Jocelyn Davies a Plaid leadership contender?

Jocelyn Davies AMONE WOMAN (Elin Jones) has already been spotlighted as a potential new leader for Plaid Cymru, writes Clive Betts from the Assembly press gallery.

And now a second woman hove into view. And more than one member of the press is in agreement on the issue.

“She could be an interim leader,” was the words used in the press gallery. “An interim before whom?” I interjected, to receive no answer.

Deputy minister Jocelyn Davies jointly hosted with her leader Ieuan Wyn Jones the weekly cabinet press briefing.

Mr Jones had the star position, both with his announcement on an £11m boost for business research, and because he can speak with the authority of a party leader.

Ms Davies was there mainly to talk about housing, in particular the new LCO on social housing and the protection of vulnerable people.

But, apart from these two issues, it was extremely instructive to note the relationship between the pair. Ms Davies interjected at an early point to suggest – to general laughter – that Mr Jones should apologise for them arriving late.

Really, the South East AM was just emphasising how they had both kept to time.

At several points, Mr Jones glanced in her direction as if to check on the line that he should take. Once was when he was asked whether the arrival later that day of a new Labour party leader – widely expected at that time to be Carwyn Jones – would make any difference to the membership of the cabinet.

Certainly there would be changes on the Labour side, he replied. But what about on the Plaid side – “I do not think so,” he said.

Well, on this point, perhaps I beg to differ. The new First Minister might well feel that big changes are overdue in a cabinet which is in its main personnel a decade old.

And some Plaid AMs are wondering what sort of changes Carwyn may have up his sleeve, and to what extent they will apply to his coalition partners as to his own party.

Particularly in the boundaries between jobs. And once you start chopping and changing, an entire ministerial department could  either disappear or appear.

There will certainly be no change in the numbers of AMs involved – two ministers and one deputy for Plaid. But don’t rule out changes for the responsibilities.

The previous week saw Elin Jones , agriculture minister, rising in the firmament. She was already one of the most highly regarded on the Plaid benches, and her hosting of the previous week’s cabinet briefing sent her star lighting up the sky.

In this wee contest between ladies on the Plaid benches, Elin must count as being far in the lead. In the Welsh-speaking world that is so crucial to success in Plaid, she has the great advantage of appealing to both Gogs and Hwntws.

While poor young (no, she’s not that young !) Jocelyn suffers so much that she is really disqualified because she is not a Welsh-speaker.

Additionally, she is a real, pure Valleys girl. Whether she’s from the Left or Right, I’m not sure. But most Pleidwyr don’t know much about the Valleys, so they’ll automatically assume that her political stance is the one that they can’t stomach within Plaid.

And after naming this pair, there’s the third in the trio of strong, capable Plaid women. Helen Mary Jones is probably the best of them all.

But the Plaid AM tried for a top job once, and things went wrong

Now she’s sitting there on the backbenches, when her true position should be in the Cabinet or heading a department.

But then perhaps she is just too good and has to be kept tied down.

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Welsh Assembly

The dead cow and devolution

SOME PEOPLE believe that the Assembly is about Legislative Competence Orders and such law-making business, but to those who remember the old-style and sadly-departed ministerial committees, the running of a country depends much more on administering policies and in deciding HOW things happen.The Assembly is far too concerned with getting the legislation right that it is forgetting about the administration.

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Welsh Conservatives

Did Tory racists force Oscar to join Plaid?

The biggest surprise was that he had ever been chosen as Plaid’s second nominee for South East, for he is clearly out of sympathy with any idea of “independence”. He said he a strong believer in the United Kingdom, and seemingly in the Royal Family.
I asked him whether he suspected racism among the Tories and whether he believed that the Tory Party had really changed its spots?

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Welsh Conservatives

New-style Tories now David’s in the imperial Parliament ?

ARE WE seeing a new-style Tory party in the Assembly?
Nick Bourne has done much to rescue the party group in the Assembly from the right-wing days when everyone harked back to Thatcherism.

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Welsh Politics

The two Carwyn Joneses

CARWYN JONES has often been accused of being lazy.
Those of us who have known him for a long time wonder whether that accusation is entirely fair.
And now Lib Dem leader and farmer’s wife Kirsty Williams has pointed out that there are actually TWO Carwyn Joneses.

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Welsh Politics

When Darling’s squeeze is around your throat

PLAID ISN’T too happy with the London government attitude to the amount of money which Cardiff gets to run Wales each year.
The Assembly is worse than even a community council; they can raise their own rates while the Assembly has to depend 100 pc on London.

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Welsh Politics

Protocol to appease the monarchists

AS CAMBRIA forecast a couple of weeks ago, it is not the Labour Party who will decide the issue of who becomes the next First Minister. The individual AMs will decide. Which opens up the possibility that the individual AMs will be able to reject Carwyn Jones as leader.

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