News
Four more Welsh councillors join Reform UK
Party says momentum growing among local representatives
FOUR independent town councillors in Towyn and Kinmel Bay have announced they are joining Reform UK.
Luke Knightly, Dave Johnson, Debbie Mulvaney and Geoff Corry issued a joint statement saying they were “joining the only party that is putting our left-behind communities first.”
Their move follows the defection of Pontypool community councillor Nick Jones last week, and comes in the constituency represented in the Senedd by Welsh Conservative leader Darren Millar.
In a joint statement, the four councillors said: “Towyn and Kinmel Bay, just like so many parts of Wales, have been failed by the political establishment. We’re delighted to be joining the only party that is putting our left-behind communities first.
“Right across Wales, hardworking community representatives are making the same decision and joining Reform. That’s because Reform is the party that will deliver real change for our community and for communities right across Wales.”
A photograph was supplied with the announcement.
News
Elin Jones says West Wales has been ‘too far away’ from Cardiff Bay decision-making
PLAID CYMRU LEAD CANDIDATE SAYS WITHYBUSH AND BRONGLAIS MUST BE PROTECTED
PLAID CYMRU lead candidate Elin Jones has said West Wales needs a fairer deal from Cardiff Bay, as she pledged to fight for Withybush and Bronglais hospitals during a 30-minute interview at The Herald offices.
NEW CONSTITUENCY BATTLE
Jones, who is standing in the new Ceredigion Penfro constituency, sat down with Herald editor Tom Sinclair in Milford Haven as part of The Herald’s election interview series.
She said the election was unlike any she had fought before, with Labour and the Conservatives “very low down in the polls” and Plaid Cymru and Reform locked in a close contest.
Jones said: “There is far more jeopardy in this election. Every vote will count in a different way, because the election system is different as well.”
FAIRER DEAL FOR WEST WALES
She said Plaid Cymru’s central message was that Wales needed new leadership after 27 years of Labour-led government.
Jones said: “I think over the last 27 years Labour hasn’t got it right in Wales. They have concentrated too much on the M4 corridor, on those areas of South Wales, and not enough for West Wales and possibly even North Wales.”
She added that Plaid would seek to provide “a fairer representation of all parts of Wales and a fairer allocation of resources”.
CARDIFF BAY ESTABLISHMENT
Asked whether Plaid Cymru now looked like part of the Cardiff Bay establishment, Jones rejected the suggestion.
She said: “We’re certainly an alternative to Labour because we focus entirely on Wales. We have no leader elsewhere in the UK who tells us what to do.
“We have no Nigel Farage or Keir Starmer to decide what Plaid Cymru’s policies and priorities are.”
HOSPITALS TOP PRIORITY
Jones said she accepted that many people in Pembrokeshire felt decisions were made elsewhere.
She said: “People in Ceredigion will tell me that they feel the end of the road. There’s a lot of similarities in the issues both counties face.”
She said the clearest example was healthcare, particularly the future of Withybush Hospital in Haverfordwest and Bronglais Hospital in Aberystwyth.
Jones said: “I’ve absolutely no doubt in answering that question. It is to make sure that both Withybush and Bronglais retain their status and the services that they need to be full district general hospitals.
“We can’t allow these two big rural areas served by those two hospitals to have to travel for the services that they are meant to provide.”
NHS UNDER PRESSURE
On the NHS, Jones said waiting times, GP access, ambulance pressures and dentistry were among the biggest issues being raised on the doorstep.
She said Plaid Cymru would seek to reduce waiting lists through surgical hubs and would employ an additional 100 salaried GPs over the next four years.
Jones also said Wales needed to train more dentists, particularly for rural areas.
She said: “One of the commitments in the Plaid Cymru manifesto is to have a new dental school for rural Wales.
“We have to provide more dentists into the system to enable a better balance and more access to NHS dentistry, particularly and especially with children’s dentistry, which is particularly problematic and worrying.”
NEW HOSPITAL ROW
Jones criticised Labour for putting the idea of a new hospital between Carmarthen and Pembrokeshire back on the agenda shortly before the election.
She said: “I don’t know what the motivation of Labour was to put this back on the agenda so swiftly, just before the election. It certainly confused the picture again.
“What it does is throw into question again whether you invest in the hospitals you have or whether you really go for planning the next new hospital.”
Jones said there needed to be an early decision after the election.
She said: “We’ve got to settle this. I thought it had been settled for now last year by the decision by the health board, but Eluned Morgan and the Labour Party have just thrown it back up in the air.”
