Cyflwynwyd yr
ymateb hwn i
ymgynghoriad y
Pwyllgor Biliau Diwygio ar
Fil Senedd Cymru (Aelodau ac
Etholiadau).
This response
was submitted to the
Reform Bill
Committee consultation on
the
Senedd Cymru
(Members and Elections) Bill.
SCME426 Ymateb gan: | Response from: John
Kitchen
_____________________________________________________________________________________
- To maintain the relevance of my comments to
the matters being discussed I will use the consultation
document as a template.
- If passed, the Senedd Cymru (Members and
Elections) Bill will:
-
- Increase the size of the Senedd to 96
Members.
- 1 I believe this to be wholly
inappropriate given the burgeoning costs of the administration and
the dire financial position that the Welsh Government
is in. Competing items such as health, education
and road maintenance and renewal all demand
preference if and when finance becomes available. This depends on
robust action to prevent unnecessary spending and reduction in
bureaucracy that stifles business growth
Decrease the length of time between
Senedd ordinary general elections from five to four years.
-
- I strongly oppose this which whilst
appearing innocuous adds more than 20% to the costs of the present
election process whilst not providing any tangible benefit
- Increase the maximum number of Deputy
Presiding Officers from one to two.
- Unnecessary waste and duplication
- Increase the legislative limit on the size of
the Welsh Government to 17 (plus the First Minister and Counsel
General), with power to further increase the limit to 18 or
19.
- The reason for this is unclear.
Opposed
- Require candidates to, and Members of, the
Senedd to be resident in Wales (by disqualifying candidates and
Members who are not registered to vote in a Senedd
constituency).
- This would result in persons resident in
wales being unable to vote or apply as candidates for roles in
England, Scotland or Northern Ireland. If to be considered this
must be put to a public vote, as part of a referendum on
independence.
- Provide a mechanism for the Seventh
Senedd’s consideration of job-sharing of offices relating to
the Senedd (by requiring the Llywydd in the Seventh Senedd to
propose the establishment of a Senedd committee to review specified
matters).
- This is too vague. What exactly would be
the benefits.
- Change the Senedd’s electoral system so
that all Members are elected via closed list proportional
representation, with votes translated into seats via the
D’Hondt formula.
- This is totally undemocratic. The public
lose the democratic right to vote for and elect their chosen
representative. It gives a platform within party political
structures for jobs for the chosen few. Appears to be based upon
the electoral mechanism of the Communist Party of China
- Repurpose and rename the Local Democracy and
Boundary Commission for Wales; provide the renamed Democracy and
Boundary Commission Cymru (DBCC) with the functions needed to
establish new Senedd constituencies and undertake ongoing reviews
of Senedd constituency boundaries; and provide instructions for the
DBCC to follow when undertaking boundary reviews.
- Why? This provides no clear financial or
managerial benefit again in straitened times this is an unnecessary
drain on resources best spent elsewhere if they are indeed
available at all
-
- SUMMARY
- Senedd has announced that there is a very
serious financial situation.
- There are massive demands across the board
for increased spending and priorities must clearly be made. If
everything is a priority then of course nothing is a priority!
- However, health, a devolved power has slipped
below other nations by more or less any measure, be that ambulance
response times or waiting times for elective surgery. BCUHB within
that area of devolution holds an unenviable position as probably
the worst performer across the board.
- If you ask any member of the public, your
electorate, which they want: millions spent on a Senedd Reform or
improvements to the Welsh NHS it is to use common parlance, a no
brainer!
- Education.
- STEM is what the employers want taught but
this appears secondary to vanity projects
- Transport
- Not one single advanced nation has
adopted a no road building programme.Here in north wales millions
has been wasted on the much needed Red Route. This impacts north
east wales, the industrial heart of the economy. It has impact on
jobs, wealth creation, international trading and desirability as a
place to set up new and exciting businesses.
- Today the news is about young people leaving
the country. The projected reforms will not stop that. They need
good, well paid jobs, a culture of excellence and an enthusiasm for
success.
- The economy needs bolstering, business rates
and taxes need to be slashed to encourage, as in Eire a pro
business anti red tape model.
- Stop blaming Westminster, goodness knows
there are many problems there but Wales after Northern Ireland
receives the second highest amount from central
government.
This is a short summary of what I consider
priorities and I accept they have been may not fit with the Senedd
view. Nonetheless as a health care professional, as a business
person, as a homeowner, as a parent and grandparent I believe in
democracy.
This is my voice and opinion.
However I am concerned having seen the
outrageous disregard given to a petition, the largest such petition
in U.K. let alone Welsh history, that any observations regarding
the Reform of the Senedd will be given the same degree of cavalier
disrespect.
Yours truly
John Kitchen