Where to start? A truly momentous result. But will it make much difference? Join me as I ramble through the results.
◊
THE VOTING SYSTEM
Let’s start with the widespread and growing feeling that the party list system, in 16 vast constituencies, was a mistake, and one that must not be repeated. But how did we end up with this monstrosity?
It started well enough, in February 2017, when the self-styled ‘Welsh Government’ appointed an ‘expert panel’ of academics to look into various electoral systems and come up with recommendations. Which the panel did. But Labour (possibly also Plaid Cymru) didn’t like those recommendations.
The panel favoured the Single Transferable Vote (STV) system. And it specifically rejected the system used last Thursday. In this piece I put out a couple of years ago, I wrote:
On page 128 of the report we read the ‘closed list proportional representation’ system was rejected. It’s ‘weakness’ spelled out as, “No choice for voters between individual candidates. No accountability for individual Members directly to voters.”
Through a series of further – more political – groups, we arrived at the abomination forced on us last week. Based on the understanding that Labour would be the biggest party, with less than 40% of the vote in a low turnout, propped up by Plaid Cymru.
To put that into context: In 2016 Labour won 30 out of the 60 seats with 34.7% of the vote. Plaid Cymru came third with 11 seats and 20.5%. The turnout was 45.3%.
Never was it imagined that Labour would finish many lengths behind in third.
But it’s happened; and now Plaid Cymru needs to promise something better before the elections of 2031. With Wales now having 32 Westminster constituencies one obvious option is to elect three Members from each.
A simple system that would mean:
1/ Parties putting up three candidates in each constituency. Giving each party a total of 96, the same as we had on May 7.
2/ This system would be far more representative in that it would allow voters to pick and choose from candidates. Even vote for three different parties 1, 2, 3.
3/ It would be fairer for smaller parties and independent candidates.
But will Plaid Cymru want to change the system that gave them victory, at last?
◊
PLAID CYMRU, REFORM, ALSO-RANS
Not for nothing do people say of me: “That bloke’s no curmudgeon“, and now I’m going to prove it . . . without getting carried away, you understand.
The victory last Thursday eclipsed everything Plaid Cymru has achieved in its century-long existence. Without wishing to sound ungracious, I believe Plaid did so well, in part, from negative voting. Because much of the Plaid vote was against other parties.
There’s an irony here. In campaigning ahead of the election Labour and the rest of the ‘progressive’ parties urged us to vote against Reform; but Labour didn’t appreciate just how many people also wanted to vote against them.
Now if people decide to vote against Reform and Labour – where they gonna go?
This can be seen in my home city. Swansea has been a wasteland for Plaid for decades; no councillors, hardly any presence whatsoever. Yet in the Gŵyr Abertawe constituency, corresponding roughly with the old seats of Swansea West and Gower, Plaid Cymru won 3 of the 6 seats, but with just 31.9% of the vote.
Another factor in the Swansea results was the feeling that the city has been short-changed by Cardiff-obsessed Labour governments in Corruption Bay. I’ll return to this aspect of the picture later, when I address what Plaid should do to live up to the hopes of those who voted for the party.
Especially those who voted Plaid for the first time. Hoping for real change.
It might be worth mentioning that of the Plaid intake 27 are women and just 16 are men. Plaid has been pushing ‘equality’ for a long time, but it appears they might have gone too far.
For as George Orwell warned us in 1984:
It was always the women, and above all the young ones, who were the most bigoted adherents of the Party, the swallowers of slogans, the amateur spies and nosers-out of unorthodoxy.
Substitute Globalist-Woke agenda for Party.
Reform UK could have done better. Had they remembered this was an election in Wales, to the Senedd. Not a lot to ask, you might think. But it seems to have been too much for Reform. And many of their candidates.
What Reform offered was the usual England/UK spiel with a few unconvincing tweaks, offered by candidates many of whom seemed unsure where they were.
And yet, Reform got a good vote with 29.3%, and 34 of their candidates elected. With a better campaign Reform might have come out on top. If nothing else, the vote for Reform reminds us that we’re in uncharted territory.
And nothing shows this change more than the collapse of Labour’s vote. But this was long overdue. For too long Labour relied on the ‘hereditary’ vote in post-industrial and urban areas. Appeals to remember Nye Bevan and other emotive distractions from the embarrassing reality of modern Wales.
