Connect with us
Advertisement
Advertisement

Politics

First Minister grilled on ‘scattergun’ international strategy

Published

on

FIRST MINISTER Eluned Morgan came under friendly fire over the Welsh Government’s “scattergun rather than strategic” approach to international relations.

The Senedd’s culture committee scrutinised Baroness Morgan about the Welsh Government’s international strategy and plans for an investment summit.

Lee Waters, a Labour backbencher, took the First Minister to task about a perceived move away from a focus on a globally responsible Wales towards attracting investment.

He said: “It feels to me that inward investment has become more important. And you’ve created a summit. Well, having organised lots of conferences – conferences can take a lot of energy and deliver very little, so [it’s] interesting how you measure that.”

Baroness Morgan maintained that the core priorities – to raise the nation’s profile, grow the economy and establish Wales as a globally responsible country – remain the same, saying: “I don’t think we’ve shifted at all, we’ve lent into it.”

She insisted: “I don’t think it’s been de-emphasised. You should see the work we’re doing in relation to [the] Wellbeing of Future Generations Act, we’re doing stuff in the UN.”

Baroness Morgan highlighted work in India, with the state of Maharashtra – which is home to more than 100 million people – modelling a similar law on the Welsh one.

She said: “I’ve spent a lot of time with these Indian people promoting [the] Wellbeing of Future Generations Act. There’s a huge amount of work being done everywhere, it’s not one at the expense of another. There’s lots of different things in different places.”

Mr Waters, a former minister, pressed the point: “You can’t have it both ways…. If you put more emphasis on one thing – there’s less emphasis on another, by definition. And your emphasis, as you’ve said, is on an international summit. What do you expect that to deliver?”

Labour Senedd Members Lee Waters and Alun Davies
Labour Senedd Members Lee Waters and Alun Davies

Baroness Morgan replied: “Well, we’ve got a lot of ambitions and we’re doing a lot of work on it and we’re expecting it to deliver quite a bit.”

Asked again what December’s summit at Celtic Manor will deliver, she said: “Well, you’ll have to wait and see because we don’t know until it’s actually happened.”

Baroness Morgan, who was previously accused of undermining scrutiny by earlier declining to give evidence, said she would not give chapter and verse on expectations for the summit.

She told the committee she wants conference delegates to, ideally, be at least half way through the process towards announcing investment in Wales.

Plaid Cymru’s Heledd Fychan piled on the pressure, saying: “I have to say I’m really unclear about what the answer was to Lee Waters’ question there.”

Plaid Cymru MS Heledd Fychan
Plaid Cymru MS Heledd Fychan

She asked: “It seems very scattergun rather than strategic – that’s my impression from the evidence I’ve just heard – how are you able to reassure me, that’s not the case?”

Baroness Morgan, whose responsibilities as First Minister include international relations, deferred the question to her officials: Andrew Gwatkin and David Warren.

Mr Gwatkin said: “It’s not a case of us being headless, jumping from one thing to another. There is a constant and core to what we do…. but, of course, we’re a small team – we can’t adapt to everything… we can’t do everything and our budgets, similarly, are what they are.”

Baroness Morgan, who in 2020 was responsible for developing the strategy which contains 270 actions, published a 15-point delivery plan this year. During the meeting on June 18, she pointed to the impact of the pandemic, Brexit, war in Ukraine and US president Trump.

Alun Davies, a Labour member, called for greater accountability. He said: “What we want is to understand how the government is spending public money… to hold [the] government to account for that and that’s a fair and reasonable request to make.”

Baroness Morgan replied: “I absolutely get that, which is why we have committed over the summer: we’ll go through the 270 actions, so it’s clear and more transparent. There will be some things in there we haven’t been able to achieve because the world has changed.”

She emphasised: “Just to manage your expectations, we’ve got one person working on this,” with Mr Davies earlier joking: “I’ve been a member here for 20 years, First Minister, my expectations are well managed.”

 

Business

Pembrokeshire Broad Haven holiday park works refused

Published

on

A DEVELOPMENT call for a Pembrokeshire holiday park has been turned down by Pembrokeshire Coast National Park.

In an application to park planners, Broad Haven Holiday Park, through agent Gerald Blain Associates, sought permission for the relocation of a boat storage area, vehicle shed and play area along with rewilding of adjoining fields at Broad Haven Holiday Park, Broad Haven, near Haverfordwest.

The application was supported by local community council The Havens.

However, an officer report recommended refusal.

