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COMMISSION ON THE POWERS AND ELECTORAL
ARRANGEMENTS OF THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY FOR WALES
MINUTES OF PROCEEDINGS
of the
EVIDENCE OF:
THE PRESIDING OFFICER OF THE SCOTTISH PARLIAMENT
RT HON SIR DAVID STEEL KBE
THE DEPUTY PRESIDING OFFICER OF THE SCOTTISH
PARLIAMENT
MURRAY TOSH
CLERK/CHIEF EXECUTIVE OF SPCB
PAUL GRICE
held at
The Scottish Parliament
on
Thursday, 13th February 2003
THE CHAIRMAN: Thank you very much for coming. We are
having a very interesting session, we had a very interesting
day yesterday and are looking forward to a similar day today.
We are very grateful to you, you are one of the fundamental
features of the Parliament. We were very grateful really to
have your views on how its gone - what hasnt worked
and what has worked, and I wonder if for the sake of the record
if you could really introduce yourself and your colleagues.
SIR DAVID STEEL: First of all, we are very glad to come
and give evidence to you. I hope that the outcome of your
work will be rather more positive and constructive than certain
other places with which I am familiar.
On my left is Murray Tosh who is Convener of our Procedures
Committee. I am sure therefore, that he will answer a lot
of the detailed questions that I might not be able to answer.
On my right is Paul Grice who is the Parliaments Clerk
and Chief Executive. I think coming towards the end of this
four year Parliament, we have overcome some of the difficulties
we had at the beginning, chiefly the difficulty of getting
across to the public the difference between the Executive
and the Parliament. It has been important for us to stress
that the Parliament has a distinct and separate role, and
that the Executive is answerable to the Parliament. In the
public mind, the word Holyrood simply became one and
the same thing and it was quite difficult to get people to
distinguish between the two. My impression is that as we come
to the end of the first four years, we have largely overcome
that problem and that people now realise there is an Executive
out there which may or may not be re-elected, but that the
Parliament is here to stay and to continue to hold the Executive
to account. I would say that is the principal change during
our first four years.
MR TOSH: That is a continuing difficulty, although I
think that more and more people are becoming to understand
the difference. However, I noticed a headline this week in
one of our more serious broadsheet newspapers, referring to
Holyrood, when the story referred in fact to Executive
actions, and not to the Parliaments. This has been a
recurring confusion in media coverage, and, while there are
grounds for believing that media coverage is improving, there
continues to be confusion among the general public.
THE CHAIRMAN: Its a difficulty that people blame
the Parliament in the sense of the Executive, that is a problem,
That is what we are trying to deal with, it is?
MR TOSH: Yes, theres always been a bit of collective
blame culture in Scotland anyway. Whatever people think is
going wrong, whatever people find unpalatable, the public
reaction tends to be that the Parliament is responsible. While
the Parliament obviously legitimises the Executives
exercise of power in general, when it comes to detailed actions
and decisions, the public is often reacting against the Executive,
rather than something for which the Parliament is directly
responsible. It remains true that people are not necessarily
willing to distinguish between the two.
THE CHAIRMAN: But the Executive emerges from the state
of Parliament after the election, is it?
MR TOSH: Yes, and in Parliament the Executive obviously
attempts to push through its programme, but most Executive
actions are taken by ministers under the powers delegated
to them and their departments. When the public reacts to decisions
which are taken in the name of Parliament, they are often
really reacting to Executive decisions. I am a member of a
non-executive party, which feels, as members of other opposition
parties feel, that we are all targeted when the public is
aggrieved at something which the Executive has decided to
do, or legislation which it has passed through the Parliament.
THE CHAIRMAN: It is the Executive controlling the Scottish
Parliament?
SIR DAVID STEEL: It is difficult to give a straight answer
to that question. I think it is true to say that one thing
which has not worked out exactly as it had been foreseen by
the Consultative Steering Group, is the operation of the Parliamentary
Bureau. The Bureau consists of the business managers of each
party that has at least five elected members; so for practical
purposes that has meant four parties have been represented
on the Bureau. If there is a need to vote, which does not
happen very often, then the Members vote accordingly. Voting
is proportionate to the number of elected members in each
Party. I have a casting vote, but this would never arise given
the arithmetic involved. It so happens we have a coalition
Executive consisting of two of the four parties represented
on the Bureau. They therefore command a majority both in the
Parliament and in the Bureau. To follow that train of thought,
it means that they have a commanding majority in the Bureau
for every decision. The Bureau decides on what we call the
Parliamentary programme and what legislation goes to which
specific committee although in the case of the former,
the business programme is put to the whole Parliament for
a final decision. It also decides how long the committee stage
of each bill will be and so on. So I have often felt that
even though Chair the Bureau, I am impotent given that I have
neither a vote nor an opportunity to use a casting vote. It
is rather like being Chair of the usual channels at Westminster.
When the Consultative Steering Group was drawing up plans
for the Bureau I do not think they quite worked out that is
how it would turn out to be in practice. I think they thought
the Presiding Officer, as Chair of the Bureau, would have
more say over the business of the Parliament than he actually
has. Let me reiterate however that there are not many votes
in the Bureau as the programme and the allocation of bills
is developed by consensus so I do not want to give you the
impression that we are told what to do by the Executive, that
would give you the wrong impression.
THE CHAIRMAN: What happens if the Executive has a differing
position on an issue of competence?
SIR DAVID STEEL: That has never happened.
THE CHAIRMAN: What is the constitutional position, do
they have to resign or, you cant force an election?
MR GRICE: There are provisions in case, following an
election, it is ultimately impossible to form a government.
