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COMMISSION ON THE ASSEMBLYS POWERS
AND ELECTORAL ARRANGEMENTS
MEMORANDUM BY THE UK GOVERNMENT
Opening
remarks
Introduction
The National Assembly for Wales assumed its full responsibilities
on 1 July 1999 following the elections on 6 May that
year. That marked a culmination of the process of implementing
the Governments vision of devolution in Wales,
originally set out in the White Paper A Voice for
Wales. The White Paper proposals were endorsed by
the people of Wales in a referendum in September 1997,
and subsequently given full effect through the Government
of Wales Act 1998.
With the Assembly now nearing the completion of its
first full term, the Government believes that devolution
has been a great success. Devolution has become a settled
part of the political landscape, and the National Assembly
for Wales and Welsh Assembly Government have begun to
make a real difference to the lives of the people of
Wales, finding Welsh solutions to Welsh problems. It
is important that the Assembly continues to be effective
in delivering better public services and stronger communities
for the people of Wales within the settlement for which
they voted.
Assembly Powers
Whether the Assemblys powers are
sufficiently clear to allow optimum efficiency in policy-making
- The scheme of devolution set out in A Voice for
Wales and endorsed by the people of Wales was
deliberately very different to the approach adopted
for Scotland. The Scottish settlement involves both
legislative and executive devolution, and the Scottish
Parliament has full legislative competence (i.e. it
can pass both primary and secondary legislation).
The Scotland Act 1998 sets out those powers reserved
to the UK Parliament and Government, with everything
else devolved to the Scottish Parliament and Executive.
By contrast, Welsh devolution is purely executive,
with the Assembly exercising powers formerly exercised
by the Secretary of State for Wales. The Government
of Wales Act 1998 therefore made provision for the
establishment of the Assembly, leaving its detailed
powers to be specified in a series of Transfer of
Functions Orders made under the Act plus those conferred
by subsequent primary legislation.
- The advantage to this approach lies in its considerable
flexibility to adapt to circumstance. But the Transfer
of Functions Orders are by their very nature not particularly
"user-friendly" for ordinary people interested in
finding out about the powers devolved to Wales. As
with all legislation, they are drafted to achieve
legal certainty. Using more "everyday" language would
make it more difficult for legal advisers to advise
policy-makers on the precise extent of the Assemblys
powers. Nevertheless, the Office of the Deputy Prime
Ministers Devolution Guidance Note 11 on Ministerial
Accountability after Devolution was deliberately designed
as a more accessible guide to the general scope of
the Assemblys powers. Though this Guidance Note
is now in need of some up-dating to reflect a number
of changes since it was first written.
Whether both the breadth (i.e. the
range of issues over which it has control) and the
depth (i.e. the capacity to affect change within
those issues) of the Assemblys powers are
adequate to permit integrated and consistent policy
making on issues where there is a clear and separate
Welsh agenda
- The Government believes that the current settlement
does provide an adequate framework for integrated
and consistent policy-making in Wales. The White Paper
A Voice for Wales stated that:
Parliament will continue to be
the principal law maker for Wales.
Nevertheless, it went on to say:
The Governments proposals
will allow the Assembly to seek to influence legislation
which is being considered at Westminster.
And
The Government will consider, in
drafting each Bill that it introduces into Parliament,
which of the new powers it contains should be exercised
in Wales
As a general principle, the Government
expects Bills that confer new powers and relate
to the Assemblys functions, such as education,
health and housing, will provide for the powers
to be exercised separately and differently in Wales;
and to be exercised by the Assembly.
The UK Government has therefore been
willing, where possible, to accommodate a separate
Welsh agenda in primary legislation. This has resulted
in a number of Acts that contain significant Welsh
provisions, as well as Wales-only legislation. (See
the summary at Annex A.)
- Procedures for handling primary legislation affecting
Wales are set out in the Office of the Deputy Prime
Ministers Devolution Guidance Note 9 (attached
at Annex B). This states that the UK Government,
through the lead UK department, should consult the
Welsh Assembly Government at an early stage in the
development of legislative proposals, in order to
identify the level of interest for the Assembly and
to ensure that the Bill is handled properly in relation
to Wales. The guidance means that the Welsh Assembly
Government should always be consulted on Bills which:
- confer new functions on the Assembly;
- alter the Assemblys existing functions; or
- otherwise affect areas which are the responsibility
of the Assembly, including where the Assembly will
be responsible for implementation in Wales, though
policy control remains with the UK Government.
