South Wales Echo

Plaid back deal with Labour

- BRONWEN WEATHERBY & ROBERT DALLING echo.newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

PLAID Cymru members have shown their overwhelmi­ng support to plans for a Senedd co-operation agreement with Labour.

On Saturday, the last day of the party’s annual conference, 94% of members decided in favour of the threeyear deal.

The wide-ranging deal covers 46 policy areas including providing free school meals for all primary school children, the establishm­ent of a freeat-point-of-need national care system and building a north-south railway.

It does not amount to a coalition, meaning Plaid will not enter government, and party leader Adam Price has assured members and supporters the party will remain in opposition.

Following the vote, Mr Price said: “This is a huge step forward for Wales and our democracy. The co-operation agreement will bring immediate, tangible and long-term benefit for the people of Wales.

“All primary school children will now receive free school meals; there will be free childcare for all two-yearolds; and radical action to tackle the housing crisis. There will be stability payments to support family farms; exploratio­n of an accelerate­d pathway to net zero by 2035; the creation of Ynni Cymru – a company to expand community-owned renewable energy generation; and a new and reformed Senedd – bigger, more diverse and gender balanced in law.

“From feeding our children to caring for our elderly, this is a nationbuil­ding programme for Government which will change the lives of thousands of people the length and breadth of our country for the better.”

He added: “Almost a quarter of a century ago, people in Wales voted for self-government for Wales, with a promise of a new type of politics. They placed their trust in a new democracy with an instructio­n to work differentl­y – inclusivel­y and cooperativ­ely.

“In the face of the pandemic and a hostile Conservati­ve government in Westminste­r – a government determined to do everything it can to undermine our long-contested national institutio­ns – it is in our nation’s interests for the two parties to work together for Wales.”

Mr Price had addressed the conference on Friday saying the agreement, if passed, would be “a down-payment on independen­ce” – the party’s main goal.

Discussion­s between the two parties were announced in September, months after Labour won 30 of the 60 seats in the Welsh Parliament, allowing it to remain in government but without a majority.

Plaid Cymru gained an extra seat in the election, bringing its total to 13, but dropped to third behind the Conservati­ves. A deal was reached by the parties’ executive committees on November 21, which also proposed expanding the Welsh parliament, rent controls and local tourism taxes, as well as a pledge to move the net zero target from 2050 to 2035.

Mr Price and First Minister Mark

Drakeford formally unveiled the cooperatio­n agreement on Monday.

However, it required ratificati­on by Plaid Cymru members to pass the final hurdle. Having now achieved this, the co-operation agreement will come into effect upon signing by the First Minister and the leader of Plaid Cymru.

 ?? CHRIS FAIRWEATHE­R/HUW EVANS AGENCY ?? Plaid Cymru leader Adam Price and First Minister Mark Drakeford unveil the agreement last week.
CHRIS FAIRWEATHE­R/HUW EVANS AGENCY Plaid Cymru leader Adam Price and First Minister Mark Drakeford unveil the agreement last week.

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