When the Western Mail runs a story quoting a “senior Welsh Tory” questioning whether party centrist Nick Bourne should “stay on as leader”, one must wonder how close that individual is to the self-styled True Wales group led by a descendant of Owain Glyndwr.

The Mail reporter with a direct line to a link to that long-ago slaughterer of English colonists is Martin Shipton, the paper’s chief reporter. The man in question is no less than David Davies, MP and previous AM for Monmouth.

Reporters are always coy about naming people who have given them information which turns up in the paper without attribution.  With exceptionally good reason.

The journalist’s job is to wheedle into the public domain accurate information about what is going on, in particular behind the scenes and in what were once smoke-filled rooms.

It should be no secret that Mr Shipton has long had links with the David Davies’s family of Newport, and has been more willing to run their right-wing diatribes against the Assembly than many other journalists.

In so doing, Mr Shipton provides a public service.  The problem, though, is to judge the weight which the Davies-family comments carry within the party in general.

The answer is – not much. A small coterie exists of Newport-based right-wingers; but their weight outside that city seems to be very light.

When the Tories brought out their 39-page dossier Rhodri Morgan – Leadership without Purpose journalists immediately recognised its main author as being Richard Hazelwood, for South Wales Echo political correspondent – he quit the job to become Tory press officer in the Assembly just before his paper closed its office in the Assembly, just as the Western Mail closed its own office – and his press office.

Mr Hazelwood is a wizard at filing significant press releases, etc on his computer – as well, apparently, in paper, to prevent loss. The dossier’s 13,400 words were the sort of political criticism of a opposing leader which was to be expected.

His section on “Rhodri-isms” was lovely. “Denial is more than a river in Egypt,” Mr Morgan told Nick Bourne in accusing him of forgetting the history of the Tory Party in government.

And he said that Alun Cairns, in his review of the Welsh economy, “looks like a Victorian undertaker looking forward to winter”.

I have heard many others as good.

Mr Bourne ran into trouble over the 230 words about Rhodri as a “dedicated follower of fashion”. The First Minister sometimes turns up (although not in the Senedd) in casual sports sweater – but critics should take care. One of the Plaid ministers has turned up for party press conferences in attire just as casual.

This turned largely into a BBC story. Modryb from Llandaff seems intent on bringing down at least one minister – they already possess the scalp of Alun Cairns, the Tory shadow education spokesman, after getting him, in a light-hearted radio programme, to make just the sort of rapidly-delivered light-hearted remark which the programme exists for, about Italians (and which, according to the Western Mail at the time, most Welsh Italians just brushed aside). Continue reading »

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Edwina Hart took the weekly Assembly cabinet press briefing like she was a negotiator for the Banking, Finance and Insurance Union (her previous employer) scattering the terrified ranks of banking employers tied up in the current world financial crisis.

Bluntly, she was convinced today she was right, and possessed the answers – which meant she charged forward at top speed, promulgating policies on both sides, dismissing her enemies with a light touch of sarcasm, and acknowledging her own changes of mind (‘I preferred this, but the evidence said that’), and threatening dire consequences to those who don’t follow her elected lead.

Some of the health professions adore her (try the nurses). “She tells it as it is,” said one. They are bedazzled with her ability to get things done; to cut out the bull**** (although that was not quite their wording).

As former president of BIFU, the Gower AM knows all about negotiating. One presumes that her experience at that level in a middle class profession is being put to good and winning use when she deals with another middle class profession, the members of one of Britain’s toughest trade groups, the doctors massed within the British Medical Association. Continue reading »

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We all know the Western Mail (otherwise Llais y Sais) is losing readers, and that their reporters sometimes can’t find stories (after all, it is still the “silly season“).

But today’s effort on the future leadership of the Welsh Labour Party in the wake of Rhodri Morgan is peculiarly off-centre.

So peculiarly off-centre that it’s worth examining, for what might be behind it.

Examine first the author. Martin Shipton, chief reporter (never political reporter, although that is where his interest lies) hardly knows the Assembly, apart from over a phone line.

Although a Welshman, he spent some years in north east England, has been close to Labour up there, and sometimes displays the anti-regional assembly bias that seems to have been a bit too common within Labour in both that region and this.