Of course that could be a minority government, there is no
requirement for a coalition to be formed. It hinges on the
ability to select a candidate for nomination as First Minister.
If that proves impossible within 28 days, another general
election would follow.
SIR DAVID STEEL: But the fundamental difference is that
unlike Westminster, the losing Government cannot call an election.
MR GRICE: Its a slightly more transparent procedure
in the Scottish Parliament.
MR TOSH: On the question of Executive control of the
Parliament and its programme, one of the subtleties of the
arrangements which we have at present - which I dont
think anyone ever really anticipated - is that the two Executive
parties are very, very tight on the Bureau. The business manager
of the principal Executive party is the Minister for Parliamentary
Business, while the smaller partys business manager
is also the deputy Minister for Parliamentary Business. So
the link is strengthened by the bond between the senior minister
and junior minister, and the fact that the two of them are
briefed by the same set of officials. They therefore work
more tightly together than was expected, and they command
the majority of votes on the Bureau, with the result that,
if any challenge is made to the Executive there, the outcome
of any vote is a foregone conclusion. The opposition parties
will therefore rarely challenge and force a vote, except if
they see a major point of principle, where they wish to put
their views on the record, perhaps to justify political criticism
of the decision later.
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: Very useful, but we were told
however that there had been, so to speak, a split on, I think
it was a debate on Iraq and the Liberal Democrats were anti
Westminster government policy on Iraq and the result was that
in the bureau they didnt have therefore a automatic
majority but on the floor of the House they got a majority
with the support I think of the Conservatives, is that right,
so its not
MR TOSH: Yes, that is what happened, but that is a separate
issue from the determination of Parliamentary business. In
debates themselves, the coalition partners both support Executive
motions and amendments, although, in the Iraq debate, the
Liberal Democrats lodged their own amendment. Over the four
years of the Parliament, there have been two or three occasions
also when the Liberal Democrats have lodged their own amendment
to an opposition motion, and the majority Executive party
has agreed to go along with the Liberals, so that the amendments
in question became Executive amendments. There was one occasion
when all motions and amendments were rejected, on something
on which there was a disagreement between the Liberals and
the Labour party which they could not resolve.
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: But that is less control over
Parliament than the government business managers have in the
House of Commons.
SIR DAVID STEEL: Well, it was more complicated by the
fact that we were discussing a reserved matter. The parties
each decided to follow the policy of their party at Westminster.
It was a somewhat unusual situation.
MS SUGAR: Could I go back to the procedure from the business
bureau and your role as a Presiding Officer, does a report
go from the bureau to the Parliament as a recommendation which
would give you a opportunity if you had been deeply unhappy
about a vote in the bureau but actually address all the members
and where do you take your advice from?
SIR DAVID STEEL: That has never happened and in fact
I find it difficult to imagine I would get away with making
comments to the Parliament about what had gone on in the Bureau.
The decisions of the Bureau are minuted and a note of decisions
is made available to all MSPs. Votes are also recorded, so
Members can see where there has been disagreement. A Presiding
Officer would be in a very difficult position if he were to
say to Parliament that he had disagreed with a decision taken
by the Bureau. I am the Chair of the Bureau I have to go along
with what it decides.
MS SUGAR: To go back to the beginning, you said that
you did not have a vote in the bureau and I suppose your role
is also to be a sort of guardian of propriety and the spirit
of the Parliament and if you were faced with the decision
that the two parties who were manipulating the system for
political advantage in a way you felt unhappy about, what
you say to us is you have no recourse
SIR DAVID STEEL: I have to say that has not happened,
I would not want you to misinterpret anything I have said.
The Executive has a majority and that is a fact. I did not
say they manipulated it. What often happens in the Bureau
is that if an issue arises I will give my view, or make a
suggestion as to how the issue might be resolved. Members
do not always take my advice or agree with me but then they
are not bound to. I do have a say - sometimes they accept
guidance and some times they say "that is all very interesting
but we dont agree" and there is nothing I can do about
it. But I can assure you that there has never been an issue
where I have felt so strongly that I would want to make a
fuss about it.
MR TOSH: One of the difficulties is that we only see
on the Bureau those areas where there are differences among
the party business managers which they cannot resolve beforehand.
They do actually hold a pre-meeting among themselves, and
there is also extensive bi-lateral contact in the period before
meetings. A lot of the difficulties and disagreements are
resolved by what you might call the usual channels. The Bureau
tends to be the forum where the decision taken is validated,
or the disagreements which have taken place are noted for
the record. Opposition party business managers would usually
force a vote at the Bureau, when they intend that, when the
Bureaus business motion is moved in the Parliament the
next day, they will move and vote against it. They feel obliged
to flag up to the Bureau the fact that they are not happy
with the decision. As Sir David says, business usually rolls
forward quite smoothly and amicably, and disagreements tend
to be at the margins, for example over whether a debate should
have allocated to it two hours or two and a half hours, or
whether we should have the debate this week or next week.
THE CHAIRMAN: Given what was said so to speak from the
outset and I dont speak for everyone on the Commission
but discussing what is interesting is the degree of consensus
that there seems to be between the parties and the operations
of the Scottish Parliament. There is agreement on timetabling
of bills in London, there is agreement on how long people
take in committees. You know, this is, we have been told this
is a different style of politics. Do you think that is a fair
description of what you are doing here?
SIR DAVID STEEL: There is more agreement than disagreement
on how the Bureau is run. We had a disagreement yesterday,
for example, over why we were not holding a fisheries debate,
given the current situation. It is quite an emotive issue
but when you look at it closely, the disagreement was limited
to timing and whether you hold a debate this week or next
week. But as I have already said, by and large, we reach agreement
by consensus in the Bureau most of the time.
