STATES OF JERSEY

COUNCIL OF MINISTERS:
VOTE OF NO CONFIDENCE
Lodged au Greffe on 13th June 2008
by Senator S. Syvret
STATES GREFFE
PROPOSITION
THE STATES
are asked to decide whether they are of opinion -
that
they have no confidence in the Council of Ministers.
SENATOR S. SYVRET
Note: In
accordance with Standing Order 22(a) this proposition has been signed by the
following members –
Deputy
A. Breckon of St. Saviour
Deputy
G.C.L. Baudains of St. Clement
Deputy
P.V.F. Le Claire of St. Helier
The
reasons for bringing this proposition are set out in the report below.
REPORT
This proposition of no-confidence in Jersey’s Council
of Ministers marks an historic turning-point in the Island’s politics.
For the first time ever, the people of Jersey will
have an opportunity to rid themselves of a government which has, in effect,
been in power for decades upon decades without effective opposition – and
which is seemingly despised by 85% of the population.
The opportunity to bring about an end to decades of
misrule and incompetence comes in two forms.
Firstly, this community can look to its elected
representatives to finally begin acting as a responsible legislature during the
debate on this proposition – and acknowledge the paramount faults of the
current regime.
Secondly – and in the event of failure by States
members to hold the executive to account – the people themselves can
exercise the power necessary to force change through the ballot-box later this
year.
That is, should the people so wish.
It may, of course, be that the general impression of
dissatisfaction on the part of the public may be an inaccurate assessment.
Perhaps a clear majority of Islanders are, in fact, content with the customary
performance of the States of Jersey. Perhaps voters will not want change –
in which case those present members who support this Council of Ministers will
be returned to office.
It could well be that the entrenched ruling
claque – the de facto covert party – in the States is respected and admired
by a silent majority – and that those members who oppose them will
displease the people of this community.
Personally – I don’t think so.
In any event – after decade upon decade of
political failure and ever-growing dissatisfaction, those who care about the
future of this community must finally give the public a real choice; an
opportunity for real change.
Those members who have signed this proposition may
have differing views on certain issues, and, indeed, the performance of certain
Ministers.
However – the common view of the signatories to
this proposition – and that of some other members – is that in
general terms this Council of Ministers has failed and that it no longer has
the support of the community – if, indeed, it ever did.
And it is, in many ways, that generality – a need
to challenge a stale political epoch – for which this no-confidence
proposition is brought.
It was my original intention to word the proposition
so that it was a vote of no-confidence in the Chief Minister and Council of Ministers, but standing
orders stipulate that the vote must be focused upon the Chief Minister or the Council of Ministers. However,
the question is largely academic as the effect of the vote succeeding would be
the same in either case; namely – the fall of this Council of Ministers
and the election of a replacement.
And it is actually correct that the vote should be
against the Council as a whole – not merely the Chief Minister, Senator
Walker. For whilst he has numerous political faults to his name – in many
respects he personally is indistinguishable from the politically decadent era
of which he just happens to be the present figurehead.
It is also a fact that such is the seriousness of the
issue at hand – the future of this community – it would be quite
inappropriate to reduce matters to what may be lazily and inaccurately termed
merely “a clash of personalities”.
This proposition is really about a sea-change in
Jersey politics.
It could be argued that some of the Ministers are less
culpable than some of their longer-serving colleagues; that they’ve only been
elected a comparatively short time and that they should be given another
chance.
However – in the event of this proposition
succeeding, a new Chief Minister and a new Council of Ministers will be
elected. Then – if it is the wish of a majority of members – some of
the present Ministers may be returned to office.
For some – there may be a second chance; it is in
the hands of members of this Assembly.
But the debatable merits of one or two Ministers
cannot shield this Council as an entity from the fact of its failures.
Nor – more importantly – can personal
support for one or two Ministers disguise the fact that the type of politics
represented by this Council has now – clearly – run its course.
After at least 3 decades of short-termism, of
shallow materialism, of over-development, of economic and financial
incompetence, of environmental destruction, of exploitation of the poor –
and a near-complete failure to have any regard for the long-term future of the
community as a whole – the time for change has come.
We as a community are at a junction in our history. We
must now choose one path or the other: more of the same – or a new path?
And this is a choice that the Island may never have the luxury of making again.
This is why it is necessary to test the credibility of
this Council of Ministers; because this Council embodies the stale and tired
political era of which so many Islanders are heartily sick.
