Government of Wales Act 2006

Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Government of Wales Act 2006 (c. 32) is an act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom that reformed the then-National Assembly for Wales (now the Senedd) and allows further powers to be granted to it more easily. The act creates a system of government with a separate executive drawn from and accountable to the legislature.[1][2] It is part of a series of laws legislating for Welsh devolution.[2]

Long titleAn Act to make provision about the government of Wales.
Introduced byPeter Hain MP (Commons)
Lord Evans of Temple Guiting (Lords)
Territorial extentUnited Kingdom[b]
Quick facts Long title, Citation ...
Government of Wales Act 2006[a]
Act of Parliament
coat of arms
Long titleAn Act to make provision about the government of Wales.
Citation2006 c. 32
Introduced byPeter Hain MP (Commons)
Lord Evans of Temple Guiting (Lords)
Territorial extent United Kingdom[b]
Dates
Royal assent25 July 2006
Commencementvarious[c]
Other legislation
Amends
Amended by
Relates to
  • Welsh Elections (Coronavirus) Act 2021
Status: Amended
History of passage through Parliament
Text of statute as originally enacted
Revised text of statute as amended
Text of the Government of Wales Act 2006 as in force today (including any amendments) within the United Kingdom, from legislation.gov.uk.
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Background

The legislation came about because of proposals from the Richard Commission, which were supported in a special party conference in 2004.[3]

The specific details of the legislation were negotiated by First Minister Rhodri Morgan and Secretary of State for Wales Peter Hain.[3]

Provisions

The act has the following provisions:

The bill received royal assent on 25 July 2006.[1][17]

The part that provides for acts was brought into force, and the relating to measures and related Orders in Council ceased to have effect, on 5 May 2011 following the 2011 Welsh devolution referendum. The act was further amended to rename the assembly to Senedd Cymru, and further extend its legislative competence to the reserved matters model, by the Wales Act 2014.

Schedule 5 of the act

Schedule 5 of the act describes the 20 "fields" and "matters" in which the National Assembly for Wales had legislative competence, i.e. the ability to pass Assembly Measures. A field is a broad subject area, such as education and training, the environment, health and health services, highways and transport, or housing. A matter is a specific defined policy area within a field.

The assembly could gain further legislative competence by the amendment of schedule 5. There were two ways in which this can happen: either as a result of clauses included in legislation passed by an act of Parliament at Westminster, or by Legislative Competence Orders (LCOs) granted by Parliament in response to a request from the National Assembly itself (LCOs could be proposed by the Welsh Government, or by individual members, or by assembly committees, but had to be approved by the National Assembly before they could go forward). The result of either method was to amend any of the 20 fields by inserting specific matters. The assembly then had competence to pass legislation on those matters.

Schedule 5 was regularly updated as result of these two processes.

Schedule 5 became moot when the assembly gained the competence to pass acts, which were restricted to matters listed in schedule 7 rather than schedule 5, and lost the competence to pass measures.

Fields of schedule 5

Source:[18]

Criticism

The Government of Wales Act 2006 was criticised by Plaid Cymru for not delivering a fully-fledged parliament.[citation needed]

See also

Notes

  1. Section 166.
  2. Section 165.
  3. Section 161.

References

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