Throw in ‘Two-tier Keir’, and 27 years of failure from the Bay, and maybe Labour should be thankful they got 11.1% of the vote and 9 seats.
The Conservatives were almost squeezed out of the debate, and this wasn’t helped by the party’s woeful recent performance in Westminster. That said, 10.7% and 7 seats is not to be sniffed at. Just 0.4% behind Labour.
Reminding us that the Tory vote may be low, but it’s always there. Had things worked out differently they could have come third and been the junior partner in a coalition. That may be stretching it a bit, but an arrangement of some sort might have been agreed with Reform.
A month ago the Greens looked set for 7 or 8 seats, but recent revelations about the leader and some of his cronies put paid to those hopes. It’s all very well being weird, but when you’re weird and dangerous, then people will turn away.
The Lib Dems got their one seat with Jane Dodds in that ‘camel’ of a constituency, Brycheiniog Tawe Nedd. Nationally, they managed 4.5% of the vote.
I won’t dwell on the minor parties and independent candidates except to show you this from the Welsh Communist Party statement. It was put out after the election. I show it because it tells us what’s wrong with Wales. (I didn’t know we had a Welsh Communist Party!)
“Fair, green and socialist Wales“. . . “progressive coalition between Plaid Cymru and Welsh Labour” . . . “extra-parliamentary pressure“.
In other words, more of the same. Too many thinking that way explains why Wales is in the mess she’s in.
◊
OUT WITH THE OLD, IN WITH THE NEW?
Plaid Cymru has a golden opportunity – and a popular mandate – to put right the mistakes of the past 27 years.
For the first time Plaid can genuinely claim to be ‘The Party of Wales’, for it now has a better geographical spread in its support than Labour ever enjoyed, having been confined to the south (east of Llanelli) and the north east.
As I mentioned earlier, many in the Swansea area voted Plaid because they feel the city has been neglected by Labour administrations in Cardiff. This feeling is not confined to the city of my dreams.
Because administrations in the Bay have behaved as if they were an extension of Cardiff council. I pointed out a few months ago that five (of six) first ministers had served on the city council. (Carwyn Jones is the only exception.)
The leader of Cardiff’s Labour-controlled council, Huw Thomas, was elected last Thursday, the party’s only successful candidate in Caerdydd Penarth. No doubt he’s being lined up for bigger things. Or he was.
Remembering that they sit in Senedd Cymru not Senedd Caerdydd will be a big test for Plaid Cymru. But it’s essential.
On one of the post-election programmes former Plaid leader Dafydd Wigley was asked what the party should focus on in power. His answer was short and simple: “Economy, economy, economy“.
And as BusinessNewsWales reported on the Monday following the election:
‘Joshua Miles, Head of Wales at the Federation of Small Businesses calls on the new Welsh Government to provide “a clear economic strategy, with achievable targets and genuine accountability”.’
‘Russell Greenslade, Director, CBI Wales, also called on the new government to focus on partnership working, including with business.’
If Plaid Cymru is to honestly focus on building up the Welsh economy then they’d have the support of other parties. Certainly Reform. Or would they reject that to stay on the same path of failure with their soul-mates in Labour and Greens?
In her powerful farewell speech outgoing first minister Eluned Morgan faced her Ceausescu moment by arguing that Labour needs to re-connect with the working class. This is the working class that relies mainly on jobs provided by the business sector.
We need to go back to being the party of the working-class. We need the Labour Government nationally to change course. We need the wealth of this nation to be more equally distributed away from the South East.
Though working with business would be unpalatable to many in ‘progressive’ parties who have neither experience nor knowledge of real world economics. Worse, many believe job provision should be the preserve of the state, local councils, third sector, and nationalised industries.
With workers ‘represented’ by trade unions answerable to the state.
But the real obstacle to fulfilling Eluned Morgan’s vision is that the Labour party, like socialist parties elsewhere in the West, lost a large component of working class support through net zero costing jobs and raising bills; then further alienated the toiling masses with open borders, CRT, self-ID, and all the other ishoos from the Student Activist Toolkit™.
Fundamentally, Plaid needs to distance itself from all the things Labour did wrong.
One worth mentioning is the obsession with Wales saving the planet single-handed which, in practice, meant allowing windfarms and solar complexes, BESSs and pylons just about everywhere, all to benefit foreign companies providing no jobs.
