Education
First Minister pressed on biological sex, additional learning needs, and NHS jobs
PLAID CYMRU’S Rhun ap Iorwerth was challenged on budget decisions and the NHS in this week’s First Minister’s questions.
Tuesday’s plenary also saw the First Minister face questions on biological sex and funding for children with additional learning needs.
There was disruption in the chamber as shouting broke out when the First Minister admitted he had met with Reform UK’s Welsh leader Dan Thomas.
In his questions to the First Minister, Mr Thomas pressed him to disclose if he had had any talks with other political parties, if there are any potential areas of compromise within the supplementary budget, and if he’d be willing to work with Reform.
The First Minister responded: “It really shouldn’t come as a surprise to anybody that I have met all leaders of political parties in this Senedd.
“When I speak of wanting to be a co-operative government, that means having conversations with leaders of Reform, the Conservatives, Labour, and the Green Party.
“I’m sorry if that’s come as a surprise to anybody.”

Mr ap Iorwerth said his government is “determined” to put in place their programme for government and recognises that to do so it will need cross-chamber support.
Leader of the opposition Dan Thomas began his questions to the First Minister by drawing attention to the “plight” of student nurses.
He called on Mr ap Iorwerth to share if any of the £145 million allocated to the NHS in the supplementary budget will be used to “guarantee student midwives and student nurses a job when they finish their training.”
Noting that there are “some things […] that money can’t buy”, the First Minister said the current problems facing graduates are due to “over-commissioning” in 2022.
He said: “There’s a specific problem that has arisen this year, which should not have arisen, but it has arisen because training numbers for this cohort who are looking for jobs in September this year were commissioned in 2022.
“Now, we are living now with the challenges posed by the over-commissioning back then.”
Acknowledging how “unsettling” the lack of jobs must be, the First Minister confirmed his health minister has started work on improving the outcomes for graduates.
Mr ap Iorwerth said: “We will help those graduating now to get jobs. They have careers in the NHS. We need them.
“But we have a problem that we face right now, which this government is working around to quite rightly support those who are worried in a way that they shouldn’t be, when they signed up to those courses in 2022.”
Funding for children with additional learning needs was once again at the forefront of discussions in the Siambr.
Interim Labour leader Ken Skates pressed the First Minister to say how much he expects to receive from the UK Government in additional learning needs consequentials between now and 2029.

Noting the importance of the prioritisation of government money, the First Minister did not provide a specific figure in response to the Labour member.
Instead he pledged to concentrate on helping “children in education, patients in the health service and families who need support with childcare.”
Answering his own question, Mr Skates said: “The answer is more than £0.5 billion – more than £0.5 billion that will come to the Welsh Government as a result of increased spending by the UK Government on additional learning needs. That is a huge additional sum that your government will be receiving.
He added: “Every one of the 22 local authorities in Wales is calling for this year’s consequential to be passed to councils so that they can then pass it to schools for investment in children and in the teaching profession.”
He called on the First Minister share how much additional ALN funding he is willing to allocate in the supplementary budget.
Mr ap Iorwerth responded: “Those who have been in government will know that there are two sides of the ledger when it comes to budgets. There are consequentials, yes, from time to time, there are pressures, too.
“This government has inherited significant pressures, which have to be addressed – and we have inherited those pressures from previous governments – whilst taking a long-term and sustainable approach to the whole ALN system.”
The First Minister told the Siambr that the ALN pressures will be solved through “long-term thinking in developing policy” not by a one-off payment.

Natasha Asghar, the Conservative health spokesperson, pressed the First Minister to reveal what action the Welsh Government will be taking following the Supreme Court’s ruling on the “definition of biological sex”.
Ms Asghar told the Siambr she was recently contacted by Aneurin Bevan University Health Board staff who had received a presentation titled ‘transcending boundaries, celebrating transgender awareness week and how to be an ally’.
She said: “I’m all in favour of diversity, but I would much rather NHS staff focus on patients and delivering care, than them being distracted by training sessions that do not improve patient care and frontline services.”
Ms Asghar said the staff who contacted her said they felt extremely uncomfortable with the session, describing it as highly sexualised and inappropriate.
She added: “I can’t say I blame them when you hear some of the presentation’s content.
“Part of the presentation involved a man talking about his genitals, alongside a photo of a rocket, and he states, and I quote, ‘No Viagra needed’.
“The presentation also includes a photo of a man when he was naked as a child. The presentation also talks about transgender bathroom issues and supporting men in women’s spaces.”
Ms Asghar asked the First Minister how the Welsh Government will ensure public bodies are following the law and “protecting women’s spaces”.
