Welsh Assembly: Re-Arranging Titanic’s Deckchairs

Welsh Assembly

Re-Arranging Titanic’s Deckchairs

AFTER A two-year investigation, the Richard Commission has
recommended that the Welsh Assembly should be given primary law-making powers
by 2011. 

Dave Reid, Socialist Party Wales

The same week it was revealed that a 55-year-old woman suffering from
pneumonia and heart problems was forced to wait for a hospital bed on a trolley
for four days at Swansea’s Morriston hospital.

Former leader of the Lords, Lord Richard and his team of
nine commissioners spent nearly two years examining the way the Cardiff Bay
body works. Their report suggested giving the Assembly more powers gradually
between now and 2011. It also suggests raising the number of Assembly Members
from 60 to 80, and electing them using a single transferable vote system.

No power

The problem that Labour Lord Richard and the rest of the
commission have had to grapple with is how can the Welsh Assembly work if it
has no power to do anything?

Dissatisfaction has grown throughout Wales as none of the
problems of Welsh society have been addressed let alone solved by the Welsh
Assembly. The Assembly has been viewed with utter contempt by people in Wales.

Last May, while some schools complained they did not have
enough classroom chairs for their students, the politicians squabbled over the
seating arrangements in the Assembly. Thousands of pounds were spent moving the
seats around the chamber so that they could each sit next to their friends.

A few minor reforms like free bus passes for the elderly
have been outweighed by the worsening of major crises in health and education.
One in ten of the Welsh population occupy a place on a health waiting list
rather than in a hospital bed.

The ‘Welsh Labour’ majority in the Assembly has proudly
boasted that top-up fees will not apply to Wales (for one year at least!) but
the Assembly government has not got the cash to fund Welsh universities
separately to England.

So, as Socialist Party Wales predicted when the Assembly
was established, the Richard Commission has concluded that the Assembly should
have law-making powers. But these powers will only apply to those areas of
government devolved to the Assembly and the Welsh Office before it like health,
education, housing and social services.

So the Welsh Assembly, even under these proposals, will
have no power over fiscal and monetary policy, employment legislation, most
energy matters, the railways, social security, broadcasting, equal
opportunities, police or criminal justice, as well as defence, immigration and
nationality issues.

It is proposing that the number of Assembly members should
be increased from 60 to 80 to deal with the proposed new powers and allow for
their election by the purely proportional representative system of Single
Transferable Vote (as in elections to the Dail, the Irish Parliament) instead
of the current Regional List mixture of ‘first past the post’ and proportional
representation.

Socialist Party Wales has always supported law-making
powers for the Welsh Assembly and would support the election of Assembly
Members by proportional representation which would allow space for new
representatives of the working class to challenge the four main pro-capitalist
parties.

Failing system

However, the Richard Commission’s proposals are a million
miles from the aspirations of the ordinary working class people of Wales. These
proposals are motivated by the desire to smooth out the creases of a failing
system.

It looks likely that Labour Party Wales leadership will
accept extra powers for the Assembly but not election by proportional
representation nor the expansion of the number of Assembly Members to 80. The
excuse used will be that people in Wales do not want more politicians in the
Assembly. But if they were that concerned about the perception of politicians
then they would not vote for their inflated salaries.

The basic problem is that the public services that the
Assembly is responsible for are under-funded by the Blair/Brown government and
all the main parties accept the basis for this under-funding. Richard concedes
that there is a case for tax raising powers for the Welsh Assembly but everyone
knows that there is little scope for taxing Wales anymore because the Welsh GDP
is the lowest in Britain.

Socialist leadership

So unless a socialist leadership of the Assembly is elected
that fights for the return of the billions of pounds taken from public services
in Wales and the rest of Britain over the past 25 years then none of the
crushing problems affecting public services can be solved.

Until fighters for the working class lead the Assembly then
the Richard proposals amount to re-arranging the deckchairs on the deck of the
Titanic. And re-arranging chairs is one thing that the Assembly already can do.