the Assembly but outside.
What I tried to do was to get the subject committees
to engage with the legislative process. Many of them
saw it as somehow outside their experience or their
powers and it was seen as somehow irrelevant to what
they did. Increasingly what we are doing now with my
ministerial colleagues is to engage at a very early
stage with the legislative process. For example, in
any policy initiatives on our part it is not just a
case of making the bid directly to Whitehall and through
the Secretary of State but engaging with the committee
in that policy formulation. For example, a classic case
was what was then the Education and Life-Long Committee,
a post-16 Education Committee which looked at the whole
area of post-16 education as part of the Education and
Training Action Group. The committee were very much
involved in the formulation of the policy and then subsequently
when the Learning and Skills Bill went through and the
secondary legislation which fell out of that was dealt
with, the committee then had an active role in terms
of driving the legislation. It has been quite a task
to get committees to engage in the process. I have to
say it has not been easy.
|
|
PETER PRICE: You have
given me an in-house answer in the sense that you can
pull out the principles and get the committee to focus
on those principles even if the principles are later
to be found in secondary legislation, but if we now
look outside the house, as it were, as far as the public
are concerned, the users of the laws you make, if both
principles and the mass of detail are all there in these
vast tomes of secondary legislation, does it not make
it very difficult for people to handle this new great
body of Welsh legislation?
|
|
MR DAVIES: Yes. On
the basis that the bulk of legislation is secondary
and subordinate rather than primary, yes. The other
thing is our systems for dealing with legislation are
immensely complex, I do not think anybody would describe
them as simple or straightforward. Byzantine is the
word that springs to mind. I do not think that derives
from the Government of Wales Act, I think it derived
largely from the National Assembly Advisory Group in
terms of recommending how this work should be dealt
with and the Standing Orders Commissioner, who drew
up the Standing Orders, was trying to put into operation
the recommendations of the Advisory Group. Maybe it
is unnecessarily complex and maybe the legislation does
not withstand that degree of scrutiny. My fear is that
committees see their role as scrutinising the legislative
process and not really having an input into that.
|
|
I think there is a wider issue which
is the point I make in point six. There has been a real
vacuum in policy making in Wales. I do not wish to be
critical in any way at all but I think in the Welsh
Office there was not any policy making expertise. One
of the challenges I saw, and one of the challenges for
me personally as Minister for Assembly Business, was
to engage with civil society, to help engender that
policy making culture. I think there have been huge
leaps forward within the Civil Service. We have sought
to engage with local authorities, the voluntary sector,
the higher education sector, for example. There are
centres of expertise developing as a direct result of
devolution. I think the deficiency is less on the mechanics
of our legislative process and more on the capacity
to generate more ideas or innovative thinking.
|
|
What I am saying really is the call
for primary legislation, of greater powers, however
you want to phrase it, is probably putting the cart
before the horse. In order to have primary legislation
you need policy and you need the ideas with which to
implement it.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: Can
you give us some idea of the volume of secondary legislation?
|
|
MR DAVIES: Certainly
within my portfolio there is very little secondary legislation.
The bulk of it is within education, health. I do not
have figures but obviously we can get that information
for you.
|
|
PETER PRICE: If I
may put one more point and that is the argument you
were putting a minute ago was first of all you have
got to get the horse, but having got your legislation
it does not really matter whether it is in primary form
or secondary form, the problems about the form of the
legislation are just found in methods of adoption in
their byzantine form, as you put it. That is to say
that pulling out principles into primary legislation
is not really important, you can get around that problem
in a different way through a different procedure. What
different procedure would address that problem?
|
|
MR DAVIES: I think
it is less the legislative process rather than the policy
making process that has been deficient. I am not aware
of any particular areas where we have failed to implement
through primary legislation our own primary needs through
the existing constitutional settlement. The system has
been extremely flexible and, as I said earlier on, we
have been very successful in bidding for parliamentary
time at Westminster. Many of the challenges we have
are less legislative, they may be budgetary, for example,
if compared with some of the things that Scotland have
done. We have decided to go down a particular route
because we wish to spend the money in a different way.