Noting the Supreme Court decision was not “a victory of one side over another”, the First Minister expressed the need for political leadership.
He said: “She [Ms Asghar] mentions ‘concerned members of staff’. We hear from very concerned trans people who feel that they are being disempowered and put at risk, even, by the current debate.
“And that, I think, is where political leadership comes from. I can’t comment on the particular material that she mentioned because I’m not aware of what it is. But that Supreme Court ruling wasn’t a victory of one side over another.
“I was listening at the time when the judgment was given. What it did usher in was a new era of the need for greater understanding between people who have divergent views.
“All of us have to be aware of that in trying to cool down the temperature on what has become a heated debate but also a very painful debate for many individuals.”
The First Minister was also quizzed on his government’s position on puberty blockers for under-18s, by Reform MS Paul Marr.

Mr ap Iorwerth said: “Where clinically appropriate, puberty suppressing hormones can be prescribed for children in Wales who started treatment prior to the UK Government’s order restricting their prescribing other than through the NHS, and to children accessing NHS gender services, as part of the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence research study when that commences.”
The First Minister said gender identity services in Wales will continue to be “led by the evidence.”
Suggesting the Cass Review highlights “significant uncertainties” around the “long-term safety” of puberty blockers, Mr Marr pressed the First Minister on the “specific steps” his government will take to ensure that “vulnerable young people are not subject to avoidable harm”.
Mr ap Iorwerth informed the Reform MS that the author of the Cass review is supportive of that research.
Mr ap Iorwerth added: “This is a careful study, an academic study, that is about reducing harm to children and young people.
“I would have thought that that is something that, as a whole, we would eager to sign up to.”
Community
Welsh pupils pitch green ideas as youth confidence crisis deepens
YOUNG people from Pembrokeshire and Neath Port Talbot will gather in Carmarthen next week for a Welsh education project aimed at tackling what organisers describe as a growing crisis in youth confidence.
Cymbrogi Futures will hold its fourth annual Tomorrow’s Changemakers Hackathon at the University of Wales Trinity Saint David on Friday, July 10, bringing together five finalist teams of 12 and 13-year-olds to pitch ideas linked to tourism, hospitality and the built environment.
The event comes against a stark national backdrop. Latest figures from the Office for National Statistics show more than one million young people aged 16 to 24 across the UK are not in education, employment or training. In Wales, Welsh Government data shows the proportion of 16 to 24-year-olds classed as NEET rose to 17.0% in the year ending December 2025.
A recent report by the Institute for Public Policy Research has also warned that many young people are losing faith in their futures, with only one in four 16 to 29-year-olds believing that people have a fair chance to succeed through talent and hard work.
Cymbrogi Futures says its programme is designed as a practical response to those concerns, giving pupils the chance to work with employers, community organisations and mentors on real-world sustainability challenges.
The Tomorrow’s Changemakers programme is rooted in the Curriculum for Wales and inspired by the Wellbeing of Future Generations Act. It asks learners to act as researchers, designers, communicators and problem-solvers, rather than simply studying climate and economic issues from a distance.
This year’s programme has reached around 1,000 learners across three counties, with five teams making it through to the Carmarthen final. Since 2022, Cymbrogi says the programme has worked with thousands of learners across Wales, with further expansion planned into Swansea, Powys and Bridgend from September 2026 and Bristol in 2027.
Ian Chriswick, Director of Cymbrogi Futures, said Wales already had the foundations for a more hopeful approach to education.
He said: “Wales has a ground-breaking curriculum that asks us to truly teach the future. But at a time when we should be celebrating its successes, we hear instead of record teacher burnout and falling learner morale.
“Tomorrow’s Changemakers is a direct, practical response to that, and to the question of why so many young people are losing faith in their own futures.”
The programme is backed by a range of Welsh and UK partners, including Milford Haven Port Authority, Cwm Environmental, Morgan Sindall Construction, Tai Tarian Housing Association and Admiral Insurance.
Organisers say the aim is not only to inspire pupils, but also to connect them directly with sectors that will need new skills as Wales moves towards a lower-carbon economy.
Milford Haven Port Authority, one of the UK’s major energy hubs, is involved as Pembrokeshire looks to position itself at the centre of floating offshore wind, green hydrogen and future energy infrastructure. Other partners bring links to construction, housing, insurance, the circular economy and community resilience.
Owen Stacey, Senior Social Value Manager, said: “For any business that cares about investing in the skills of the future or demonstrating social impact in their communities, this programme delivers on both counts.
