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Senedd

The Senedd (pronounced [ˈsɛnɛð] (listen); lit.'parliament' or 'senate'), officially known as the Welsh Parliament in English and Senedd Cymru (Welsh pronunciation: [ˈsɛnɛð ˈkəmrɨ]) in Welsh,[2] is the devolved, unicameral legislature of Wales. A democratically elected body, it makes laws for Wales, agrees certain taxes and scrutinises the Welsh Government.[3] It is a bilingual institution, with both Welsh and English being the official languages of its business.[4] From its creation in May 1999 until May 2020, the Senedd was known as the National Assembly for Wales (Welsh: Cynulliad Cenedlaethol Cymru).

Senedd Cymru
Welsh Parliament
Sixth Senedd
Type
Type
History
Founded12 May 1999
Preceded byWelsh Office (1965–1999)
Leadership
Llywydd (presiding officer)
Elin Jones, Plaid Cymru
since 11 May 2016
Trefnydd (leader)
Lesley Griffiths, Labour
since 13 May 2021
Mark Drakeford, Labour
since 13 December 2018
Manon Antoniazzi
since April 2017
Andrew RT Davies, Conservative
since 24 January 2021
Structure
Seats60
Political groups
Government (30)
  Labour (30)[a]

In Co-operation with

  Plaid Cymru (12)

Official Opposition (16)

  Conservative (16)

Other opposition (1)

  Liberal Democrats (1)
  Independent (1)[1]
Elections
Additional member system
Last election
6 May 2021
Next election
due on 7 May 2026
Meeting place
Siambr (debating chamber) in the Senedd building, Cardiff, Wales
Website
senedd.wales

The Senedd comprises 60 members who are known as Members of the Senedd (Welsh: Aelodau o'r Senedd),[5] abbreviated as "MS" (Welsh: AS).[6] Since 2011, members are elected for a five-year term of office under an additional member system, in which 40 MSs represent smaller geographical divisions known as "constituencies" and are elected by first-past-the-post voting, and 20 MSs represent five "electoral regions" using the D'Hondt method of proportional representation. Typically, the largest party in the Senedd forms the Welsh Government.

A National Assembly for Wales was created by the Government of Wales Act 1998, following the result of the 1997 referendum. The Assembly initially had no powers to make primary legislation. Limited law-making powers were gained through the Government of Wales Act 2006. Its primary law-making powers were enhanced following a Yes vote in the referendum on 3 March 2011, meaning that the UK Parliament or the Secretary of State for Wales were no longer consulted when passing acts of the National Assembly for Wales related to the 20 devolved areas.[7] These powers were further extended by the Wales Act 2014 and Wales Act 2017, with the latter moving the Assembly to a reserved powers model of devolution like that of the Scottish Parliament. In May 2020, the Assembly was renamed to "Senedd Cymru" or "the Welsh Parliament" when section 2 of the Senedd and Elections (Wales) Act 2020 came into force. Matters devolved to the Senedd include health, education, economic development, transport, the environment, agriculture, local government and some taxes.

History

Road to devolution

An appointed Council for Wales and Monmouthshire was established in 1949 to "ensure the government is adequately informed of the impact of government activities on the general life of the people of Wales". The council had 27 members nominated by local authorities in Wales, the University of Wales, National Eisteddfod Council and the Welsh Tourist Board. A post of Minister of Welsh Affairs was created in 1951 and the post of Secretary of State for Wales and the Welsh Office were established in 1964 leading to the abolition of the Council for Wales. The establishment of the Welsh Office effectively created the basis for the territorial governance of Wales.[8] The Royal Commission on the Constitution (the Kilbrandon Commission) was set up in 1969 by Harold Wilson's Labour Government to investigate the possibility of devolution for Scotland and Wales.[9] Its recommendations formed the basis of the 1974 White Paper Democracy and Devolution: proposals for Scotland and Wales,[9] which proposed the creation of a Welsh Assembly. However, Welsh voters overwhelmingly rejected the proposals in a referendum held in 1979.[9][10]

After the 1997 general election, the new Labour Government argued that an Assembly would be more democratically accountable than the Welsh Office. For eleven years prior to 1997 Wales had been represented in the Cabinet of the United Kingdom by a Secretary of State who did not represent a Welsh constituency at Westminster.[11] A referendum was held in Wales on 18 September 1997 in which voters approved the creation of the National Assembly for Wales with a total of 559,419 votes, or 50.3% of the vote.[12]

The following year the Government of Wales Act was passed by the United Kingdom parliament, establishing the Assembly. On 1 July 1999 the powers of the Secretary of State for Wales were transferred to the Assembly and the Welsh Office ceased to exist.[13]

In July 2002, the Welsh Government established an independent commission, with Lord Richard (former leader of the House of Lords) as chair, to review the powers and electoral arrangements of the National Assembly to ensure that it is able to operate in the best interests of the people of Wales.[14] The Richard Commission reported in March 2004. It recommended that the National Assembly should have powers to legislate in certain areas, whilst others would remain the preserve of Westminster.[14] It also recommended changing the electoral system to the single transferable vote (STV) which would produce greater proportionality.[14]

In response, the British government, in its Better Governance for Wales White Paper, published on 15 June 2005, proposed a more permissive law-making system for the Welsh Assembly based on the use of Parliamentary Orders in Council.[15][16] In so doing, the Government rejected many of the cross party Richard Commission's recommendations. This has attracted criticism from opposition parties and others.[citation needed]

Enhanced powers: The Government of Wales Act 2006

The Government of Wales Act 2006 received Royal Assent on 25 July 2006. It conferred on the Assembly legislative powers similar to other devolved legislatures through the ability to pass Assembly Measures concerning matters that are devolved. Requests for further legislative powers made through legislative competence requests were subject to the veto of the Secretary of State for Wales, House of Commons or House of Lords.

The Act reformed the assembly to a parliamentary-type structure, establishing the Welsh Government as an entity separate from, but accountable to the National Assembly. It enables the Assembly to legislate within its devolved fields.

The Act also reforms the Assembly's electoral system. It prevents individuals from standing as candidates in both constituency and regional seats. This aspect of the act was subject to a great deal of criticism[citation needed], most notably from the Electoral Commission.[citation needed], though it was supported in the Richard Commission[14]

The Act was heavily criticised[citation needed]. Plaid Cymru, the Official Opposition in the National Assembly from 1999 to 2007, attacked it[citation needed] for not delivering a fully-fledged parliament. Many commentators[who?] have also criticised the Labour Party's allegedly partisan attempt to alter the electoral system. By preventing regional Members from standing in constituency seats the party has been accused[by whom?] of changing the rules to protect constituency representatives. Labour had 29 members in the Assembly at the time, all of whom held constituency seats.[citation needed]

The changes to the Assembly's powers were commenced on 4 May 2007, after the election.[17]

Following a referendum on 3 March 2011, the Welsh Assembly gained direct law making powers, without the need to consult Westminster.