In addition to liaising with the Welsh Assembly Government
over provision for Wales in primary legislation the
UK Government is also prepared to consider the transferring
of additional functions to the National Assembly. For
example, the Government is currently in discussion with
the Welsh Assembly Government on the case for transferring
further animal health powers to the Assembly to deal
with all future outbreaks of animal disease in Wales.
Whether the mechanisms for UK Government
policy making as regards Wales and the arrangements
for influence by the Assembly on these are clear and
effective, and in particular whether they correct any
shortcoming from the previous item
Memorandum of Understanding and the Joint
Ministerial Committee
There is a close working relationship between the UK
Government and the Welsh Assembly Government at both
ministerial and official levels. The majority of day-to-day
relations are informal and on a bilateral basis. This
is recognised in the Memorandum of Understanding
and supplementary agreements first published in October
1999 and most recently revised in December 2001. The
Memorandum of Understanding states that:
"The UK Government and the devolved administrations
believe that most contact between them should be carried
out on a bilateral or multi-lateral basis, between departments
which deal on a day-to-day basis with the issues at
stake. Nevertheless, some central co-ordination of the
overall relationship is needed
. The UK Government
and devolved administrations commit themselves, wherever
possible, to conduct business through normal administrative
channels, either at official or Ministerial level."
The Memorandum of Understanding is not legally binding;
it simply sets out the principles that the UK Government
and the devolved administrations intend should underlie
relations between them. The Memorandum of Understanding
commits all four administrations to the principles of:
- good communications, especially where the work of
one administration may have some bearing upon the
responsibilities of another administration;
- co-operation, where appropriate, on matters of mutual
interest; and
- open access to scientific, technical and policy
information, including statistics and research, subject
to any appropriate safeguards each administration
might wish to place on its use and the requirements
of the Freedom of Information Acts.
The Memorandum of Understanding also provides for the
establishment of the Joint Ministerial Committee.
The Committee meets in plenary format at least once
a year to review the operation of devolution. It is
chaired by the Prime Minister (or his representative)
and attended by the Deputy Prime Minister, the Heads
of the devolved administrations, and the territorial
Secretaries of State. Other Ministers attend as appropriate
when issues relevant to their areas of responsibility
are discussed. Its terms of reference are:
- to consider non-devolved matters which impinge on
devolved responsibilities, and devolved matters which
impinge on non-devolved responsibilities;
- where the UK Government and the devolved administrations
so agree, to consider devolved matters if it is beneficial
to discuss their respective treatment in the different
parts of the United Kingdom;
- to keep the arrangements for liaison between the
UK Government and the devolved administrations under
review; and
- to consider disputes between the administrations.
To date, the Joint Ministerial Committee has met on
three occasions in plenary format, in Edinburgh on 1
September 2000, in Cardiff on 30 October 2001 and in
London on 22 October 2002. All three meetings reviewed
the operation of the devolution settlement. The committee
has also met in a number of subject formats to explore
issues in greater depth. Over the past two and a half
years, Ministers have held productive discussions on
Europe, health and NHS modernisation, poverty and the
knowledge economy. Functional committees are open to
review, and Ministers are free to establish a committee
on any subject they wish (although only a limited range
of subjects are of interest to all four administrations).
The fact that no disputes have so far been referred
to the Joint Ministerial Committee for resolution suggests
that the existing system of inter-administration relations
is working well. The Government believes that the system
would be able to cope even in the event of strained
relations, should that occur. In the UK tensions between
local and central government have been commonplace,
yet they have rarely required some form of formal "dispute
resolution". Evidence from overseas suggests that even
in countries where relations between one or more part
of the state are strained, the ordinary business of
government still gets done.