Plaid talks the talk on community ownership of renewable energy projects. Give it a go; but to walk the walk community projects must be more than vehicles for activists to push their political hang-ups and soapboxes for enviro-nut good lifers.
Oh yeah, and make sure there’s a reliable backup supply.
◊
DR DAF GETS ON HIS BIKE
So will Plaid Cymru be an improvement?
Worth asking because Plaid may be more Woke than Labour; and even more in hock to the pressure groups, the lobbyists, and the single-issue fanatics.
Too many of Plaid’s intake view business – and the jobs it provides – as the capitalist enemy. Of the 43 Plaid SMs I doubt if more than a handful have experience of the real world economy.
Telling me that Plaid will follow the same disastrous path as Labour, forcing on us unpopular policies dictated by pressure groups. One such policy will be the war on private transport and the undesirable freedom it gives individuals.
As I pointed out in my previous piece Who Ya Gonna Vote For? Labour SM Lee Waters had worked for cycle group Sustrans (now Walk Wheel Cycle Trust), and he was the driving force behind 20mph speed limits, even on rural A roads.
Waters stood down last week, but he has a successor in newly-elected Plaid SM for Caerdydd Ffynnon Taf, Dr Dafydd Trystan Davies. And it didn’t happen yesterday.
And what a performance Dr Daf put on in his acceptance speech! He talked of the climate emergency, and he promised to go everywhere by bike, train, bus, or else he’d walk. But if it was pouring down and the bus didn’t turn up then he might resort to a car – but he’d record it so everybody would know what a good boy he is.
I’m sure most of the 151,198 registered voters in his constituency wanted to hear something better, hope for the future; but all they got was this sanctimonious little bugger telling them nothing is going to change.
And let’s remember that much of Plaid’s support is still in rural areas. Where there are few trains, sparse bus services, and ageing populations; so how will “on yer bike” be received?
Bad enough; but the whole concept of ‘Active Travel’ has been an expensive failure.
◊
CONCLUSION: PLUS ÇA CHANGE, PLUS C’EST LA MÊME CHOSE
Devolution has failed Wales because for 27 years Labour, either alone or in alliance with Plaid or Lib Dems, has ignored the economy, the NHS, and the real needs of the people. Choosing instead to play student politics; making gestures and taking ‘positions’.
Jo Stevens MP for Cardiff East and Labour’s Secretary of State for Wales, agrees. She also agrees with me that, “Plaid’s victory in this Senedd election was not a reflection of nationalist fervour or a genuine enthusiasm for independence. It was a rebuke of our own performance and a vote to stop Reform in Wales.”

Those responsible for Labour being ‘distracted’, and the only ones to benefit from it, have been gangs of swivel-eyed activists. The “extra-parliamentary pressure” demanded by the Welsh Communist Party.
In the process, this failure created, and is now perpetuated by, a new political class that Djilas would have recognised. Members of this class were brainwashed in school and university. They then got jobs as spads and advisors to politicians. Or they joined lobbying outfits and pressure groups. Maybe they worked in the third sector and for other bodies reliant on the public purse. Some became ‘journalists’.
This political caste, this New Class, is increasingly distanced from the people, and is now entrenched. It’s become generational. It’s self-perpetuating. And it’s concentrated on the left. A very real threat to representative democracy.
Plaid Cymru won because people want change. But if Trystan Davies is any guide they’ll be disappointed, as Plaid will make the same mistakes Labour made.
♦ end ♦
© Royston Jones 2026





See my letters on wind energy in Wales.
[1] Tivyside, Cardigan on 1/6/26 re ECIU and Ed Miliband.
[2] Western Mail ,4/6/26…in answer to David Wood of Swansea.
Child Labour Context: While TFM, a major player in the area, states it supports child rights, independent reporting highlights that children as young as 4–7 years old are engaged in cobalt mining in the DRC, often working in dangerous, unregulated conditions.
It sounds like a copy and paste from an AI generated enquiry. Content noted. Not clear why you have decided to upload this information given your views on Jac’s blog; as forwarded to me by email this afternoon, and reproduced below. If that is your view of Jac’s blog would it not be more appropriate for you to send the information to a newspaper?
“Lyn a serious issue you should discuss with this Wynne Jones guy who seems terrified to put his name on anything public. You know him well.
Here it is :-
I put a serious write up on the fairly well known Jac o’ the North BLOG site about child labour and wind turbine components. Nobody has commented. Why? Because hardly anybody reads that Blog these days. Typical of all Blogs!
