According to
Andrew RT Davies, the leader of the Assembly group of the
Conservatives in Wales, the Labour First Minister, Carwyn Jones, failed to do
any planning at all in anticipation of a vote to leave the EU. On that point of fact, he’s absolutely
right. I’m rather less certain about the
veracity of his assertion that “… the UK
Government undertook detailed planning”; the evidence in support of that is
not exactly obvious. They still don’t really
seem to know what to do next.
But the more important
question is perhaps this: how much time and effort do we want governments to
spend on detailed planning for an eventuality which they consider unlikely? The answer to that surely depends more on an
assessment of the probability of the outcome rather than on the desirability of
it in the eyes of an opposing politician.
After all, I
don’t recall Mr Davies demanding that the government – either in Cardiff under
Labour or in London under his own party – should prepare detailed plans for the
future of Wales and the UK after a Scottish ‘yes’ to independence in 2014. Neither government prepared for that eventuality
– and I rather suspect that he would have criticised any such planning as a
waste of public resources.
Of course,
given the result of the 2014 referendum, that lack of planning didn’t really
matter. That simply proves that hindsight
is a wonderful thing; but it’s not much use as a planning tool. In the run-up to the EU referendum, most
observers believed (albeit wrongly, as it turned out) that ‘remain’ would gain
a narrow victory. At that point, the
most obvious priority for the Welsh Government was dealing with the steel
crisis. Would anyone (other than,
perhaps, the leader of the Tory Assembly group) really have preferred ministers
to take their eye off that ball to prepare a detailed plan for something that
they thought was not going to happen?
1 comment:
I agree generally, but all projects are regularly assessed for risk, and I should think it was a requirement of any government to be assessing all likely actions and events for their likely outcomes. The level of preparation should be commensurate to the potential outcome of the risk not its likelihood. Leaving the EU should have been seen as such a cataclysmic event as to be avoided at all costs ... as the Scottish Government did.
Risks arise every day.
Huw Meredydd
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