And in testing the credibility of this Council –
we also subject the Assembly to examination. We test its independence of
thought; its ability to seriously hold the executive to account – and we
test whether the Assembly is properly reflecting the general concerns of the
community, in that, whatever the outcome of the vote – the public will
then be well-placed to cast its judgement in the elections later this year.
The Council of Ministers as an Entity
Whilst this may be less of a criticism of the Council
of Ministers than it is of the political culture of Jersey, it must still,
however, be observed that the Council of Ministers have not received, either
individually or collectively, a mandate from the public for their
policies – a fact that seems to be lost on some Ministers when they announce
that they “will (or have) made the
decision”.
The absence of a clear public mandate ought to
moderate the approach taken by the Council of Ministers – but instead they
exhibit an apparent belief that they possess democratic credibility akin to a
government in the UK, and that this entitles them to drive forward their
policies – largely regardless of the views of the community.
The generalities of the policies pursued by this
Council of Ministers – and the longer-term politics of several of its
members – are deficient on at least two grounds.
Firstly, whilst these things are difficult to assess
accurately, the impression is that a clear majority of people living in Jersey
have no confidence in Senator Walker and this Council.
Secondly, as the recent Waterfront Masterplan debate
illustrated so clearly, this Council has failed to move the focus of Jersey
politics from short-term, sticking-plaster responses towards long-term
solutions for the problems we face.
In many respects, the Waterfront debate could be said
to embody the ultimate failure of the political era represented by this
Council. Their scheme represented more destruction of Jersey’s unique
attributes; further aesthetic disasters; utter obsolescence in what is now a
very changed world – and yet more financial incompetence.
Which other government would come to its
parliament – railroad through the Assembly a shockingly flawed development
strategy – and during the debate repeatedly assert that criticisms of the
financial underpinning of the project were ill-founded – when
10 minutes on the Internet reveals significant concerns about the
preferred company – and then imagine they could remain in office?
Essentially – this Council of Ministers
represents the same old approach. More of the same; business as usual. For
there is no discernable meaningful difference between this Council of
Ministers – and the old Policy and Resources Committees.
It is near-impossible to differentiate between the
policies, politics and performance of this Council – and the so-called
‘leadership’ of the States at any point during the last 3 decades.
But one of the most alarming failures of Senator
Walker and this Council of Ministers is to be seen in the fact that the senior
reaches of Jersey’s civil service remain out-of-control, deficient,
undisciplined, seemingly invulnerable and wholly unaccountable.
For all that certain members of this Council like to
portray themselves as embodying some kind of ultra-efficient and
business-minded degree of managerial skill – in truth, they have failed
utterly to impose anything even faintly approaching the degree of
accountability which is taken for granted in the commercial world.
Even when presented with, clear, irrefutable evidence
of incompetence and irresponsibility on the part of certain senior civil
servants – Senator Walker and this Council of Ministers has displayed only
a tremulous timidity – a scarcely disguised fear of taking-on and tackling
indiscipline, and unaccountability on the part of senior officers. A group of
people who cost taxpayers a vast amount of money each year, yet who, in many
cases, would not last 2 months in an equivalent private sector job.
It has to be asked – would these members of the
Council of Ministers be prepared to tolerate so blithely such management
deficiencies in their own businesses?
This Council of Ministers is also clearly in a state
of profound indecision and confusion concerning its policies. Ministerial
government was supposed to deliver a brave new world of joined-up government.
Yet within the same 24 hours, Senator Walker and
this Council launch a major PR spin-campaign in an effort to portray themselves
as ‘Green’ – as genuinely committed to the environment – and
then – without apparent embarrassment – drive through the States a
truly monstrous waterfront development proposal which had not been subjected to
an environmental impact assessment.
Senator Walker, on behalf of his Council, spoke many
fine words during his Great Green-wash Address – for example, expressing a
commitment to reducing Jersey’s carbon emissions. It apparently not being
within his knowledge or that of other Ministers, that the production of cement
is, perhaps, the most heavily carbon-emitting and polluting of industrial
processes.
Yet many hundreds of thousands of tonnes of concrete
will be required for the vast waterfront development – a substantial
amount of it for road and tunnel construction – to accommodate ever larger
quantities of traffic – which will then add even more carbon to the
atmosphere.
This Council of Ministers also displays the very worst
habits of the States of Jersey insofar as secrecy and a lack of transparency
are concerned. A very substantial number of items of business discussed at the
CoM are classified as ‘part b’ items. The failure of this Council to
embrace freedom of information demonstrates just how remote they are from the
standards of modern, democratic government.