It must be worse with the Blogs of ‘Action’ Groups. I doubt if even their own inactive members read them. Nobody knows they exist !!!!!!!!!!!!
As you keep telling Wynne Jones – many thousands read newspapers including Politicians who make and take real decisions. Wynne keeps saying it is globalists who make decisions globally. That is correct, but – it is our Welsh Politicians who have made the devolved planning powers in rigging all the Welsh Planning decisions making it an open door for foreign multi nationals to trample all over Wales. So letters to newspapers is important and far more important than unknown Blogs! I only know of just one called “Rethink” and they do not respond.
Of course I differ a little in my thinking that the most important thing of all now is for people to write to their own six local Senedd Members to halt and amend the rigged planning policies that favour all this destruction. they have that power.
Why don’t you send this complete to your friend Wynne Jones. Ask him why has he not commented openly on Jac o’ the North about awful child labour.
Pob hwyl, Ioan”
They don’t seem to realise that instead of gaining support for their cause (whatever it is) they’re just alienating people. Either with general slanders or else with personalised attacks. They’re their own worst enemies.
Q1.How many personalised attacks have you made against people Jac?
Q2. How many general slannders have you made Jac?
Q3. How many people have you alienated Jac?
Q4. How don’t you understand our clear cause Jac?
Q5. How many read your BLOG and its Comments these days Jac?
A1: I make legitimate criticism of public figures for their words and/or actions. If they’re not public figures then it’s usually because they’re in receipt of public funding, or have political influence.
A2: What does the question mean?
A3: Who knows? Do you?
A4: What is your “clear cause”? (Not clear to me.)
A5: There are people still visiting my blog to read articles I published years ago. How many go looking for a letter you wrote to the Ynysmeudwy Bugle back in 2017?
To Wynne who never gives his full contact details :- Of course my write up above did contain a lot of ‘stick and paste’. I do not have the research facilities of the United Nation of 195 nation countries, nor the research resources of the professional Welsh politicians and the Graduate SPADS they employ. At least I have highlighted the issue of child labour in the components of Wind Turbines in Wales, which most of our politicians are ignoring in their race and delusions in saying they want to make little Wales a global leader in averting Climate Change.
What do you Wynne have to say openly about the topic Wynne? Your favourite excuse seems to be saying its all ‘globalism is the blame’. Yes, that is probably a main issue, but all in Wales Government, past and present, elected by us the Welsh, bend over to help these globalists by rigging Wales’ Planning Policies to assist and worsen the situation. That can lessened by our own politicians, who are elected by people like you Wynne who has never put your head above the parapet surrounding your closet. Pull your closet chain Wynne and flush away your excrement. Let’s hope the sizeable Senedd Opposition members question the issue.
This is what I mean about you. Always personal.
Wynne does great work holding public bodies to account. But because he doesn’t bombard newspapers with repetitive and rambling letters, in your book he’s doing nothing.
Maybe you should call it a day and stop commenting on this blog.
Thank you Jac. Much appreciated.
In reply to your request for information Ioan, I set out below the general framework for action on this subject, last updated 16 June 2024. Information has been circulated to action groups in Wales and has been well-received. There is an ongoing exchange of information with group members who are actively involved in various aspects, as listed below.
It is by adopting the dialogic communication model that RE-think are able to; communicate with a wide audience, organise activities / events, provide access to posters, banners and other display material, provide briefing notes and FAQ helpful to others, provide newsletters and latest news updates, provide information about developers, provide press releases for electronic transfer to the media, raise funds for professional assistance with technical / legal issues etc. Wind energy developers are increasingly inviting the public to provide feedback on their proposals through the use of webinars. Groups respond accordingly. The benefits of dialogic communication should be clear to all from the information presented on RE-think website at the following hyperlink.
https://www.rethink.wales/
A dialogic communication system [e.g social media, webinar etc] is characterised by a two-way, interactive exchange of information, ideas, and perspectives between participants, where all parties actively engage, listen, respond, and contribute to the conversation. The system values feedback and is flexible, adapting to changing circumstances and perspectives. In contrast, a monologic communication system [e.g newspapers, TV and radio broadcasting] is a one-way transmission of information from a single speaker or source to a passive audience.The audience’s role is primarily that of a receiver with little to no opportunity for feedback or participation.
