Welsh Government

"Government of Wales" redirects here. For an overview of the political system of Wales, see Politics of Wales.
Welsh Government
Welsh: Llywodraeth Cymru

Welsh Government logo
Overview
Established 12 May 1999 (1999-05-12)
Polity Wales
Leader First Minister
Appointed by Monarch
Main organ Welsh Cabinet
Responsible to National Assembly for Wales
Annual budget £15.3 billion (2015/16)
Headquarters Crown Buildings
Cardiff
Website http://www.gov.wales

The Welsh Government (Welsh: Llywodraeth Cymru) is the executive of the devolved National Assembly for Wales. The government was established in 1999 as the Welsh Assembly Government by the Government of Wales Act 1998, which created a devolved administration for Wales in line with the result of the 1997 referendum on Welsh devolution. The government consists of ministers, who attend cabinet meetings, and deputy ministers, who do not, and also of a counsel general. It is led by the first minister, usually the leader of the largest party in the National Assembly, who selects ministers and deputy ministers with the approval of the assembly. The government is responsible for tabling policy in devolved areas for consideration by the assembly and implementing policy that has been approved by it.[1]

History

1999 to 2007 (Executive Committee of the National Assembly)

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As initially established, the Welsh Government had no independent executive powers in law (unlike, for instance, the Scottish ministers and British government ministers). The National Assembly was established as a body corporate by the Government of Wales Act 1998 and the executive, as a committee of the assembly, only had those powers that the assembly as a whole voted to delegate to ministers.

The Government of Wales Act 2006 formally separated the National Assembly for Wales and the Welsh Government, giving Welsh ministers independent executive authority, this taking effect after the May 2007 elections. Following separation, the Welsh ministers exercise functions in their own right. Further transfers of executive functions from the British government can be made directly to the Welsh ministers (with their consent) by an Order in Council approved by the British parliament.

Separation was designed to clarify the respective roles of the assembly and the government. Under the structures established by the Government of Wales Act 2006, the role of Welsh ministers is to make decisions; develop and implement policy; exercise executive functions and make statutory instruments. The 60 assembly members in the National Assembly scrutinise the government's decisions and policies; hold ministers to account; approve budgets for the Welsh Government's programmes; and enact acts of assembly on subjects that have been devolved to the Welsh administration.

The result mirrored much more closely the relationship between the British government and British parliament and that between the Scottish Government and the Scottish Parliament.

After the 2007 election of the National Assembly for Wales

Legal separation

The new arrangements provided for in the Government of Wales Act 2006 created a formal legal separation between the National Assembly for Wales, comprising 60 assembly members, and the Welsh Government, comprising the first minister, Welsh ministers, deputy ministers and the counsel general. This separation between the two bodies took effect on the appointment of the first minister by Queen Elizabeth II following the assembly election on 3 May 2007.

Separation was meant to clarify the respective roles of the assembly and the government. The role of the government is to make decisions; develop and implement policy; exercise executive functions and make statutory instruments. The 60 assembly members in the National Assembly scrutinise the Welsh Government's decisions and policies; hold ministers to account; approve budgets for the Welsh Government's programmes; and have the power to enact assembly measures on certain matters. Assembly measures can now go further than the subordinate legislation which the assembly had the power to make prior to 2007.

Transfer of functions

The assembly's functions, including those of making subordinate legislation, in the main, transferred to the Welsh ministers upon separation. A third body was also established under the 2006 Act from May 2007, called the National Assembly for Wales Commission. It is responsible for employing the staff supporting the new National Assembly for Wales and for holding property, entering into contracts and providing support services on its behalf.

Welsh ministers

The 2006 Act made new provision for the appointment of Welsh ministers. The First Minister will be nominated by the Assembly and then appointed by Her Majesty the Queen. The First Minister subsequently appoints the Welsh Ministers and the Deputy Welsh Ministers, with the approval of Her Majesty. The Act created a new post of Counsel General for Wales, the principal source of legal advice to the Welsh Government. The Counsel General is appointed by the Queen, on the nomination of the First Minister, whose recommendation will need to be agreed by the National Assembly. The Counsel General may be, but does not have to be, an Assembly Member. The Act permits a maximum of 12 Welsh Ministers, which includes Deputy Welsh Ministers, but excludes the First Minister and the Counsel General. Accordingly, the maximum size of the Welsh Government is 14.

2011 referendum on law-making powers

Functions and areas of competence

Following the "yes" vote in the referendum on further law-making powers for the assembly on 3 March 2011, the Welsh Government is now entitled to propose bills to the National Assembly for Wales on subjects within 20 fields of policy. Subject to limitations prescribed by the Government of Wales Act 2006, Acts of the National Assembly may make any provision that could be made by Act of Parliament. The 20 areas of responsibility devolved to the National Assembly for Wales (and within which Welsh ministers exercise executive functions) are:

Renaming

The Welsh Assembly Government was renamed Welsh Government (Llywodraeth Cymru) under the Wales Act 2014.[2]

Ministers and deputy ministers

The government is composed of ministers, who attend cabinet meetings, and deputy ministers, who do not. The counsel general also attends cabinet meetings. The current government is formed by Welsh Labour.