“This is our third year and it’s exactly what the industry needs.”
The event will include a welcome lunch, keynote addresses, team pitches, collaborative judging and an awards ceremony. Organisers describe the format as friendly and informal, with adult participants asked to act as “cheerleaders first, judges second.”
Representatives from the Future Generations Commission, Welsh Government, local education authorities and academic partners are also expected to attend.
The wider policy context is significant. The new Plaid Cymru-led Welsh Government has placed education, skills, climate action and the green economy at the centre of its programme. Cefin Campbell MS, who represents Sir Gaerfyrddin, is now Deputy Minister for Skills and Tertiary Education, while Anna Brychan MS is Cabinet Minister for Education and the Welsh Language.
However, the scale of the challenge remains substantial. A single school programme cannot solve youth unemployment, poor mental health, transport barriers, poverty or the shortage of secure entry-level jobs. Those issues require sustained action from government, councils, colleges, employers and the voluntary sector.
There are also questions about how projects such as Tomorrow’s Changemakers can be scaled up without adding pressure to already stretched schools and teachers.
But supporters argue that the model offers something often missing from the national debate: a route from classroom learning into practical confidence, workplace awareness and civic purpose.
For west Wales, where young people often face limited transport, fewer local opportunities and pressure to leave their communities to build careers, that connection matters.
The Carmarthen hackathon will not by itself reverse the rise in young people falling out of education and work. But it offers a glimpse of a different approach, one where pupils are treated not as a problem to be solved, but as people with ideas, agency and a stake in Wales’s future.
Education
Council deputy leader moves to halt Stepaside school closure plan
PEMBROKESHIRE COUNTY COUNCIL’S Deputy Leader has launched a major bid to halt controversial plans to close Stepaside School.
Cllr Paul Miller, who took over responsibility for education on May 15, has submitted a motion asking councillors to rescind two previous decisions which authorised officers to begin statutory consultation on closing Saundersfoot and Stepaside schools and replacing them with a single 3-11 primary school on the Saundersfoot site.

The proposal, backed by council in December 2025 and reaffirmed in March 2026, would have seen consultation begin in September.
But in a significant change of direction, Cllr Miller has now told members he no longer believes the proposal to discontinue Stepaside School is “the right one”.
In an email sent to all county councillors, he said he had reviewed the council’s school modernisation and reorganisation plans since taking on the education portfolio.
He said the authority’s work to date had focused mainly on surplus places, which he described as an “interesting estates and facilities metric” but one which “tells us very little about the educational experience of the children inside those buildings”.
Cllr Miller said he accepted that very small schools could become unviable, not only financially but educationally, because of pressures on leadership, staff capacity, mixed-age classes, peer groups and pupil wellbeing.
However, he said Stepaside was in a “materially different position” from schools with exceptionally low pupil numbers.
With around 100 pupils on roll, he said the school was “substantially larger than schools previously deemed unviable”.
He added that decisions affecting larger schools required a broader assessment of educational sustainability, leadership capacity, workforce resilience and pupil experience before closure could be justified.
Cllr Miller also raised the possibility of alternatives, including shared leadership arrangements or formal federation, which he said could strengthen the sustainability of both schools.
He further noted that the planned temporary full decant of Tenby VC School may use a significant proportion of existing surplus places at Saundersfoot School, potentially weakening the case for closing Stepaside as a response to surplus capacity in the Tenby cluster.
His motion asks council to rescind its decisions of December 12, 2025 and March 5, 2026 and to discontinue the proposed statutory consultation process relating to the closure of Saundersfoot and Stepaside schools.
He has asked for the motion to be dealt with at July’s full council meeting, describing it as the final ordinary meeting before the planned September consultation.
The move is likely to be welcomed by campaigners and parents who have opposed the closure of Stepaside School, but it also raises fresh questions about the future of the wider Saundersfoot proposal and the council’s school modernisation programme.
The Herald has previously reported strong local concern over the plans, with parents and residents arguing that Stepaside remains a viable village school and plays an important role in the community.

Pembrokeshire County Council has consistently said school reorganisation must take account of pupil numbers, surplus places, Welsh Government guidance, building condition, long-term sustainability and the need to provide high-quality education.
If accepted onto the agenda, Cllr Miller’s motion could force councillors to revisit one of the most sensitive education decisions currently facing the authority.
South Pembrokeshire MP Henry Tufnell welcomed the development, describing it as “absolutely fantastic news” and “a massive victory for our community”.
He said the council had listened following serious concerns raised by local parents, residents and community representatives.
Mr Tufnell added: “When a community stands together, raises its voice, and refuses to be ignored, this is exactly what can be achieved.”