It is not clear why the focus of your attention is on anti-wind energy campaign groups: they are on your side. The communication model and tactics used are matters for group members to decide. I would not expect instructions / demands from non group members to be well-received. The focus of your attention should be on wind energy developers and the policy, planning and legislative framework within which they are allowed to operate.
I look forward to your further observations and details of the work you are currently involved in on this subject.
FRAMEWORK FOR ACTION
I see Dave Thomas as been appointed ‘Chief of Staff’ for Reform in the Senedd. Knowing how important this position is makes me think he have an hold on someone high up in Reform.
Trust me this man has no attributes whatsoever…and his background and personal past will come to haunt him and Reform.
He really is a p***k of the first order!!!
Do tell!
Here is David Thomas “explaining” how he and Reform will “cut waste” :-
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LTak_jxGeOY
I think most ppl would like to see a change to the NHS and the fact that if you live in Holyhead you have to travel all the way to Glan Clwyd Hospital for Radiotherapy treatment. Cancer treatment needs to be localised not central which the stress of travelling over 100 miles round trip daily for weeks is enormous and not necessary. The Prob with Plaid as I have ranted on is Nationalism and this is not the answer for Wales until we have an economy that can support the ppl of Wales. Up in N Wales there are few jobs and everything is spent on the Welsh home Counties.
One small delight post election for me, was to see Alun Davies on the news embittered by losing his seat, and Mike Hedges in a video clip on ‘Walesonline’ blaming the Welsh Media for Labour’s thrashing. Mike Hedges is here in this pathetic video clip below:-
MS appears to blame media for Labour’s Senedd election drubbing
”A politician to complain about the media is like a sailor to complain about the sea” – Enoch Powell
Great analysis Jac.
I think that countries with small populations like Wales and New Zealand are used to test out global policies before they are rolled-out elsewhere. Unless Plaid Cymru distance themselves from UN Agenda 2030 and the 17 so-called sustainability goals I doubt we will see any real change for the better in Wales. I hope I’m wrong. Early days.
Plaid is as bad as Labour. Possibly worse. A few years of Plaid Cymru and devolution itself could be on the ballot. Especially if Reform wins the next UK general election.
What if, as a sort of call-your-bluff, we were to end up with a three way between Westminster, devo and full independence, and independence actually won? That would be a veritable omelette mask for the hypothetical Reform PM.
A three-way referendum is never going to happen because it would resolve nothing. No option would get 51%. The only referendum we’d get from a Reform government in London is: Devolution Yes or No?
Well yes, It will be interesting to see how Mr Jones as leader performs. But you know my opinion on this lol.
He seems a reasonably level-headed individual . . . but only when compared to the gang of clowns and extremists behind him.
Agree with all you say. The amount of ‘firsts’ achieved by Wales is remarkable. I wrote about it here wales-where-agenda-2030-is-already-a-reality .
Worryingly, Plaid Cymru believes in ‘an independent Wales with full membership of and a seat at the United Nations’. I linked that in something else I wrote, but the link has conveniently moved as the UNA is bringing content to its ‘new website’.
It’s a long time since I read 1984, so thanks for the reference by Orwell to women. As a woman I have felt bad about my belief that there are actually too many women in senior roles/positions and that their influence is not as beneficial as so many believe. I noticed this in the industry I worked in many years ago. The industry lost that daring creativity and strange to say rebelliousness that brought step change improvements and innovation. It also lost the blunt responses that are occasionally needed to weed out the more stupid ideas, yes often proposed by men, that women tend to skirt around and agree to have a go at even though they know they will not work. When the best response would be ‘ Don’t be so bloody stupid’.
Perhaps it’s even more noticeable in the USA, where anti-Trump, anti-ICE, or pro immigration events, seem to be made up in the main of middle class, middle-aged white women. This phenomenon is known as ‘suicidal empathy’.
Your ‘superfan’ who deemed you ‘revolting’ I mentioned on your previous entry fit in that demographic.
Remind me. (I have so many fans.)
The Woke I was texting, who I simply had enough of when she declared how it’s impossible for white people to be victims of racism. Interestingly I did note in her correspondences a strong overtone of overarching bitterness and anger towards all sorts of people and things. Almost everyone we mutually knew was a ‘racist’ or ‘toxic’ or whatever. I wonder whether it’s a common trait among the ultra-woke, at least the non-performative ones who are not there on the grift.
