Results 1261–1280 of 1310 for representations -taxation speaker:Jane Dodds -speaker:Janet Finch-Saunders -speaker:Huw Irranca-Davies -speaker:Huw Irranca-Davies -speaker:Ken Skates -speaker:David Melding -speaker:David Melding -speaker:Rhun ap Iorwerth -speaker:Jane Hutt -speaker:John Griffiths -speaker:John Griffiths -speaker:John Griffiths -speaker:Gareth Bennett -speaker:Jane Dodds -speaker:Jane Dodds -speaker:Jane Dodds -speaker:Elin Jones -speaker:Elin Jones -speaker:Vaughan Gething -speaker:Vaughan Gething -speaker:Rebecca Evans -speaker:Llyr Gruffydd -speaker:Angela Burns -speaker:Angela Burns -speaker:Mike Hedges -speaker:Rebecca Evans -speaker:Rebecca Evans -speaker:Rebecca Evans -speaker:Rebecca Evans

2. 2. Business Statement and Announcement (27 Sep 2016)

Julie Morgan: ...the job properly here in this Chamber and that all these items should be considered together? Wouldn’t having had a constitutional convention have been the ideal opportunity to look at all these representation issues in the round?

1. 1. Questions to the Cabinet Secretary for Finance and Local Government: <p>Swansea Bay City Region</p> (21 Sep 2016)

Suzy Davies: ...chains in what should be an ambitious vision for this region. I met the Association of British Ports at a recent reception in Cardiff Bay and was surprised to hear that, at that stage, they’d not been involved in any discussions on the city bay deal vision at all. Could you remind the Assembly how the membership board was decided, and do you have any concerns about whether the very...

1. 1. Questions to the Cabinet Secretary for Finance and Local Government: <p>Questions Without Notice from Party Spokespeople</p> (21 Sep 2016)

Mark Drakeford: Llywydd, the funding formula is reviewed every year. A group of people with expertise in this field, including representation from local government look, every single year, at the formula. They look at all the component parts of it: demography, geography, economy and social factors and, every year, they bring forward proposals, and governments, in my experience, accept the advice that they...

2. 2. Questions to the Cabinet Secretary for Communities and Children: <p>Welfare Reform</p> (14 Sep 2016)

Carl Sargeant: ...for people suffering from domestic violence, and other causes are supported through Wales and across the UK. I’m very concerned that supported accommodation, including women’s refuges, is not exempt from the local housing allowance cap. We have made representations to the Department for Work and Pensions. I do hope that this pause in the appointment of this policy may give the Minister...

2. 2. Questions to the Cabinet Secretary for Communities and Children: <p>Questions Without Notice from Party Spokespeople</p> (14 Sep 2016)

Mark Isherwood: My question was, rather, what representations you would be making. Clearly, I appreciate how the budget round works and was not seeking to score party-political points. I fully supported the protection of that budget last year and I will continue to do so into the future, not just because of homelessness, but because of the related impact of early intervention on substance misuse, on domestic...

2. 2. Questions to the Cabinet Secretary for Communities and Children: <p>Questions Without Notice from Party Spokespeople</p> (14 Sep 2016)

Mark Isherwood: ...and treatment now has given me an opportunity at life once again’. Do you recognise, as I’m sure you do, that these projects save money for statutory services, and will you be making representations accordingly as we move towards the draft budget for next year?

5. 3. Statement: EU Transition (13 Sep 2016)

Mark Isherwood: Thank you for your statement. My party, the Welsh Conservatives, do believe that Wales must benefit from at least as much funding as we go forward and we’ll continue to make those representations in our discussions here and elsewhere. You refer to your being pleased that the Treasury has announced that the common agricultural policy pillar 1 funding for farmers has been settled until 2020...

4. 2. Business Statement and Announcement (13 Sep 2016)

Mr Simon Thomas: .... So, I’ll turn to ask the business manager for a couple of statements on something more immediate, because last night the House of Commons completed its work on the Wales Bill and sent it to another place. Now, the First Minister in July, to the Constitutional and Legislative Affairs Committee, described this Bill as something that could never be a lasting settlement, nor provide the...

1. 1. Questions to the First Minister: <p>The Welsh Steel Industry</p> (13 Sep 2016)

Suzy Davies: Following representation by the Prime Minister, Theresa May, the G20 members agreed to set up a forum to tackle the issues of overcapacity and production in the global steel market, so the UK is moving ahead and getting world leaders to confront and answer the central question as well as dealing with the issues they’ve already been acting on until recently. Now, I accept that the Welsh...