Role of the Secretary of State for Wales
and the Wales Office
Devolution Guidance Note 4 explains the role of the
Secretary of State. As primary legislation continues
to be made in Westminster, the Secretary of State for
Wales maintains a significant workload on occasions
in the form of separate Welsh Bills but more commonly
leading on Wales-only clauses in England and Wales legislation.
For the rest, his responsibilities are akin to those
of the other territorial Secretaries of State. His overriding
objective is to represent the UK Government in Wales
and to represent Wales (not just the Assembly) in the
Government. This requires Wales Office Ministers to
answer for Wales regularly at Parliamentary Questions,
in Welsh Grand Committee meetings, before the Welsh
Affairs Committee and on other Parliamentary occasions.
It also requires them to be members of around 20 Cabinet
committees or sub-committees. Parliament votes the "Welsh
Block" to the Secretary of State, who transfers funds
to the Assembly after deducting the expenses of the
Wales Office. Changes to the Block are consequential
on changes to equivalent English programmes, calculated
by the Barnett formula; details are set out in the Treasurys
Statement of Funding Policy. However, these changes
do not bind the Assembly to expenditure on equivalent
programmes; it is free to allocate funds within the
Block according to its own priorities.
The Secretary of State meets the First Minister at
least weekly, and he and the Parliamentary Secretary
have regular meetings with other Assembly Ministers.
The Secretary of State has a non-voting seat in the
Assembly and is required by section 31 of the Government
of Wales Act to attend once a year to present the Governments
legislative programme to the Assembly. The Parliamentary
Secretary has by invitation attended Assembly Committees
on a number of occasions.
In addition to this, section 41 of the Government of
Wales Act allows for activities to be undertaken by
either administration on behalf of the other through
agency arrangements. For example, Assembly staff assist
Wales Office officials in supporting Wales Office Ministers
during the passage of Wales-only legislation through
Parliament.
Role of the Office of the Deputy Prime
Minister
The Office of the Deputy Prime Minister has the overall
lead on devolution issues within the UK Government.
The Deputy Prime Minister chairs the Cabinet Committee
on the Nations and Regions. He is also a member of the
Joint Ministerial Committee when it meets in plenary
format. In taking forward these responsibilities, the
Deputy Prime Minister is supported by the Devolution
and Constitution Division, whose primary role is to
manage overall relations with the devolved administrations
and oversee the operation of devolution. This includes:
- ensuring that the exchange of information between
administrations is adequate;
- helping to resolve bilateral problems;
- where necessary, ensuring liaison between the UK
Government and the devolved administrations on issues
cutting across departmental boundaries;
- maintaining an overview of the workings of the devolution
arrangements, including the concordats and the resolution
of disputes arising from them;
- servicing meetings of the Joint Ministerial Committee
and its official counterpart; and
- providing a central source of guidance and expertise
(including the suite of Devolution Guidance Notes
already referred to).
Operation of the mechanisms
As has been explained above, there are clear mechanisms
for consulting the Assembly. However, they will only
be effective if operated correctly. Getting this
right has been a process of learning for both the UK
Government and the Welsh Assembly Government. Although
operation of these mechanisms has not always been perfect,
the last meeting of the Joint Ministerial Committee
in October agreed that steady progress was being made.
It is important though, to ensure that as officials
in UK Government departments and the Assembly who are
familiar with operating devolution move on, their knowledge
and experience are not lost to their successors.
Whether the division of responsibility
between the Assembly and the UK Government places inappropriate
constraints on Whitehall policy making, both on matters
over which the Assembly has control and otherwise
The division of responsibility between the UK Government
and the National Assembly does place some constraints
on Whitehall policy making. However, the Government
does not consider these constraints to be inappropriate;
they are an intended consequence of devolution and allowing
things to be done differently in different parts of
the UK.
The Government has retained control over matters which
affect devolved responsibilities in Wales, just as it
has in Scotland and Northern Ireland. One obvious example
is the social security and benefits system, which is
best organised on a GB basis. It is inevitable that
the administration of the social security and benefits
system will impinge upon devolved responsibilities,
for example for certain aspects of social policy. In
such cases it is of course appropriate that the Assembly
Government is both informed and consulted in accordance
with the commitments in the Memorandum of Understanding.
