South Wales Echo

Carwyn predicts tough election

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CARWYN Jones has launched Welsh Labour’s local election campaign, admitting it will be tough to hold on to the gains the party secured in 2012.

Labour has overall control in 10 of Wales’ 22 local authoritie­s, having improved its position from running just four councils between 2008 and 2012.

The First Minister told candidates and activists at the launch event for the May 4 elections in Newport yesterday: “We will run this campaign on the basis that we are an honest party with promises that we deliver on.

“Last year [at the Assembly election] people asked why should they vote Labour and we said we had made promises and kept all those promises.

“It’s the same in councils up and down Wales, where Labour councillor­s have made promises that they have delivered on. We know we’ve had seven years of austerity. The Tories said to us there needs to be a period of austerity to balance the books... we’re still waiting, seven years on.

“As we’ve seen cuts year after year after year from the Tory government in London, we’ve seen Welsh Labour councils and indeed the Welsh Government trying to deliver services despite those cuts – and we’ve done it.”

Mr Jones said the Conservati­ves would claim Labour should make more cuts, while simultaneo­usly “promising the earth” with uncosted promises that would cost millions of pounds, which they could not deliver.

He claimed that despite the financial challenges arising out of cuts imposed in Westminste­r, Labour had never abandoned its principles.

“We stand for fairness, we stand for justice and for opportunit­y because we are at the end of the day the party that represents working people,” he said. “We have our roots in communitie­s that suffered so much under the Tories in the 1980s and 1990s.

“Many of the people who destroyed our communitie­s are now in Ukip, claiming they are the voice of the working people. But they’re the people who supported Thatcher in the miners’ strike, they’re the people who supported the loss of steel jobs that we saw in the 1980s – and now they claim to be representi­ng our communitie­s up and down Wales.”

The First Minister acknowledg­ed it was going to be hard for Labour to hold on to the seats it won in 2012.

“It was hard last year,” he said. “I turned up in Bridgend to my count and the first question I was asked on the TV was when I was going to resign because we were going to lose loads of seats. But we didn’t. Do you know why? Because we worked hard delivering messages that people understood.

“We knocked on doors, we spoke to people, we listened to people’s concerns and we saw the result last year.”

In the May 2016 Assembly election, Labour lost one seat – to Plaid Cymru leader Leanne Wood in Rhondda.

Asked about cuts to school budgets in his home borough of Bridgend, Mr Jones said the funding of individual schools was based on the number of pupils they had. If the number fell, the budget would go down because it was based on an allocation per pupil.

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