I really do feel it is an issue of capacity in terms
of policy making which is the biggest drawback. However,
I do feel our secondary legislative process is extremely
complex and I am not sure that it necessarily needs
to be as complex as it is.
|
|
HUW VAUGHAN THOMAS:
Your argument was about policies but in a sense policies
can be constrained by people's horizons and if that
horizon is set on secondary legislation then the fact
that you do not have primary powers does not enter into
it, whereas if you think you have got primary legislation
you could start thinking wider than the box.
|
|
MR DAVIES: In practice
I do not see the distinction because obviously we can
bid for parliamentary time at Westminster for primary
legislation. When you talk to people in the voluntary
sector or elsewhere and say A what can the Assembly
do , and I have done this to various organisations,
and say A in what ways can we help you through the legislative
process? , they have not actually thought of it in those
terms because their immediate thought is it is either
a Westminster issue or it is an issue affecting Brussels.
For example, in Cardiff, although it is beginning to
develop, there is no lobby culture. There is still a
presumption that if you want to change legislation you
do it either at Westminster level or at a European Brussels
level. I think people are beginning to become aware
that we can influence, we can change things, either
through the current constitutional settlement, through
primary legislation at Westminster or through our secondary
legislation. Most secondary legislation we deal with
now is as a result of the primary legislative process
at Westminster which obviously would also involve some
of our responses. However, there is, of course, a huge
raft of legislation which has been transferred to us
under the settlement, the Government of Wales Act, which
we can vary. Our organisations can seek to vary that
and they can influence our decisions on that. I am not
aware that has actually been done.
|
|
HUW VAUGHAN THOMAS:
I wondered if you were a business manager when the Assembly
carried out this internal review. One of the products
of that was the Rawlings Principles to transform the
way in which legislation was being handled at Whitehall.
How far have you and ministers tried to carry those
principles to Whitehall in your ministerial meetings
or in your bilateral relationships to try to lodge those
principles which the Welsh Assembly agreed to within
the Whitehall structure?
|
|
MR DAVIES: This has
been an ongoing dialogue with Whitehall colleagues and
at my invitation the Leader of the House of Commons,
Robin Cook, came down to the Assembly earlier in the
year and was very interested in not just our procedures,
which he thought were very commendable and I think maybe
influenced his reforms about how the House of Commons
works, but certainly in terms of how legislation is
dealt with. We were very pleased indeed at his proposals
to have a greater role for pre-legislative scrutiny
of Bills which we felt was a huge opportunity for us
because we would be part of that pre-legislative scrutiny,
both on the one hand as ministers but also it would
give a role for subject committees to engage in that
process. We felt it would have a huge advantage.
|
|
HUW VAUGHAN THOMAS:
The Rawlings Principles go further than just pre-legislation,
the way Whitehall Bills are drafted will almost automatically
rather than from Bill to Bill take account of the fact
that the secondary legislative power will reside in
the Assembly. How far did you get with that principle
with the Leader?
|
|
MR DAVIES: We are
dealing with a huge government machine in Whitehall,
with a system where it is not just on the political
side or even civil servants, you have got parliamentary
draftsmen who are used to a particular system. I think
in the past Wales was not on the radar at either political
or official level in this regard. It is an ongoing process
of education and raising awareness about our specific
needs. I think that has changed quite substantially.
I do not know whether David can say anything in terms
of an official level how those relationships have changed.