MR ROWLANDS: Part of our remit is whether the Assembly
should have legislative powers and I wonder if we could explore
with you what the implications are and what the impact of
legislation has had on Parliament, for example, when you started
out four years ago, what were the kind of cost of estimates
that you had and what it would cost and what staffing would
be required from the Parliament end to, as it were, fulfil
the legislative function, and how different in the last four
years that has turned out because we understand that you have
done 60 bills again in those four years, which is a huge increase
on anything done previously and we need some spear on what
impact using the legislative powers of this kind has on Parliament,
on the staffing costs and whether it has distorted the role
of committees in any way and if you could share your thoughts
with us on that?
SIR DAVID STEEL: We certainly found quite early on that
we needed more staff and needed to support committee meetings
for longer than had been anticipated in the discussions before
the Parliament came into being. That incidentally had a knock
on effect on the new building because we had to increase its
size from the original plan. There is, of course a basic difference
between Scotland and Wales, in that we have our own legal
system. My impression is that in this first Parliament we
have been picking up quite a lot of legislation which had
been drafted following Scottish Law Commission reports and
the like, and which did not make it into the Legislative Programme.
I understand that the Scottish Parliament has passed around
44 bills, and it will probably be nearer 60 by the time we
have completed our first four year session. That compares
with only a handful of Scottish bills per annum at Westminster.
I have a hunch that in the Second Parliament there might not
be quite the same volume of legislation that we have had in
this first Parliamentary session because all the sweeping
up will have been finished by now. Certainly it has been quite
a burden on our committees. We had to split, for example,
the Justice Committee into two Justice Committees simply because
there was so much legislation in the field of justice that
that had to be dealt with. It is not very satisfactory and
I would hope perhaps in the next Parliament that we can go
back to having just one Justice Committee. If I might take
another committee - the Health and Community Care Committee
for example. As you can imagine, health is a popular issue
and the Committee set off with a whole list of issues they
wanted to have inquiries into. However they soon discovered
they were so busy dealing with legislation that they simply
could not get on with their inquiries and other work. I know
they have been unable to get through the agenda that they
wanted to.
MR ROWLANDS: I would be very grateful if you could tell us
what were the estimates at the beginning of this when you
were setting up this model, what you thought it was going
to cost Parliament to run the legislative side of things and
what this actually turned out to be among other things to
actually produce the cost to what we recommend as well?
MR GRICE: The set up we have broadly mirrors what you
would find at Westminster, for example, the staff includes
a team of clerks, lawyers, official reporters and research
and information services. Indeed in some cases, and very deliberately,
for example in relation to the research and information service,
we looked to replicate, though in a different setting, the
House of Commons library given its success. We cant
point to is an original estimate because we deliberately started
on the small side on the ground before we had a Parliament.
We had to provide services from day one. We succeeded in doing
that. But it was important in my view to leave room for organic
growth, led by the Parliament. So, for example, we have, in
the event, provided a substantial increase in the research
and information services because there has been a clear demand
from the Parliament. We have beefed up the clerking support
because there are more committees than we envisaged. And,
necessarily, we have had to have more official reporters,
again to cope with the level of business. Even more significant,
has been engaging with the public. Thats been a feature
of the Parliament from the outset and one that continues to
develop. There is a very clear demand that this Parliament
should continue to make major efforts to encourage public
participation, so we have a substantial education service
as well as broadcasting and media teams. These are features
of this Parliament which have become more enhanced. The total
staffing complement is now just under 500. We are in another
period of uncertainly as we approach the move to the new building.
There may be some savings in some areas but increased demand
in others. For example, we are expecting between 6 and 700,000
visitors a year to the new building compared to around 80,000
a year here. That is going to place an enormous burden on
the Parliament to cope positively with them. I would be more
than happy, if the Commission is interested, to let you have
details of our staffing structures and overall running cost
estimates.
THE CHAIRMAN: I think that would be very helpful the
way its developed.
MR ROWLANDS: If there is any way you could relate it
to the function of legislation, I realise presumably members
as opposed to the Executive have the equivalent of support
like the public bill for us in the Commons where you know,
a member can go and advise on and stick amendments down where
in order or assisting in drafting non-executive bills and
all the rest of it?
MR GRICE: One difference, as you raised it, is that non-executive
legislation is relatively more significant. In particular,
as you no doubt know, are the powers that committees have
to initiate legislation and also the relatively greater opportunity
for Members bills to succeed once introduced. They cant
be talked out in the same way as they can at Westminster.
We established a non-executive bills unit which has the capacity
to support committees and members. As we also have a panel
of draughtsmen, so we have our own, independent drafting capacity.
MR ROWLANDS: How big is that?
MR GRICE: We have five draughtsmen which provides a reasonable
level of capacity. The two biggest non-Executive bills to
date have been the Standards Commissioner Bill and the
Childrens Commissioners bill. These are very substantial
bills compared, for example, to the more traditional, though
important measures such as those on dog fouling which is important.
We have had to staff up quite significantly but, as I think
as Sir David would tell you, we have probably not quite yet
got the political control mechanisms right to determine just
how much non-executive legislation is appropriate. We are
still feeling our way.
MR TOSH: One thing which has taken us by surprise in
the legislative field is in the area of overlap between our
responsibility and Westminsters. The devolution settlement
contained a provision introduced by then Scottish Office Minister
Lord Sewel, and known thereafter as Sewel motions, where we
can agree to allow Westminster to legislate within the devolved
areas. It was not expected that the Sewel process would be
used very much but in practice it has been used quite regularly.
