Politics
Senedd supports call for unpaid carers bill
SENEDD Members backed calls for a bill to ensure better support for more than 310,000 unpaid carers across Wales.
Sioned Williams told the Senedd that unpaid carers save the Welsh Government more than £10bn every year as she criticised “significant failings” in terms of support.
She said only between 0.3% and 8% of carers who need a carer’s rights assessment received one despite a legal right under the Social Services and Wellbeing Act 2014.
The Plaid Cymru politician told the Senedd: “We cannot continue to fail to support unpaid carers like this. We must do more to bridge the gap – the clear gap – between the Act’s rhetoric and the reality on the ground.”
Ms Williams said a fundamental weakness identified by Carers Wales was a lack of understanding within councils of the situation facing unpaid carers.
In her proposal, she called for better monitoring, greater sharing of data where appropriate and a duty on ministers and councils to recognise unpaid carers as a priority group.
Ms Williams said: “Wales owes a great debt to unpaid carers and we have a moral duty to give them greater recognition and support. Failure to do so only leads to additional costs and pressures for public services at every level.”
Siân Gwenllian, a fellow Plaid Cymru member, said she only recently learned of the right to a carer’s needs assessment while researching how to best meet her mother’s needs.

She said: “We need to promote this far more, because the assessment can open the door to important sources of support for informal carers.”
Labour’s Julie Morgan pointed to the Welsh Government-funded short breaks scheme and carers support fund which were extended last week with a £5.25m investment.
The former social care minister said: “The short breaks scheme I think has been a great step forward, as well as the carers support fund, which I think has been an absolute lifeline, we are told, to carers to access money in a time of financial crisis.
“And I remember somebody telling me that they’d taken a grant from the carers support fund and they were using it to pay for Christmas dinner, because otherwise they wouldn’t have been able to have any Christmas dinner.”

Mabon ap Gwynfor said: “If there is one cohort of people in society that is ignored, undervalued and disregarded, it is unpaid carers.”
Plaid Cymru’s shadow health secretary warned carers can suffer burnout without respite.
He said: “Their working week is not made up of five working days, seven hours a day, with 25 days of leave every year – those aren’t their terms and conditions.
“There are no rules to say that young people aged 16 cannot work more than eight hours a week for carers. But, again, there are over 20,000 young carers in Wales working diligently for their loved ones, without the support that they need.”