And this absence of transparency is further compounded
by the long-standing habit of certain Ministers to engage in so-called
‘consultation’ exercises, such as “Imagine Jersey”, which are, essentially,
nothing more than exercises in manufacturing consent for policies that the CoM
feels a need to gain some apparent public support for.
This Chief Minister and Council also waste a
substantial amount of public money on the so-called ‘communications
unit’ – essentially a collection of spin-doctors employed at taxpayers’
expense in order to act as little more than a PR apparatus for the Chief
Minister and his Council. It may well be the case that some resources need to
be spent in projecting the interests of Jersey to the wider world. But that is
a far cry from using such resources to manipulate public opinion within Jersey.
This Chief Minister and Council of Ministers remain
wedded to the notion that constant population growth is the solution to certain
problems Jersey faces, such as an ageing population. Whilst an aging population
is certainly an issue that we must address – what these Ministers always
stop short of admitting is that attempting to replace active members of society
through inward migration is mathematically doomed to fail. It is, therefore,
yet another of the policies which characterise this administration –
essentially, short-term fixes masquerading as solutions, but which are, in
fact, incapable of addressing the real long-term problems.
This Council is also incapable, clearly, of grasping
the nature of the experience of many Islanders of financial hardship – or
even poverty in many cases. Although Jersey has the second-highest GDP per
capita in Europe, significant numbers of people struggle to survive here
because of the immense cost of living in Jersey and just do not share in the
wealth in the Island.
Clearly – this Council is directionless and
disjointed. It appears to believe that it can be all things to all people; to
on the one hand promulgate yet more vast and destructive development
growth – and on the other believe itself to be genuinely committed to
environmental protection.
For what is displayed is not only a profound degree of
intellectual and philosophical contradiction – also on plain display is a
lack of leadership; a fear of telling the public the truth. That truth
being – we cannot be all things to all people.
There are hard decisions to be made – and clear
trade-offs. For example – we can follow the Hong Kong/Europe path –
as preferred by the States for the last 3 decades – or
we can protect our environment and our quality of life.
We cannot do both.
And the time has come to begin being honest with the
public about that fact. This Chief Minister and this Council of Ministers are
clearly incapable of doing this.
This Chief Minister and Council embodies the political
era of the last 30 years. The time for change is long overdue.
The
Individual Ministers
As already stated, it could be argued that some of the
present Council may deserve a second chance. If so – members will
re-appoint them when a new Council is appointed, should the vote succeed.
But there is no escaping the fact that, to put it
charitably, several of their number have simply not performed to acceptable
standards for a variety of reasons. I will explore these deficiencies in
greater detail during the debate, but by way of generality, consider these few
points.
We have a Minister for Transport and Technical
Services who seems to believe the principal function of his job is to perform
as a stand-up comedian and deliver withering sarcastic put-downs upon members
as though he were addressing the audience in some seedy nightclub.
A Minister for Home Affairs who, admittedly, inherited
the prison in a state of disarray following decades of appallingly deficient
investment. But successive HMI reports remain utterly condemnatory. It is also
the case that she, along with the Minister for Education, Sport and Culture,
failed to respond appropriately to concerns over systemic child protection
failures.
The Minister for Education, Sport and Culture, as
already remarked, exhibited the typical States member’s response to poor
performance – ignore the child protection failures; ignore those clients
who had been failed and instead set about protecting the defective officers
responsible for the service failure. He has also failed to deliver on early
years education; and has presided over a child-care sector in chaos, with the
public in a lottery as to whether they get free places for their children or
have to pay for them.
The Minister for Health and Social Services, Senator
Ben Shenton, and his Assistant Minister, Senator Jimmy Perchard, have – in
a matter of a few months – demonstrated themselves to be utterly unsuited
to having responsibility for Health and Social Services.
Senator Shenton began his tenure in the post by
engaging in a botched and error-strewn approach to pandemic flu preparations.
This was early days – so perhaps we might, naturally, expect some
mistakes.
However, the performance of the Minister and his
Assistant Minister has gone from bad to worse.
Both men have demonstrated themselves utterly
incapable of enforcing even the faintest levels of accountability and
discipline upon poorly performing senior staff. Both have demonstrated
themselves unwilling and incapable of properly dealing with the senior staff
involved in present controversies, notwithstanding clear and unambiguous
evidence of wholly unacceptable professional conduct the part of certain of
those officers.
