South Wales Echo

We’re fighting for every vote – labour’s starmer

- RUTH MOSALSKI Political Editor ruth.mosalski@walesonlin­e.co.uk

LABOUR leader Sir Keir Starmer has said Boris Johnson is to blame for growing support for independen­ce in Wales and Scotland.

On his first visit to South Wales since being elected to his party’s top job a year ago, Sir Keir said the growing support for independen­ce was Mr Johnson’s fault.

“I think there’s disaffecti­on for what Boris Johnson is doing in Westminste­r, but the idea that the answer to that is to break up the UK is in my view the wrong answer.

“What we want is a strong Wales in a fair UK. Are people disillusio­ned with Westminste­r? Yes they are.”

Repeated polls have shown a strengthen­ing of support for independen­ce with in Wales with around 25% supporting it in successive polls – and far fewer saying they are actively opposed to it.

Sir Keir, who was visiting Wales to support the Welsh Labour election campaign ahead of May’s vote, said: “I think there’s a strong disillusio­n with Westminste­r. You pick that up in Wales and in Scotland.

In so far as there’s disaffecti­on with politics, the answer to that is a strong Wales, a stronger Wales in a fairer UK.”

He said he is working with former Prime Minister Gordon Brown on a review of devolution, not just in terms of countries but regions. But he declined to be drawn on what powers he personally would like to see devolved to Wales.

“Nothing is off limits. We’re not just looking at what powers may lie in Westminste­r or in the Senedd but more generally at whether powers can go into the regions across the UK not just Wales.

“This isn’t just a formal constituti­onal ambition, it’s literally to put power closer to the people because I think that’s one of the central challenges”.

Campaignin­g ahead of next month’s election, he said the Welsh Government had been “first class”.

“We’re fighting for every vote in Wales, no-one has actually voted yet and Mark Drakeford and Welsh Labour have got a very good record,” he said.

“The test of any government is how they responded to any crisis, and we’ve had a crisis over the last 13 or 14 months.

“Welsh Labour has been absolutely first class, cautious, reassuring, explaining through the careful plans for safeguardi­ng the economy.

“It’s safeguarde­d 165,000 jobs and the virus I think, the infection rate is the lowest in the UK and I think Wales has today become the third fastest roll

Mark Drakeford and I have had a very good working relationsh­ip for a number of years now

out of the vaccine in the world.

“If anyone wants to have hard evidence of why they should vote for Labour in three weeks time I would say look at the record in the last term and over the pandemic and let Welsh Labour finish the job they’ve started.

Asked how jobs and vaccines were solely Welsh Government success stories, he replied: “What the Welsh Government has done which Westminste­r hasn’t done is to target it on the businesses that most need it taking into account turnover and business rates etc.

“If you look at what distinguis­hes the Welsh scheme to the scheme in England, it’s that Mark and Welsh Labour have a targeted approach which is why they’ve safeguarde­d 165,000 jobs.

“The actual rollout, obviously there’s overlap, what happens on the ground is very much a matter for Welsh Labour.

“There are other examples, the testing in England was as good as outsourced, in Wales it’s been under public ownership and local control and been a lot lot better.

“If you look across the UK people point to Wales, as an example of careful, cautious decisions by Mark Drakeford and Welsh Labour Government and explained to the public. In terms of a test of leadership this has been one and Mark Drakeford has come through it with flying colours.”

Asked what would happen on May 7 if Labour’s numbers are down, as polling suggests, and if so whether that would be a failure of Labour generally or of Mark Drakeford’s government, Sir Keir dodged the question.

“We’re three weeks away and we’re fighting for every vote,” he said. “We’re going to put forward the record. I can’t think of a better reason to vote Labour on May 6 than that a First Minister has done a very good job under the most difficult circumstan­ces.”

Meanwhile, asked whether the visit of a UK Labour leader during the campaign for Welsh Labour in a Welsh election would further confuse people already grappling with different rules across the UK, he said: “Not in the slightest. Mark Drakeford and I have had a very good working relationsh­ip for a number of years now. I’ve known Mark for a long time and I’ve worked closely with Mark since we’ve been in the pandemic.

“His office and my office are in almost daily contact and we work very closely.

“We speak every other week or so. Or text. We work very well together and there’s very few issues we need to sort out between ourselves.”

Sir Keir Starmer

 ??  ?? Labour Leader Sir Keir Starmer, second left, with, from left, First Minister Mark Drakeford and Senedd candidates John Griffiths and Jayne Bryant during a visit to CAF in Newport
Labour Leader Sir Keir Starmer, second left, with, from left, First Minister Mark Drakeford and Senedd candidates John Griffiths and Jayne Bryant during a visit to CAF in Newport
 ?? GARETH EVERETT ?? Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer during a visit to CAF in Newport
GARETH EVERETT Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer during a visit to CAF in Newport

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