GOOD TO see some excellent business enterprise for the sake of both the Welsh language and the Welsh community last weekend.

The former mining village of Bedwas is known to few people – although some years ago, Plaid Cymru chose the then newly-refurbished Workmen’s Hall as the location for its annual conference.

Since then nothing much has happened.  But last weekend saw a performance there by the national troubadour of Wales, the forever great Max Boyce.

The significance of his visit went beyond his performance. He sang in the former workingmen’s club. Which was closed and shuttered until a couple of weeks ago.

And while he was there he formally opened in an upstairs room in the club a Bar Cymraeg. Something, I can assure you, which is totally new for this former mining village.

The pit closed, by the way, when Arthur Scargill forced the men working underground to join his strike, despite what the law said and how the men had voted. When the strike ended, the pit stayed closed.

For a new economic force is now at work in Bedwas.

Workingmen’s clubs seem to be a dying force. Bedwas had closed, and the Aneurin at the other end of Caerfffili is open only at weekends as it waits to be demolished and replaced by housing.

But there’s one difference between Bedwas and the Aneurin at the bottom of the council estate in Penyrheol. The Aneurin is a Labour Club.

And that party’s not doing too well currently, both in Caerffili, where control has been lost to a Plaid-led group, and in the UK.

But Bedwas is feeling the force of an up-and-coming political and economic grouping. Behind the reborn WMC in Bedwas – now rechristened The Greenfly – is one of the strongmen in that new grouping.

Clayton Jones was deputy leader when Plaid first took control of Taff-Ely District Council (leader of the group was Janet Davies, who went on to become an AM before she retired at the last election).

But Clayton used to have another life. He also ran a bus company which grew until it was almost bigger than the sleepy council-run operation in Pontypridd.

He then sold out to Veolia and went into semi-retirement. Until a financial crisis beset a local private coach operator in Bedwas. Top-Kat Travel was based at the former headquarters of another sleepy council-run operation – Bedwas and Machen, which was eventually run out of operation by competitors when Rhymney Valley council was Labour- run.

Top-Kat is still operating.

Next door to Top-Kat stands the former Bedwas WMC. When that also collapsed, Clayton saw another financial opening.

At one end of Caerffili, the Aneurin is closing. A political period is ending. At the other end of the town The Greenfly is opening. A different sort of political period is opening.

And the main bus past the Greenfly - the service A through Caerffili centre to Cardiff – drives at the other end of its journey every half-an-hour past a third indication that the world in Wales is changing.

The bus passes very close to a large public house very close to the University Hospital of Wales known until recently as the Cross Inn. This pub’s location in the middle of a roundabout ensured business was often slow – unlike the traffic.

But that pub has just been reopened. It takes almost the same name as the Penyrheol club.

But the Aneurin Bevan is run by Wetherspoon’s, not by the Labour Party.

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Dirty SignsLocal councils in Wales are running a competition on which possesses the dirtiest road signs. They’ll be blaming the Assembly for not giving them enough money this year so they can clean them.

If it’s not the Assembly, it will be the general economic situation.

The worst council in Wales is surely the largest one – Cardiff, and the neighbouring Rhondda Cynon Taf and Vale of Glamorgan must be running the city a close second.

In fact, it’s neither of the reasons I’ve just given. It’s more likely that some councils just don’t care.

But I’m glad to be able to report that another neighbour is among the best. Caerffili suffered, indeed, for a couple of years when Labour was in control and the cleaning suffered from a budget cut.

Fortunately, Plaid had been in control previously and had run a strict cleaning regime. So there was not that much chance for Labour’s years to allow the signs to get that dirty.

Plaid are now in control again. And orders have gone out from the council offices to get out the cleaning equipment once more.

I spoke to one of Plaid’s councillors, who told me that a gang was already at work. He added, “Mind you, I don’t know where. I haven’t seen any evidence yet.”

Some might say this is scarcely an issue at the top of any council’s agenda. But it shows pride in an area. Caerffili’s road signs are clean; so are their council estates.

RCT’s signs can be bad. So are their council estates. But it’s not purely political. Merthyr does well on both accounts. Could it be something to do with having one of the tidiest-looking AMs down Cardiff Bay – Huw Lewis ?

Cardiff’s signs are a laughing stock. They are NEVER cleaned. Eventually, they get so bad they have to be replaced. Which is cheaper – cleaning, or buying anew and then erecting ?

You could blame the Lib Dems, who run the city now. But Cardiff’s roads have always been bad; when Alun Michael, Labour MP for Cardiff South and Penarth, was chairman of transport, he often complained about the damage that poor city road surfaces was causing to his buses.

One sometimes fears that some Labour administrations skimp on cleanliness because that is a “middle class preoccupation”. Unfortunately, Cardiff seems to possess a culture of couldn’t care less. Or the surveyor hasn’t had the oomph to demand a bigger budget.

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Those with long memories will quickly recognise Den Dover, the Tory MEP expelled from both party and group for directing no less than £500,000 in the wrong direction (ie, family-wards), as an old acquaintance.

When the Conservative Party was a term of abuse in Wales – in days when miners still existed, and the far-Left still thought it was going somewhere rather than nowhere – Mr Dover made an acquaintance with Wales.

He was no more than another Englishman sent to Wales to learn his political trade. I doubt he ever came back after the election. Indeed, a carpet-bagger once, a carpet-bagger always. Eventually he won a Parliamentary seat in Lancashire, where he was known for his anti-European ramblings.

When the tide swung against the Tories, he swiftly switched to become a Tory MEP for the same region, despite his true beliefs. Yet his family home has always remained in Hertfordshire, despite claiming he lived in Euxton, near Chorley, Lancs. Perhaps he was mixing Chorley, Lancs with Chorleywood, Herts…

Anyway, the family cash went to Hertfordshire.

In October 1974, he was his party’s Parliamentary candidate in Caerffili. His catchline was moderately memorable – “Roll over with Dover”, if I remember correctly. His vote, however, was far from memorable – he managed only 11.5pc, up against Plaid’s Phil Williams, who before long came within a ace of capturing the seat, also setting the foundations for his party’s current control of the county borough. Continue reading »

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Cambria Books

New publication.
Important contribution to our knowledge of the Arab Spring by Denis Campbell.

Cambria Books

New publication. Entertaining guide to the US Elections by Denis Campbell.
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