Jonathan EdwardsThese are certainly exciting times for Plaid Cymru.  A General Election when we expect to win the largest amount of Parliamentary seats in our history; an Autumn or 2011 New Year referendum on full law making powers within devolved competencies; and a Welsh General Election in 2011.     From a personal perspective it’s great to be back full time in active politics at the heart of the national movement; the political equivalent of playing central midfield for the national football team every day of the year!

Over the next 18 months the future of Wales for a generation will be shaped.  In this period, Plaid has the best opportunity in its history of replacing a discredited Labour party as the dominant political force in our country.  It’s an opening we have a duty to grasp.

A new political environment will be shaped following the General Election.  It is highly likely that we are looking at significant Tory victory across the UK.   If tensions between the UK Government and the devolved Administrations have been all too often visible with a Labour Government in Westminster, imagine what it’s going to be like with a Tory Government in London that is at best suspicious of devolved politics.

The Labour party will inevitably implode after their defeat.  In the medium term it has two choices in Wales.  Firstly it grows up and becomes a party that genuinely promotes progressive nationalism – making itself relevant to the new political environment, or it continues along the path to self destruction with its current political malaise due to its own deep splits.

When Labour enjoyed political hegemony over our country it was able to pacify the two warring factions within its ranks by playing the politics of the lowest common denominator.   Opposition parties working within this context had no option but to grit their teeth and bear it.   Unfortunately for Labour, in the space of a few years their hegemonic control over Welsh politics (that lasted the best part of a century) disappeared.  And the trajectory is only going one way.    In the new plural political environment of modern Wales, Labour’s current approach will be ruthlessly exposed – the events within the Government of Wales only last week are a case in point.

In the face of a Tory Westminster Government, the alternative narrative will not be a replacement New Labour London Government – but rather the development of Welsh political democracy and sovereignty.   As someone who has spent the last two years of my life campaigning directly for social justice with the CAB movement, it became evidently clear that Wales doesn’t have power over the real leavers to fully tackle social inequity.   That is why, if elected, my political future will be in Westminster until Wales has control over the benefits system and fiscal autonomy are devolved.  Northern Ireland already has administrative control over the benefits system and even the unionist parties in Scotland are campaigning for fiscal autonomy.  We want Wales to have the same rights as our Celtic cousins – why should we accept less?

There are those in the Labour party who accuse us of navel-gazing over the constitutional question.  What they fail to acknowledge is that political power is the key to driving forward the social justice agenda.  Without the tools to do the job – no craftsman no matter its skill can achieve its task.   Are the unionists in their midst seriously arguing that a Tory Government in London is likely to deliver on the social justice more than a government of progressives in Wales?

The political dynamic of post General Election Wales will therefore be between a Conservative right wing, South-East-of-England-Centric UK Government in conflict with an increasingly Plaid dominated Government of Wales.   If Labour fail to react to this new political dynamic they will become increasingly marginalised.  Peter Hain is only half right – the real political choice is between Plaid and the Tories.

At this stage it’s important to pay tribute to the way in which current Plaid leader Ieuan Wyn Jones, an Amman Valley boy like myself having been born and raised in Garnswllt, is creating the new Wales.  Ieuan knows where the future strategic battles lie.  Apart from his contribution in steering Wales through the recession, his major contribution will be the way that he has paved the way and shaped the future of so many young politicians.

With Wales’ most effective political campaigner in Bethan Jenkins and the party’s Director of Policy Nerys Evans already elected at the Senedd, Ieuan has facilitated the development of the likes of the next Jennie Eirian in Myfanwy Davies , the hugely talented Steffan ‘Next But One’ Lewis, forensic thinker Colin Nosworthy and ultra impressive Heledd Fychan.

Added to this, he has managed to recruit a group of exceptionally gifted young staffers and advisers to drive Plaid’s ambitions.  Having individuals as talented and committed as this team must make other political parties in Wales not only envious but also extremely worried.

A lesser leader would have pinned down the ‘young Turks’ in the party in order to preserve his own position.  His selflessness is creating the new Wales that will shape the future of our nation.

In doing so Ieuan has not only ensured an increasingly impressive team to lead, but has also provided his party with a new generation of politicians ready to lead Wales to justice and prosperity well in to the future.

I am confident that the future is bright – and I’m convinced the future is Plaid.

Jonathan Edwards

Plaid Prospective Candidate, Carmarthen East and Dinefwr

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Cambriapolitico can reveal.

The front-runner to take over as parliamentary candidate from retiring Plaid MP for Carmarthen and East Dinefwr Adam Price is Jonathan Edwards, thirty-something political whizz-kid from Rhydaman and Mr Price’s former adviser Jonathan Edwardsand strategist.

With possible contender Mabon ap Gwynfor out of the running, the wise money is on Edwards who, sources close to the constituency party say, has the tacit (though undeclared) backing of both Price and AM Rhodri Glyn Thomas.

Masterminded Price’s victory

Edwards, who has recently been working for the Citizens Advice Bureau in the Valleys to broaden his experience, has some powerful backers both within the constituency party and in Cardiff. Many credit him as the mastermind behind Mr Price’s spectacular career as MP, his initial victory over diminutive Labourite Alan Williams, and the consolidation of Carmarthen and East Dinefwr into a strong Plaid seat.

Committed to broadening Plaid’s appeal

Jonathan Edwards and Dafydd IwanEdwards is know to be a staunch and uncompromising nationalist committed to the cause of Welsh independence, with a broad knowledge of economics and considerable experience in public affairs. However, he is also known to be committed to widening Plaid’s appeal beyond its perceived Welsh-speaking heartlands, and building the party into a powerful force to challenge Labour in its traditional strongholds as that party’s core support goes into freefall.