There have been cases where it is seen as essential that a
UK bill must apply to Scotland, Prevention of Terrorism for
example; and there are other circumstances where we have seen
it as an opportunity to apply Westminster legislation to Scotland,
the Adoption of Children having been one of the areas in question.
In fact weve had about 30 Sewel motions, which have
generally been debated in the Parliament and which have generated
a huge amount of controversy. There is a minor academic industry
in this field, and some journalists who have written articles
about how Parliament is handing away its powers. The old Enoch
Powell nostrum about how power devolved is power retained
is regularly trotted out, and this is an area where we have
not fully sorted out our procedures and processes. We need
to review these processes, so that we are actually agreed
on when we should act and when it is sensible to let Westminster
act. A lot of the debate is politically motivated, an attack
on devolution as opposed to independence, and it has consumed
more time and more heat than I think we envisaged. It remains
a case of unresolved business.
THE CHAIRMAN: We were exposed to some of that yesterday.
MR ROWLANDS: About the framework of the standing orders
and also the broader issues of CSG and the report of the review
of that and we had evidence from the Presiding Officer of
Wales, he talked a lot about novel circumstances and so on.
I just wondered whether you could outline how sustainable
and how satisfactory the standing orders as a Presiding Officer
and whether there have been any pressure points or you can
anticipate there are likely to be any pressure points in the
future?
SIR DAVID STEEL: I think the standing orders have proved
pretty good really. The Procedures Committee does occasionally
undertake a revision of the standing orders.
MR TOSH: Well we have had one major review of the standing
orders where we effectively revised the whole corpus of standing
orders, which were contained in a Transitional order, and
we transposed them into our own set of standing orders. Since
then we have had 7 or 8 reports to Parliament where we have
addressed specific areas in the Standing Orders, on a chapter
by chapter or section by section basis.
SIR DAVID STEEL: There has not been anything absolutely
fundamental in the Standing Orders that has been changed.
I think it has all been fine tuning here and there. I suppose
one area which is a bit controversial is whether the Presiding
Officer should have any control, perhaps thats too strong
a word, any judgement, over the length of Ministerial answers
at oral question time. This is a regular complaint I receive
from Members. I can reprimand a questioner for deviating from
the subject matter or for taking too long over the question,
but I cannot actually stop Ministers from going on too long
in the answers they give. That is an issue that is being looked
at.
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: Why not?
SIR DAVID STEEL: The standing order is quite specific.
Supplementary questions must be brief so you pray that in
aid, but there is no similar standing order which says Ministers
should be succinct and to the point.
THE CHAIRMAN: Is there a time limit on a question?
SIR DAVID STEEL: No. We do not operate as you do in the
Welsh Assembly. The only time limit is the total time for
questions. There is no time limit on each individual question
- it is very much at the discretion of the Presiding Officer.
THE CHAIRMAN: You can cut off the question and move on
to the next questioner.
SIR DAVID STEEL: Yes, that is a judgement I have to make
all the time.
THE CHAIRMAN: Is it at Westminster that you have to call
people?
SIR DAVID STEEL: Yes. In the Scottish Parliament, Members
indicate electronically that they wish to speak. Their names
appear on the screen in front of me. But the concept is basically
the same. If six members want to ask a question, I may pick
three or something like that. But I have to balance such things
as the size of the Parties, whether someone has been called
already that day set against someone who has not been called,
and the time you allocate to a particular question may depend
on the importance of the subject matter as you judge it. That
is the kind of judgement we have to make the whole time.
THE CHAIRMAN: Can your judgement be challenged?
SIR DAVID STEEL: I do not think my judgement has ever
been challenged - that happens in other Parliaments.
MR TOSH: To go back to the original question about standing
orders and the CSG, I think the standing orders have worked
well. I think the Parliamentary processes have worked as envisaged.
The CSG, the Consultative Steering Group, set out large, overarching
concepts to apply to the Parliaments working, and, without
necessarily defining all of the details, they nonetheless
laid down principles which can be extrapolated to cover the
activities of the Executive. There are therefore some areas
where we could argue the CSG principles are perhaps not being
translated effectively into practice. Although the Parliament,
its standing orders and the committees are working within
the CSGs principles, there are gaps. For example, concerns
have been expressed about scrutiny of the work of Executive
agencies, or about the whole functioning of the Civil Service,
areas which are within the Executives sphere but nonetheless
impact on Parliamentary processes. The CSG tended to turn
a bit of a blind eye to a lot of these processes, which we
would like to bring much more clearly within the ambit of
the CSG principles.
MS MCALLISTER: Is the principal sharing of power, has
that been problematic in terms of the Executive?
MR TOSH: That is extremely difficult. Its difficult
to define it, and difficult to explain what it means. Effectively,
sharing power meant that the Executive and the Parliament
would share power with the people and a large network of groups
in a complex civil society, which is very rich and highly
developed in Scotland. The Parliament has tried to do this.
Parliament has very extensive procedures for involving the
people in its committee enquiries, and in taking evidence
on bills. Also, the Executive has worked up much more precise
and thorough approaches to consultation than was ever the
case before. It has built up relationships with various organisations
as gateways to involve civil society - the Scottish
Civic Forum being the principal example of that in
dialogue on policy and legislation. I think that the difficulty
in practice with power-sharing with the Executive is in legislative
programming. One of the recurring difficulties in the programme
is the sheer pace and volume of legislation. This presents
difficulties for civil society, faced with meeting after meeting
after meeting to finalise legislation, in actually sharing
power by participating in sustained dialogue with the Executive
and Parliament throughout the process.