Reserved powers model: The Wales Act 2017

The Conservative-Liberal coalition government created the Commission on Devolution in Wales (also known as Silk Commission), composed of members nominated by the 4 parties represented in the Welsh Assembly and several leading legal and political experts, to "create a lasting devolution settlement for Wales". Following the first set of recommendations by the Commission, the UK government announced in November 2013 that some borrowing powers are to be devolved to the Assembly along with control of landfill tax and stamp duty. Additionally the Wales Act 2014 provides for a referendum to be held on the Assembly's ability to set a degree of income tax,[18] though there is a proposal for the requirement for a referendum to be removed.

Both the UK and Welsh governments supported the Silk Commission (Part 2) proposal to move to a "reserved powers" model of devolution (similar to that of the Scottish Parliament and the Northern Ireland Assembly) where the UK government would have specific "reserved" powers and the Welsh Assembly would have control of all other matters.[19][20] This replaced the previous model where certain powers were "conferred" and all others were assumed to be powers of the UK national government. Since the passing of the Wales Act 2017, the power model in Wales has been in line with that of Scotland, being a reserved matter model.[21]

The Wales Act 2017, based on the second set of recommendations of the Silk Commission, proposed devolving further areas of government, including some relating to water, marine affairs (ports, harbours, conservation), energy (subsidies, petroleum extraction, construction of smaller energy-generating facilities, etc.), rail franchising and road travel.[22]

Name change

In July 2016, Assembly members unanimously agreed that the name of the Assembly should reflect its constitutional status as a national parliament.[23] The Assembly Commission ran a public consultation on the proposal, which showed that 61% of respondents agreed or strongly agreed that the Assembly should change its name.[24] In 2018, the commission announced its intention to introduce legislation to change the name of the Assembly. Later that year, the Llywydd – the Assembly's presiding officer – wrote to all Assembly Members explaining that the name change proposed in the Bill would be the monolingual name "Senedd".[25] In 2019, the Senedd and Elections (Wales) Bill, favouring the name "Senedd", was introduced on behalf of the Assembly Commission. Following support of a subsequent amendment to the Bill which favoured a bilingual name for the institution, the Bill was passed by the Assembly on 27 November 2019 and was given Royal Assent on 15 January 2020.[26][27] The Act changed the name of the Assembly to "Senedd Cymru" or the "Welsh Parliament". Its guidance states that the institution will be commonly known as the Senedd in both languages. The name change came into effect on 6 May 2020. Members of the renamed body are known as Members of the Senedd (MS), or Aelodau o'r Senedd (AS) in Welsh.[28][29]

Proposed expansion

On 22 November 2021, Welsh Labour and Plaid Cymru agreed a co-operation deal[30] that will see the implementation of 46 policies that the two parties share.[31] One of these is the expansion of the Senedd from 60 Members to between 80 and 100 Members.[32]

At its Conference on 12 March 2022, Welsh Labour unanimously approved increasing the size of the Senedd. "The expansion of the Senedd is essential because the journey of devolution is not yet complete," former First Minister Alun Michael said. "There is more to come. And the capacity needs to be there for those backbenchers to do the job of holding to account that you rightly said, cannot be done by to smaller number of representatives."[33] Two weeks later, Plaid members backed the expansion proposal as well.[34]

On 10 May 2022, plans to increase the number of MSs from 60 to 96 were unveiled, as well as the scrapping of first past the post, which is currently used to elect 40 of the 60 Members of the Senedd (MSs). Drakeford said these changes were required as "report after report" had demonstrated that the Senedd in its current form "cannot do the job in the way that people in Wales have a right to expect it to be done".[35] Welsh Lib Dem leader Jane Dodds criticised these plans, claiming that they would disproportionately impact smaller parties.[36]

On 8 June 2022, the Senedd voted 40-14 in favour of expanding the number of MSs.[37]

Buildings

Senedd building

The debating chamber in Cardiff Bay, the Senedd (Senate), was designed by the Richard Rogers Partnership, and built by Taylor Woodrow, with environmental, mechanical, electrical and plumbing design by BDSP Partnership. It uses traditional Welsh materials, such as slate and Welsh oak, in its construction, and the design is based around the concepts of openness and transparency. The timber ceiling and centre funnel, manufactured and installed by BCL Timber Projects (sub-contracted by Taylor Woodrow) is made from Canadian sourced Western Red Cedar.

 
Logo of the Senedd Cymru – Welsh Parliament on the outside of the Senedd building

The Senedd houses the debating chamber known as the Siambr (Welsh: Y Siambr)[38] and Committee Rooms. It was officially opened by Queen Elizabeth II on St David's Day, 1 March 2006.[39]

The Senedd is designed to be environmentally friendly: it uses an Earth Heat Exchange system for heating; rainwater is collected from the roof and used for flushing toilets and cleaning windows, and the roof features a wind cowl which funnels natural light and air into the debating chamber below.[40]

Telecasting

 
Screenshot of the front page of senedd.tv in 2022

The building houses the debating chamber and committee rooms for the Senedd. When the Senedd building opened on 1 March 2006, there was regular screening of live proceedings from the Siambr on S4C2 and also on internet television.[41] Coverage of the S4C2 screenings were on Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays between 9:00 am 6:00 pm when the Senedd was sitting.[42] In addition, limited screens were shown on the BBC Two Wales programme "am.pm", including First Minister's Questions.[43] These were decommissioned after S4C2 switched its scheduling to children programs and because of budget cuts.[44] Internet television screenings are now shown on the Senedd's own website called Senedd.tv, which screens approximately 35 hours of content each week in English and Welsh. The service began 15 April 2008.[45] Key events such as First Minister's Questions are shown live and recorded on BBC Parliament on television and on iPlayer. Also on BBC Parliament some proceedings are shown as highlights of the week on the program The Week in Parliament.

Tŷ Hywel and Pierhead Building

The Senedd estate in Cardiff Bay
 
Tŷ Hywel
 
The Pierhead Building

The debating chamber was initially based in Tŷ Hywel, next to the site of the present building. The offices of Members are still in this building which is connected to the Senedd by a skyway. The Senedd Commission is also responsible for the Pierhead Building, which is the location of "The Assembly at the Pierhead" exhibition, and is the Visitor and Education Centre for the Senedd as well as housing a small gift shop. The exhibition, currently still in the process of being updated following the 2016 National Assembly for Wales election,[needs update] provides visitors with information on who's who, what's happening and how the Senedd works.

North Wales Office

 
North Wales Office

The North Wales Information Centre is located in Prince's Park on Prince's Drive, Colwyn Bay. The office is open to the public to access information about the Senedd. The office is open on weekdays between 9:00 and 17:00.[46]

Officials

Elected officials

 
The Senedd's ceremonial mace sits in front of the Presiding Officer's desk in the Senedd chamber.

After each election, the Senedd elects one Member of the Senedd to serve as Llywydd (Presiding Officer) of the Senedd, and another to serve as Dirprwy Lywydd (Deputy Presiding Officer). Elin Jones, Plaid Cymru MS, has been Llywydd since 2016, having taken over from Rosemary Butler. The Llywydd also acts as Chair of the Senedd Commission. Both the Llywydd and the Dirprwy Lywydd typically don't vote in simple-majority votes.

Permanent officials

The permanent administrative and support staff of the Senedd are employed by the Senedd Commission. They are not civil servants, although they enjoy similar terms and conditions of service to members of the UK Civil Service.