Detailing the application, it said: “The proposal relates to the extension of an existing static caravan holiday site into adjacent undeveloped woodland to accommodate the relocation of boat storage, a vehicle shed, and a children’s play area, together with associated ecological mitigation measures. No increased pitch numbers are proposed.

“The development site has already undergone some site clearance, resulting in the removal of approximately 1,000 square metres of woodland.”

It went on to say: “The existing site is already intervisible with the coast, and the proposed relocation of boat storage would likely increase its visibility rather than reduce it. Without supporting evidence in the form of a Landscape and Visual Impact Assessment (LVIA) or Zone of Theoretical Visibility (ZTV) demonstrating that the development would be visually contained, the proposal appears contrary to the guidance contained within the SPG and the objectives of Policy 41.

“As a result, the proposed development is considered to detract from the special qualities of the National Park in this location and would be detrimental to the quality and character of the landscape character area in which the site sits, and as such does not comply [with policies].”

The application was refused on grounds including it being sited within previously undeveloped land within a flood zone, a lack of information on potential impacts on biodiversity, and it is “considered to detract from the special qualities of the national park in this location and would be detrimental to the quality and character of the landscape character area in which the site sits”.

 

Continue Reading

Politics

Calls to reopen access to top of Pembrokeshire’s Hean Castle

Published

on

CALLS for permission to replace a decayed spiral staircase preventing access to the top of Pembrokeshire’s historic Hean Castle mansion have been submitted.

In a listed building application submitted to Pembrokeshire Coast National Park, The Trustees of T O Lewis Trust, through agent Acanthus Holden Architects, seeks permission for the removal of a decayed timber spiral staircase and replacement in aluminium, along with pointing and masonry repairs to a flue turret, stairs turret and s bay at the Grade-II-listed Hean Castle, near Saundersfoot.

A supporting statement accompanying the application says the works planned will reinstate the spiral stairs access to the main castle tower, the scheme “aimed at reducing moisture ingress through the thin, walled turrets a replacing a rotten timber spiral staircase 13m tall”.

It says the upper third of the wooden treads in the “existing and very possibly the original spiral staircase” are “now badly decayed where they slot into the equally rotten stringers at this level, to the point that safe access to the turret top is no longer safe”.

It adds: “The replacement of the stairs in timber is a difficult and a very costly exercise with all fabrication and erection carried out likely to have been carried out originally on site. Accessing the turret at high level on the outside is also very difficult and only limited repointing will be possible.

“Ongoing water ingress into the turret would likely lead to further rotting of the replacement timber stairs in the near future.

“Two options have been considered for the replacement of the stairs in metal: Aluminium and Galvanised steel, both with similar cost implications.

“Aluminium is favoured and an acceptable quote has been received for the supply of a sectional staircase with ‘made to measure’ hard wood timber treads bolted to the Newell brackets. The made-to-measure treads will allow us a degree of flexibility with regard to any variance in the diameter of the ‘tube’.”

It says the proposed works will secure long-term sustainability, improve accessibility, and address urgent fabric defects.

The application will be considered by park planners at a later date.

 

Continue Reading

News

Game of Thrones star urges voters to back anti-DARC parties

Published

on

ACTOR Jerome Flynn has urged voters in Wales to back parties opposed to the proposed DARC radar scheme at Cawdor Barracks, saying the issue could be decided by the next Welsh Government.

The Pembrokeshire-based Game of Thrones star, also known for Soldier Soldier and Robson & Jerome, made the appeal in a video released by PARC Against DARC on Tuesday (May 5), just two days before polling day in the Senedd election.

Radar row enters election campaign

Flynn urged voters in Ceredigion Penfro and across Wales to support Plaid Cymru or the Green Party, saying both parties had pledged to oppose the project.

The Ministry of Defence has submitted a planning application to Pembrokeshire County Council for 27 radar antennas and associated infrastructure at Cawdor Barracks, near Brawdy.

The scheme forms part of the Deep Space Advanced Radar Capability programme, linked to the AUKUS defence partnership between the UK, US and Australia.

The MOD says DARC would help detect, identify and track objects in Earth orbit, supporting military and civilian satellite security.

Opponents claim the radar would industrialise part of the Pembrokeshire countryside, damage the setting of the national park, and increase the area’s military significance.

Flynn says project ‘not a done deal’

In the video, Flynn described the election as “probably the most crucial vote we’ve made in 25 years”.