SIR DAVID STEEL: If you look at the impact which the
Parliament has had on public life in general, it is very noticeable
there is a clear difference in attitude towards us from those
who engaged with us, and those who have not. Around 5,000
individuals had been in front of our committees in the course
of the four years. Indeed many of the organisations they represent,
whether they be voluntary bodies or professional bodies or
whatever, have commented very favourably on the Parliament,
although it has not been universal. They now have direct contact
with their elected representatives, there is a sharing of
power, there is consultation, and there is access and an openness
that was simply not possible previously when their Parliament
sat 400 miles away. There is certainly a difference between
those that engage with the Parliament and those who view it
through the eyes of the newspapers.
MR JONES: Just on that point, you say you spend heavily on
engaging with the public, are there examples of things that
have worked better and been more effective?
MR TOSH: Yes. Some committees have done very good work
in building up what we loosely call civic participation events.
The Equal Opportunity Committee, for example, held such an
event to conduct a very extensive discussion on race relations,
with a range of organisations, particularly those which represent
ethnic minorities. The Enterprise and Lifelong Learning Committee
has held similar events with business people, where they discussed
a range of initiatives. Many committees have also gone out
into local areas in order to gather evidence about a specific
piece of legislation or enquiry, and they have married their
formal business with open meetings in distinct communities,
and have held what have effectively been public meetings,
where they have tried to gather in opinions. There has been
a deliberate attempt to try and get as much business as is
realistically possible away from Edinburgh and out into the
communities across Scotland, not simply to meet with councils
and official bodies, but actually to meet with the general
public as well.
MR PRICE: The scrutiny of bills of how that
Sorry.
I should say you have explored ideas in public about the scrutiny
of bills and how that might be improved, what do you think
are the strengths and weaknesses of your present system of
scrutiny of legislation and what are your present views on
how that should be improved?
SIR DAVID STEEL: I think the greatest strength of our
system is the pre-legislative scrutiny of Bills by our committees,
something that does not exist formally at Westminster, although
I think hope is growing there. Certainly from my time in the
Westminster Parliament, it was unusual. The fact that a Bill,
before it is debated by Parliament, is scrutinised by a committee
which can listen to all the people affected by that piece
of legislation and share their views on it before it ever
gets debated, is I think a great strength. Evidence given
by people affected by the legislation does get quite a lot
of media coverage in the way routine committee business tends
not to. As I have said, that has probably been the greatest
strength of our system in my view. A weakness is that I think
at times we have been a bit rushed when it comes to considering
legislation. We have already discussed the quantity of legislation
and I hope in the next Parliament it will be less. The time
spent therefore on each individual piece of legislation will
be increasingly greater. I do get a little worried that we
are rushing through the stage three of Bills - that is the
Report stage at Westminster. There is often a very tight timetable
here, which often means there must be short speeches by Members.
There is also a risk, and I put it no higher than that, that
you get things wrong. As things stand, there is nothing to
rescue something that goes wrong. We have not had any disasters
but the potential has always been there.
MR ROWLANDS: Its a bit like the Lords, quite fast
moving trends. Sorry. Sir Russell in the evidence he gave
to the House of Lords speaking about legislative process said
its a bit like the Lords in that it analyses legislation
in quite fast moving chunks, is that what you were
SIR DAVID STEEL: I mean that we have had one or two occasions
recently when we have been very close to the end of the time
limit for consideration. This is what we call at Westminster
the guillotine motion, but there is no such thing here because
the timetable has been agreed beforehand. But nonetheless,
there have been occasions when we come up against the time
allowed for discussion and I have said all along that is one
thing we cannot afford to do in this Parliament. There is
no revising procedure and we cannot afford to have amendments
put to the vote that have not been discussed or considered
fully. We have not actually been in that position but we have
been very close to it on occasions and that is slightly worrying.
MR TOSH: One of the things in our procedures which we
have not explored at all, because its never happened,
is a provision to deal with the fact that we do not have the
capacity to go to the House of Lords. It is possible for the
member in charge, the relevant Minister in the case of an
Executive Bill, before a bill has been passed, to refer parts
of the bill back to the committee for further consideration,
if the Minister is not happy that the Bill is entirely fit-for-purpose.
That has never happened. I suspect it may very well never
happen because I suspect ministers would see that as a sign
of failure, but it is clear that, just as committees are working
very hard to finalise bills, so are the Civil Service and
draughtsmen. Its such a fast moving process when Bills
are going through their committee stages, and it is important
that the participants in the process are all really confident
that every aspect of every bill is absolutely precisely correct.
We have procedures therefore to deal with the absence of a
revising chamber, but we havent used them yet.
MR PRICE: If I can follow that up, we have heard what
you have obviously just said with reference to there is no
House of Lords, lack of a revising chamber, do you feel that
the procedure could or should be improved by some other kind
of revising body, advisory or otherwise being interposed in
this procedure or is that even if desirable politically just
not on?
SIR DAVID STEEL: I do not think the case for it has yet
been made. As I said earlier, we have not had any disasters
but the potential for something going wrong is still there.
I hope that in the next Parliament there will be less legislation
and therefore the danger will be averted by allowing a little
more time between the stages of bills and in particular in
the discussion at stage 3. However, when the Scotland Act
comes to be reviewed which would be not in the lifetime of
the next Parliament but the one after possibly around 2007,
that is the moment at which a general assessment should be
made on how well our procedures have gone. I can certainly
see how a case could be made out not for having a Scottish
equivalent to the House of Lords, but to have a reviewing
procedure. We already have one reviewing procedure which is
forgotten about and that is for a month after a Bill is passed
it is examined by the law officers both in Scotland and at
Westminster. They check two things - that it is within the
legislative competence of the Parliament under the Scotland
Act following amendments made to it, and that it is consistent
with the European Convention of Human Rights. I have already
put forward the idea that there could be a case for having
a body of about the size of this Commission for example, sitting
in our Committee rooms during the same month that a Bill is
passed, looking at the legislation and having the power to
send it back to the relevant Committee if they found something
defective or needed further examination. But as I have said,
I do not think the case for that has yet been made. I certainly
think it is too early to come to a hard and fast view as to
whether it would be possible to think of an appointed revising
body being a Parliamentary equivalent of the law officers.