7. 7. Plaid Cymru Debate: UK Withdrawal from the European Union (13 Jul 2016)

Mark Isherwood: ...a new support system that recognises the distinct challenges faced by farmers in Wales and provides the financial support necessary to support the industry’s long-term sustainable future. Welsh representation must have a central input as part of the negotiation process for the UK’s withdrawal from the EU, where all UK nations face unique, separate challenges. The rights of all EU...

7. 7. Plaid Cymru Debate: UK Withdrawal from the European Union (13 Jul 2016)

Hefin David: ...ideas with interest. In the meantime, and by the same token as the leader of the opposition has said, the new Prime Minister must work with our elected Government here to ensure that Wales does not lose out by our leaving the European Union. A distinctive Welsh exit plan and our economic strategy must be integral to the negotiations to leave the European Union. This motion today sets some...

6. 6. Debate by Individual Members under Standing Order 11.21(iv): The BBC in Wales (13 Jul 2016)

Jeremy Miles: ...forward to further discussions as part of that committee. The debate goes to the heart of our sense of ourselves as a nation and how we see ourselves reflected back at us in the media. That’s another reason why it’s so important. There’s also the issue of the economic impact of the BBC within Wales. Rhianon Passmore talked about the property investments in Wales, which are...

6. 6. Debate by Individual Members under Standing Order 11.21(iv): The BBC in Wales (13 Jul 2016)

Rhianon Passmore: ...ACW—stated that three in five people, which is 62 per cent, in Wales, ‘feel the TV licence fee offers value for money, while more than four in five people in Wales would miss the BBC if it was not there’. That is 83 per cent. So, today I rise to speak in this debate, as I know my colleagues have, out of a shared desire to see the BBC achieve its full potential in twenty-first...

1. 1. Questions to the Cabinet Secretary for Economy and Infrastructure: <p>The Wales Bill and Integrated Public Transport Systems</p> (13 Jul 2016)

Ken Skates: ...this important issue, and perhaps invite her to write to me formally regarding the bus service from Tredegar to Aberdare, which I’d like to take a closer look at, if I may, and perhaps make representations on behalf of her constituents. Further devolution in respect of the traffic commissioner’s functions over bus registration will give us the opportunity to consider changing how bus...

1. 1. Questions to the Cabinet Secretary for Economy and Infrastructure: <p>PCS and National Museum Wales</p> (13 Jul 2016)

Ken Skates: .... I’ve also been clear that the workers at the museum—the people who ensure that visitors have the best experience possible—are better represented at the most senior level. That includes representation at boards of trustee meetings. I think it’s essential that employees are represented and heard and taken notice of.

8. 7. Statement: Transport Modernisation — An Update on the Wales and Borders Franchise and Metro Programmes (12 Jul 2016)

Julie Morgan: ...sighted experience difficulties on the trains, and this can be due to poor lighting, signage or lack of disability-awareness training amongst the staff. So, could the Cabinet Secretary tell me what representations he’s had from people or groups that represent disabled people about ensuring that disability issues will be entrenched in the franchise? The second question was about the...

8. 7. Statement: Transport Modernisation — An Update on the Wales and Borders Franchise and Metro Programmes (12 Jul 2016)

David Lloyd: ...Wales and borders franchise, and also the situation with the metro? Of course, in talking about the franchise in the first instance, the situation as we talk about trains can be difficult because not all railways are devolved here to Wales, and specifically with this particular franchise, part of the track is in England and part of the track is in Wales also. Now, the intention of the...

QNR: Questions to the First Minister (12 Jul 2016)

Mark Drakeford: We have regularly expressed concern about significant job losses across Trinity Wales publications in Wales. We will continue to make representations to Trinity about the developing situation with staff in north Wales. We recognise the importance of a healthy media sector as an essential component of a modern democratic society.

2. 1. Debate on the Queen's Speech ( 6 Jul 2016)

Huw Irranca-Davies: I rise because she’s raised the representations that the Constitutional and Legislative Affairs Committee has made, and that invitation still stands, by the way. The reason it stands is because, in the spirit of the constructive engagement made by the First Minister, by opposition leaders, and also by the Presiding Officer—even to the extent of suggesting amendments—we genuinely feel we...

12. 11. Debate: Renaming the National Assembly for Wales ( 5 Jul 2016)

Mr Neil Hamilton: Like everybody else, I welcome this debate, although I wonder, amongst the public at large, whether they might regard it as a bit of kind of pretentious navel-gazing and they’re not too bothered about what we call ourselves—as far as I can tell, they’re highly critical of what we do in this place. But, several of us, of course, have been Members of Parliament in another place, and I...


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