He also thanked those who attended meetings, backed the campaign and spoke up for the future of local children.
Education
Skills warning as chemistry contributes £1.9bn to Welsh economy
CHEMICAL science contributed £1.9bn to the Welsh economy in 2023, according to a new report which warns that skills shortages and pressure on universities could put future growth at risk.
The Royal Society of Chemistry says the sector is one of Wales’ most productive, generating £99,500 in Gross Value Added per worker. That compares with £73,300 per worker across the wider UK workforce and places Wales among the strongest-performing parts of the UK for chemistry-related economic output.
The findings are contained in The Contribution of Chemistry, a report commissioned by the Royal Society of Chemistry and carried out by Metro Dynamics. It examines the role of chemistry in economic activity, workforce development, research, innovation and regional growth.
The report says chemistry is often “hidden” within wider economic statistics, despite being embedded across major industries such as clean energy, advanced materials, healthcare, food and drink, construction, agriculture and manufacturing.
Across the UK, nearly half of chemistry-using professionals work in government priority growth sectors, compared with just over a quarter of the wider workforce. The RSC says this shows how important chemistry is to industrial strategy, local prosperity and high-value employment.
However, the report also warns that the skills pipeline is under pressure. Universities are described as playing a critical role in supplying graduates, supporting businesses and helping research move into commercial use. The RSC says funding pressures in higher education could make it harder for Wales and the wider UK to maintain access to the talent and facilities needed for future growth.
Helen Pain, Chief Executive of the Royal Society of Chemistry, said the figures showed the “enormous significance” of the sector.
She said: “With chemistry injecting nearly £2bn in GVA contribution to the Welsh economy, our report underlines the enormous significance of our sector to both Wales and the UK.
“As more and more universities across the country face funding cuts, it’s more important than ever that both the Welsh and the UK governments recognise how central chemistry is to the economy within wider innovation and skills strategies and ensure opportunities to study chemistry do not fall away.”
The report also highlights the value of chemistry graduates to the labour market, saying 83% go into high-skilled roles. It says maintaining that pipeline will depend on stronger links between schools, colleges, universities, technical training and employers.
For Wales, the issue is not only about university departments, but also about the businesses and local economies that depend on chemistry skills. The report argues that sectors relying on chemical science can be affected if there are shortages in skilled workers, research capacity, laboratory space or scale-up support.
The Royal Society of Chemistry is calling on local, devolved and UK governments to make chemistry a core part of economic, science, industrial, innovation and skills strategies. It also wants reforms to higher education and research funding to recognise the cost and importance of chemistry teaching and research, including the need for laboratories, equipment, specialist staff and consumables.
The report says chemical sciences GVA across the UK grew by 18% between 2019 and 2023, but warns that growth could be held back without better access to lab space, pilot facilities and support for businesses trying to scale up new products and technologies.
Ms Pain added: “Chemistry is critical to many local growth ambitions, straddling sectors ranging from clean energy and advanced materials to healthcare and manufacturing.
“A sustainable chemicals and materials sector is vital for national resilience and local growth, providing both the everyday products we need and vital supply chains for many more economic sectors.”
Fiona Tuck, Director at Metro Dynamics, said the report showed why leaders needed to look beyond traditional sector labels when planning for growth.
She said: “Now more than ever, leaders need to understand what really underpins growth in places. Too often, the capabilities that matter most are not the easiest to count.
“Chemistry shows why this matters: it is woven through our research base, industrial supply chains and priority sectors, but its contribution can be hidden when we look only through traditional sector lenses, or at technology alone.”
Dr Alexander Reip, Chair of Enterprise Oxfordshire, trustee of the Royal Society of Chemistry and a member of the project steering group, said chemistry should be treated as essential economic infrastructure.
He said: “Chemistry’s contribution to the UK economy is substantial, and this report finally puts hard numbers to what many in the sector have long understood.
“Chemistry-intensive activity runs through the industrial base of communities across the UK, underpinning jobs, supply chains and innovation capacity in ways that rarely get the visibility they deserve.”
He added that local and devolved governments needed to support the education pathways, laboratory facilities and commercialisation support that allow research to become real economic activity.
The report says supporting chemistry-based businesses at the scale-up stage is particularly important, because promising innovations can fail to reach commercial success without the right facilities, finance and skilled workforce.
The Royal Society of Chemistry says the sector has a major role to play in future challenges including clean energy, healthcare, environmental protection, secure food and water supplies, and resilient manufacturing.
The full report can be found on the Royal Society of Chemistry website.
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