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‘No-show’ First Minister ‘undermined’ Senedd scrutiny

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WALES’ First Minister Eluned Morgan undermined a Senedd inquiry on international relations by declining to give evidence in person, a committee warned.

Delyth Jewell, who chairs the culture and international relations committee, expressed concern about a continued lack of detailed evidence from the Welsh Government.

She said: “It is regrettable that the First Minister’s decision not to attend our committee in person to give oral evidence, coupled with this lack of essential detail in written evidence, has undermined our ability to carry out meaningful scrutiny.

“That is something I hope very much will change in the future.”

Baroness Morgan, whose responsibilities include international relations, instead provided the inquiry with written evidence “which fell below the standard we expect”.

Leading a debate on an annual report about international relations, Ms Jewell said the First Minister reneged on commitments made to the committee by her predecessors.

Baroness Morgan signalled a shift last year, publishing a “delivery plan” with 15 aims rather than following through on a refresh of the international strategy, which contains 270 actions.

“Important commitments made to our committee in terms of involvement have been rolled back,” said Ms Jewell, who criticised a mismatch between the delivery plan and strategy.

South Wales East MS Delyth Jewell
South Wales East MS Delyth Jewell

Warning of a lack of openness, the Plaid Cymru politician said: “This lack of coherence undermines, again, accountability and makes effective scrutiny all the more difficult.”

The Welsh Government accepted six of the committee’s eight recommendations. Ms Jewell pointed out that while ministers accepted the first recommendation – which called for regular progress updates – “the accompanying narrative contradicts that”.

Gareth Davies argued that international relations are reserved to Westminster.

The Conservative questioned the return Welsh taxpayers receive for the Welsh Government’s 20 overseas offices which cost £4.6m in 2024.

Conservative MS Gareth Davies
Conservative MS Gareth Davies

Mr Davies told the Senedd: “I fear that that answer would be, ‘very little’. And that is why the Welsh Conservatives support shutting down overseas offices and redirecting the money back to frontline services, where it is needed most.

“This network is expensive and, in far too many cases, it appears to be duplicating work already being done by UK embassies and trade commissioners.”

But he backed the committee’s calls for St David’s Day to become a bank holiday – with discussions between Welsh and UK Labour ministers said to be ongoing.

Heledd Fychan was disappointed that Baroness Morgan was not in the chamber to respond to the debate on May 21: “Not having the First Minister here today, given that we knew that this debate was happening, is very frustrating.”

Labour’s Alun Davies accused the Conservatives of a lack of understanding about the importance of the Welsh Government’s “essential” overseas office network.

Labour MS Alun Davies
Labour MS Alun Davies

He said: “They’re seeking out new opportunities to bring work and jobs to this country, to increase the profile of Wales in these places. It’s the work that we need done if Wales is to be taken seriously as a global nation.”

His colleague Mick Antoniw, the Welsh Government’s former chief legal adviser, similarly criticised “contradictions and confusion” from the Conservative benches.

“International relations are not reserved,” he said. “International relations are about supporting Welsh interests in devolved areas.”

‘Crucial’

Jane Hutt, secretary for social justice, trefnydd and chief whip
Jane Hutt, secretary for social justice, trefnydd and chief whip

Responding for the Welsh Government, Jane Hutt told the chamber that the First Minister will meet the committee in June as part of a new inquiry into international relations.

The minister said: “Scrutiny is crucially important, and it will happen not just at that committee meeting but here today as we receive your report.

“But it will be an opportunity for the First Minister to discuss the work we are doing to enhance our global relationships and how we seek to achieve our goals.”

Ms Hutt described the international strategy, which was first published five years ago, as a bold statement of intent to raise Wales’ profile and grow the economy.

She agreed with Mr Antoniw: “We need a wider international debate and I am sure the First Minister will be reflecting on that.”

 

News

Police asked to investigate alleged ‘sabotage’ of Senedd candidate’s campaign

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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.

 

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News

Farage mocked over ‘London elections’ advert in Welsh newspaper

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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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Plaid tells Carmarthenshire voters: ‘Only we can stop Reform’

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PLAID CYMRU has urged voters in Sir Gaerfyrddin to back the party on Thursday, claiming it is the only party able to beat Reform UK in the new constituency.

The appeal comes after the latest ITV Cymru Wales, YouGov and Wales Governance Centre MRP poll suggested Plaid Cymru is on course to become the largest party in the Senedd, with Reform close behind. The poll put Plaid on 33% across Wales and Reform on 29%. (YouGov)

Sir Gaerfyrddin is one of the new Senedd constituencies being used for the first time in this election. It has been created from the Carmarthen and Llanelli Westminster seats and will elect six Members of the Senedd under the new closed-list system.

Plaid Cymru’s list in Sir Gaerfyrddin is led by Cefin Campbell, followed by Nerys Evans, Adam Price and Mari Arthur. (Who Can I Vote For?)

The party says the contest locally is now between Plaid Cymru and Reform UK, and has called on voters who want to stop Nigel Farage’s party from gaining ground in Carmarthenshire to “lend” Plaid their vote.

Nerys Evans said Plaid was offering “new leadership” and a “positive vision” for Wales, including childcare support, a National Development Agency to grow the economy, and a new numeracy and literacy scheme for children.

She said: “As the voters of Sir Gaerfyrddin head to the polls on Thursday, the choice could not be more stark.

“Only two parties can win here: Plaid Cymru, who offer new leadership, a positive vision, and which will be accountable only to the people of Wales; or Reform, which would divide our communities, threaten the future of our NHS, cut support for our culture and language and is controlled by Nigel Farage, billionaires, and ex-Tories in London.

“Support for Labour has disappeared in Carmarthenshire, with people unwilling to vote for a party that has let Wales down for over 27 years and in Westminster since Keir Starmer became Prime Minister.

“There is no evidence that the Greens or the Liberal Democrats will secure enough votes to come close to winning a seat.

“We ask anyone who wants to prevent a victory for Reform in Carmarthenshire to lend their vote to Plaid Cymru on Thursday.”

The Senedd election takes place on Thursday (May 7).

 

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