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Senedd reform: Voters to be able to expel misbehaving politicians
Senedd reform: Voters to be able to expel misbehaving politicians

BBC News

time12-03-2025

  • Politics
  • BBC News

Senedd reform: Voters to be able to expel misbehaving politicians

Voters will be able to eject politicians from the Welsh Parliament for misbehaviour after the next Senedd Welsh government has agreed to pass legislation to introduce a recall process as soon as possible, saying "public trust in politics is hard-won, but easily lost, and it's our duty to safeguard it".But ministers suggested it may not be not come into force in time for the beginning of the new Senedd, in May if Senedd members are found to have broken the rules they can be suspended for a period of time but, unlike at Westminster, cannot be removed from the parliament altogether. The Standards of Conduct Committee has proposed a system giving electors the opportunity to vote to remove a misbehaving politician, but unlike in Westminster they will not be able to choose their a Senedd member breaks the rules in a way serious enough to warrant a recall process, voters in their constituency would then have a vote to either keep the existing politician or remove them and replace with the next member on the party chair Hannah Blythyn said the changes would help build "trust and transparency in our processes, in our politicians and in our politics".She pressed the Welsh government to introduce the new system in time for the next Senedd term "so that all members elected to that Senedd will be held to a consistent standard from the start".Although Counsel General Julie James agreed to introduce legislation before the next election, she warned "time is tight".She suggested work on agreeing guidelines on what level of offence or suspension from the Welsh Parliament would trigger the recall process will not happen until after the is agreement across the parties of a need to change the system and according to James "public trust in politics is hard-won, but easily lost, and it's our duty to safeguard it"."People rightly expect high standards from their elected representatives, and when those standards aren't met, they expect consequences," she said."And that's why we need a fair, transparent system that allows voters, the very people who put us here, to have the final say."

Welsh politicians caught lying could lose seats in Senedd
Welsh politicians caught lying could lose seats in Senedd

BBC News

time19-02-2025

  • Politics
  • BBC News

Welsh politicians caught lying could lose seats in Senedd

Members of the Senedd who lie could lose their seats under new recommendations being made to the Welsh the Senedd's Standards of Conduct Committee has stopped short of recommending that deliberate deception be made a criminal offence - to be investigated by the police and prosecuted in the committee said the existing standards regime should be strengthened, with the ultimate sanction of a referendum-style vote in an MS's constituency to decide whether they stay in the plans the Senedd's standards commissioner would also have the power to start their own investigation, rather than wait for a complaint, and could compel an MS to issue a correction. If they do not make that correction then they would be considered to have broken the rules, or code of conduct, and face tougher report also called for lay members, from outside the Senedd, to join the standards has been the case in the House of Commons' equivalent committee since 2015, using people from outside the institution with relevant knowledge to bring an "independent and external perspective" to the Welsh government accepts the plans then MSs would be subject to a beefed-up code of conduct with a rule to act "truthfully" replaced with an explicit instruction to refrain from making deliberately inaccurate are currently considering a previous committee report which recommended the Senedd introduce a "recall" procedure which would give voters the chance to remove MS's who had their latest report the committee concluded that introducing a criminal offence risked unintended consequences which might outweigh any had heard evidence that it might overwhelm police and the criminal justice system - which is already facing severe backlogs - and that any allegations of deliberate deception would have to reach the criminal committee also wanted one standards system, and not have lying treated separately and seen as more serious than other the circumstances were deemed serious enough - subject to a recommendation from the committee and a vote in the Senedd - committee members felt that the ultimate decision should lie with the electorate to recall their Senedd member. 'Rebuild public trust' Under the plans the disciplinary procedure would remain standards commissioner would investigate, the committee would consider the report and recommend a sanction before the Senedd would vote on MS falling foul of the new rules would have a note about the case on their biography on the Senedd committee also called on the Welsh government to clearly define deliberate Blythyn, the Labour MS who chairs of the Senedd's standards committee, said: "Toughening rules for Members of the Senedd and candidates standing for election is critical at a time when public trust in our institutions is low."By strengthening the law governing elections, toughening our code of conduct and giving more power and independence to those investigating complaints, we can start to rebuild public trust in our political institutions and support a parliament fit for the future."Committee members considered three options:To create a criminal offence of deception which would end up in the criminal courtsTo use an existing investigative body - the Public Services Ombudsman for Wales has been mentioned and gave evidence to the committee - and to bring in a civil sanction such as a fineStrengthen the MS code of conduct and beef up the available sanctions, meaning it would be dealt with through the Senedd's disciplinary proceduresFour members not on the standards committee, so called "observer members", also took part in the of them - Labour MS Lee Waters, Plaid Cymru's Adam Price and the Liberal Democrat leader Jane Dodds - favoured an independent process involving a criminal or civil supported improvements to the standards system but did not think it would go far enough to meet what the Welsh government had promised the public and the Senedd. How did we get here? Former counsel general Mick Antoniw, who is now a member of the standards committee, had made a commitment that the Welsh government would legislate in time for the 2026 Senedd election for the disqualification of members and candidates found guilty of deception through an independent judicial made the concession after the government looked set to lose a vote on the issue, which could have led to the creation of a law that would have made lying a specific criminal offence.A separate set of rules would apply to candidates standing in a Senedd committee recommended broadening the UK Representation of the People Act to include deliberate deception, which the Welsh government already has the power to the moment it is a criminal offence to make a false statement about an opponent's conduct or character.A Welsh government spokesperson said: "The Standards of Conduct Committee has produced a detailed and thorough report into deliberate deception as part of its inquiry into member accountability. "We will now consider its findings and recommendations before responding formally."

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