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History of Plaid Cymru - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

History of Plaid Cymru

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Plaid Cymru — The Party of Wales
"Plaid Cymru Logo"
Leader Ieuan Wyn Jones AM
Founded August 5, 1925
Headquarters 18 Park Grove,
Cardiff, CF10 3BN
Wales
Political Ideology Welsh Independence
Social democracy
Political Position Centre-left
International Affiliation none
European Affiliation European Free Alliance
European Parliament Group Greens-EFA
Colours Yellow
Website www.plaidcymru.org
See also Politics of the UK

Political parties
Elections

See also Plaid Cymru: The Party of Wales

Plaid Cymru; The Party of Wales (IPA:/plaɪd ˈkəmri/; often referred in common speech simply as Plaid) originated after a 1925 National Eisteddfod meeting, held in Pwllheli, Gwynedd.[1]

Representatives from the Army of the Welsh Home Rulers (Byddin Ymreolwr Cymru) and The Welsh Movement (Y Mudiad Cymreig), both founded only the previous year, agreed to meet and discuss the need of a "Welsh party".[2]

Founded originally under the name Plaid Genedlaethol Cymru, the National Party of Wales, the party would attract members from the political left, the political right, and the political centre whose principal aims include the promotion of the Welsh language and for the political independence of the Welsh nation.

Contents

[edit] Foundation 1925

Deffroad Cymru, the Awakening of Wales Christopher Williams (1911)
Deffroad Cymru,
the Awakening of Wales
Christopher Williams
(1911)

Discussions for the need of a "Welsh party" had been circulating since the 19th century.[3] With the generation or so before 1922 there "had been a marked growth in the constitutional recognition of the Welsh nation", wrote historian Dr. John Davies.[4] A Welsh national consciousness re-emerged during the 19th century; leading to the establishment of the National Eisteddfod in 1861, the University of Wales (Prifysgol Cymru) in 1893, and the National Library of Wales (Llyfrgell Genedlaethol Cymru) in 1911, and by 1915 the Welsh Guards (Gwarchodlu Cymreig) was formed to include Wales in the UK national component to the Foot Guards. By 1924 there were people in Wales "eager to make their nationality the focus of Welsh politics".[2]

Support for home rule for Wales and Scotland amongst most political parties was strongest in 1918 following the independence of other European countries after the First World War, and the Easter Rising in Ireland, wrote Dr. Davies.[5] However, in the UK General Elections of 1922, 1923, and 1924; "Wales as a political issue was increasingly eliminated from the [national agenda]".[2] By August 1925 unemployment in Wales rose to 28.5%, this in contrast to the economic boom in the early 1920's.[2] For Wales, the long depression began in 1925.[2]

It was in this climate that the two groups met. Both organizations sent a delegation of three to the meeting, with H.R. Jones heading the Welsh Home Rulers group and Saunders Lewis heading The Welsh Movement. They were joined by Lewis Valentine, D.J. Williams, and Ambrose Bebb, among others. The principal aim of the party was to foster a Welsh speaking Wales.[6] To this end it was agreed that party business be conducted in Welsh, and that members sever all links with other British parties.[6] Lewis insisted on these principles before he would agree to the Pwllheli conference.

According to the 1911 census, out of a population of just under 2.5 million, 43.5% of the total population of Wales spoke Welsh as a primary language.[7] This was a decrease from the 1891 census with 54.4% speaking Welsh out of a population of 1.5 million.[8]

With these prerequisites Lewis condemned "'Welsh nationalism' as it had hitherto existed, a nationalism characterized by inter-party conferences, an obsession with Westminster and a willingness to accept a subservient position for the Welsh language", wrote Dr. Davies.[6] It may be because of these strict positions that the party failed to attract politicians of experience in its early years.[6] However, the party's members believed its founding was an achievement in itself; "merely by existing, the party was a declaration of the distinctiveness of Wales", wrote Dr. Davies.[6]

Lewis Valentine Plaid Cenedlaethol Cymru's first president in the 1936 pamplet Coelcerth Rhyddid
Lewis Valentine
Plaid Cenedlaethol Cymru's first president in the 1936 pamplet Coelcerth Rhyddid

In these early years Plaid Genedlaethol Cymru published a monthly paper called Y Ddraig Goch (the Red Dragon, the national symbol of Wales) and held an annual summer school.