A further example is the Nationality, Immigration and
Asylum Act 2002, for which the Home Office was responsible
but which has had an impact on the Assemblys responsibility
for health and education. The Assembly Government was
therefore fully consulted in the preparation of the
legislation.
Furthermore, it should be noted that Westminster remains
sovereign and, although for example, it will not normally
legislate on matters that have been devolved to Scotland
without the agreement of the Scottish Parliament, it
retains the capacity to do so. (A parallel convention
applies to primary legislation affecting Northern Ireland.)
So while there are some constraints on Whitehall, which
must act within the framework of the legislation passed
by Parliament, there are no such constraints on Parliament.
Electoral Arrangements
Whether the size of the Assembly is
adequate to allow it to operate effectively within a
normal working week, and without placing undue pressure
on members
Whether the means of electing the Assembly,
including the degree of proportionality, adequately
and accurately represents all significant interests
in Wales
Whether any changes which have been recommended
to the Assemblys powers make either necessary
or desirable changes to the size of the Assembly or
the means of electing it
The Governments aim in establishing the electoral
arrangements for the National Assembly for Wales, a
form of the Additional Member System, was "a system
of election that will enable all parts of Wales to be
fairly represented". Arrangements for elections
to the Scottish Parliament and Greater London Authority
are very similar. The Government has also proposed that
such arrangements should be used for directly-elected
English Regional Assemblies. It is also worth noting
that, in addition to establishing the Parliament, the
Scotland Act proved for a reduction in the number of
Scottish seats at Westminster, to take effect following
the conclusion of the current boundary review.
Should changes ever be made to the composition or electoral
arrangements for the Assembly, that would of course
require legislation to amend the Government of Wales
Act. It would also be necessary to consult the Electoral
Commission and the Welsh Parliamentary Boundary Commission.
Wales Office
Office of the Deputy Prime Minister
December 2002
PRIMARY LEGISLATION FOR WALES OR WITH
SIGNIFICANT WALES-ONLY PROVISIONS
Wales-only legislation
- Childrens Commissioner for Wales Act 2001
- Health (Wales) Bill 2002
Legislation with significant Wales-only
provision
- Care Standards Act 2000
- Countryside and Rights of Way Act 2000
- Local Government Act 2000
- Learning and Skills Act 2000
- Transport Act 2000
- Special Education Needs and Disability Act 2001
- Education Act 2002
- NHS Reform and Health Care Professions Act 2002
- Licensing Bill 2002
- Local Government Bill 2002
- Planning and Compulsory Purchase Bill 2002
DEVOLUTION GUIDANCE NOTE 9
POST-DEVOLUTION PRIMARY LEGISLATION AFFECTING
WALES
SUMMARY
- The UK Government has agreed with the Welsh Assembly
Government that they will normally consult each other
from an early stage on the development of relevant
legislative proposals, in confidence where necessary.
- The Welsh Assembly Government should always be consulted
on Bills that confer new functions on the Assembly;
alter the Assemblys existing functions; or otherwise
affect areas which are the responsibility of the Assembly.
- The same procedure should be followed for Bills
being published in draft, and for Private Members
Bills that are to be supported by the Government.
- The note does not deal with legislation that deals
with emergencies or is similarly exceptional.
Introduction
1. This note sets out guidance for
UK Government departments on consulting the Welsh Assembly
Government on new legislation affecting the Assemblys
responsibilities. The UK Government has agreed with
the Welsh Assembly Government that they will normally
consult each other from an early stage on the development
of relevant legislative proposals, in confidence where
necessary (see Devolution Guidance Note 1 Common
Working Arrangements, which should be read separately
if you are unfamiliar with it, in particular
paragraphs 31 to 34). This means that the Welsh Assembly
Government should always be consulted on Bills which:
- confer new functions on the Assembly;
- alter the Assemblys existing functions (including
legislation on, for instance, freedom of information,
which would affect the overall discharge of its duties
and those of public bodies for which it is responsible);
or
- otherwise affect areas which are the responsibility
of the Assembly, including where it will be responsible
for implementation in Wales, though policy control
remains with the UK Government.
