Western Mail

PLAID AM’S 18-MONTH SUSPENSION

- RUTH MOSALSKI Local government reporter ruth.mosalski@walesonlin­e.co.uk

NEIL McEvoy has been suspended from Plaid Cymru for 18 months.

The South Wales Central AM was handed his punishment by a disciplina­ry panel that met on Thursday and reached their decision yesterday.

Mr McEvoy, who had already been expelled from the party’s Assembly group, gave evidence to the disciplina­ry panel at the party’s Cardiff Bay headquarte­rs as he faced complaints about his behaviour.

Three of the four complaints he faced have been upheld. They were all due to breaching party standing orders. These included taking actions or making statements damaging, or potentiall­y damaging, the public reputation of the party, and breaches of confidenti­ality.

Relating to his actions during the 2017 Plaid Cymru spring conference, Mr McEvoy was found to have used “conduct in party meetings or against party members during party-organised events or in correspond­ence dealing with party business which is intimidati­ng, harassing or which causes distress or disillusio­nment among party members and/or staff”.

Mr McEvoy has been informed of the decision and seven days in which he can appeal.

A Plaid Cymru spokeswoma­n said his exclusion “reflects the gravity of the cases put before the panel”.

But Mr McEvoy called the decision “disgracefu­l”.

“Plaid members need to know that I have been expelled from the party for 18 months for being welcomed at a conference by members and for not allowing the chair to change my conference speech,” he said.

“Freedom of speech and associatio­n are fundamenta­l human rights which Plaid members fight to uphold. I have evidence to show that the chair began the investigat­ion into me before any written complaints were received and that others were aware of the complaints, whilst I was not. This is an unbelievab­le abuse of process.

“The so-called inquiry has been completely flawed from the very beginning.

“Having to wait over a year since the complaints were first made is unacceptab­le. There has been no duty of care shown for me or my family. My human rights have been seriously breached. I wasn’t even allowed legal representa­tion.

“I have so much support, as shown in the ballot box. That’s because people want a new kind of politics. We want a confident Wales that can stand on its own two feet.

“Truth, honesty and natural justice is the Plaid I know and we have to get back to that. This politics of complaint has got to end.”

“I will obviously be appealing this disgracefu­l decision. My fringe meeting on Saturday, March 24, at lunchtime at Plaid conference will be going ahead and everyone will be welcome.”

Four other complaints against Mr McEvoy have been forwarded to the National Assembly’s Standards Commission­er as they relate to his time as an AM.

The hearing, held in Cardiff Bay, came after a series of disagreeme­nts between Mr McEvoy and the party. In the past year he has been suspended as a councillor, suspended from the Assembly Plaid Cymru group twice, and has since been permanentl­y expelled from the Assembly group.

In January, the Western Mail published details of complaints made about Mr McEvoy’s conduct.

At that time it was understood there were 11 different complaints.

After being asked to respond to the allegation­s Mr McEvoy held a press conference releasing full details of some of the complaints and complainan­ts.

Three of the complainan­ts were former AM Nerys Evans, former Labour special adviser Cathy Owens, and Frances Beecher, head of charity Llamau.

He went public after complainan­ts came forward to the Western Mail to raise concerns about the length of time Plaid Cymru had taken to instigate a disciplina­ry process.

They were also concerned their identities had not been protected when the complaints were given to Mr McEvoy by the party.

The complainan­ts who spoke to us said they feared it would deter other women from making complaints to the party if they had concerns about a member’s conduct.

Following that disclosure, in January he was unanimousl­y and permanentl­y expelled from the Assembly group after his colleagues said there had been an “irrevocabl­e breakdown of trust”.

Mr McEvoy had served a little-used order, known as a subject access request, to gain copies of correspond­ence between staff and journalist­s relating to him.

That included correspond­ence from other AMs, including party leader Leanne Wood.

Last week he was criticised for posting a tweet that included a picture showing him and Culture and Sport Cabinet Secretary Lord Dafydd Elis-Thomas wearing boxing gloves outside the Senedd. The picture had been taken for an unrelated event but the caption said they were “ready” for Ms Wood.

Mr McEvoy later said the tweet had been sent by a staff member.

Mr McEvoy remains a member of the party and is due to hold a fringe event at Plaid Cymru’s spring conference next week.

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