Will new panels pass scrutiny?
Thursday 24th November 2011, 3:00PM GMT.
THE Island has a new Council of Ministers which promises to be distinctly different in character from its predecessor.
It also now has a new set of Scrutiny panels whose chairmen bear only limited relationship, in political terms, to those who held the jobs in the previous administration.
Broad categorisation can be dangerous, but before the autumn’s elections Scrutiny was something of a stronghold of the fiercest opponents of the executive. Indeed, certain Scrutiny panels came under fire for setting themselves up as agents of opposition rather than the ‘critical friends’ that they were intended to be in the light of the Clothier reforms.
It would be entirely wrong to suggest that the new line-up of Scrutiny chairmen will amount to a selection of yes-man and yes-women. The track records of the experienced politicians among them give the lie to that idea. However, it is surely significant that figures such as Deputy Geoff Southern and Deputy Trevor Pitman do not feature among the newly elected Scrutiny leadership.
It is also significant that, initially at least, no one at all was willing to put their name forward to chair the Health, Social Security and Housing panel, and that two of the new chairmen have only just been elected to the States.
It is tempting to speculate that those who were the most ardent critics of the previous Council of Ministers have made the tactical decision to focus their efforts elsewhere rather than depending on Scrutiny to promote their alternative perspective.
More probably, the new distribution of jobs reflects many Members’ frustration with the Scrutiny system as a whole and its limited ability to either improve the processes of government or set appropriate limits on ministerial power.
It would, of course, be entirely wrong to prejudge the potential of the new Scrutiny chairmen or the panels that they will lead. In spite of this, it is fair to say that past experience tells us that the whole checks and balances element of the ministerial structure has been less of a success than we might have hoped.
Against this background, it is clearly a candidate for the tuning and improvement that was always envisaged as part of the development of our reformed system of government.
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