Although other challengers have yet to declare their hand, Edwards’s supporters are moving fast to set up a winning campaign for the Rhydaman gladiator.

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Gordon Brown’s message to the people of Wales on St David’s Day was sent to the organisers of the National St David’s day Parade in Cardiff rather than to Welsh Labour Party Leader and First Minister Rhodri Morgan to deliver,  it has emerged.

St.David's Day Parade 2009The message, from the Prime Minister’s office in No 10 Downing Street was sent by email to the Parade’s President Henry Jones-Davies, publisher of the national magazine Cambria. It was read publicly, in English and Welsh, by David Petersen, a leading member of the National St David’s Day Parade Committee, to a gathering of more than a thousand people outside Cardiff City Hall at the start of the Parade last Sunday on March 1st , attended by representatives of all the political parties in the Senedd – except Labour.

Despite cross party support since the Parade’s inception in 2004, the Labour party has consistently boycotted the event, with not a single Labour MP, AM or councillor attending.

“On the occasion of St David’s Day I would like to send my warmest greetings to the people of Wales and Welsh people all across the world.” The Prime Minister’s message ran. “The National Day of Wales is a time of proud celebration right across the four corners of Wales and beyond. From the birthplace of St David in the West of Wales, to the parades in Cardiff, Swansea and in North Wales, the St David’s Day festivities will play out.

In the cultural sphere we continue to pay tribute to your musical stars, especially this year’s Brit Award winner Duffy, national film and television personalities and those in the Arts.

Political life in Wales is always inspiring and in difficult economic times such as these we continue to find inspiration in working together with you to do whatever it takes to support Welsh businesses and jobs.

St David said in his famous final words that we should ‘do the little things in life’, and today we mark a great number of Welsh achievements, small and large, individual and collective, that contribute to a strong, proud and passionate nation.

I wish you all a wonderful St David’s Day.”

This year’s Parade, attended by a record 10,000 people ended with speeches and a flourish on the steps of the Senedd, with Conservative AM William Graham and Plaid Cymru AM Chris Franks addressing a capacity crowd of several thousands. Again, there were no Labour representatives present, although former Plaid Cymru luminary and now Labour AM Alun Davies was spotted standing on the periphery of the Oriel.

Continue reading »

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New Labour allegedly plans to merge Wales’s national football and rugby teams into new “Great Britain” superteams in the wake of the successes of “Team GB” at the Beijing Olympics, a whistleblower on Gordon Brown’s political staff has revealed.

The whistleblower, believed to be a member of Gordon Brown’s Downing Street staff, who is Welsh, said she felt compelled to speak out in view of the “sheer madness” of policies aimed at creating a “new sense of Britishness” by  removing bodies such as the Welsh Rugby Union and the Welsh Football Association by creating Great British teams to replace “the sub-national/regional teams of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland”. These are, the official said, nothing less than “attempts to bolster support for an ailing Labour Party and the Prime Minister’s increasing unpopularity by pursuing a reinvigorated and naked ‘unionist’ agenda,” adding “This is not something I am prepared to support.”

The start of this process is seen as Brown’s demand for a “Great Britain” football team to take part in the 2012 London Olympics, described by Scottish First Minister Alex Salmond as a “spectacular own goal”. “Instead of trying to brow beat the SFA, the IFA and the Football Association of Wales into a single team,” Mr Salmond continued, “Gordon Brown should abandon his campaign which threatens the identity of each of the home associations and their national squads.” There has been no comment so far from ministers in the Welsh Assembly. See here for more on this.

Wales, Scotland and the North of Ireland have already lost swathes of funding for sport and the arts as a result of the budgetary demands of London Olympics, whose facilities are being constructed against a backdrop of thinly disguised organisational chaos and deepening recessionary gloom.

The Government is reportedly putting pressure on football’s governing body, FIFA, to press for one major team to represent Great Britain in future international tournaments, which will mean the demise of independent Welsh, Scottish and Northern Ireland teams, first in football and then rugby.

If you don’t like what’s being planned then sign the petition … HERE

Update

“It’s great to be flying the Welsh flag on the world stage. My Dad’s born and bred in Wrexham and is Welsh through and through and so am I.” Says Olympic gold winner Tom James. -see article

Update
More evidence has been unearthed – see here

If you don’t like what’s being planned then sign the petition … HERE

Ed.Note: This post is by Cuneglas an occasional contributor to CP. Cuneglas is NOT Clive Betts who posts as Cambriapolitico. CP as stated in our terms and conditions do not necessarily agree with the views and statements expressed by their various contributors (some of whom are as mad as hatters).

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Glad to see BBC Wales has got its top news stories right on the day of the Irish referendum and 42 day detention vote aftermath. Yes, the top story is … wait for it … Sir Norman Lloyd-Edwards is retiring from his post as Lord Lieutenant on his 75th birthday. My God what a scoop! Deserves a Pulitzer at least!

It hasn’t all been plain sailing though – and the former Lord Lieutenant remembers one time when he made a slight mistake.
He said he met the Queen at the airport and when the group were then embarked on a journey, he and another took their caps off.Sir Norman said it was pointed out to him that, even when you are in the Queen’s presence, you must keep to the uniform.
As for meeting the great and the good, the Lord Lieutenant said he particularly likes Prince Charles.
“Well, I have got favourites – of course I have – but I am not allowed to say,” he laughed.”I must say I get on with them all extremely well.”
I think Prince Charles is an absolutely super man. Some you are very pally with and others you are friendly but not quite so pally.

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