H.R. Jones, the party's full-time secretary, established a few party branches, while Valentine served as party president between 1925 and 1926. In the UK General Election of 1929, Valentine stood for Caernarfon and polled 609 votes. Later they became know as the 'the Gallant Six Hundred' when Dafydd Iwan, the current party president, immortalized them in song.[6][9]

By 1932 the aims of self government and Welsh representation at the League of Nations had been added to that of preserving Welsh language and culture. However this move, and the party's early attempts to develop an economic critique, did not lead to the broadening of its appeal beyond that of an intellectual and socially conservative Welsh language pressure group.[10]

[edit] The Lewis Doctrine 1926-1939

Saunders LewisIn the 1936 pamphlet Coelcerth Rhyddid.
Saunders Lewis
In the 1936 pamphlet Coelcerth Rhyddid.

During the inter-war years, Plaid Genedlaethol Cymru was most successful as a social and educational pressure group rather than as a political party.[11] For Saunders Lewis, party president 1926 - 1939, "the chief aim of the party [is] to 'take away from the Welsh their sense of inferiority... to remove from our beloved country the mark and shame of conquest.'" Lewis sought to cast Welshness into a new context, wrote Dr Davies.[11]

Lewis wished to demonstrate how Welsh heritage was linked as one of the 'founders of European civilization.[11] Lewis, a self-described "strong monarchist," wrote "Civilization is more than an abstraction. It must have a local habitation and name. Here its name is Wales".[11][12] Additionally, Lewis strove for the stability and well-being of Welsh-speaking communities, decried both capitalism and socialism and promoted what he called perchentyaeth; a policy of 'distributing property among the masses.[11]

[edit] Broadcasting campaigns & 1931 Census

Plaid Cymru's logo from 1936-2006
Plaid Cymru's logo from 1936-2006

With the advent of broadcasting in Wales, Plaid Genedlaethol Cymru protested the lack of Welsh language programmes in Wales and launched a campaign to withhold license fees. Pressure was successful, and by the mid 1930's more Welsh language programming was broadcasted, with the formal establishment of a Welsh regional broadcasting channel by 1937.[13]

According to the 1931 census, out of a population of just over 2.5 million, the percentage of Welsh speakers in Wales droped to 36.8%, with Ynys Mon recording the highest concentration of speakers at 87.4%, followed by Cardigan at 87.1%, Merionedd at 86.1%, and Carmarthen at 82.3%. Caernarfon listed 79.2%.[14] Radnor and Monmouth ranked lowest with a concentration of Welsh speakers less then 6% of the population speaking Welsh.[14]

[edit] Tân yn Llŷn 1936

see also Penyberth

Coelcerth Rhyddid Plaid Cenedlaethol Cymru's 1936 political pamplet
Coelcerth Rhyddid
Plaid Cenedlaethol Cymru's 1936 political pamplet

Welsh nationalism was ignited in 1936 when the UK government settled on establishing a bombing school at Penyberth on the Llŷn peninsula in Gwynedd. The events surrounding the protest, known as Tân yn Llŷn (Fire in Llŷn), helped define Plaid Genedlaethol Cymru.[15] The UK government settled on Llŷn as the sight for its new bombing school after similar locations Northumberland and Dorset were met with protests.[16]

However, UK Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin refused to hear the case against the bombing school in Wales, despite a deputation representing half a million Welsh protesters.[16] Protest against the bombing school was summed up by Lewis when he wrote that the UK government was intent upon turning one of the 'essential homes of Welsh culture, idiom, and literature' into a place for promoting a barbaric method of warfare.[16] Construction of the bombing school building began exactly 400 years after the first Act of Union annexing Wales into England.[16]