BATTLE WITH FIRST MINISTER
Asked why voters should choose her over Labour First Minister Eluned Morgan, who is also standing in the seat, Jones said she had spent years fighting to protect services at Bronglais.
She said: “I have spent the last 20 years in my area, originally Ceredigion, fighting for Bronglais Hospital and against the centralisation of services.
“I want to bring the same enthusiasm, and also an in-principle support for services needing to be retained locally.”
She added: “That should be the first point of any decision that a health board makes. It’s why keep it locally, not why centralise services.”
DIGITAL HEALTHCARE
Jones said she accepted that some specialist services would always require travel, but said routine care and life-saving services should be available locally.
She also called for more use of digital healthcare, saying patients in rural areas should be able to speak to specialists in Swansea, Cardiff or Morriston by video from local hospitals.
PLAID AND LABOUR
On Plaid Cymru’s previous co-operation with Labour, Jones said her party had tried to improve policies from opposition but was not responsible for Labour’s record in government.
She said: “We are not responsible for the decisions of the government, and we have not been, other than the time of coalition between 2007 and 2011.
“We have sought to make some things better at different times.”
Jones said Plaid’s ambition was to lead the next Welsh Government, ideally as a minority government.
She said: “Plaid’s ambition in this election is to form a government, to lead the government, to ultimately elect Rhun ap Iorwerth as the First Minister.”
REFORM CHALLENGE
Asked about the rise of Reform UK, Jones said some voters were angry with politics, but she believed many people in Wales did not want Nigel Farage to be able to claim victory after the election.
She said: “I’m absolutely convinced that there are more people in Wales, and in the door-knocking I’m doing in Pembrokeshire, who do not want to see Farage win this election.”
FARMING FRUSTRATION
On farming, Jones said the sector had faced major uncertainty since Brexit and criticised Labour’s handling of the Sustainable Farming Scheme.
She said farmers in Pembrokeshire were particularly concerned about bovine TB.
Jones said: “Farmers are desperate to see a government that is serious about tackling TB, because it has got a serious hold over farming.
“We need to bring a little bit more common sense into how we have regulations and rules around farming.”
She also criticised what she described as “farming by calendar”, saying farmers should be able to make decisions based on weather and conditions rather than fixed dates.
FAMILY FARMS
Jones, who was brought up on a family farm near Lampeter, said family farms were vital to rural Wales.
She said: “The countryside that we all love looks as great as it does because farmers and family farms continue to be the bedrock of rural areas.”
YOUNG PEOPLE LEAVING
On young people leaving West Wales, Jones said the area needed more housing, better-paid jobs, and stronger support for key local sectors including agriculture, tourism and renewable energy.
She said Milford Haven and the wider Pembrokeshire coast had major opportunities in offshore renewable energy.
On transport, Jones said rail and bus links in West Wales needed improvement.
She said: “We need to make rail investment in West Wales, whether that is the railway into Aberystwyth or the railway that links from Carmarthen into Pembrokeshire.
TRANSPORT LINKS
“We need to modernise those services and make them more frequent.”
RETURN TO PARTY POLITICS
Jones, who has served as Llywydd of the Senedd, said she felt “excited and invigorated” to return fully to party politics.
She said canvassing in Pembrokeshire had been “enlightening”, adding that the new constituency was “all to play for”.
PLAID FIRST MINISTER
Asked what she still wanted to achieve after almost three decades in Welsh politics, Jones said: “I want to achieve a Plaid Cymru First Minister.
“It is only when a party takes the role of the First Minister, the First Minister’s office, the First Minister’s leadership of government, that you can truly make the change that your party wants to see.”
News
Independent candidate Aaron Carey says West Wales is being ignored by Cardiff Bay
Calls for stronger local voice as he criticises health cuts, planning delays and lack of jobs in rural Wales
INDEPENDENT Senedd candidate Aaron Carey has said West Wales needs a stronger voice, claiming politics has become too polarised and detached from the needs of local communities.
Carey visited The Herald office in Milford Haven for an interview with Herald editor Tom Sinclair, as part of the paper’s coverage of candidates standing in the new Ceredigion Penfro constituency.
REASON FOR STANDING
Explaining why he decided to stand, Carey said: “Politics is too polarised at the moment.
“You’ve got this end here, this end there, and all they seem to want to do is throw mud at each other and lose sight of what the actual people in the community on the ground want.”