It would not be the same as having a second chamber. There
have been voices and arguments for a second chamber; I do
not think there is much political weight behind that because
of the bureaucracy. I do not think it is justified given that
our system with its pre-legislative facility works very well.
MR PRICE: On the hypothesis that you put, that if in
2007 there was a feeling this was necessary, you have talked
about using the subsequent month after it had undergone all
its Parliamentary stages, what would be the scale in your
view of such an examination by such a revising chamber, would
it be limited to the same two points that the law officers
are looking at which would be the whole of the legislation
in which case wouldnt that be too late a stage to persuade
Parliament which has already voted to look again at what potentially
could be significant aspects of the legislation?
SIR DAVID STEEL: I do not think it would be too late.
In the four week period, it would be technically possible
for a review body to say there is something about the legislation
that ought to be looked at again and to refer it back to the
appropriate Committee. The House of Lords can refer a bill
back to the Commons. What I think we would not have is a second
chamber which would, like the House of Lords, have its own
debates.
THE CHAIRMAN: The revising process in the Lords is perhaps
a bit more political than some people think it is, a set of
wise legislators sitting there, parties involved, politicians
involved.
SIR DAVID STEEL: That is why in my opinion I am not in
favour of having a second chamber because the body should
be apolitical.
THE CHAIRMAN: Can I come on to the sort of the legislation
that you actually pass, what percentage of it is private?
MR TOSH: I think about 10% of our Bills have been non-executive
Bills, although a higher proportion of the bills that are
proposed are non-Executive. I think about a quarter
of the bills proposed are non-Executive Bills, but these dont
necessarily proceed. Of those bills which start off and actually
go through the formal process in the House to completion,
I think that about 10% are from members and committees. We
have not so far had any genuine private bills but we have
two in process at the moment, and we expect more private bills
in the future. Although the pace of Executive legislation
may slow in the future, we also expect that more members are
aware of the procedures and are confident in what they want
to do, and will lodge their own bills in the next Parliament.
I also think it is inevitable that there will be more Committee
Bills, as David said earlier. We have not worked out yet exactly
how we will ration Parliamentary resources, including plenary
and committee time between the two Bills which form
part of the Executives programme and those which come
forward from the various other sources of potential bills.
SIR DAVID STEEL: That is the biggest unresolved issue
that we are left with in this Parliament.
MR JONES: And presumably it comes back to the difficulty
you had at the beginning that if the business managers format
is dominated by the Executive and they feel, if the private
members wish to have more voice and better access to time
then who will champion those private members initiative if
the Presiding Officer hasnt got a strong enough voice?
SIR DAVID STEEL: You have put your finger on an issue
we are deeply imbedded in at the moment. There are those who
are saying that the Bureau will have to sort this out and
others who say it should not have the responsibility. There
is an Executive majority in the Bureau. It has been suggested
that perhaps there ought to be some other back bench committee
being responsible, perhaps followed at the end of the day,
by a debate in Parliament. We are considering this issue at
the moment and it remains an unresolved matter.
MR ROWLANDS: Are there private days allocated, private
members days for private members which is allocated as you
do in the Commons?
SIR DAVID STEEL: No, the Bureau recommends the Parliamentary
timetable to the Parliament and it allocates time for Bills
as they come forward. As I have said, we do not have the same
mechanisms that Westminster has. There are non-executive party
days that are set down by agreement. But as things stand there
is no legislative time set down for non-executive legislation,
it all has to go through the same sausage machine.
MR TOSH: If you bring forward a sufficiently adequate
bill proposal, it will go to a committee. The committee will
consider it and take evidence before making its Stage 1 report
to the Parliament, where the report will be debated. We have
had three or four Bills which have reached Stage 1, and where
Parliament has rejected the bill. There is no ballot, as at
Westminster, and any member who takes a Bill through the system
will find that the Bill doesnt suffer from a lack of
time for debate. The Bill will emerge on the agenda, and about
six Bills have so far commanded that degree of support in
the first session, have been allocated sufficient time, and
have been, or will shortly be, passed.
MS DAVIES: Can you explain the ad hoc membership and
how they actually function in practice?
SIR DAVID STEEL: The membership of the committees, as
at Westminster, simply reflects the party balance. The convenership
and the deputy convenership of committees are allocated by
the business managers. As Murray has said, the usual channels
do not exist but nonetheless the party business managers do
meet and decide amongst themselves how they allocate the convenerships
between the committees. That seems to have been an amicable
process.
MS DAVIES: Im speaking about the ad hoc committees?
MR TOSH: They are formed on the same basis for rotating
convenerships of the permanent committees. Parliament would
know, if new ad hoc committees had to be created, whose turn
it would be to have the convenership. Ad hoc committees are
smaller than ordinary committees, and perhaps would not be
so broadly representative in membership, but there has never
been a difficulty about membership. Ad hoc committees have
been formed to deal with private bills, because they are not
put before the mainstream committees.
SIR DAVID STEEL: We only had two or three of those in
the whole four years.
MR TOSH: And I think that committee bills may also go
to an ad hoc committee, rather than one of the mainstream
committees.