Powers and status

The Senedd consists of 60 elected members. They use the title Member of the Senedd (MS) or Aelod o'r Senedd (AS).[48] The executive arm of the Senedd, the Welsh Government, has been a Labour administration since its inception in 1999. Currently it is led by First Minister, Mark Drakeford, since December 2018.[49] The government between 2007 and 2011, had been a coalition between Labour, led by First Minister Carwyn Jones and Plaid Cymru, led by Deputy First Minister Ieuan Wyn Jones; and between 2016 and 2021, Labour had been in coalition with the Liberal Democrats and an independent member.[50][51] Since 2021, the government has been a Labour minority government that works in co operation with Plaid Cymru. The executive and civil servants are mainly based in Cardiff's Cathays Park while the MSs, the Senedd Commission and Ministerial support staff are based in Cardiff Bay, where a new £67 million building, the Senedd, has been built.[52][53][54]

One important feature of the National Assembly until 2007 was that there was no legal or constitutional separation of the legislative and executive functions, since it was a single corporate entity. Compared with other parliamentary systems, and arrangements for devolution in other countries of the UK, this was unusual. In practice, however, there was separation of functions, and the terms "Assembly" and "Assembly Parliamentary Service" came into use to distinguish between the two arms. The Government of Wales Act 2006 regularised the separation when it came into effect following the 2007 Assembly Election.

Initially, the Assembly did not have primary legislative or fiscal powers, as these powers were reserved by Westminster. The Assembly did have powers to pass secondary legislation in devolved areas. Sometimes secondary legislation could be used to amend primary legislation, but the scope of this was very limited. For example, the first Government of Wales Act gave the Assembly power to amend primary legislation relating to the merger of certain public bodies. However, most secondary powers were conferred on the executive by primary legislation to give the executive (i.e. Ministers) more powers, and the Assembly had wider legislative powers than appearances might suggest. For example, the Assembly delayed local elections due to be held in 2003 for a year by use of secondary powers, so that they would not clash with Assembly elections. In 2001 the UK parliament used primary legislation to delay for one month local elections in England during the Foot and Mouth Disease epidemic.

The Assembly gained limited primary legislative powers following the 2007 election and the passage of the Government of Wales Act 2006. These laws are known as Assembly Measures and can be enacted in specific fields and matters within the legislative competency of the Assembly. New matters and fields can be devolved by Acts of the UK Parliament or by LCOs approved by Parliament.

Until 2015 the Assembly had no tax-varying powers, however it could influence the rate of Council Tax set by local authorities, which are part-funded by a grant from the Welsh government.[55] It also has some discretion over charges for government services. Notable examples in which this discretion has been used to create significant differences from other areas in the UK are:

  1. Charges for NHS prescriptions in Wales – these have now been abolished.[56]
  2. Charges for University Tuition – are different for Welsh resident students studying at Welsh Universities, compared with students from or studying elsewhere in the UK.[57]
  3. Charging for Residential Care – In Wales there is a flat rate of contribution towards the cost of nursing care (roughly comparable to the highest level of English Contribution) for those who require residential care.[58]

This means in reality that there is a wider definition of "nursing care" than in England and therefore less dependence on means testing in Wales than in England, so that more people are entitled to higher levels of state assistance. These variations in the levels of charges may be viewed as de facto tax varying powers.

This model of more limited legislative powers created in 1999 was partly because Wales has had the same legal system as England since 1536 (though a different court system until 1830), when it was merged with England. Ireland and Scotland were never merged with England, and so always retained some differences in their legal systems. The Scottish Parliament and the Northern Ireland Assembly both have deeper and wider powers.

The Assembly inherited the powers and budget of the Secretary of State for Wales and most of the functions of the Welsh Office. It has power to vary laws passed by Westminster using secondary legislation.

Following a referendum on 4 March 2011, the Welsh Assembly gained direct law-making powers (without the need to consult Westminster). On 3 July 2012, the Welsh Assembly passed its first Act, the Local Government Byelaws (Wales) Act.[59]

The Wales Act 2014 and Wales Act 2017 devolved the following taxes to the Welsh Assembly:

Powers of the Senedd

The Senedd has the competence to pass bills for Acts of Senedd Cymru in all areas which are not explicitly reserved to Westminster; these 'reserved matters' are outlined in schedule 7A of the Government of Wales Act 2006.[60]

This means the Senedd has powers over areas such as:

Reserved matters include subjects such as:

  • Foreign affairs
  • Police and justice
  • Currency
  • Most benefits
  • Most taxes

Members, constituencies, and electoral system

 
Members of the Senedd during a plenary session in the Siambr

Under the Additional Member System,[61][62] forty of the MSs are elected from single-member constituencies on a plurality voting system (or first past the post) basis, the constituencies being equivalent to those used for the House of Commons and twenty MSs are elected from regional closed lists using an alternative party vote.[63] There are five regions: Mid and West Wales, North Wales, South Wales Central, South Wales East and South Wales West (these are the same as the pre 1999 European Parliament constituencies for Wales), each of which returns four members.[63] The additional members produce a degree of proportionality within each region.[63] Whereas voters can choose any regional party list irrespective of their party vote in the constituency election, list MSs are not elected independently of the constituency element; rather, elected constituency MSs are deemed to be pre-elected list representatives for the purposes of calculating remainders in the D'Hondt method.[63] Overall proportionality is limited by the low proportion of list members (33% of the Senedd compared with 43% in the Scottish Parliament and 50% in the German Bundestag), the regionalisation of the list element, and the lack of overhang seat compensation and leveling seats.[64] Consequently, the Senedd as a whole has a greater degree of proportionality (based on proportions in the list elections) than the plurality voting system used for British parliamentary elections, but still deviates somewhat from proportionality.[64] The single transferable vote system had been considered for the Senedd by the Labour Party as early as 1995–96, but according to the evidence given to the Richard Commission by Ron Davies, a former Welsh Secretary,

Had we done that of course we would have had to have had a Boundary Commission and that process would have taken forever and a day and that would have frustrated our overall political timetable. So we had to settle on the existing constituency arrangements, parliamentary constituencies and European Constituencies.[64]

In April 2020 the Senedd became the first legislature in the UK to meet over the internet. Due to the consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic, it held First Minister's Questions using Zoom videotelephony software and the session was subsequently broadcast by Senedd.tv.[65]

Elections

Percentage2021 Senedd election2016 National Assembly for Wales election2011 National Assembly for Wales election2007 National Assembly for Wales election2003 National Assembly for Wales election1999 National Assembly for Wales election
Percentage of seats won in each election by political group, 1999 to 2021. Left to right:

There have been six elections to the Senedd, in 1999, 2003, 2007, 2011, 2016 and 2021. The 2016 election was delayed from 2015 as the UK general election was held in 2015,[66][67] and following the passing of the Wales Act 2014, elections occur every five years from the 2016 election.

The next Senedd election is due to be held on Thursday 7 May 2026.