He said there was a clear disconnect between Cardiff Bay and rural West Wales.
Carey said: “There’s this disconnect between especially the rural areas of West Wales, but South Pembrokeshire as well. They don’t seem to know what’s going on.”
Carey accepted that the new electoral system made it difficult for independent candidates, saying the “cards are stacked” against individuals standing without party backing.
But he said independence would also be a strength if elected, because he would not be bound by a party whip.
He said: “If it’s a great idea, why would I go against it? If it’s a bad idea, I’ll go against it.
“I can come back and talk to the people and say, ‘Do you actually agree with this?’ I can take that back to Cardiff and fight the corner.”
On healthcare, Carey said Withybush Hospital had suffered years of “salami slicing”.
He said: “The salami slicing over the years of the health service, with Withybush especially, has been absolutely disgusting.
“One week it’s gone. That bit’s gone. That bit’s gone.”
Carey said services should not be removed before any new hospital is built.
He added: “Keep everything at Withybush until it’s there and see how we stand.”
ECONOMY
On jobs and the economy, he said West Wales needed major investment to stop young people leaving the area.
Carey said: “You need something that’s a reason for people to travel inwards instead of outwards.
“I’ve got children myself, and I can’t see what future they have here.”
He said he would like to see a nuclear power station developed locally, arguing it would “supercharge the economy”.
On housing and planning, Carey said construction was vital to the local economy and that delays were holding communities back.
He said: “If there’s not construction going on, there’s nothing developing. There’s nothing happening.
“Construction is a sign of a strong economy. Tradesmen get paid, they go and spend money in restaurants and everything snowballs from there.”
Carey also criticised sewage discharges into local waterways and said environmental concerns had to be balanced with health and the economy.
On climate change, he said: “I think we contribute to it. A lot of it is a natural course that we go through anyway.
“I think we’re probably speeding it up a little bit, but not to the extent perhaps some people are pushing it.”
YOUTH DISORDER
Asked about recent youth disorder and knife-related incidents in Pembrokeshire, Carey said the loss of youth provision was part of the problem, but added that discipline also had to start at home.
He said: “Over the years, they’ve run out of places for young people to go.
“But a lot of it stems from not enough discipline at home, if I’m honest.”
On farming, Carey said he did not want to see more pressure placed on farmers.
He said: “They’re the ones feeding us.
“I’d like to see them supported more to diversify, if they want to, into different food stocks, animal stock, vegetables, however they want to do it.”
On education, Carey said standards in Wales were “not at all” good enough, but stressed that teachers were not to blame.
He said: “I don’t put that fault on the teachers. They’re not getting the support they need.”
Carey said children should be allowed to develop according to their strengths, whether academic or practical.
He said: “You can see which way a child’s going.
“If they’re good with their hands, nurture it. Don’t just say, ‘You’ve got to sit there and not move and do your maths.’”
AGAINST RAISING TAXES
In a quick-fire section, Carey said he would prefer to cut spending rather than raise taxes, supported more renewables, and said Wales should have the same or fewer devolved powers.
Asked why voters should back him, Carey said: “I will stand up for you, the people.
“I don’t have any other agenda. I don’t have party politics to worry about. I don’t have a whip to worry about.
“I’m only accountable to you and nobody else.”
News
Welsh Labour leader accidentally tells voters to back Plaid Cymru
First Minister corrects herself after campaign speech slip-up at Barry Island event
WELSH LABOUR leader Eluned Morgan accidentally urged supporters to “vote Plaid Cymru” during a campaign event in Barry Island.
The First Minister was addressing Labour members on Thursday (Apr 30), less than a week before voters go to the polls in the Senedd election.
She told the audience to vote Welsh Labour next week, before switching into Welsh and mistakenly saying: “Pleidleisiwch Plaid Cymru” — “vote Plaid Cymru”.
Baroness Morgan immediately corrected herself, saying “Plaid Lafur”, meaning Labour Party.
The slip was met with laughter and applause from supporters at the event.
Speaking afterwards, the First Minister said the mistake came after switching languages during a tiring campaign.
She said she was “very, very keen” for people to vote Welsh Labour, adding that voters knew where they stood with her party.
The gaffe came as Labour launched details of the costings behind some of its election pledges.
Welsh Labour has led the Welsh Government since devolution, but opinion polls suggest the party faces a difficult contest, with Plaid Cymru and Reform UK both hoping to make major gains on Thursday, May 7.
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