MR GRICE: And also recently a consolidation bill, which
has been a rare feature in the first four years.
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: On fisheries?
MR GRICE: On salmon.
THE CHAIRMAN: How do you deal with secondary legislation?
SIR DAVID STEEL: We have a Subordinate Legislation Committee
which scrutinises all the statutory instruments. It has a
serious function but how it copes with the volume, I do not
know.
MR TOSH: It is an area where we havent really
moved on. One of the major changes anticipated was that our
committees would devote a lot of time to post-enactment legislative
scrutiny, not simply scrutinising statutory instruments, but
devoting committee time to determine whether legislation has
achieved its objectives. Committees are only beginning to
come to terms with such scrutiny. The model we use for secondary
legislation is the Westminster one, where Ministers lay statutory
instruments, which the Parliament can either pass or not.
There is no facility to amend statutory instruments. A good
recent example of the difficulty created by that was a dispute
in the North of Scotland about the boundary for the proposed
Cairngorm National Park, where the local communities were
all up in arms about what was proposed, and the committee
wanted to amend the zone area; but, when Parliament had to
decide, it had a choice between passing the instrument as
it stood, or rejecting the whole proposal, in order to pressure
the Executive into returning with a revised proposal. In the
event, Parliament passed it. As things stand, therefore, there
is no facility to get into the political or policy dimensions
of statutory instruments, and we are still are operating under
the procedures laid down by Westminster in the Transitional
Order. I think the reason for that is that the committees
have simply been so limited in time that they have not yet
explored the possibility of working up our own system of scrutinising
secondary legislation. Replacing the Transitional Order with
our own procedures is something which may be attended to in
the next Session of Parliament.
THE CHAIRMAN: Do you have a negative and positive procedure
decided, which is which?
MR TOSH: Ministers generally determine that in the Bills
themselves.
MR GRICE: That is usually in the primary legislation
and, as Murray said, there are complex rules which arent
a million miles away from Westminster. That is the basic approach.
The volume, I think, is something like 2,000 pieces of secondary
legislation. So even with the procedures we have, which involve
providing subject committees as well as the subordinate legislation
committee scrutinising, I think they have found on occasions
that they simply have not had sufficient time.
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: I think it is amazing what
you have done so quickly, you are up and running in four years.
I think its amazing, but that prompts me to refer to
your speech in June two years ago in which you referred to
the amount of European legislation which is being scrutinised
here, it is also being scrutinised in the Commons and in the
Lords and to a very limited extent in the national scope.
These are technical jobs, they need lawyers, they need expertise,
what strikes me is that somebody should consider with the
advantages of IT and so on, a process of sharing out the work
because you have this huge amount of legislation delegated
legislation, European draft instruments as you say, 2000 in
two years, in one body they will get bogged down, the thing
is extremely selective and go for the jugular on a very few
which is what the delegated powers committee in the House
of Lords does about bills. They go for about nine a year or
ten a year of the whole legislative programme and it would
seem to me in each with the weight of motion you are doing
all these reviews, I mean you are doing a lot of guessing
about the way the Parliament works and God knows Westminster
does not do enough but it does strike me one thing worth considering
is sharing the load of these technical expert functions which
are so important because Government and administration has
got very technical and complex which is partly the reason
for it, the House of Lords because there was some lawyers
and boring old people who are willing to do the hard round
and the Commons was unwilling to do and which the government
did not anyway want to do.
SIR DAVID STEEL: There is one caveat - what we have to
do is check the delegated legislation in Scots law, so we
have a slightly additional task to the general one. The point
you make raises a wider issue which I am very interested in,
as is Paul Grice. And that is to what extent now that we have
a pattern in the UK, and to what extent can we share the apparatus
of devolution across the frontiers. We have not made a great
deal of progress on that. At the beginning, we borrowed some
people from the Northern Ireland Assembly but it seems to
me that there is still scope for sharing the expertise which
exists in the Commons, the Lords, Northern Ireland, Wales,
Scotland, so that we build up a corpus of expertise, and not
just in the area of Europe. That is the obvious example, but
across the board I would say that I hope this will develop
in the years to come.
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: Its the kind of thing
we were told about in the House of Lords the other day, somebody
from the public bill office, that you are trying to build
up a process in which they tip you off about an amendment
to legislation which are the subject of Sewel resolution or
motion where it might make an impact when as a Parliament
need to look at them again, this is a purely practical way
in which co-operation does make sense otherwise you have to
read every word.
MR GRICE: There is a tremendous amount of co-operation
across a range of services. Clerks from Westminster and Northern
Ireland and Welsh Assemblies meet at least once a year. And
there are links, for example between the European committees
here and at Westminster. And there are strong links between
the official reporters and the research and information services,
where we have a very long standing link with the House of
Commons library. I began discussions with the outgoing Clerk
of the House of Commons, and will take up with the new Clerk
the notion of seconding staff. Of course, if Westminster opened
up its recruitment processes as we have done in Wales, Scotland
and Northern Ireland that would naturally help the movement
of staff around but that is something outside your remit.
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: Well, what about
MR GRICE: We have at the moment some excellent colleagues
on attachment mostly from the Northern Ireland Assembly, I
would accept theres a lot more we could do and of course,
there are wider issues about common consensus in other areas.
I entirely accept the point you make, but I would not want
you to think we have not built links.
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: Can I make one supplementary
point. You are described here as clerk chief executive, now
that pops into my mind that some of your work is procedural
and some of your work is running the administration and balancing
the books or not on the new building and keeping the contractors
in order, that is what it pops into my mind, I dont
know. I wonder what proportion of your time you spend on these
two or three fields which is the most important if you have
a little graph, Lord Wilberforce when he was a judge he put
a little card in front of him saying you are paid to be bored,
in your case what does your card say?