The hang-ups never come alone. They get lonely.
I have a half-formed theory that the reason so many of them are, how to put it, aesthetically challenged, is that they’ve been burned by the inherent inequality and cruelty of the world from a young age. Growing up being picked on for being fat or ugly, or having to watch the ‘cooler’ and better-looking kids having all the luck with the opposite sex, imbues a strong sense of ‘social justice’. A social justice that would scar the faces of the better looking and cut the silver tongues out of those with charisma so that everyone is equivalently badly off.
That’s an observation many have made. But to point it out means you’re guilty of some kind of -ism, and must be silenced.
And black people can be racist too, towards eachother re colour of skin being darker!. I was once referred to as hello Pinky! which from a black person to a white person is racist?…so…wokeism…well I think we, I could rant on forever because there should! be a boundary between equal rights and intimidation. I know people who really dont like men and also control other women who for various reasons are vulnerable and aportion the blame onto men. In every marriage or relationship, somone has to stay in a look after the children and how this is portioned out has always and always will be up to the couple and disagreements about her time, his time etc will always happen, well imo in this century anyway, where the world is in another 75 years is open to debate. Its interesting looking at my sons circle of friends and how they cope within their relationships or dont. The core of this tho is discontent and unhappiness due to the political economic and social climate we endure. Poverty in this country is an illusion if you compare it to other parts of the world who really have nothing. Our expectations and grown and our lifestyle evolved so far in 75 years. I was talking to someone last week who grew up in the 60s with frost on the windows inside in the winter and said, how do you explain this to Gen z who dont know what VE day was.
By some metrics like has improved and by others in no way has it. I doubt a house cost ten times the average salary back then, plenty of pubs to go to and socialise of a night without breaking the bank, and you could quit a job on a Friday and walk into a new one on Monday. High streets were also teeming with life and not the wastelands they are today.
Well, hopefully that is just in the USA and not yet here!. The problem is that we are all human and as part of that we are competitive, tribal, greedy and envious and Labour have not moved with the times. They are locked in the past mentality. Rayner is a good example of do as I say not as I do and when they are faced with choices of being honest with the dosh piling up they just cant help but grab it and that to me is the issue. as for Plaid well, we will see. Wales hasnt got the means to become a separate self governing Independent Nation. Scotland has. It will be interesting to see how long Starmer holds on. As the son of a poor tool maker and a brother who is poor!.
But it is here. Look around. They’re everywhere.
What do Monaco, Singapore, Liechtenstein, San Marino, Luxembourg, Iceland, Ireland, Scotland, Andorra, Switzerland, Finland, Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania have that Wales doesn’t?
Wales is not recognised as a state in its own right. Scotland has its own parliament. Wales has the Senedd but its powers although are devolved to the Govt are linked to Westminster. It is not a Sovereign Nation…However Scotland is also dependent upon England for Money under the Barnet system…Ireland is a totally indpendent Country recognised and within the Eu…I think thats more or less right…
I’m sorry but you’ve muddled and conflated so many definitions there and parroted so much tired ‘received wisdom’ that I don’t know where to start. All without remotely addressing my question on why myriad small states the world over are happy and prosperous but Wales uniquely is poorly positioned to do the same for some unknown reason.
Because Wales is too left wing! Where are the entrepreneurs to make Wales prosperous? I can almost guarantee that many of the “patriots” talking on here earned their money from the UK’s English input?
If Wales itself had to pay the public pensions of most of these Welsh; their pensions would need to be cut drastically!!.
Most successful small nations are tax havens and countries that live OFF their bigger neighbours. Ireland lives of England generally, and Irish juggernauts smash along Welsh road links to England without paying anything towards Welsh road expenditure. Irish lorries buy diesel in Ireland. What do they spend in Wales? Meanwhile, UK lorries pay on French motorways.
Secondly, Corporation tax needs to be cut to around 17 pc to attract business, if Wales was independent. We could not pay lazy people to idly chat.
It has always struck me that there is hardly one branded Welsh global product made of steel made in South Wales….which produced steel, whilst the best known steel/aluminium product from Wales is the “Ifor Williams animal trailer”, sold globally from the little rural village of Cynwyd, Corwen….in a NON-STEEL area. They have the BEST Welsh steel product.
Where are the Welsh metal finished products from this huge steel-making area of South Wales? I mean WELSH BRANDS!