Summary

Assembly/
Senedd
Year Turnout Seats Governments
Labour Plaid
Cymru
Conser­vative Lib
Dems
UKIP Others
1997 50% Devolution referendum
1st 1999 46% 28 17 9 6 Michael (Labour minority)
Interim Morgan (Labour minority)
Morgan I (Labour – LD)
2nd 2003 38% 30 12 11 6 0 1 (JMIP) Morgan II (Labour majority until 2005[68]), minority after 2005 [n 1]
3rd 2007 44% 26 15 12 6 0 1 (BGPVG) Morgan III (Labour minority)
Morgan IV (Labour – Plaid)
Jones I (Labour – Plaid)
2011 36% Devolution referendum
4th 2011 42% 30 11 14 5 0 Jones II (Labour minority)
5th 2016 45% 29 12 11 1 7 Jones III (Labour–LD minority, Lib Dem coalition)
Drakeford I (Labour–LD–IND majority)
6th 2021 47% 30 13 16 1 0 Drakeford II (Labour minority)

Notes

  1. ^ With the Presiding and Deputy Presiding Officer both coming from the opposition Labour had 30 voting members to the oppositions collective 28. This government officially became a minority government in 2005 after Peter Law left Labour to sit as an independent on the opposition benches, giving the government 29 and the opposition (excluding the Presiding Officer and Deputy) 29.

Last election

Overall

2021 Senedd election
 
Parties Additional member system Total seats
Constituency Region
Votes % +/− Seats +/− Votes % +/− Seats +/− Total +/− %
Labour 443,047 39.9   5.2 27   401,770 36.2   4.7 3   1 30   1 50
Conservative 289,802 26.1   5.0 8   2 278,650 25.1   6.3 8   3 16   5 26.7
Plaid Cymru 225,376 20.3   0.2 5   1 230,161 20.7   0.1 8   2 13   1 21.7
Liberal Democrats 54,202 4.9   2.8 0   1 48,217 4.3   2.2 1   1 1   1.7
Green 17,817 1.6   0.9 0   48,714 4.4   1.4 0   0   0.0
Abolish 18,149 1.6   1.6 0   41,399 3.7   0.7 0   0   0.0
UKIP 8,586 0.8   11.7 0   17,341 1.6   11.4 0   7 0   7 0.0

Turnout

Voter turnout at Senedd elections has been traditionally lower than UK general elections. No election since devolution began has hit 50% turnout, with the 2021 election being the highest at 46.6%.[69] In their 2004 paper Turnout, Participation and Legitimacy in Post-Devolution Wales, academics Roger Awan-Scully, Richard Wyn Jones and Dafydd Trystan Davies identified three potential reasons for this: antipathy to the Welsh institutions, apathy to the Welsh institutions or apathy to politics more generally. They suggested apathy – in Wales and to politics in general – is the most likely reason.[70]

Following the 2021 election, Dr Jac Larner, a politics lecturer at Cardiff University and an investigator for the Welsh election survey, said the lower turnout figures in Wales did not necessarily reflect a lack of perceived importance in the Senedd.[71] He told BBC News: "We know from research that low voter turnout is actually a lot do to with people thinking they can't win in a devolved election, so they don't bother going to vote. That's different to a general election where, in Wales, Labour are still more likely to win a majority of seats, but at the UK level it's far more competitive."[71] He compared turnout in Wales to turnout for Scottish Parliament elections, which is significantly higher: "Scotland is in quite a unique political position at the moment, where the single most salient issue and the biggest cleavage in society – the issue of independence – basically is going to be determined by what happens at the Holyrood elections. Part of it is this idea of interest – there has always been more interest in the idea of a Scottish Parliament, the Scottish Parliament has always been more powerful than the Senedd, even going back to 1999."[71]

Current composition

Government formation

Welsh Labour won 30 seats out of 60 in the 2021 Senedd elections. On 9 May 2021 the First Minister, Mark Drakeford MS said "We have demonstrated over a number of governments that you can govern successfully on 30 seats, but I'm open to working with any party where there is common ground between us."[72]

On 22 November a deal between Welsh Labour and Plaid Cymru was announced. This is not a formal coalition and will not see Plaid Cymru MSs take up Minister or Deputy Minister Posts. However, Plaid Cymru will be able to appoint special advisors to the Welsh Government. The deal will last for three years.[73][74]

See also

References

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  3. ^ . Archived from the original on 8 June 2020. Retrieved 13 May 2020.
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  1. ^ Includes 16 Labour and Co-operative MSs.

External links

  • Official website  
  • The Queen opens the First Welsh Assembly 1999
  • Government of Wales Act 1998 11 October 2003 at the Wayback Machine
  • Live internet television from www.senedd.tv
  • Recorded internet television from the BBC am.pm