Senators Shenton and Perchard – along with
Senator Walker – are, apparently, entirely happy that Jersey’s taxpayers
should carry on spending very considerable amounts of money on employing a
number of manifestly deficient senior officers who are unfit to work in the
public sector.
We can hardly find it surprising that the senior
levels of Jersey’s civil service should be so bloated, invulnerable, expensive
and un-accountable when we see such spineless failure to enforce the most
rudimentary standards of discipline.
There is, however, another striking and profound way
in which Senator Shenton and Senator Perchard have demonstrated themselves
quite incapable of remaining in-post.
Both men have repeatedly – pro-actively –
and publicly – attacked and denigrated the States of Jersey Police Force,
its senior leaders and the investigation they are conducting into the Jersey
child abuse disaster.
This conduct is literally incredible.
There comes a time when even the most obtuse of
politicians have to recognise the folly of their position – and that time
is at hand as far as the Minister for Health and Social Services and his
Assistant Minister are concerned.
The seriousness of their actions in attacking the
Police investigation cannot be over-stated. For not only have they made
themselves appear absurd – they have made Jersey appear absurd.
Where – on the face of the planet – would
one find another modern, democratic society – in which THE politicians
with legal and political responsibility for child protection – were
pro-actively and publicly attacking a Police investigation into child abuse?
No such State exists; it is only in Jersey one would
alight upon such madness – and perhaps it serves as a broader example of
the final state of chaos and ineptitude reached by Jersey politics.
The very fact that Senator Shenton and Senator
Perchard have been manoeuvred and manipulated by senior civil servants into
placing themselves in what is, quite possibly, the most untenable position ever
seen in Jersey politics, shows them both to be completely incapable of
enforcing accountability.
The Minister for Treasury and Resources, whilst
certainly faced with challenging economic and taxation issues, has failed
utterly to take the community with him in driving through his fiscal strategy.
It may well be argued that no new taxation measures are ever going to be
popular, but to have introduced such taxes as GST and 20 means 20 –
whilst leaving the well-documented range of loopholes in place to enable rich
residents to avoid meaningful taxation could have almost been designed to
foment dissatisfaction amongst many ordinary Islanders.
The Minister for Economic Development seems to take no
more sophisticated approach to economics other than merely seizing every
opportunity for growth which emerges. On the face of it, economic growth brings
benefits – but where is the detailed understanding of the fact that Jersey
is already utterly and dangerously over-dependant on finance – and that it
is other sectors of the economy we should be helping to grow?
Indeed – much of the growth driven forward in
recent years – for example in the obsessive focus of the Waterfront –
appears to have had, as a prime effect, driving business away from already
established local enterprises.
It is also the case that Senators Ozouf and Le
Sueur – along with Senator Walker – have repeatedly failed to deal
effectively with the issue of economic leakage. This was a problem at the best
of times. With the 0/10 fiscal policy in place this serious issue is
compounded.
The sight of various monumental construction projects
being undertaken may appear to be beneficial – but just how much of the
resultant profit actually remains in Jersey?
The Minister for Housing has also exhibited a serious
failure to understand the need to ensure more of the fruits of economic
development remain in Jersey to be enjoyed by Islanders. Were this not the
case, he would have driven forward policy and legislative changes to ensure
that the range of apartments and flats which have been built in recent times
were not available for sale on a buy-to-let basis. This failure has resulted in
many homes being owned by non-resident investors – thus continuing the
price inflation of accommodation which local people struggle with when trying
to keep a roof over their heads.
He has also upset many Housing tenants through his
policy of selling certain Housing stock, and subjecting existing tenants to an
ultimatum – buy the property from us – or you must move out into
other accommodation.
The Minister for Employment and Social Security has
singularly failed to meaningfully address the disastrously unsustainable
‘supplementation’ situation. This sees over £50 million per annum of
taxation being used to supplement the social security scheme. Whilst some of
this supplementation is necessary, for example in respect of the
lower-paid – it is well-documented that various loopholes exist to enable
the avoidance of full social security payments by those who should be paying a
higher amount.
Those loopholes should have been addressed – just
as should the fundamental structure of the scheme with a view to making it more
self-sustaining. The vast annual expenditure on the scheme by taxpayers is
manifestly unsustainable; has been so for years – and, really, this should
have been addressed a long time ago.