Departments should make clear when information
is being passed in confidence. There is no absolute
need to consult the Welsh Assembly Government on other
Bills, although departments might find this useful in
some circumstances and the Welsh Assembly Government
might likewise wish to make representations about such
matters itself.
2. The purpose of this guidance is to
facilitate the efficient conduct by the UK Government
of its legislative business. Disagreements are an impediment
to that and it is in the Governments interests
that potential disagreements are identified as early
as possible through consultation. Potential points of
disagreement with the Welsh Assembly Government should
be fully explored and wherever possible resolved before
legislation is introduced or, in the case of Bills which
are advance drafted, before Bills are published. Departments
will be expected therefore to make every effort to ensure
that the Legislative Programme Committee (LP) is fully
aware of any potential difficulties which might be material
to their decisions.
3. Consistently with the separation
of functions between LP on the one hand and policy committees,
such as DA (Domestic Affairs), on the other, this note
is not concerned with the process by which the Assembly
Cabinet is consulted about policy. Arrangements for
this are set out in the Memorandum of Understanding,
the agreement on Common Working Arrangements (Devolution
Guidance Note 1) and the various bilateral concordats
between departments and their counterparts in the Assembly.
Government of Wales Act
4. Section 31 of the Government of
Wales Act 1998 places a duty on the Secretary of State
for Wales to consult the Assembly after the beginning
of each Session on the legislative programme and on
non-programme Bills agreed for introduction subsequently
(unless there are considerations relating to the Bill
which make such consultation inappropriate). The duty
includes one of personal attendance by the Secretary
of State for Wales. It provides an opportunity to consider
the content of individual Bills, in addition to the
Governments choice of priorities. More guidance
on the role of the Secretary of State for Wales, including
the role in relation to primary legislation, is given
in Devolution Guidance Note 4 The Role of the
Secretary of State for Wales.
Government Bills - LP
5. There may need to be consultation
with the Welsh Assembly Government on a proposed Bill
during or prior to consideration by LP of the content
of the legislative programme. In many cases, such consultation
will occur naturally, at the same time as consultation
takes place on policy content. Where that is not the
case, departments should consider alternative means
of obtaining the Welsh Assembly Governments views,
to feed into their thinking about the priorities which
they would put to LP. Where the possibility of particular
legislation has not been publicly announced, information
going to the Welsh Assembly Government should be passed
in confidence. It will be a matter for agreement whether,
and to what extent, confidentiality must constrain wider
consultation by the Welsh Assembly Government and in
no circumstances will the Welsh Assembly Government
circulate or allude to Bill material without the consent
of the lead department such agreement, if reached,
may depend on the duty of confidentiality extending
to any other bodies consulted by the Welsh Assembly
Government. Additional guidance on confidentiality is
given in paragraph 11 of the Memorandum of Understanding
agreed between the UK Government and the devolved administrations.
6. Consultation with the Welsh Assembly Government
can be facilitated if departments ensure that Bill material
deals accurately with the Assembly and addresses certain
common features of the devolution settlement. The annex
to this note lists some of the main aspects of this.
While this is not prescriptive, and is no substitute
for detailed discussions, it should ensure that such
discussions can focus on any substantive sticking points
and are not dominated by relatively minor and technical
matters.
Preparation of Bills and Submission to
LP
7. The essential requirement is that
by the time proposals to introduce legislation reach
LP, all devolution-related issues are to have been addressed
and so far as possible resolved (significant unresolved
issues may affect LPs view of the readiness of
the Bill for introduction). Papers for LP must contain
a statement to that effect. In addition papers to LP
should:
- explain any provision proposed in respect of Wales
which differs from the provision proposed for England
or the rest of the UK;
- identify any exception to the general rule that
a new function created by the Bill will pass to the
Assembly in cases where it already exercises similar
functions within that subject area and identify the
policy clearance for that decision;
- identify any change to the existing functions of
the Assembly, including any new function being vested
in the Assembly which might raise issues of general
principle, and the policy clearance for the change;
and
- confirm that the Welsh Assembly Government has been
consulted on the draft clauses as necessary (including
commencement and other transitional provisions), summarise
the Welsh Assembly Governments view and indicate
whether the Committee on the Nations and Regions or
the Joint Ministerial Committee is likely to become
involved (either in correspondence or through a meeting).