Coordinates: 51°27′55″N 3°09′37″W / 51.46528°N 3.16028°W / 51.46528; -3.16028

senedd, this, article, about, devolved, parliament, wales, building, housing, building, pronounced, ˈsɛnɛð, listen, parliament, senate, officially, known, welsh, parliament, english, cymru, welsh, pronunciation, ˈsɛnɛð, ˈkəmrɨ, welsh, devolved, unicameral, leg. This article is about the devolved parliament of Wales For the building housing it see Senedd building The Senedd pronounced ˈsɛnɛd listen lit parliament or senate officially known as the Welsh Parliament in English and Senedd Cymru Welsh pronunciation ˈsɛnɛd ˈkemrɨ in Welsh 2 is the devolved unicameral legislature of Wales A democratically elected body it makes laws for Wales agrees certain taxes and scrutinises the Welsh Government 3 It is a bilingual institution with both Welsh and English being the official languages of its business 4 From its creation in May 1999 until May 2020 the Senedd was known as the National Assembly for Wales Welsh Cynulliad Cenedlaethol Cymru Senedd Cymru Welsh ParliamentSixth SeneddTypeTypeUnicameralHistoryFounded12 May 1999Preceded byWelsh Office 1965 1999 LeadershipLlywydd presiding officer Elin Jones Plaid Cymru since 11 May 2016Trefnydd leader Lesley Griffiths Labour since 13 May 2021First MinisterMark Drakeford Labour since 13 December 2018Chief Executive and ClerkManon Antoniazzi since April 2017Leader of the OppositionAndrew RT Davies Conservative since 24 January 2021StructureSeats60Political groupsGovernment 30 Labour 30 a In Co operation with Plaid Cymru 12 Official Opposition 16 Conservative 16 Other opposition 1 Liberal Democrats 1 Independent 1 1 ElectionsVoting systemAdditional member systemLast election6 May 2021Next electiondue on 7 May 2026Meeting placeSiambr debating chamber in the Senedd building Cardiff WalesWebsitesenedd wbr walesThe Senedd comprises 60 members who are known as Members of the Senedd Welsh Aelodau o r Senedd 5 abbreviated as MS Welsh AS 6 Since 2011 members are elected for a five year term of office under an additional member system in which 40 MSs represent smaller geographical divisions known as constituencies and are elected by first past the post voting and 20 MSs represent five electoral regions using the D Hondt method of proportional representation Typically the largest party in the Senedd forms the Welsh Government A National Assembly for Wales was created by the Government of Wales Act 1998 following the result of the 1997 referendum The Assembly initially had no powers to make primary legislation Limited law making powers were gained through the Government of Wales Act 2006 Its primary law making powers were enhanced following a Yes vote in the referendum on 3 March 2011 meaning that the UK Parliament or the Secretary of State for Wales were no longer consulted when passing acts of the National Assembly for Wales related to the 20 devolved areas 7 These powers were further extended by the Wales Act 2014 and Wales Act 2017 with the latter moving the Assembly to a reserved powers model of devolution like that of the Scottish Parliament In May 2020 the Assembly was renamed to Senedd Cymru or the Welsh Parliament when section 2 of the Senedd and Elections Wales Act 2020 came into force Matters devolved to the Senedd include health education economic development transport the environment agriculture local government and some taxes Contents 1 History 1 1 Road to devolution 1 2 Enhanced powers The Government of Wales Act 2006 1 3 Reserved powers model The Wales Act 2017 1 4 Name change 1 5 Proposed expansion 2 Buildings 2 1 Senedd building 2 2 Telecasting 2 3 Tŷ Hywel and Pierhead Building 2 4 North Wales Office 3 Officials 3 1 Elected officials 3 2 Permanent officials 4 Powers and status 4 1 Powers of the Senedd 5 Members constituencies and electoral system 6 Elections 6 1 Summary 7 Notes 7 1 Last election 7 2 Overall 7 3 Turnout 8 Current composition 8 1 Government formation 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksHistory EditRoad to devolution Edit Main article History of Welsh devolution An appointed Council for Wales and Monmouthshire was established in 1949 to ensure the government is adequately informed of the impact of government activities on the general life of the people of Wales The council had 27 members nominated by local authorities in Wales the University of Wales National Eisteddfod Council and the Welsh Tourist Board A post of Minister of Welsh Affairs was created in 1951 and the post of Secretary of State for Wales and the Welsh Office were established in 1964 leading to the abolition of the Council for Wales The establishment of the Welsh Office effectively created the basis for the territorial governance of Wales 8 The Royal Commission on the Constitution the Kilbrandon Commission was set up in 1969 by Harold Wilson s Labour Government to investigate the possibility of devolution for Scotland and Wales 9 Its recommendations formed the basis of the 1974 White Paper Democracy and Devolution proposals for Scotland and Wales 9 which proposed the creation of a Welsh Assembly However Welsh voters overwhelmingly rejected the proposals in a referendum held in 1979 9 10 After the 1997 general election the new Labour Government argued that an Assembly would be more democratically accountable than the Welsh Office For eleven years prior to 1997 Wales had been represented in the Cabinet of the United Kingdom by a Secretary of State who did not represent a Welsh constituency at Westminster 11 A referendum was held in Wales on 18 September 1997 in which voters approved the creation of the National Assembly for Wales with a total of 559 419 votes or 50 3 of the vote 12 The following year the Government of Wales Act was passed by the United Kingdom parliament establishing the Assembly On 1 July 1999 the powers of the Secretary of State for Wales were transferred to the Assembly and the Welsh Office ceased to exist 13 In July 2002 the Welsh Government established an independent commission with Lord Richard former leader of the House of Lords as chair to review the powers and electoral arrangements of the National Assembly to ensure that it is able to operate in the best interests of the people of Wales 14 The Richard Commission reported in March 2004 It recommended that the National Assembly should have powers to legislate in certain areas whilst others would remain the preserve of Westminster 14 It also recommended changing the electoral system to the single transferable vote STV which would produce greater proportionality 14 In response the British government in its Better Governance for Wales White Paper published on 15 June 2005 proposed a more permissive law making system for the Welsh Assembly based on the use of Parliamentary Orders in Council 15 16 In so doing the Government rejected many of the cross party Richard Commission s recommendations This has attracted criticism from opposition parties and others citation needed Enhanced powers The Government of Wales Act 2006 Edit Main article Government of Wales Act 2006 The Government of Wales Act 2006 received Royal Assent on 25 July 2006 It conferred on the Assembly legislative powers similar to other devolved legislatures through the ability to pass Assembly Measures concerning matters that are devolved Requests for further legislative powers made through legislative competence requests were subject to the veto of the Secretary of State for Wales House of Commons or House of Lords The Act reformed the assembly to a parliamentary type structure establishing the Welsh Government as an entity separate from but accountable to the National Assembly It enables the Assembly to legislate within its devolved fields The Act also reforms the Assembly s electoral system It prevents individuals from standing as candidates in both constituency and regional seats This aspect of the act was subject to a great deal of criticism citation needed most notably from the Electoral Commission citation needed though it was supported in the Richard Commission 14 The Act was heavily criticised citation needed Plaid Cymru the Official Opposition in the National Assembly from 1999 to 2007 attacked it citation needed for not delivering a fully fledged parliament Many commentators who have also criticised the Labour Party s allegedly partisan attempt to alter the electoral system By preventing regional Members from standing in constituency seats the party has been accused by whom of changing the rules to protect constituency representatives Labour had 29 members in the Assembly at the time all of whom held constituency seats citation needed The changes to the Assembly s powers were commenced on 4 May 2007 after the election 17 Following a referendum on 3 March 2011 the Welsh Assembly gained direct law making powers without the need to consult Westminster Reserved powers model The Wales Act 2017 Edit The Conservative Liberal