Cabinet

Office Name Term Party Image
First Minister Rt. Hon Carwyn Jones 2009–Labour
Minister for Finance & Government Business Jane Hutt 2011–Labour
Minister for Economy, Science & Transport Vacant Labour
Minister for Education & Skills Vacant Labour
Minister for Natural Resources Carl Sargeant 2011–Labour
Minister for Health & Social Services Mark Drakeford 2013–Labour
Minister for Communities & Tackling Poverty Lesley Griffiths 2013–Labour
Minister for Public Services VacantLabour
Office holders given special provisions to attend Cabinet
Chief Whip Vacant Labour
Counsel General for Wales Theodore Huckle QC2011–Labour

Deputy ministers

Office Name TermPartyImage
Deputy Minister for Skills and Technology Julie James 2014–Labour
Deputy Minister for Culture, Sport and Tourism Ken Skates 2013–Labour
Deputy Minister for Health Vaughan Gething 2014–Labour
Deputy Minister for Farming & Food Rebecca Evans 2014–Labour

Civil service

The Welsh Government also includes a civil service that supports the Welsh ministers. According to a report from 2014, there are over 5,000 civil servants working across Wales.[3] The civil service is a matter reserved to the British parliament at Westminster: Welsh Government civil servants work within the rules and customs of Her Majesty's Civil Service, but serve the devolved administration rather than British government.[4]

Permanent secretary

The permanent secretary heads the civil service of the Welsh Government and chairs the Strategic Delivery and Performance Board.

The permanent secretary is a member of the Her Majesty's Civil Service, and therefore takes part in the permanent secretaries management group of the Civil Service[5] and is answerable to the most senior civil servant in Britain, the cabinet secretary, for his or her professional conduct. He or she remains, however, at the direction of the Welsh ministers.

Directorates

Strategic Delivery and Performance Board

The Strategic Delivery and Performance Board translates the strategic direction set by the Welsh cabinet and its committees into work that is joined up across Welsh Government departments and makes the best use of its resources. The board is made up of two deputy permanent secretaries, the director-general for health and social services/NHS Wales chief executive, four directors and 3 non-executive directors, and is chaired by the permanent secretary.

Board members are appointed at the discretion of and by the permanent secretary. Membership is not wholly dependent on functional responsibilities; it is designed to provide balanced advice and support to the permanent secretary, and collective leadership to the organisation as a whole.[6]

Position Name
Permanent Secretary Sir Derek Jones KCB
Deputy Permanent Secretary - Education and Public Services Group Owen Evans
Deputy Permanent Secretary - Economy, Skills & Natural Resources Group James Price
Director General, Health & Social Services and Chief Executive of NHS Wales Dr. Andrew Goodall
Director, Legal Services Jeff Godfrey
Director, Governance & Performance David Richards
Director, Finance Gawain Evans
Director, HR & Corporate Services Peter Kennedy
non-executive director Elan Closs Stephens
non-executive director James Turner
non-executive director Ann Keen
non-executive director Adrian Webb

Welsh Government sponsored bodies

The Welsh Government is responsible for a number of Welsh Government sponsored bodies (WGSBs). These are, respectively,

WGSBs are staffed by public servants rather than civil servants.

The Welsh Government is also responsible for some public bodies that are not classed as WGSBs, such as NHS Wales, and the Welsh Offices of England and Wales legal offices.

Offices

The Welsh Government has a total of 35 offices across Wales,[7] with a number in London and overseas.[8] Traditionally, most Welsh Office staff were based in Cardiff, especially in Cathays Park. However, in 2002, the Fullerton Review concluded that "the Assembly could no longer sustain having the majority of its operational functions located in and around Cardiff".[9] Since 2004, Welsh Government civil servants have been relocated across Wales as part of the Location Strategy, which involves the creation of new offices at Merthyr Tydfil, Aberystwyth and Llandudno Junction.[10] In 2006, the mergers of ELWa, the Wales Tourist Board and the Welsh Development Agency into the Welsh Government brought these agencies' offices into the Welsh Government estate.

The office of the First Minister is in Tŷ Hywel and the Senedd in Cardiff Bay; an office is also kept at the Welsh Government building in Cathays Park where the majority of Cardiff-based Welsh Government civil servants are located.

Budget

The Welsh Government receives a budget allocation from the UK Government[11] determined by the Barnett Formula.

List of successive Welsh Governments

Further information: List of Welsh Governments

See also

References

  1. "Welsh Government: a quick guide" (PDF). Welsh Government. 2015. Retrieved 13 January 2016.
  2. "Welsh assembly report damns Cardiff government for failure to cut poverty". The Guardian website (Guardian News & Media). 19 June 2015. Retrieved 15 January 2016.
  3. "Welsh Government Civil Service". Welsh Government. 31 March 2014. Retrieved 13 January 2016.
  4. "Welsh Government civil service: how we work". Welsh Government. 11 November 2013. Retrieved 13 January 2016.
  5. Civil Service. PSMG Membership
  6. Welsh Government | Membership. Wales.gov.uk (2013-03-18). Retrieved on 2013-08-24.
  7. "State of the Estate Report 12/13". Welsh Government. 2013-10-31. Retrieved 2013-12-31.
  8. Welsh Assembly Government | All offices
  9. Welsh Government | Update on Location Strategy
  10. Welsh Government | Location Strategy
  11. Welsh Government | Budgets. Wales.gov.uk (2013-07-08). Retrieved on 2013-08-24.

External links

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