8. There should, in addition to any earlier
policy discussions, also be consultation with the Welsh
Assembly Government as part of the process of formulating
instructions to Parliamentary Counsel, where these touch
on the Assemblys responsibilities, so that their
interests are understood from the outset and any dispute
resolution process undertaken in good time. An arrangement
that has proved effective in the past is for Assembly
lawyers to provide a draft of instructions for the lead
department to approve and then pass on to Parliamentary
Counsel. In some cases, it may be appropriate for Parliamentary
Counsel to take instructions direct from the Assembly
lawyers; but this should be done only where it is the
most effective way of operating and the lead departments
and its ministers agree to this arrangement.
Pre-Legislative Draft Bills
9. The procedures described above should also be followed
for Bills being published in draft.
Private Members Bills
10. The same procedures should be followed
for Government Hand-out Bills as for Bills in the main
programme. For other Private Members Bills, if
the Government intends to support the Bill, the Welsh
Assembly Government should likewise be consulted on
any matters which affect the Assemblys responsibilities.
It is not absolutely necessary to inform the Assembly
if it is clear that the Government cannot support a
Private Members Bill. However it will frequently
be helpful for officials in Wales to be aware of this
if the Bill covers functions which are the responsibility
of the National Assembly.
Office of the Deputy Prime Minister
January 2003
Referring to the Assembly in primary legislation
The following checklist aims to cover some largely
technical points in referring to the Assembly in Government
Bills. It is neither exhaustive nor prescriptive. However,
it should serve as a useful aide-mémoire for departments
and should minimise the need for discussions with Assembly
officials to be dominated by relatively minor issues
such as these.
Nomenclature
- Parliamentary Counsel will judge on the most suitable
way of referring to the Assembly in a Bill, for example
by its formal title, "the National Assembly for Wales",
or by a short title such as "the Assembly". However,
the term "Welsh Assembly" is always to be avoided.
- The Government of Wales Act introduced a new definition
of "Wales", expanding the Assembly's jurisdiction
to include the sea around Wales to a distance of 12
nautical miles. Where a Bill confers functions on
the Assembly which could be exercised in relation
to the sea or to maritime activities, it should thus
normally use the definition of Wales in s155 of the
Government of Wales Act and orders made thereunder.
Functions in a Bill
- Functions should normally be conferred on the Assembly
as a whole, rather than on a named office-holder (such
as the First Minister). It is for the Assembly to
consider delegating any new functions it receives
to the First Minister or to any other arm of the Assembly.
- Commencement provisions in a Bill (i.e. the means
by which it comes into force) should normally apply
on equal terms to England and Wales, and to Ministers
and the Assembly. Again, proposed departures from
these two presumptions (for example, if there is a
good case for a common implementation date) should
be discussed at an early stage in the pre-legislative
process.
- While it remains possible to confer functions on
the Assembly by means of a transfer Order under s22
of the Government of Wales Act, new functions should
normally be conferred directly on the Assembly by
primary legislation. To do otherwise can increase
the amount of parliamentary time needed (by requiring
it to consider the order as well as the Bill) and
potentially misleads as to the Government's intentions
(since Parliament will assume the functions are not
being conferred on the National Assembly).
Statutory procedures
- The Assembly's procedures as regards subordinate
legislation are not the same as Parliament's: in particular,
subordinate legislation cannot routinely be made in
the Assembly using a negative procedure. Bills should
thus not seek to prescribe the procedures for making
Assembly subordinate legislation, and provisions applying
Parliamentary procedures to subordinate legislation
made by Ministers should not extend to the Assembly.
- A Bill should not normally subject the actions of
the Assembly to Ministerial consent or approval (or
vice versa), apart from certain functions which require
the consent of HM Treasury. Exceptions to this should
be explored as early as possible in the pre-legislative
process.
- Where there is a requirement for Ministers to consult
the Assembly before acting (or vice versa), this should
be included in legislation rather than in a concordat.
New public bodies
- Where the Assembly will be wholly or partly responsible
for public bodies and offices, these should have statutory
titles in Welsh and English (e.g. "There shall be
a [title of body in English] or [title of body in
Welsh]". Assembly officials will be able to advise
on a suitable translation into Welsh.