It is very much an ongoing relationship. It is very
difficult to say to parliamentary draftsmen from here
A we want this done in a particular way because I think
it is a process of educating them or working with them
in terms of their awareness of our needs.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: Do you
think the Assembly is big enough?
|
|
MR DAVIES: It is difficult
to say. Certainly those Members who have been Members
of Parliament have said that the workload of Members
is probably greater than on individual MPs.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: Even
without the constituency pressure?
|
|
MR DAVIES: Yes.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: There
is obviously less here.
|
|
MR DAVIES: Ted knows
the system in Parliament far better than I do. In the
Assembly many AMs will be members of at least one committee,
some are members of more than one committee, and as
I said committees meet every fortnight. In addition
to that there are the various scrutiny committees, audit,
the Legislation Committee, the standing committees,
such as the Equal Opportunities Committee, and others.
The workload just on committee alone is extremely onerous.
I know that there is a lot of pressure upon Members.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: Is it
a question of more Members? You were a business manager,
say you had to carry six Bills through that process
now as a piece of primary legislation, do you think
you have both the hours and the time, frankly? I do
not see how family friendly hours can cope with the
legislative programme. Do you think that you would have
to change the whole nature of the place to accommodate
these powers?
|
|
MR DAVIES: Obviously
if the Assembly had primary legislative powers it would
change the way we work. I still come back to the point
about the actual initiation of policy. I am not aware
of this huge backlog of ideas and policy which is there
and if only we had primary legislative powers it would
transform the way we do business. I have yet to see
any evidence of that, frankly.
|
|
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH:
Minister, your letter made me understand better why
the Business Committee has been such a success. It is
a general view that the Business Committee is one of
the standard bearers of the Welsh National Assembly.
The only thing in your paper that I find it rather difficult
to go along with is you say men, brains in other words,
rather than measures. Brains, yes, certainly they are
needed, but I think you cannot go along with the system
of subordinate legislation with which you are saddled,
it is appalling, it is so bureaucratic, so complicated,
so much waste of time and it does not allow you to concentrate
on the few issues that matter. That is not the way it
has been worked. Do you see my point? Tell me I am wrong.
|
|
MR DAVIES: I think
there is a difference dealing with secondary legislation
in the particular system we have. I think we could adequately
deal with the legislation, obviously we deal with the
process but it is incredibly complex and time consuming.
As I said, I am not sure that it bears that degree of
scrutiny. I would like to see a greater emphasis on
policy making. I think secondary legislation does give
us great scope for so doing.
|
|
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH:
You are the only place in the Kingdom where you can
vary delegated legislation: Westminster cannot; Edinburgh
cannot; you can.
|
|
MR DAVIES: Yes.
|
|
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH:
And you have hardly done it so far in three years.
|
|
MR DAVIES: I think
that is largely because we have been focused on existing
primary legislation, Bills that we have proposed and
dealing with the secondary legislation that arises from
that, plus the volume of legislation that does come
down from Westminster either directly from them or indirectly
from Europe.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: I do
not really understand this sharp distinction that you
and certain other ministers have been talking about
between policy formulation and secondary legislation,
it seems the thing is much fuzzier than that. In your
portfolio if it is decided that you need secondary legislation
to do x, y and z, you take that decision and the committee,
one hopes, at some stage approves it, but who actually
does the drafting? What is the actual parliamentary
procedure for getting it through?
|
|
MR DAVIES: The lead
division or area, part of the Civil Service, is the
Office of the Counsel General that will deal with the
actual drafting in consultation and close co-operation
with policy officials in the respective policy division.
They will then propose the legislation and it will go
through the various stages.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: Tell
me the stages.
|
|
MR DAVIES: I have
to say I do not have a flow chart in front of me, I
wish I had brought one. Obviously it includes a decision
about whether there should be consultation on it and
then you have to do a regulatory appraisal.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: Consultation
within the Assembly or outside the Assembly?
|
|
MR DAVIES: If it affects
the business community, for example, obviously there
will be a need to consult with either the business community
generally or if it affects a specific sector then with
the key players or companies in that sector. Regulatory
appraisal may be required on legislation in Westminster
as well. Certainly we will decide whether a regulatory
appraisal is necessary.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: I am
sure I am being very dense but I want to try and follow
this. At that stage the thing has been drafted by the
appropriate ministry, does the Assembly approve it before
it goes out to consultation and does it stay with the
committee, the relevant committee, when it goes out
to consultation? When does it actually become law?