coalition government created the Commission on Devolution in Wales also known as Silk Commission composed of members nominated by the 4 parties represented in the Welsh Assembly and several leading legal and political experts to create a lasting devolution settlement for Wales Following the first set of recommendations by the Commission the UK government announced in November 2013 that some borrowing powers are to be devolved to the Assembly along with control of landfill tax and stamp duty Additionally the Wales Act 2014 provides for a referendum to be held on the Assembly s ability to set a degree of income tax 18 though there is a proposal for the requirement for a referendum to be removed Both the UK and Welsh governments supported the Silk Commission Part 2 proposal to move to a reserved powers model of devolution similar to that of the Scottish Parliament and the Northern Ireland Assembly where the UK government would have specific reserved powers and the Welsh Assembly would have control of all other matters 19 20 This replaced the previous model where certain powers were conferred and all others were assumed to be powers of the UK national government Since the passing of the Wales Act 2017 the power model in Wales has been in line with that of Scotland being a reserved matter model 21 The Wales Act 2017 based on the second set of recommendations of the Silk Commission proposed devolving further areas of government including some relating to water marine affairs ports harbours conservation energy subsidies petroleum extraction construction of smaller energy generating facilities etc rail franchising and road travel 22 Name change Edit In July 2016 Assembly members unanimously agreed that the name of the Assembly should reflect its constitutional status as a national parliament 23 The Assembly Commission ran a public consultation on the proposal which showed that 61 of respondents agreed or strongly agreed that the Assembly should change its name 24 In 2018 the commission announced its intention to introduce legislation to change the name of the Assembly Later that year the Llywydd the Assembly s presiding officer wrote to all Assembly Members explaining that the name change proposed in the Bill would be the monolingual name Senedd 25 In 2019 the Senedd and Elections Wales Bill favouring the name Senedd was introduced on behalf of the Assembly Commission Following support of a subsequent amendment to the Bill which favoured a bilingual name for the institution the Bill was passed by the Assembly on 27 November 2019 and was given Royal Assent on 15 January 2020 26 27 The Act changed the name of the Assembly to Senedd Cymru or the Welsh Parliament Its guidance states that the institution will be commonly known as the Senedd in both languages The name change came into effect on 6 May 2020 Members of the renamed body are known as Members of the Senedd MS or Aelodau o r Senedd AS in Welsh 28 29 Proposed expansion Edit On 22 November 2021 Welsh Labour and Plaid Cymru agreed a co operation deal 30 that will see the implementation of 46 policies that the two parties share 31 One of these is the expansion of the Senedd from 60 Members to between 80 and 100 Members 32 At its Conference on 12 March 2022 Welsh Labour unanimously approved increasing the size of the Senedd The expansion of the Senedd is essential because the journey of devolution is not yet complete former First Minister Alun Michael said There is more to come And the capacity needs to be there for those backbenchers to do the job of holding to account that you rightly said cannot be done by to smaller number of representatives 33 Two weeks later Plaid members backed the expansion proposal as well 34 On 10 May 2022 plans to increase the number of MSs from 60 to 96 were unveiled as well as the scrapping of first past the post which is currently used to elect 40 of the 60 Members of the Senedd MSs Drakeford said these changes were required as report after report had demonstrated that the Senedd in its current form cannot do the job in the way that people in Wales have a right to expect it to be done 35 Welsh Lib Dem leader Jane Dodds criticised these plans claiming that they would disproportionately impact smaller parties 36 On 8 June 2022 the Senedd voted 40 14 in favour of expanding the number of MSs 37 Buildings Edit The Senedd building Senedd building Edit Main article Senedd building The debating chamber in Cardiff Bay the Senedd Senate was designed by the Richard Rogers Partnership and built by Taylor Woodrow with environmental mechanical electrical and plumbing design by BDSP Partnership It uses traditional Welsh materials such as slate and Welsh oak in its construction and the design is based around the concepts of openness and transparency The timber ceiling and centre funnel manufactured and installed by BCL Timber Projects sub contracted by Taylor Woodrow is made from Canadian sourced Western Red Cedar Logo of the Senedd Cymru Welsh Parliament on the outside of the Senedd building The Senedd houses the debating chamber known as the Siambr Welsh Y Siambr 38 and Committee Rooms It was officially opened by Queen Elizabeth II on St David s Day 1 March 2006 39 The Senedd is designed to be environmentally friendly it uses an Earth Heat Exchange system for heating rainwater is collected from the roof and used for flushing toilets and cleaning windows and the roof features a wind cowl which funnels natural light and air into the debating chamber below 40 Telecasting Edit Screenshot of the front page of senedd tv in 2022 The building houses the debating chamber and committee rooms for the Senedd When the Senedd building opened on 1 March 2006 there was regular screening of live proceedings from the Siambr on S4C2 and also on internet television 41 Coverage of the S4C2 screenings were on Tuesdays Wednesdays and Thursdays between 9 00 am 6 00 pm when the Senedd was sitting 42 In addition limited screens were shown on the BBC Two Wales programme am pm including First Minister s Questions 43 These were decommissioned after S4C2 switched its scheduling to children programs and because of budget cuts 44 Internet television screenings are now shown on the Senedd s own website called Senedd tv which screens approximately 35 hours of content each week in English and Welsh The service began 15 April 2008 45 Key events such as First Minister s Questions are shown live and recorded on BBC Parliament on television and on iPlayer Also on BBC Parliament some proceedings are shown as highlights of the week on the program The Week in Parliament Tŷ Hywel and Pierhead Building Edit The Senedd estate in Cardiff Bay Tŷ Hywel The Pierhead Building Main articles Tŷ Hywel and Pierhead Building The debating chamber was initially based in Tŷ Hywel next to the site of the present building The offices of Members are still in this building which is connected to the Senedd by a skyway The Senedd Commission is also responsible for the Pierhead Building which is the location of The Assembly at the Pierhead exhibition and is the Visitor and Education Centre for the Senedd as well as housing a small gift shop The exhibition currently still in the process of being updated following the 2016 National Assembly for Wales election needs update provides visitors with information on who s who what s happening and how the Senedd works North Wales Office Edit North Wales Office The North Wales Information Centre is located in Prince s Park on Prince s Drive Colwyn Bay The office is open to the public to access information about the Senedd The office is open on weekdays between 9 00 and 17 00 46 Officials EditElected officials Edit Main article Llywydd of the Senedd The Senedd s ceremonial mace sits in front of the Presiding Officer s desk in the Senedd chamber After each election the Senedd elects one Member of the Senedd to serve as Llywydd Presiding Officer of the Senedd and another to serve as Dirprwy Lywydd Deputy Presiding Officer Elin Jones Plaid Cymru MS has been Llywydd since 2016 having taken over from Rosemary Butler The Llywydd also acts as Chair of the Senedd Commission Both the Llywydd and the Dirprwy Lywydd typically don t vote in simple majority votes Permanent officials Edit The permanent administrative and support staff of the Senedd are employed by the Senedd Commission They are not civil servants although they enjoy similar terms and conditions of service to members of the UK Civil Service Powers and status EditSee also 2011 Welsh devolution referendum List of devolved matters in Wales and Act of Senedd Cymru The Royal Badge of Wales appears on Acts of Senedd Cymru 47 The Senedd consists of 60 elected members They use the title Member of the Senedd MS or Aelod o r Senedd AS 48 The executive arm of the Senedd the Welsh Government has been a Labour administration since its inception in 1999 Currently it is led by First Minister Mark