Wales’ social care minister Dawn Bowden said the Welsh Government must focus on making sure rights under the Act are consistently embedded and delivered.
Responding to the debate on February 5, she told the Senedd that a ministerial advisory group on unpaid carers has commissioned a new census to better understand needs.
She said: “Unpaid carers I’ve spoken to have also told me about how they feel that they can’t access timely information or advice and that they’ve not been able to easily receive an assessment of their support needs, and that should be of great concern to all of us.”
But Ms Bowden did not see an immediate need for a bill, saying: “Rather, we should direct our energies to ensuring the current legislation that we have is effectively enabled.”
While the non-binding motion was agreed, 31-2 with 22 abstaining, a bill is unlikely to be brought forward without the Welsh Government’s full support.
News
Welsh Labour insists Senedd election remains ‘wide open’
LABOUR has insisted the Senedd election remains “wide open” despite polling suggesting Plaid Cymru could emerge as the largest party after Thursday’s vote.
Deputy First Minister and Welsh Labour deputy leader Huw Irranca-Davies said the latest figures were “disappointing” for Labour, but argued that the result could still be decided by narrow margins in several constituencies.
Speaking on ITV Wales’ Sharp End programme, Mr Irranca-Davies rejected suggestions that the campaign had become a straight contest between Plaid Cymru and Reform UK.
He said: “The polling that we’ve had tonight would be disappointing for Labour, you can’t take away from it.
“But what it also shows is there are really narrow margins, particularly for that fifth and sixth seat, and that is where a lot of parties can make a difference, so it’s not a two-horse race.”
The comments came after a new ITV Cymru Wales poll placed Plaid Cymru on 33% of the vote, ahead of Reform UK on 29%.
Under MRP modelling for the new 96-seat Senedd system, Plaid Cymru was projected to win 43 seats, with Reform UK on 34.
Labour was forecast to fall to 12 seats, with the Conservatives on four, the Greens on two, and the Liberal Democrats on one.
The figures would leave Plaid Cymru short of an overall majority, but potentially in the strongest position to form a government.
Analysts have warned, however, that small shifts in vote share could have a major effect on the final seat totals, particularly under the new six-member constituency system.
Plaid Cymru’s Heledd Fychan said the polling showed that the race was between Plaid and Reform in many parts of Wales.
She warned that Reform could still emerge as the largest party if anti-Reform voters did not back Plaid Cymru.
Reform UK’s James Evans questioned whether the poll reflected what the party was hearing from voters during the campaign.
He said Reform was seeing strong support on the doorstep from people opposed to Labour, Plaid Cymru and potential coalition arrangements after the election.
The Welsh Conservatives also argued that they could still play an important role in a divided Senedd.
Tom Giffard said: “If you vote Conservative and you are a Conservative, you’ll get Conservative representation.
“No party’s going to win a majority.”
The Green Party, polling at 8%, could win two seats under the projection.
Green representative Philip Davies said small increases in support could make the difference in closely contested areas, particularly for the final seats in each constituency.
The Welsh Liberal Democrats, polling at 6%, are projected to return leader Jane Dodds, although party representative Tim Sly said the campaign had been focused on target seats where the party believed it could outperform polling expectations.
Voters across Wales go to the polls on Thursday (May 7).
News
Police asked to investigate alleged ‘sabotage’ of Senedd candidate’s campaign
INDEPENDENT Senedd candidate Paul Haywood-Dowson has contacted Dyfed-Powys Police alleging that his election campaign was deliberately disrupted less than 24 hours before polling day.
In an email sent on Wednesday afternoon (May 6) to the force’s Electoral Fraud and Malpractice Single Point of Contact (SPOC), Mr Haywood-Dowson claimed a marketing contractor had taken possession of 4,000 election leaflets and then stopped responding to communications.
Mr Haywood-Dowson, who is standing in the Ceredigion Penfro constituency, alleged the actions amounted to “criminal sabotage of election material” under Section 115 of the Representation of the People Act 1983.
He wrote: “I am formally reporting a criminal interference in the election occurring right now.”
The candidate claimed a Liverpool-based contractor had collected the leaflets and accepted £252 in payment before allegedly failing to deliver or return them.
Mr Haywood-Dowson stated: “By taking physical possession of my flyers and refusing to deliver or return them 24 hours before the poll, he has used a ‘fraudulent device or contrivance’ to prevent the free exercise of the franchise by my potential voters.”
He further alleged: “This is not a delivery delay. It is Theft by Deception.”
The email requested a crime reference number and asked police to contact the contractor “immediately” to secure the return of the campaign material.
The Herald has contacted Dyfed-Powys Police and the contractor, who we are not naming at this stage, for comment.
News
Farage mocked over ‘London elections’ advert in Welsh newspaper
REFORM UK leader Nigel Farage has been criticised after a campaign advert urging people to vote in the “London elections” appeared in a Welsh newspaper read by voters in Powys.
Critics say advert shows Reform’s campaign is focused on London, not Wales
The two-page party political advert was published in the Powys County Times on Friday (May 1), just days before voters in Wales go to the polls in the Senedd election on Thursday (May 7).
The advert included a letter from Mr Farage in which he attacked London Mayor Sadiq Khan and claimed the capital had become “lawless” and “unrecognisable” under Labour.
But the message appeared to have been aimed at London voters, not those in Powys.
In the letter, Mr Farage wrote: “If you want to get rid of Keir Starmer and change the direction of this country, there is one way to do it: Vote Reform in the London elections on May 7th.”
He added: “London needs Reform. It is one of the world’s great capitals. Yet these days Sadiq Khan’s London often feels lawless and unrecognisable to Londoners who can no longer afford to live in their own city.”
The advert has since been seized on by rival parties, who say it raises questions about Reform UK’s focus on Wales during the Senedd campaign.
A Welsh Labour source said: “For Wales, see London. Reform UK’s focus isn’t on Wales, it’s on getting Farage into Number 10.
“They don’t even care enough to place the right advert in the right country. It’s all about promoting Farage as their front man and fooling voters into thinking they’ve got more than slogans.”
Voters in Wales will elect Members of the Senedd on Thursday, while a number of local council and mayoral elections are also taking place in England.
In London, all 32 boroughs are holding elections, with more than 1,800 councillors due to be elected.
The Welsh Liberal Democrats also criticised the advert.
Glyn Preston, the party’s lead candidate for Gwynedd Maldwyn, said: “Reform can’t even get the right election on their own leaflets. It says everything about how little they understand or care about Wales or Powys, and raises serious questions about their ability to run the country.
“While they’re busy talking about Sadiq Khan and London, the Liberal Democrats are focused on the issues that actually matter to people here in Powys — long NHS waiting times, rural communities, and securing a fair deal on investment from Cardiff Bay.
“Powys deserves representatives who are rooted in the communities they serve, who know and understand local challenges, not yes-men taking their lead from Nigel Farage in London in his latest quest for power.”
Reform UK has been running newspaper adverts across Wales in the run-up to the Senedd election.
The party has been polling strongly, with surveys suggesting it could make major gains under the new voting system.
Reform UK has not yet commented publicly on why a London-focused advert appeared in a Powys newspaper.
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