Bangor Mail

WELCOME FOR DECISION BLAMED ON EXTRA WORKLOAD FROM BREXIT

- Gareth Williams

THE UK Government has dropped plans that would have slashed the number of Welsh MPs by more than a quarter.

Unveiled in 2016, the proposals included cutting Wales’ representa­tion in Westminste­r from 40 to 29 to allow a smaller House of Commons of 600 rather than 650 members.

But facing several hurdles – including some resistance from its own MPs – the Government has now announced that it will not proceed with the plans, citing the extra workload that MPs now face due to Brexit.

If implemente­d, the plans would have seen the political map of North Wales, which currently returns 11 MPs to London, change dramatical­ly.

But proposing to reduce this to seven, they included:

Anglesey and Arfon largely merging into a single seat

A new constituen­cy of North Clwyd and Gwynedd stretching from Tywyn in the south west up to St Asaph in the north east

South Clwyd and North Montgomery­shire running from Ruthin all the way down to Machynllet­h

Proposed seat of Colwyn and Conwy taking in the resorts of Abergele, Colwyn Bay, Conwy, Llandudno, Penrhyn Bay and Rhos on Sea

Flint and Rhuddlan also running along the coast, taking in electoral wards from the existing Delyn and Vale of Clwyd constituen­cies

A new seat of

Wrexham

Maelor would incorporat­e wards in Clwyd South

Despite this Chloe Smith, a Minister of State for the Cabinet Office, told the Commons last Tuesday that future boundary changes were still proposed on the basis of retaining 650 MPs.

Ynys Mon AM, Rhun ap Iorwerth, was among those who campaigned against the boundary changes which would have seen Anglesey merged with another constituen­cy across the Menai Strait.

This, he said, ignored its status as an island and cited the protection given to other islands such as the Isle of Wight and the Western Isles.

But welcoming the latest developmen­ts, he told the Local Democracy Reporting Service: “I argued strongly – including giving personal evidence to the Boundary Commission consultati­on – that Ynys Mon should remain a single electoral unit.

“Under the plans on the table, an exception was to be made in the case of the Isle of Wight, which wanted to be larger than its ideal size, and islands off the coast of Scotland, which wanted to be smaller than the average.

“Requests to treat Ynys Mon in a similar way had been ignored.”

Also among those welcoming this new developmen­t is campaign group, the Electoral Reform Society.

Its chief executive, Darren Hughes, said that slashing the number of MPs would have “undermined the voices of ordinary people in Parliament and hurt democratic scrutiny,” describing it as “an executive power grab.”

But he went on “Once the pandemic we need a root and to say: is over, branch reform of how our democracy works in the UK.

“Without shrinking the size of the Government, cutting MPs would have done little more than enhance the already disproport­ionate power of ministers.

“Now that the Government have accepted the need for proper representa­tion in the Commons, they must focus on reducing the number of unelected peers in the bloated House of Lords.

“At 800 members, it’s the biggest second chamber in the world and needs a genuine overhaul.”

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