Drakeford since December 2018 49 The government between 2007 and 2011 had been a coalition between Labour led by First Minister Carwyn Jones and Plaid Cymru led by Deputy First Minister Ieuan Wyn Jones and between 2016 and 2021 Labour had been in coalition with the Liberal Democrats and an independent member 50 51 Since 2021 the government has been a Labour minority government that works in co operation with Plaid Cymru The executive and civil servants are mainly based in Cardiff s Cathays Park while the MSs the Senedd Commission and Ministerial support staff are based in Cardiff Bay where a new 67 million building the Senedd has been built 52 53 54 One important feature of the National Assembly until 2007 was that there was no legal or constitutional separation of the legislative and executive functions since it was a single corporate entity Compared with other parliamentary systems and arrangements for devolution in other countries of the UK this was unusual In practice however there was separation of functions and the terms Assembly and Assembly Parliamentary Service came into use to distinguish between the two arms The Government of Wales Act 2006 regularised the separation when it came into effect following the 2007 Assembly Election Initially the Assembly did not have primary legislative or fiscal powers as these powers were reserved by Westminster The Assembly did have powers to pass secondary legislation in devolved areas Sometimes secondary legislation could be used to amend primary legislation but the scope of this was very limited For example the first Government of Wales Act gave the Assembly power to amend primary legislation relating to the merger of certain public bodies However most secondary powers were conferred on the executive by primary legislation to give the executive i e Ministers more powers and the Assembly had wider legislative powers than appearances might suggest For example the Assembly delayed local elections due to be held in 2003 for a year by use of secondary powers so that they would not clash with Assembly elections In 2001 the UK parliament used primary legislation to delay for one month local elections in England during the Foot and Mouth Disease epidemic The Assembly gained limited primary legislative powers following the 2007 election and the passage of the Government of Wales Act 2006 These laws are known as Assembly Measures and can be enacted in specific fields and matters within the legislative competency of the Assembly New matters and fields can be devolved by Acts of the UK Parliament or by LCOs approved by Parliament Until 2015 the Assembly had no tax varying powers however it could influence the rate of Council Tax set by local authorities which are part funded by a grant from the Welsh government 55 It also has some discretion over charges for government services Notable examples in which this discretion has been used to create significant differences from other areas in the UK are Charges for NHS prescriptions in Wales these have now been abolished 56 Charges for University Tuition are different for Welsh resident students studying at Welsh Universities compared with students from or studying elsewhere in the UK 57 Charging for Residential Care In Wales there is a flat rate of contribution towards the cost of nursing care roughly comparable to the highest level of English Contribution for those who require residential care 58 This means in reality that there is a wider definition of nursing care than in England and therefore less dependence on means testing in Wales than in England so that more people are entitled to higher levels of state assistance These variations in the levels of charges may be viewed as de facto tax varying powers This model of more limited legislative powers created in 1999 was partly because Wales has had the same legal system as England since 1536 though a different court system until 1830 when it was merged with England Ireland and Scotland were never merged with England and so always retained some differences in their legal systems The Scottish Parliament and the Northern Ireland Assembly both have deeper and wider powers The Assembly inherited the powers and budget of the Secretary of State for Wales and most of the functions of the Welsh Office It has power to vary laws passed by Westminster using secondary legislation Following a referendum on 4 March 2011 the Welsh Assembly gained direct law making powers without the need to consult Westminster On 3 July 2012 the Welsh Assembly passed its first Act the Local Government Byelaws Wales Act 59 The Wales Act 2014 and Wales Act 2017 devolved the following taxes to the Welsh Assembly Non Domestic Rates in Wales from 1 April 2015 Land Transaction Tax LTT from 1 April 2018 Landfill Disposals Tax LDT from 1 April 2018 Welsh Rates of Income Tax WRIT from 1 April 2019Powers of the Senedd Edit Main article List of devolved matters in Wales The Senedd has the competence to pass bills for Acts of Senedd Cymru in all areas which are not explicitly reserved to Westminster these reserved matters are outlined in schedule 7A of the Government of Wales Act 2006 60 This means the Senedd has powers over areas such as Agriculture fisheries forestry and rural development Culture Economic development Education and training Environment Health and health services Highways and transport Local government Tourism Welsh languageReserved matters include subjects such as Foreign affairs Police and justice Currency Most benefits Most taxesMembers constituencies and electoral system Edit Members of the Senedd during a plenary session in the Siambr See also List of members of the Senedd and List of Senedd constituencies Under the Additional Member System 61 62 forty of the MSs are elected from single member constituencies on a plurality voting system or first past the post basis the constituencies being equivalent to those used for the House of Commons and twenty MSs are elected from regional closed lists using an alternative party vote 63 There are five regions Mid and West Wales North Wales South Wales Central South Wales East and South Wales West these are the same as the pre 1999 European Parliament constituencies for Wales each of which returns four members 63 The additional members produce a degree of proportionality within each region 63 Whereas voters can choose any regional party list irrespective of their party vote in the constituency election list MSs are not elected independently of the constituency element rather elected constituency MSs are deemed to be pre elected list representatives for the purposes of calculating remainders in the D Hondt method 63 Overall proportionality is limited by the low proportion of list members 33 of the Senedd compared with 43 in the Scottish Parliament and 50 in the German Bundestag the regionalisation of the list element and the lack of overhang seat compensation and leveling seats 64 Consequently the Senedd as a whole has a greater degree of proportionality based on proportions in the list elections than the plurality voting system used for British parliamentary elections but still deviates somewhat from proportionality 64 The single transferable vote system had been considered for the Senedd by the Labour Party as early as 1995 96 but according to the evidence given to the Richard Commission by Ron Davies a former Welsh Secretary Had we done that of course we would have had to have had a Boundary Commission and that process would have taken forever and a day and that would have frustrated our overall political timetable So we had to settle on the existing constituency arrangements parliamentary constituencies and European Constituencies 64 In April 2020 the Senedd became the first legislature in the UK to meet over the internet Due to the consequences of the COVID 19 pandemic it held First Minister s Questions using Zoom videotelephony software and the session was subsequently broadcast by Senedd tv 65 Elections EditSee also List of Senedd elections and Elections in Wales Devolved parliament elections Percentage of seats won in each election by political group 1999 to 2021 Left to right Labour Lib Dem Plaid Cymru John Marek People s Voice UKIP ConservativeThere have been six elections to the Senedd in 1999 2003 2007 2011 2016 and 2021 The 2016 election was delayed from 2015 as the UK general election was held in 2015 66 67 and following the passing of the Wales Act 2014 elections occur every five years from the 2016 election The next Senedd election is due to be held on Thursday 7 May 2026 Summary Edit Assembly Senedd Year Turnout Seats GovernmentsLabour PlaidCymru Conser vative LibDems UKIP Others1997 50 Devolution referendum1st 1999 46 28 17 9 6 Michael Labour minority Interim Morgan Labour minority Morgan I Labour LD 2nd 2003 38 30 12 11 6 0 1 JMIP Morgan II Labour majority until 2005 68 minority after 2005 n 1 3rd 2007 44 26 