Under the
Wales Act 2017, the Senedd has legislative competence to pass Acts on any matter relating only to
Wales that is not a
reserved matter, or which affects powers exercisable other than in relation to Wales. The list of reserved matters is extensive; it includes: • the Crown, the union with England, and the UK Parliament; • the Civil Service; • regulation, registration and finances of political parties; • whether Senedd elections may be held on the same day as certain other elections and referendums; • the Electoral Commission and certain other matters related the regulation of Senedd and local government elections and campaigning; • the legal system and international law, including legal aid, arbitration, coroners, prisons, offender management,
rehabilitation of offenders, and criminal records; • family law, except parental discipline (Wales banned physical punishment of children in 2020, whereas it is still legal in England); • crime, public order, and policing and
police and crime commissioners; • foreign affairs including
nationality, immigration and travel documents, extradition, and international trade; • defence, national security, terrorism, and official secrets; • fiscal, economic and monetary policy, except for devolved and local taxes; • financial services and markets; • communications (including Internet services) and communications data, encryption, surveillance,
data protection, and
freedom of information; •
modern slavery and prostitution; • emergency powers; • firearms, poisons, knives, drug abuse, and drug dealing; • film and video (including video game) classification; • licensing of entertainment venues and provision of alcohol; • gambling; •
hunting with dogs; •
animal testing; • charities and philanthropy; • insolvency; • competition; • intellectual property; • consumer protection; • postal services, except financial assistance for post offices; • most aspects of road, rail, air and sea transport and transport security; • social security, child support and child maintenance payments, pensions and public sector and armed forces compensation in cases of death etc., job search and job support; • employment rights and industrial relations; • regulation of the professions, except for social work and social care; • abortion; •
xenotransplantation; • embryology, surrogacy and genetics; • medicines, including veterinary medicines; •
health and safety; •
gender recognition. Additionally, unlike Acts of the UK Parliament, an Act of the Senedd is "not law" if it is inconsistent with the
European Convention on Human Rights. ==See also==