The Minister for Planning and Environment shows
promise; many of his efforts during his first term could be said to be a great
improvement in handling what is a notoriously difficult portfolio. It is easy
to imagine the present Minister for Planning and Environment being returned to
Ministerial office. But still, there is no escaping the fact that mistakes have
been made: for example, the recent highly contentious Les Ormes decision.
The current Minister needs to learn some lessons. Not only in respect of
planning but also to recognise the lack of cohesion, and the remarkable degree
of contradiction within many of the policy areas of the Council of Ministers.
Not least in the conflict between development and protection of the
environment.
The Chief Minister himself, I’m afraid, manifests the
deficiency of many of the Island’s political leaders from the last 2 or
3 decades. This being a tendency to be a triumph of style over content.
Now, the community can no longer carry such frippery.
No amount of bespoke suits, PR training and
well-delivered, yet essentially insubstantial, speeches can compensate for an
intrinsic inability to grasp the long-term strategic issues the Island faces.
For example, from 1992 until 2002, Senator Walker was
a member of the then Finance and Economics Committee. Indeed, he became
President of that Committee in 1996 and remained so until assuming the Presidency
of the Policy and Resources Committee in 2002. He was a member of Policy and
Resources, Vice-President of, and ultimately President of that Committee over a
time-span from 1996 – until the end of Committee government and the
commencement of Ministerial government in 2005, when he assumed the post of
Chief Minister.
Therefore Senator Walker has been at the very heart of
the financial, economic and strategic policies of the States of Jersey for at
least 15 years. Yet Jersey finds itself today facing a variety of very
serious challenges – many of which we really should have been better
placed to deal with than we are at present. But because of the failure of the
leadership of the States of Jersey to pursue long-term policies – we must
now struggle to deal with the failures of the past.
To cite just one such failure – the vast degree
of public sector pension scheme debt.
These are merely a few, brief observations. It may be
that States members in general are happy with such performances by the Council
of Ministers and its individual members. If so, they will, no doubt, say so
during the debate.
I, however, get the strong impression that a majority
of the people of this community share my view.
Child
Protection
It would be disingenuous to not address the child
protection controversy directly; it is obviously one of the issues of concern.
However – that matter is not the focus of this
vote, and nor should it be. Police investigations are continuing and, no doubt,
a variety of judicial processes will follow.
But some general observations must be made concerning
the political sphere and its part in the controversy.
When I first contemplated a vote of no-confidence last
year – a draft of which I showed to Senator Walker – the police
investigation into the Jersey child abuse disaster had just been made public.
And it became obvious – the very instant that
police investigation was revealed – that the handling of the preceding
political controversy concerning child protection by Senator Walker and his Council
had been catastrophically ill-judged. Disastrously so.
For even on the basis of the more limited information
available at that time, there was sufficient evidence to support a number of
the serious concerns which were being expressed.
It was also plain last summer – on the basis of
the most cursory independent research – that a number of the assertions
Senator Walker and the Council of Ministers relied upon – claims made by
certain civil servants – were manifestly wrong.
Indeed – Senator Walker and this Council were
told that this was the case. They were warned that they were “backing the wrong
horse” in choosing to side with demonstrably defective senior civil servants in
what was plainly an act of political opportunism.
Instead – their choice was to embark on a
profoundly ill-judged attempt to make political capital. And in doing so they
quite cynically and unethically chose to use a subject as sensitive and
important as child protection and the efforts which were being made to expose
defects in the child protection apparatus.
I regret the approach taken by Senator Walker as Chief
Minister. The Council of Ministers, under his leadership, at every stage –
whenever it was faced with a choice during the political controversy concerning
child protection – invariably made the wrong decision.
How grave and irrecoverable have been these compound
political errors?
Repeatedly backing the wrong side in a battle for
effective protection for the Island’s most vulnerable children.
It simply doesn’t get any worse.
Political incompetence and irresponsibility just does
not get any worse than this.
Conclusion
Anyone in touch with grass-roots opinion amongst the
population of Jersey cannot but be aware that public dissatisfaction with the
present regime has never been greater.
This Council of Ministers and this Chief Minister
simply do not have the trust or support of the people.
There is simply no way back to political
respectability or public trust for this Council and this Chief Minister.
There is just no way back from where they have placed
themselves.
This Council of Ministers represents and embodies a
political epoch which has clearly run its course.
This community must now be offered an opportunity for
change.
SENATOR
STUART SYVRET
Financial and
manpower statement
There are no financial or manpower implications
arising from this proposition.