15 12 6 0 1 BGPVG Morgan III Labour minority Morgan IV Labour Plaid Jones I Labour Plaid 2011 36 Devolution referendum4th 2011 42 30 11 14 5 0 Jones II Labour minority 5th 2016 45 29 12 11 1 7 Jones III Labour LD minority Lib Dem coalition Drakeford I Labour LD IND majority 6th 2021 47 30 13 16 1 0 Drakeford II Labour minority Notes Edit With the Presiding and Deputy Presiding Officer both coming from the opposition Labour had 30 voting members to the oppositions collective 28 This government officially became a minority government in 2005 after Peter Law left Labour to sit as an independent on the opposition benches giving the government 29 and the opposition excluding the Presiding Officer and Deputy 29 Last election Edit Overall Edit 2021 Senedd election Parties Additional member system Total seatsConstituency RegionVotes Seats Votes Seats Total Labour 443 047 39 9 5 2 27 401 770 36 2 4 7 3 1 30 1 50Conservative 289 802 26 1 5 0 8 2 278 650 25 1 6 3 8 3 16 5 26 7Plaid Cymru 225 376 20 3 0 2 5 1 230 161 20 7 0 1 8 2 13 1 21 7Liberal Democrats 54 202 4 9 2 8 0 1 48 217 4 3 2 2 1 1 1 1 7Green 17 817 1 6 0 9 0 48 714 4 4 1 4 0 0 0 0Abolish 18 149 1 6 1 6 0 41 399 3 7 0 7 0 0 0 0UKIP 8 586 0 8 11 7 0 17 341 1 6 11 4 0 7 0 7 0 0Turnout Edit Voter turnout at Senedd elections has been traditionally lower than UK general elections No election since devolution began has hit 50 turnout with the 2021 election being the highest at 46 6 69 In their 2004 paper Turnout Participation and Legitimacy in Post Devolution Wales academics Roger Awan Scully Richard Wyn Jones and Dafydd Trystan Davies identified three potential reasons for this antipathy to the Welsh institutions apathy to the Welsh institutions or apathy to politics more generally They suggested apathy in Wales and to politics in general is the most likely reason 70 Following the 2021 election Dr Jac Larner a politics lecturer at Cardiff University and an investigator for the Welsh election survey said the lower turnout figures in Wales did not necessarily reflect a lack of perceived importance in the Senedd 71 He told BBC News We know from research that low voter turnout is actually a lot do to with people thinking they can t win in a devolved election so they don t bother going to vote That s different to a general election where in Wales Labour are still more likely to win a majority of seats but at the UK level it s far more competitive 71 He compared turnout in Wales to turnout for Scottish Parliament elections which is significantly higher Scotland is in quite a unique political position at the moment where the single most salient issue and the biggest cleavage in society the issue of independence basically is going to be determined by what happens at the Holyrood elections Part of it is this idea of interest there has always been more interest in the idea of a Scottish Parliament the Scottish Parliament has always been more powerful than the Senedd even going back to 1999 71 Current composition EditMain article Second Drakeford government Government formation Edit Welsh Labour won 30 seats out of 60 in the 2021 Senedd elections On 9 May 2021 the First Minister Mark Drakeford MS said We have demonstrated over a number of governments that you can govern successfully on 30 seats but I m open to working with any party where there is common ground between us 72 On 22 November a deal between Welsh Labour and Plaid Cymru was announced This is not a formal coalition and will not see Plaid Cymru MSs take up Minister or Deputy Minister Posts However Plaid Cymru will be able to appoint special advisors to the Welsh Government The deal will last for three years 73 74 See also Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Senedd Contemporary Welsh Law Act of Senedd Cymru List of by elections to the Senedd Regional Member changes to the Senedd London Assembly Member of the Senedd List of female Members of the Senedd 1999 National Assembly for Wales election 2003 National Assembly for Wales election 2007 National Assembly for Wales election 2011 National Assembly for Wales election 2016 National Assembly for Wales election 2021 Senedd election Northern Ireland Assembly Senedd constituencies and electoral regions Scottish Parliament Parliament of the United Kingdom United Kingdom budget Wales only laws List of Senedd elections List of devolved matters in WalesReferences Edit Plaid Cymru Senedd member Rhys ab Owen suspended from party group BBC News 8 November 2022 Senedd Cymru and Welsh Parliament names become law senedd wales 6 May 2020 Retrieved 16 May 2021 What is the role of the Senedd Archived from the original on 8 June 2020 Retrieved 13 May 2020 Senedd Cymru Welsh Parliament National Assembly for Wales Official Languages Act 2012 as amended see also enacted form from legislation gov uk Senedd and Elections Wales Act 2020 Legislation gov uk 5 March 2020 Retrieved 11 May 2020 Senedd and Elections Wales Bill PDF senedd wales Wales says Yes in referendum vote BBC News 4 March 2011 The road to the Welsh Assembly from BBC Wales History website Retrieved 23 August 2006 a b c Devolution in the UK Department for Constitutional Affairs Archived from the original on 26 June 2004 Retrieved 31 December 2022 The 1979 Referendums BBC website Retrieved 9 July 2006 Evidence to Richards Commission Archived 28 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine of Cllr Russell Goodway 10 July 2003 Retrieved 9 July 2006 Politics 97 by Joshua Rozenberg BBC website Retrieved 9 July 2006 Key Events in the Development of the National Assembly for Wales First Assembly 1999 2003 PDF National Assembly for Wales p 15 retrieved 1 July 2019 a b c d The Richard Commission Archived Richard Commission Website includes copy of Commission report Archived 10 April 2010 Better Governance for Wales White Paper Archived February 2006 Presented to Parliament by the Secretary of State for Wales in June 2005 Downloadable PDF Retrieved 9 December 2005 Electoral Reform for Wales Archived 8 December 2004 at the Wayback Machine Electoral Reform Society response to rejection of Richard Commission recommendations Retrieved 9 December 2005 Assembly powers bill becomes law BBC News 25 July 2006 Retrieved 15 September 2006 Wales offered tax raising powers BBC News 1 November 2013 Wales Office UK Government Government Response to the Welsh Affairs Committee Report on Pre legislation Scrutiny of the Wales Bill PDF Welsh Government Draft Government and Laws Bill in Wales Wales Act 2017 legislation gov uk Wales Bill 2016 PDF seneddresearch 5 March 2019 The Senedd and Elections Wales Bill IN BRIEF Retrieved 27 May 2020 National Assembly to be renamed Welsh Parliament under new law ITV News 13 June 2017 Retrieved 27 May 2020 Jones Elin 2018 Letter from the Llywydd to all Assembly Members PDF Senedd Cymru Ifan Mared 30 September 2019 National Assembly set for new bilingual name BBC News Retrieved 27 May 2020 Historic Act enables voting for 16 and 17 year olds renames Assembly to Welsh Parliament Wrexham com 16 January 2020 Name Change Consultation assembly wales Votes at 16 plan for 2021 Senedd election BBC News 12 February 2019 Retrieved 15 May 2019 Alibhai Zaina 21 November 2021 Welsh Labour and Plaid Cymru approve co operation deal i Retrieved 23 November 2021 Webster Laura 22 November 2021 Labour and Plaid Cymru agree Welsh government co operation deal The National Retrieved 23 November 2021 Mosalski Ruth 22 November 2021 Welsh 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2017 A Political Life in Wales and Westminster First ed University of Wales Press p 259 ISBN 978 1 78683 147 7 Morgan Lucy Thomas Gareth Davies Owain Wilkes Joe 18 May 2021 Election 2021 how many people voted senedd wales Archived from the original on 24 July 2021 Retrieved 28 October 2021 Scully Roger Jones Richard Wyn Trystan Dafydd 2004 Turnout Participation and Legitimacy in Post Devolution Wales British Journal of Political Science 34 3 519 537 doi 10 1017 S000712340400016X ISSN 0007 1234 S2CID 53573311 a b c Grey Jack 16 May 2021 Welsh election Votes low compared to Westminster and Scotland BBC News Retrieved 28 October 2021 Election 2021 Mark Drakeford to form Welsh Labour government alone BBC News 9 May 2021 Ambitious deal to deliver radical change and reform GOV WALES Labour and Plaid Cymru deal set to last three years BBC News 22 November 2021 Includes 16 Labour and Co operative MSs External links EditOfficial website The Queen opens the First Welsh Assembly 1999 Government of Wales Act 1998 Archived 11 October 2003 at the Wayback Machine Live internet television from www senedd tv Recorded internet television from the BBC am pm Coordinates 51 27 55 N 3 09 37 W 51 46528 N 3 16028 W 51 46528 3 16028 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Senedd amp oldid 1143694700, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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