- A new public office should only disqualify its holder
from membership of the Assembly where that would cause
an unavoidable conflict of interest with the Assembly's
responsibilities. Disqualification from membership
of the House of Commons does not always give rise
to disqualification from the Assembly (s12, Government
of Wales Act). Disqualification should generally be
left to an Order under s12(1)(b) of the Government
of Wales Act.
- New public bodies which fall solely under the Assembly's
control should normally be subject to its general
powers to reform public bodies in Wales (ss27&28
and Sch.4, Government of Wales Act). A Bill should
also normally provide for records of such a body to
be Welsh public records (ss116-118, Government of
Wales Act).
- Consideration should always be given as to whether
a new public body or office-holder should be subject
to the Assemblys powers of summons (s74 and
Sch.5, Government of Wales Act). Generally speaking
subjection to these powers will be appropriate in
cases where the Assembly might reasonably require
information from a public body or office-holder to
carry out its executive functions (i.e. when there
is reasonable common ground between the bodys
responsibilities and those of the Assembly).
- Where the Assembly is to be wholly responsible for
a new body, it should have the power to determine
the form of that body's accounts, subject to Treasury
consent.
- Bills should provide that the Auditor General for
Wales (AGW), and not the Comptroller and Auditor General,
is to be responsible for auditing the accounts of
any body which reports solely to the Assembly.
- Where the AGW audits a body's accounts, s/he should
also have the power to conduct "value for money" examinations
into that body.
DEVOLUTION GUIDANCE NOTE 4
THE ROLE OF THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR
WALES
SUMMARY
- With effect from 1 July 1999, most of the functions
of the Secretary of State for Wales transferred to
the National Assembly for Wales.
- The Wales Office, which supports the Secretary of
State, has its headquarters at Gwydyr House, Whitehall.
- The Secretary of State for Wales acts to ensure
that the interests of Wales are fully taken into account
by the UK Government in making decisions that will
have effect in Wales, and to represent the UK Government
in Wales.
- The Secretary of State for Wales is responsible
for ensuring the passage of Wales-only legislation
through Parliament
- Departments should copy to the Secretary of State
or the Wales Office all correspondence between UK
and Assembly Ministers and between senior officials,
especially when it relates to primary legislation.
Introduction
On 1 July 1999 most of the functions of the Secretary
of State for Wales transferred to the National Assembly
for Wales by Order in Council; other functions have
been transferred by further Transfer of Functions Orders
or conferred by primary legislation. Responsibility
for primary legislation for Wales remains with Westminster,
so it is not possible to distinguish between reserved
and devolved matters as it is for Scotland; the distinction
is between transferred and non-transferred functions.
Virtually no executive functions remain with the Secretary
of State for Wales; any functions not transferred to
the Assembly are exercised in Wales by the lead UK department.
Following devolution, the role of the
Secretary of State for Wales is to:
- act as guardian of the devolution settlement in
Wales;
- ensure that the interests of Wales are fully taken
into account by the UK Government in making decisions
which will have effect in Wales;
- represent the UK Government in Wales; and
- oversee the progress through Parliament of primary
legislation making separate provision for Wales.
This note considers some of the implications
of that role for other departments.
Guardian of the devolution settlement
This does not mean that the Secretary
of State is a channel of communication between the UK
Government and the Assembly. Normally departments should
deal with the Welsh Assembly Government direct. The
Secretary of State and the Wales Office will:
- give advice on the handling of business in the light
of devolution;
- act as honest broker should there be any dispute
between the Assembly and Whitehall or Westminster;
and
- explain the nature and consequences of devolution
to the Assembly on behalf of the UK Government.
It would be helpful if departments would
copy to the Secretary of State or the Wales Office all
correspondence between Ministers and Assembly Ministers
and between senior officials.