He claimed the next Senedd could play a decisive role in the future of the project, saying: “I’m here to say, it’s not a done deal because Plaid Cymru and the Greens have both made party-led decisions to say no to Westminster.

“We’re not having such a thing on our beloved coast.”

Flynn also described St Davids as “the spiritual home of Wales” and criticised what he called “the most unspeakably abominable planning application” on the edge of the Pembrokeshire Coast National Park.

Campaign steps up pressure

PARC Against DARC said it welcomed Flynn’s intervention and said it had distributed 22,000 leaflets around Pembrokeshire in recent weeks.

The campaign group said First Minister Eluned Morgan’s recent comments on the scheme did not go far enough.

A spokesperson said: “While Eluned Morgan has come out in the final hour to call for DARC to be halted, we fear this does not go nearly far enough.

“Plaid Cymru and the Green Party have both made it their national party policy to oppose and stop DARC, so we have no doubt of the authenticity of their commitment.”

The group is also urging residents to submit objections to Pembrokeshire County Council before the current publicity period ends on May 20.

Welsh Government role

Campaigners say the next Welsh Government could intervene by “calling in” the planning application, meaning Welsh ministers would take responsibility for deciding it rather than leaving the final decision with Pembrokeshire County Council.

That possibility has made DARC a significant local election issue in Ceredigion Penfro, where Eluned Morgan is Labour’s lead candidate, Elin Jones leads the Plaid Cymru list, and Amy Nicholass heads the Green Party list.

Under the new Senedd voting system, voters will elect six Members of the Senedd for the constituency using a proportional list system.

PARC Against DARC said this meant there was “far less need for tactical voting” and argued that voters opposed to the radar could support either Plaid Cymru or the Greens.

Wider concerns

Campaigners have repeatedly claimed that the radar would make Pembrokeshire a potential military target and draw Wales further into US military strategy.

They also say the project raises environmental, health, democratic and security concerns.

Supporters of the scheme argue that space monitoring is becoming increasingly important as satellites are used for communications, navigation, defence and emergency infrastructure.

Flynn ended his video by saying: “Vote with your heart because we can make a difference here, we could put in a government that cares about our land, our people and our environment.”

Whatever the outcome of Thursday’s election, the intervention by one of Pembrokeshire’s best-known residents is likely to keep the DARC controversy high on the political agenda.

 

Continue Reading

News43 minutes ago

Bishop’s report reveals major renewal challenge at St Davids Cathedral

Formal Visitation highlights financial, structural, leadership and spiritual pressures at one of Wales’ most important religious sites ST DAVIDS CATHEDRAL...

Crime17 hours ago

Farming company fined £19,000 for damaging protected wildlife site

A CARDIGAN farming company has been ordered to pay almost £20,000 after recklessly damaging a Site of Special Scientific Interest....

News20 hours ago

Baby in critical condition after Fishguard emergency

Teenagers arrested as police investigate circumstances A BABY remains in hospital in a critical but stable condition after being taken...

Community2 days ago

Tenby phone signal crisis goes national as businesses warn of summer disruption

TRADERS SAY CARD PAYMENTS, TAXIS AND VISITOR SAFETY ARE BEING HIT BY ‘DEAD ZONE’ COVERAGE TENBY’S long-running mobile phone signal...

News2 days ago

Final poll puts Plaid and Reform level ahead of Senedd vote

Labour faces historic setback as new modelling points to a hung Senedd PLAID CYMRU and Reform UK are projected to...

News3 days ago

West Wales coracle fishermen raise alarm over suspected sewage pollution

A CENTURIES-old fishing tradition on the River Towy could be under threat after coracle fishermen reported suspected sewage pollution entering...

Community4 days ago

Scooter rally brings colour and nostalgia to Tenby

TENBY is buzzing with the sights and sounds of classic scooters this Bank Holiday weekend as the Welsh National Scooter...

Entertainment4 days ago

Haverfoodfest returns to Haverfordwest town centre today

HAVERFORDWEST town centre is expected to be busy today as Haverfoodfest 2026 returns for a full day of food, drink,...

Crime5 days ago

70-year-old denies assault and restraining order breach

A PENSIONER from Pembroke Dock has denied breaching a restraining order and assaulting another man. Henry Howlett, 70, of Market...

News6 days ago

Conservatives target two seats in new Ceredigion Penfro constituency

Paul Davies and Sam Kurtz say health, farming and transport are key as they seek return to the Senedd CONSERVATIVE...

Popular This Week