If we had independence, what the hell would we live off in Wales? Who would keep the tens of thousands who don’t want to work?
Isle of Man, Jersey, Caymans, Liechtenstein, Monaco, Luxembourg et al …….
all make big money by sucking in the money and investments from the large countries around them. Hence their success financially..
Wales is NOT ENTREPRENEURIAL…that’s your reason!!
The Irish are FAR sharper…..and cash in on England’s 58 million!!
You’re mixing up correlation, cause and effect in the dressing for that word salad. Furthermore I’d love to know your source for there being tens of thousands who don’t want to work here in Wales. Nothing quite like the self-flagellating pet Taff, couldn’t design a more useful idiot for Westminster.
So , how many people did YOU ….or do you…employ, David Smith?
If you have something USEFUL to say for Wales, why don’t you say it in the Press , so others can answer you publicly?
BUSINESS BRAINS!!
You mean an extractive economy whereby the best and brightest leave, and the vicious cycle that perpetuates?
Scotland an indepebndent nation?? Sturgeon’s husband has stuffed that….by being a dishonest CROOK!!
If the report onhis thieving had come out BEFORE the recent elections…..SNP would have been stuffed in Scotland!!
As for Labour !Too many want to make big money from a PART-TIME job!
Four day week in Cardiff Bay, with every weekend off, WEEKS at Xmas; WEEKS at Easter ; a WEEK at Whitsun and about 6 weeks in Summer is a PART-TIME JOB!!
I compare political skiving to the hardest worker I know. Farmer Dai Jenkins of Penparc who went 26 YEARS WITHOUT MISSING A SINGLE MILKING…..twice EVERY day !! That is 26 years….start to finish without a full day off!! Milked twice EVERY day!! The shirkers of Wales only laugh at people like that…….the REAL heroes of Wales!!
Half the “workers” don’t even know what “work” is !! They THINK they do !!
That’s why the Poles are on Welsh farms. They will do the WORK!
Some of us worked our arses off at university, reading STEM subjects, to be able to work smart, not hard for a career. I’d like to see your milk mate knock out an MSc in bioinformatics.
Well you are certainly good at bad language! Is that what you learnt in uni?
If you’re so clever, why aren’t you opinionating in the Press??
Why are you not fighting openly for Wales?
It’s a lack of guts that you obviously have!!
As for education, I am a former OS Cartographic Surveyor [ back in the Sixties….and still working, because I’m not lazy] and both my daughter and son-in-law , who are in this business are graduates.
You may have an MSc in “bioinformatics”….but did you do anything USEFUL with it? I know plenty of graduates whose day-to-day work does not even require an O-Level !! They don’t need graduate knowledge for their work 90 pc of the time !
One of the cleverest people I know is another friend who failed his 11-Plus; went home to work on the farm at 15, then later worked as a rep for an oil company, before starting his own oil lubricant business FROM SCRATCH !!.
Now , he employs a LOT of people , has a turnover of £7 MILLION a year, owns the Howden Timber building next door……..and still works in his family business at 83 ! NOW HE IMPRESSES ME!!
It is more of HIS ILK that Wales needs!!
Did you employ people out of YOUR OWN POCKET??
I would offer a point-by-point rebuttal but the fact that you put the highly respected and important cutting-edge science of bioinformatics in quotation marks tells me it’d be wasting my time.
What a cop out!! Forget the quotation marks and give us all the details. We’re VERY interested! For whom did you work, by the way and when did your time there end?
I see you have not answered the other questions !
Let’s have your “point-by-point rebuttal” please !
I repeat…….if you’re so clever ……and erudite……why are you not pulling Welsh politicians and councils to bits in the North Wales Press , so that EVERYONE can see what you have to say?
Why are you merely “hiding your light under a bushel” [more quotation marks!] on here ???
Ah, if only. But a womans worst enemy can often be another women with certainly in some professions a Get a life attitude to older women. Younger women can be very judgemental and back in the middle ages it was women who reported other women for witchcraft lol…
Me too. I love that Orwell quote. I saw it during my time in the teaching profession.
Excellent piece Plaid will have to grow away from the Student Union activist mindset see how and why labour screwed up, and maybe backtrack a bit on Net Zero. Otherwise more of the same old will bring buyers remorse and they along with labour will get a shock at Council elections potentially,
I think Plaid is trapped in the Bay Bubble. Any changes will be cosmetic.