|
|
MR DAVIES: It is a
decision by the Business Committee. The Business Minister
will take the proposal for legislation to the Business
Committee. Because there was a realisation that there
had to be some sort of categorisation of different types
of legislation, rather than treating all items, Statutory
Instrument Orders, whatever, in the same way, there
was a hierarchy decided whereby those which were maybe
for raising up the grant levels or business rates, whichever,
which are automatic could be done very quickly through
an accelerated procedure. Then there were those that
needed a greater degree of consideration and they would
go to the subject committee or if, for example, it was
felt it was of such significance that the Assembly as
a whole should meet to debate it, there would be a much
fuller consideration. There are different levels.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: Who
takes the decision as to which level it goes to?
|
|
MR DAVIES: As a Business
Minister I would make a recommendation to the Business
Committee and the Business Committee would either accept
or reject that.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: There
is slot A, slot B or slot C. Slot C is accelerated procedure.
|
|
MR DAVIES: Sorry,
there is a fourth one which is executive procedure which
is where basically the minister makes the executive
decision because there is a matter of great urgency.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: So what
is a normal slot A?
|
|
MR DAVIES: If it is
accelerated, it is decided by the Business Committee,
it does not have to go to a subject committee for consideration.
It will then go to the plenary session, the full session
of the Assembly, where because it has been agreed by
all the parties it can then be pushed forward without
discussion, without debate.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: That
is if every party agrees to it?
|
|
MR DAVIES: That is
right.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: Suppose
some do not.
|
|
MR DAVIES: It is then
opened up to the normal procedure where you could have
a debate in subject committee. It will either be referred
to subject committee for discussion and then it will
go to plenary for discussion as well, if that is the
wish of either the subject committee or the parties.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: It is
complex.
|
|
MR DAVIES: As I said,
it is immensely complex.
|
|
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH:
What is the composition of the Business Committee? Has
it worked better since there has been a coalition than
it did before?
|
|
MR DAVIES: The committee
is made up of each of the business managers from the
four political parties.
|
|
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH:
The Deputy Presiding Officer?
|
|
MR DAVIES: The Deputy
Presiding Officer chairs the committee. It meets once
a week on a Tuesday morning before the first plenary
session on Tuesday afternoon.
|
|
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH:
Before there was a coalition you would have had two
Labour and three non Labour.
|
|
MR DAVIES: Yes, but
the chair of the committee, the Deputy Presiding Officer,
Jane Davidson was the first DPO and John Marek is the
current DPO, always have seen their role as non-party
political.
|
|
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH:
It is even worse now, it is one to three or one to four.
How do the things work?
|
|
MR DAVIES: At great
length.
|
|
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH:
At great length?
|
|
MR DAVIES: There used
to be a lot of negotiation about individual items of
business between the political parties in order to get
legislation or budgets through the Assembly plenary
session or through subject committees. That was obviously
one of the major imperatives for having a coalition
because it gave a majority and allowed, certainly from
my point of view as business manager, a much smoother
management of business and a lot more security in knowing
the outcome.
|
|
PETER PRICE: The flow
chart that was mentioned sounds like it would be a useful
piece of paper for us to see.
|
|
MR PRITCHARD: I am
sure it is available.
|
|
PETER PRICE: You mentioned
the role of the Deputy Presiding Officer in relation
to subordinate legislation only in relation to chairing
the Business Committee. Does that Office have a more
active role in scrutinising prior to it being earmarked
by the Business Committee for following down one or
other of the four channels you have described?
|
|
MR DAVIES: Certainly
the current DPO has a close interest in the process.