MR GRICE: I am paid to do what the Presiding Officer
tells me. One gets told what to do by an awful lot of people
and that is part and parcel of the job. Seriously, its
difficult for one to answer. I would say 25% dealing with
what you might call procedural and advisory matters and 75%
running the organisation. I was interested to see that Bill
McKay towards the end of his time started titling himself
as Clerk of the House and Chief Executive. The Presiding Officer
conducts over all political activity. I have to take responsibility
for the running of the organisation. Ultimately, if Sir David
wants to know whats gone wrong or what advice to take
our set-up allows us to bring things to a head in one official.
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: In the House of Lords we have
a large pyramid of staff with one top person but the House
of Commons is moving over to the other system.
MR GRICE: It is a much bigger organisation, I accept
that.
SIR DAVID STEEL: There is no Black Rod or Sergeant at
Arms - the buck stops here
MS SUGAR: One of the things under consideration is Parliamentary
services for the assembly and the split of the staff, I just
wondered if you would like to comment whether there is much
movement in the Civil Service supporting the Executive here
in Edinburgh, how do you manage peoples careers?
MR GRICE: Firstly, we are completely independent service
as opposed to, for example, the Welsh Assembly. There is a
separate Parliamentary service here derived from the Westminster
model. There is separate accountability, to the Parliamentary
authorities, in particular.
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: Can I ask, on performance
pay in the two houses at Westminster, they are linked to judges
and High Court for pay, there is no question of any body in
Wales, it still comes under the Permanent Secretary.
MR GRICE: My pay is determined by the Parliamentary authorities.
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: Not by the Executive?
MR GRICE: Not at all.
MR ROWLANDS: I want to talk a little bit about, again
thinking about when we might be recommending the committee
bills, I have read the formal procedure, has any succeeded
in this Parliament?
SIR DAVID STEEL: We have had two I think.
MR ROWLANDS: On those two bills that have succeeded give
us a flavour of how they came and went through the system?
MR TOSH: I have noted here two committee bills, but Paul
can maybe tell me if there were more. There was one to set
up the Standards Commissioner, and that must have gone to
an ad hoc committee. We are currently dealing with the Childrens
Commissioner bill which we would have dealt with yesterday,
so that would be awaiting the Royal assent, so yes, we have
had two committee bills. There was also a Members bill
which was taken over by a committee, a Bill on domestic violence,
so there have been three. Because these are driven entirely
by committees there werent many of them at the outset.
There was quite a bit of criticism from the wider body of
people in Scotland interested in these bills that there had
been a disappointingly low number of them. However, I think
it is purely a matter of committees trying to establish their
identity, functions and roles, and establish their agendas
in the early stages of the Parliament; and I think the fact
we have now had some success indicates that, when committees
plan a four year programme of their own work for the next
Parliament, they will then think just as ministers are thinking,
that they want to compete for some of the available time,
and bring forward bill proposals.
MR ROWLANDS: Taking these three bills, they would have
originally been drafted with the support of your staff or
Parliamentary draughtsmen.
MR GRICE: Yes.
MR ROWLANDS: And then at some stage during the process
would an Executive in a sense come in quite heavily to make
sure they are knocked into shape or not?
SIR DAVID STEEL: We agreed early on that we needed to
establish within our structure a non-executive bills unit,
so we have people specifically dealing with committee bills
and members bills. But as we discussed earlier, they
are somewhat over stretched and somebody has to give them
guidance as to what the priorities are. The fact that we have
established that unit shows how important this whole process
is.
MR ROWLANDS: They would have a staff process in terms
of drafting amendments responding to amendments?
MR TOSH: Its slightly different with Members
bills, as some Members have chosen to bring bills forward
using outside legal and other staff.
MR ROWLANDS; Generated by the committees themselves they
would have been drafted by the unit at a process and the legislative
executive would have taken a view about this bill and would
have said well we accept it and would they seek to amend it,
presumably taking these three bills, do they have a vote in
anyway?
MR TOSH: The bill would be the subject of a report by
the committee to which it had been referred, the Parliament
would decide whether it was going to accept the bill, and
the Executives role at that stage would be to bring
forward such amendments as it wanted. Ministers would attend
at the committee stage 2, and promote those amendments which
the Executive felt it wished to promote. In the 3rd
Stage, Minister would bring forward any further amendments:
at this stage the Parliament sits as a committee for the final
round of amendment.
MR ROWLANDS: Would an executive whip their amendment?
MR TOSH: I dont think they whip formally. They
issue their back bench members on the committees with briefings
to indicate what the Executive would wish to see happen, and
I think that the normal party discipline inclines Members
to follow the Ministers. However, I am aware of some quite
spectacular examples where committees have not agreed to support
the Executive, and have made fairly substantial changes, even
when Bills contain major items of the Executives programme.
SIR DAVID STEEL: One interesting difference I have noticed
between what happened at Westminster and what happens here,
is that there is no party whip sitting in on the committees.
You will know from experience at Westminster that every legislative
committee has its whip. We do not have such a thing. There
is more cross party voting in the process of legislation and
it is accepted as normal.
MR ROWLANDS: Its not known as giving a bloody nose
to the executive, it is a committee but it does its own thing.
SIR DAVID STEEL: The committees here are, in a sense,
more powerful than their equivalent committees at Westminster.
LORD RICHARD; Well, thank you very much indeed for coming
and being extremely useful. What we are trying to get is that
the practicalities of how you work and I think you have helped
us a great deal, thank you and your colleagues very much for
coming today.
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