When not much news is around, reporters will often be exceptionally receptive to the musings of their senior colleagues. If that colleague is Mail editor Alan Edmunds, a musing rapidly becomes a story – the pair have been extremely close ever since Edmunds headed Wales on Sunday, and Shipton was his political man. Continue reading »

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Jane Davidson gave her First-Minster impression today. And very realistic it seemed.

She gave a long and spirited exposition at the weekly Cabinet briefing for the press on everything she and her environment department were planning this week, explaining that she had a “very full” week ahead.

We were told about flooding, keeping Wales tidy, cycling, walking, the Joint Ministerial Committee (of first ministers, linking the various bits of the UK), energy, wind farms, Zimbabwe, separatism, the barrage, plus a few other topics touched on.

Having got through that lot at top rate, Ms Davidson suddenly exclaimed, “Oh, woops, and there are things this week which are not to do with my ministry.”

Continue reading »

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So Rhodri Morgan is not computer-literate.

Quite an admission for one of the top brains in the Assembly.

I somehow don’t quite believe it. I’m sure he knows full well how to find agendas for cabinet meetings on the intranet – that is the internet which is restricted to AMs, and tells a little of what is happening in the fifth floor inner sanctum six weeks before the rest of us can find something about it on the net.

The admission came in a plenary discussion on the (lack of) future for the current post office network. No-one has yet spelled it out so bluntly yet, but almost the entire network possesses no worthwhile future.

The First Minister admitted he was one of those who still renews his car tax at the local post office because “I cannot use the internet”.


Continue reading »

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Almost caught out by the bell…because it didn’t ring.

We all know that Rhodri Morgan, First Minister, ensures that he keeps himself fit. But not often can we see him taking advantage of that fitness.

Sitting at a table in what is pejoratively sometimes called the Dungeon in the Senedd, outside the AMs’ entrance to the debating chamber, I heard deputy presiding officer Rosemary Butler announcing to a pretty full house of members that, following agreement with party business managers, she had decided for this time to do away with the bell announcing voting time near the end of a plenary.

No doubt, the idea was to save a bit of time.

She had just told AMs to cast their first vote when a tall grey-haired gentleman rushed from a side room opposite the debating chamber, trying to pour himself into his jacket, and flashing an embarrassed grin my way.

Rhodri Morgan was on his way to vote. Perhaps he missed the first; he certainly caught the second.

It reminds me of the time when Mr Morgan tried to govern without a coalition with the Liberal Democrats to strengthen his position.

One important vote was lost…because a member had gone to the toilet I think.

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It’s good to know that the Assembly government is putting both its name and its money behind good beer.

No surprise after Rhodri Morgan’s address to the CAMRA UK annual general meeting in Cardiff this month.

But which ministry is putting cash into the Great Welsh Beer and Cider Festival at its new venue of the CRI, Cardiff on June 12 -14 (Thursday to Saturday) ? Economic development, tourism or even health.

Some CAMRA speakers had gone as far as to suggest that real ale is a solution to binge-drinking, on the grounds that CAMRA members never binge-drink, and beer in moderation is good for health !

Judging by civil servants’ inability to answer which ministry is paying, there must by a little face-saving involved. Maybe it’s health. Judging by the number of G and Ts that surgeons are said to knock back, a bit of alcohol would seem to do you good !

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Real kings are proclaimed by the people, rather than announced by proclamation and heralded by trumpeters.

So it is in Wales. Rhodri Morgan told Camra (the real-ale society) AGM in Cardiff about the effusive welcome he received in a Cardiff Bay pub (the White Hart, which is hardly one where Seneddwyr imbibe) after he took over as First MInister from Alun Michael.

This chap, apparently from a gypsy drinking party (!), grabbed Rhodri as he came in and serenaded (if not carried!) him around the bar, congratulating him on his election as “King of Wales”.

Should go down well in Rhodri’s canvassing for the local elections in valley-top estates.

In truth it shows what the Assembly is quietly achieving, even if it has taken more than 800 years. Owain Gwynedd (died 1170) was the last to assume the title “rex”. After that, the apex-title was merely “prince”.

Mind you, if Rhodri really becomes King Rhodri, there’ll be no further need to send new Assembly Measures up to Windsor for Frau Saxa-Coburg-Gotha to sign them. Lord Elis-Thomas can simply whip them up the fifth floor for His Royal Highness to do the work.

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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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