I think as a former parliamentarian he brings his experience
to bear in this area. He sees his role as clearly helping
to manage the process and making sure there is full
scrutiny of the legislation.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: Minister,
you have been very generous with your time but I would
like to ask one more question. Is the Civil Service
big enough?
|
|
MR DAVIES: As it was
or as it is?
|
|
LORD RICHARD: As it
is.
|
|
MR DAVIES: This is
where David starts taking notes.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: It is
something we have got to look at.
|
|
MR DAVIES: I would
say it has developed quite substantially, the numbers
now are quite significant.
|
|
MR PRITCHARD: There
are about 4,000 now. It has grown significantly from
about 2,200, 2,300, to nearly 4,000. There are functions
that have come in during that period that have complicated
the numbers but there has been a significant increase.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: The
structure is the same as it is in the rest of the UK,
you have an administrative section and an executive
section.
|
|
MR PRITCHARD: We have
developed our own framework with an executive board
that supports the Cabinet and a range of other issues.
It is a smarter operation than it used to be. The broad
bands and those sorts of things are the same. The same
idea about departments and divisions but we are innovating
in a number of areas.
|
|
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH:Of
the 4,000 how many are what used to be called, and should
not now be called, fast stream?
|
|
MR PRITCHARD: We are
moving towards open recruitment for all posts in Wales.
We still do have fast stream posts but they are relatively
small in number.
|
|
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH:
How many?
|
|
MR PRITCHARD: Offhand
it must be five, ten at most. I do not know. It is a
concept that is going to be more difficult to sustain
in one way because each post at every level will be
subject, I think quite rightly, to open competition
for a number of good reasons. Therefore, what we have
got is a system in place where bright people can be
given particular support so that they become stronger
contenders for the posts that will become available
rather than just making an assumption. Carys, I am sure,
can easily find out how many people there are but it
is not a huge number.
|
|
MR DAVIES: I think
the civil servants probably have found devolution more
of a challenge than the politicians. We came to it relatively
new but the Civil Service had obviously been used to
the old Welsh Office system. I think the way in which
they have responded and the cultural change has been
huge. In terms of policy making there have been huge
steps forward. Certainly in my own area of economic
development there is a lot of very innovative thinking
going on and I think the way in which we relate to some
of the sponsored bodies, WTA and WTB, has been transformed,
our relationship with higher education and other stakeholders
has also been transformed. I think the capacity has
improved no end. Obviously there has been a capacity
issue in terms of numbers but in terms of the quality
of work that civil servants do and the relationship
they have with wider society that has changed quite
substantially.
|
|
PETER PRICE: But you
are still saying that there is a need for greater policy
capacity. Now that you have 4,000 civil servants, is
that a matter simply of varying the mix within the 4,000
to give greater policy making experience of capacity
or are you saying that you still need more civil servants
of specialised kinds in order to meet that need?
|
|
MR DAVIES: I think
we need to be smarter in the way we work. I think the
old days when the Welsh Office was almost a colonial
ruler within Wales have gone to a large extent and there
is a much greater working relationship with local government,
for example, and higher education. I think we need to
make better use of the resources. I am not saying we
do not have good policy making capacity now, I think
it has developed quite significantly over the last three
and a half years, not just here within the Assembly
Government but also outside. I think that will start
bearing fruit over the next year or so.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: I have
to say that in my ministerial Welsh Office days I never
felt like a colonial ruler.
|
|
MR DAVIES: I think
it was in a different political context.
|
|
PAUL VALERIO: What
financial constraints have there been on the expansion
of the Civil Service?
|
|
MR DAVIES: I am not
aware of any specific constraints. We have a devolved
budget for the administration of the Civil Service and
civil servants come within it. It has been a managerial
executive decision.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: Minister,
can I thank you very much for your time. I am sorry
we kept you a bit later but it has been very interesting.
|
Source Division: Alyson Thomas
Author name: Richard Commission
Date: March 2003 |
|