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Home > National Assembly for Wales



This article is part of the series
Politics of the United Kingdom
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National Assembly for Wales
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Constitution

The National Assembly for Wales (or NAW) ( Welsh: Cynulliad Cenedlaethol Cymru) was established in 1998, following a 1997 referendum in which a small majority of voters (but not the electorate) voted in favour of the Labour Government's plans for devolution.

Unlike the Scottish Parliament and Northern Ireland Assembly, the National Assembly for Wales cannot pass its own primary legislation, nor can it raise its own taxes, as these powers remain with Westminster. This is because unlike those other parts of the UK, Wales has had the same legal and administrative system as England. However, supporters of the Assembly argue that it is more democratically accountable than the Welsh Office, which was represented in the British Cabinet by a Secretary of State who often did not even represent a Welsh constituency at Westminster.

In July 2002 the Welsh Assembly Government established an independent commission, with Lord Ivor Richard (former leader of the House of Lords) as chair, into the powers and electoral arrangements of the National Assembly in order to ensure that it is able to operate in the best interests of the people of Wales. The Richard Commission reported in March 2004. It recommended that the National Assembly should have powers to legislate in certain matters, while other matters would be retained by Westminster. It also recommended other changes that would be needed as a result of this. The matter is still under discussion.

The Assembly is composed of 60 Assembly Members, knowns as AMs (in Welsh, Aelodau'r Cynulliad, ACau). Under the Additional Member System of proportional representation, 40 of the AMs are elected from single-member constituencies on a First Past the Post basis, the constituencies being equivalent to those used for the House of Commons, while the remaining 20 AMs are elected on regional lists, in order to achieve a proportional result overall. The Assembly sits in CardiffThis article is about the Welsh capital. For the place in United States, see Cardiff, California. Cardiff ( Welsh: Caerdydd from caer "fort," and dydd "Antonius Didius") is the capital and largest city of Wales. It is located in the traditional county of, and will have a new, high-end assembly chamber in Cardiff BayCardiff Bay is the regeneration area created by the Cardiff Barrage which impounded two rivers to form a new freshwater lake around the former dockland area south of the city centre of Cardiff in south Wales. The Cardiff Bay Development Corporation was cr once construction is finished.

There have thus far been two elections to the Assembly, the first taking place in 1999For the album by Prince, see 1999 (album 1999 is a common year starting on Friday (see link for calendar), and was designated the International Year of Older Persons by the UN. Events Kosovo War Former child star Gary Coleman files for bankruptcy Y2K prep and the second in 20032003 is a common year starting on Wednesday (link will take you to calendar), and also: The International Year of Freshwater The European Disability Year Summary Perhaps the defining global event of the year 2003 was the Invasion of Iraq launched by the U. The second election produced the first ever democratically elected legislature in which 50 per cent of its members were women.

The First MinisterThe First Minister of Wales is the leader of the Welsh Assembly Government, Wales's devolved administration. When initially set up under the Government of Wales Act 1998, the title was known as First Secretary (in Welsh Prif Ysgrifennig , as Wales was giv and his Cabinet form the Welsh Assembly Government.


    Party Seats Current Assembly
1999 2003
  LabourThe Labour Party is a centre- left or social democratic political party in Britain (see British politics), and one of the United Kingdom's three main political parties. Under its leader Tony Blair it won a landslide in the 1997 general election, and forme 28 30                                                            
  Plaid CymruPlaid Cymru (literally meaning, "Party of Wales") was the name for the Welsh Nationalist Party used from the late 1920s until it was formally changed to Plaid Cymru The Party of Wales in the late 1990s. In Wales the party is often familiarly referred to a 17 12                                                            
  Conservative 9 11                                                            
  Liberal Democrat 6 6                                                            
  Forward Wales N/A 1                                                            




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