Voice of Wales in the Cabinet
The Secretary of State for Wales speaks for Wales in
the UK Cabinet and ensures that decisions are taken
with full regard to any matters where Wales has particular
interests or concerns. The Secretary of State is not
a mouthpiece for the Assembly but needs to know the
views of the Welsh Assembly Government before coming
to a view. This is particularly important in relation
to proposals for primary legislation that affect Wales
see DGN 9 Post Devolution Primary Legislation
Affecting Wales, available from the Office of the
Deputy Prime Minister.
Bearing this in mind, it is essential
if there is to be no delay in reaching decisions that
Welsh Assembly Government officials and Ministers are
consulted at an early stage in the development of policy.
Any necessary consultation of Assembly members must,
of course, wait until the proposals are made public.
Colleagues are asked therefore:
- that officials should take soundings of Assembly
officials as soon as possible. If these indicate that
there may be clauses in the legislation dealing specifically
with Wales or particular issues relating to Wales,
officials in the Wales Office should be alerted.
- that whenever possible the relevant Assembly Minister
should be asked for his or her views on a proposal
at the same time as policy clearance is sought from
Cabinet colleagues. It would not be appropriate for
the Assembly Cabinet to be aware of internal UK Cabinet
discussions, so the most useful way of achieving this
is to write to the Assembly Minister in similar terms
asking for comments rather than agreement. However,
in setting deadlines, colleagues should recognise
that the Secretary of State for Wales will wish to
know the Assembly Governments view before he
himself responds to Cabinet colleagues, whether or
not he supports that view.
While this is particularly important
for proposals for primary legislation, the principle
should be applied to any Government initiative that
affects Wales.
None of this affects the Secretary of
States duty under the Government of Wales Act
1998 to consult the Assembly on the Governments
legislative programme. This clearly means consultation
with Assembly Members and will be carried out in a formal
and public way. However if there has been adequate consultation
with the Welsh Assembly Government, the consultation
with the Assembly as a whole is less likely to raise
issues which have to be addressed during the passage
of legislation.
It is the responsibility of the Secretary
of State to steer through Parliament any clauses in
legislation relating solely to Wales. Such clauses will
have been included at the request of the Welsh Assembly
Government, with the agreement of the lead Minister,
the Secretary of State and Cabinet colleagues. However,
the Secretary of State is not in a position to draft
instructions to Counsel; that is for the lead Departments
Bill team after consulting Assembly officials and lawyers.
It would not be appropriate for Parliamentary Counsel
to take instructions direct from Assembly lawyers but
the most effective way of operating has proved to be
for Assembly lawyers to provide a draft of instructions
for the lead Department to approve and then pass on
to Parliamentary Counsel.
10. During the passage of a Bill through
Parliament, the Secretary of States officials
will commission appropriate support; this could be from
the Assembly or from the lead Department. It should
be noted that with one junior Minister and an interest
in most Bills, the Wales Office will need to look for
flexibility in membership of standing Committees.
Voice of the UK Government in Wales
11. With the agreement of colleagues,
the Secretary of State has always presented the UK Governments
policy on matters that are of significance to Wales
even if lead responsibility is formally with another
colleague. This should remain the case for issues which
have not been devolved but in which the Assembly has
a strong interest either because matters which are its
responsibility are affected by UK Government actions
e.g. negotiations with Europe on the Assisted
Areas map, Structural Funds and the CAP or because
it has responsibility for implementing all or part of
UK policies e.g. New Deal and Social Inclusion.
12. If colleagues are making announcements
on non-devolved matters which will have a major effect
in Wales, they should consider how the Secretary of
State for Wales should present the policy in Wales.
There are various possibilities:
- Joint announcements/consultations. If this is appropriate,
the timetable must allow for them to be bi-lingual
in Wales.
- The Secretary of State for Wales formally to consult
the Assembly on behalf of the UK Government by sending
them the document prepared by the lead Department.
- The Secretary of State to make a parallel announcement
to the Welsh media focusing on the effect in Wales.
Colleagues should also be aware that,
while Welsh Assembly Government officials are able to
give the Secretary of State factual briefing under the
concordat with the Wales Office, they are not in a position
to provide him with the UK Government line to take.
Wales Office officials will need to call on UK colleagues
for this in a variety of circumstances, such as parliamentary
questions, speeches, briefing for meetings, replies
to MPs and members of the public etc.
Wales Office
October 2002
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