Cynon Valley

‘Why I want to lead the Tories’

Politician­s Paul Davies and Suzy Davies are competing for the chance to lead the Conservati­ves into the 2021 Assembly election. Here, Aberdare born Suzy Davies tells DAVID WILLIAMSON about her childhood, her political awakening, and the ideas and experien

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SUZY Davies AM is in the running to be next leader of the Welsh Tories following the resignatio­n of Andrew RT Davies. she tells us why she threw her hat in the ring.

THERE is at least one thing suzy Davies, 55, has in common with David Cameron.

They are both fans of Benny Hill’s 1971 novelty hit Ernie (The Fastest Milkman In The West).

It was the first record Ms Davies ever bought, and Mr Cameron named the song about the lovelorn milkman as one of his Desert Island Discs back in 2006 and entertaine­d a TV studio audience during an advertisem­ent break in 2015 by reciting from it.

suzy’s dad, Hywel Davies, worked for the south Wales Electricit­y Board and his work meant she, along with her mum, Aurwen, and younger sister, Hilary, regularly had to up sticks.

she has lived in Bridgend, the Cynon Valley, Cardiff, Brecon, swansea, Newtown, Aberystwyt­h and now the Dyfi Valley.

she spent the biggest chunk of her childhood in Cwmbach, near Aberdare, where she said the local politics were “Labour, Labour, Labour.”

“You would watch the telly,” she said. “You knew there were other parties, and I just thought, ‘Well, why don’t we see anything about them here?’” The next stop for the family was Lisvane, Cardiff.

“I remember getting on the bus and being asked by children if I was Pakistani because of my accent,” she said.

At the age of 16 she was uprooted again. she admits she took the news that they were moving to Brecon with a “slightly heavy heart” because she liked the bright lights of Cardiff.

she said: “It turned out to be completely marvellous. I went to Brecon High school [and] met lifelong friends...

“It’s a bit like the Valleys in that everybody knows everybody else and really feels a sense of responsibi­lity to each other and that is the thing that has really stuck with me as a political imperative.”

The 1974 three-day week stands out in her memory.

“The lights used to go off and I had to do my homework by candleligh­t,” she said. “It coincided with when the IRA were very active and so we had bomb scares in our schools as well...

“Politics felt really up close and personal at certain stages.” A further moment of political awakening came when “people I knew went to fight in the Falklands”.

Ms Davies studied law at Exeter University but came back to Brecon instead of pursuing a postgradua­te qualificat­ion.

she worked in a tourist informatio­n centre and then spent fun and culture-packed years in posts at theatres in swansea, Newtown and at Aberystwyt­h’s art centre.

A life-changing moment came when she met husband-to-be Geraint. “I met him at a friend’s wedding,” she said.

“My next-door neighbour in Brecon married his next-door neighbour up in the Dyfi Valley.”

He farms and runs a caravan park. They have two sons, Alex and Calum.

she sent the boys to sunday school so they would be able to make up their own minds about faith.

“One thing that always stuns me is the level of fellowship that faith brings – and how people support each other.

“Whether that’s through politics or faith, they’re both great.”

she decided to enrol at the University of Glamorgan and gain the legal qualificat­ions she needed to practise as a solicitor. Re-entering the workforce brought financial challenges.

“[It] actually cost me to go to work because of childcare, she said, adding: “I understand how childcare is a big deal for families, it’s not just for women, because not everyone is in the fortunate position I was to have somebody who could basically tide me over financiall­y, because I was married.”

The experience of trying to buy a house and a desire to be able to do things for herself helped her, as she puts it, discover she was a Conservati­ve, in her 30s.

“At that time in your life, not paying a lot of tax is something that appeals to you,” she said.

she became involved with a local Conservati­ve associatio­n and was encouraged by party stalwart, and now Montgomery­shire MP, Glyn Davies to stand for election.

In the 2005 Westminste­r election she finished third in Plaid Cymru-held Carmarthen East and Dinefwr, and she came second in the 2007 Assembly contest when she stood against Liberal Democrat Kirsty Williams in Brecon and Radnorshir­e.

she tried again in the same constituen­cy in the 2010 Westminste­r vote before winning an Assembly seat on the south Wales West regional list in 2011.

This enthusiast­ic Welsh speaker enjoys friendship­s beyond the Tory tribe.

“I’ve got friends with all kinds of different political views and, of course, in the Assembly itself, being such a small institutio­n, you can’t let really significan­t political difference­s spoil relationsh­ips,” she said.

When she escapes Cardiff Bay she and her husband enjoy a takeaway.

“For us, because we don’t see each other that often, a saturday night in is just as nice as a saturday night out,” she said.

“The establishm­ent that does best out of us in Powys is the Machynllet­h kebab shop... They are the best kebabs I’ve ever eaten.”

The first album she ever bought was Abba’s Arrival. she’s excited at the thought of going to see Mamma Mia 2.

“There’s nothing wrong with lightness and triviality,” she said.

“I think the world could do with a little more of it occasional­ly.”

she was a founding board member of the Welsh Internatio­nal Film Festival and her favourite movie is the Frank Capra classic It’s a Wonderful Life.

“I just love that idea of one small individual making a huge difference,” she said.

A Jane Austen fan, she says: “I think you can learn an enormous amount about the human experience through fiction,” she said.

“A book that really resonates with me and that I like enormously is Behind the scenes at the Museum by Kate Atkinson.”

Myfanwy Alexander’s Bloody Eisteddfod is on her desk – but it may be a while before she can pick that up.

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 ??  ?? Suzy Davies AM is hoping to be the next leader of the Welsh Conservati­ves
Suzy Davies AM is hoping to be the next leader of the Welsh Conservati­ves

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