Yes
Definitely
Indubitably.
You wrote that on May 12th.Rob. You said re Labour :-, “and maybe backtrack a bit on Net Zero. Otherwise more of the same old will bring buyers remorse and they along with labour will get a shock at Council elections potentially,”
Well it’s now June ;.Labour were swept away by a TSUNAMI!! They had a SHOCK alright!!……Their fault!
They took the people of Wales for granted for decades as they supped hungrily from the trough !
Net Zero is total crap….and impossible . There will be petrol and diesel cars on UK roads in 2050……because the Wind Energy graphs on Gridwatch.co.uk PROVE that wind energy can never power the UK…….or its cars !!.
You don’t need a graph,actually…..common-sense should be enough!!
Net Zero?? Only by fiddling the books and getting the African jungle to “grow” British trees to “absorb UK CO2 “.
Plus, of course, the huge 58 million population of England will dump as much as possible of its “green ” responsibilities in Wales!!
YUP!! LABOUR HAD ONE HELL OF A SHOCK BACK IN MAY !!
“As ye sow, so shall ye reap” !!
Much like Queers for Palestine and Muslims, the anti-car lobby is not a unified church. There are inevitable points of contention, faultlines and schisms. Pushbike Pricks and Horsey Twats are running a campaign to lay a fucking path instead of reopening the railway to Amlwch from Gaerwen. I don’t doubt the presence of blow-in, good-lifer wankers amongst their ranks.
Inevitably if ever the line to Caernarfon becomes a realistic prospect for reopening, lycra-clad bell-ends will stick their oars in against that potential boon for the local economy, national connectivity, and indeed the environment. They should all be told, collectively, en masse, and in the nicest possible terms, to get fucked.
Trains will get travellers out of their cars, if reasonably priced and reliable, buses much less so, bike lanes, very much less so. While I do enjoy a jaunt on the old velo, only a masochist or a hardcore enthusiast (interchangeable?) is going to ditch his car for a 20 mile each-way commute by bike in all weathers.
As I suggest, how Plaid treats the ‘forgotten’ parts of Wales will be a big test. Which I think they’ll fail because too many Plaid SMs are trapped in the Bay Bubble.
Charming language on a public platform!! Amazing what an university education teaches!!
If you had GUTS, you’d make your case in the Liverpool Daily Post and Caernarfon Herald!!
My case is invariably made here in response to the preceding blog post, someone else’s comment, or infrequently off-topic but for Jac’s attention. To directly transpose this output to a Letters to the Editor page of some local rag would strip it of such context, rendering it the apparent non sequitur rantings of a madman. You may be comfortable being seen that way but I am not.
What a cop-out from someone who does not have the GUTS to write letters to the Press! To call Welsh papers “rags” is a truly feeble excuse!!These papers are collectively read by many thousands of people. Why are you afraid of expressing opinion to them? What’s the mr with you? Why hide???
By the way, I met Royston Jones here ……in my Farm Park….over 30 years ago ! Could be a lot more than 30, actually!
Half the seats on 35% of the vote is still a better representation of the ‘will of the people’ than Westminster’s First Past the Post, which could quite feasibly deliver a fat majority on such a number. The obvious downside to this d’Hondt or whatever it’s called is it’s simply baffling. Still, one thing to smile about are the undoubted sweaty palms in the Imperial Parliament, with at least half the seats in all three ‘regional’ assemblies now to be occupied by members of at least nominally separatist parties (assuming deals are made with the Greens).
The first-past-the-post system guarantees that Westminster is filled with winners, not those that came third, or fourth. But of course, it only works perfectly in a two-party system.
The system used here last week is little improvement, especially when we remember that genuinely representative options were rejected.
New system is dreadful. As you said you cannot vote for the person you want to represent you and these huge, unworkable constituencies are quite crazy. Your constituency is the biggest.
The system was chosen by the Labour party because in their worst nightmares they couldn’t imagine themselves so far behind in third position.
I have 2 reform, highest votes, 2 Plaid, 1 Con and 1 labour…so who do I go to now to get things done. Before I had 1…they had to deal and provide solutions to local problems irrispective of your political views. Who is going to pay for their constituency offices? Do the 2 reform and Plaid members share the same office or do they have their own…doesnt make sense.
Good piece.
Diolch yn fawr.