On 8 September 1936 the bombing school building was set on fire and in the investigations which followed Saunders Lewis, Lewis Valentine, and D.J. Williams claimed responsibility.[16] The trial at Caernarfon failed to agree on a verdict and the case was sent to the Old Bailey in London. The "Three" were sentenced to nine months imprisonment in Wormwood Scrubs, and on their release they were greeted as heroes by fifteen thousand Welsh at a pavilion Caernarfon.[16]

D. J. Williams in the 1936 Plaid Cymru pamphlet Coelcerth Rhyddid
D. J. Williams in the 1936 Plaid Cymru pamphlet Coelcerth Rhyddid

Many Welsh were angered by the judge's scornful treatment of the Welsh language, by the decision to move the trial to London, and by the decision of University College, Swansea, to dismiss Lewis from his post before he had been found guilty.[15] Scholar and historian Dafydd Glyn Jones wrote of the fire that it was "the first time in five centuries that Wales struck back at England with a measure of violence... To the Welsh people, who had long ceased to believe that they had it in them, it was a profound shock.".[15]

However, despite the acclaim the events of Tân yn Llŷn generated, by 1938 Lewis' concept of perchentyaeth was firmly rejected as not a fundamental tenet of the party. In 1939 Lewis resigned as Plaid Genedleathol Cymru president citing that Wales was not ready to accept the leadership of a Roman Catholic.[15] Academic and theologian J E Daniel, the party's former vice-president between 1931-1935, was elected as president of Plaid Cenedlaethol Cymru in 1939, serving until 1943.[17]

[edit] Criticism

Saunders Lewis' perceived "elitist views", and a "condescending attitude towards some aspects of nonconformist, radical and pacifist traditions of Wales" drew criticism from fellow nationalist such as David J. Davies, a leftist party member.[11] Davies argued in favour of engaging English-speaking Welsh communities, and stressed the territorial integrity of Wales. Davies pointed towards Scandinavian countries as a model to emulate, and was active in the economic implications of Welsh self-government.[18]

In many ways it was Davies' ideal of Welsh nationalism which was adopted after the Second World War, wrote Dr. Davies. But it was Lewis' "brilliance and charismatic appeal" which was firmly associated with Plaid Genedlaethol Cymru in the 1930's.[16]

Plaid Genedlaethol Cymru's appeal may have been further complicated by the apparent "fascist-style corporatism shown by [Lewis] and other Roman Catholic leaders of the party", according to historian Lord Morgan.[19] Author G. A. Williams characterized the party of the 1930s as a "right wing force", and "Its journal refused to resist Hitler or Mussolini, ignored or tolerated anti-Semitism and, in effect, came out in support of Franco".[19][20][21][22]

However, within the context of the 1930s, other UK politicians of other parties offered endorsements for fascist leaders. In 1933 Winston Churchill characterised Mussolini as 'the greatest lawgiver among men',[23] and later wrote in his 1937 book Great Contemporaries, "If our country were defeated, I hope we should find a champion as admirable (as Hitler) to restore our courage and lead us back to our place among the nations". In the same work, Churchill expressed a hope that despite Hitler's apparent dictatorial tendencies, he would use his power to rebuild Germany into a worthy member of the world community. And in August 1936, Liberal party member David Lloyd George met Hitler at Berchtesgaden and offered some public comments that were surprisingly favourable to the German dictator, expressing warm enthusiasm both for Hitler personally and for Germany's public works schemes (upon returning, he wrote of Hitler in the Daily Express as "the greatest living German", "the George Washington of Germany").

[edit] Bards under the bed 1939-1945

During the Second World War the UK government felt it prudent to "avoid action which might foster the growth of an extreme Welsh nationalist movement".[24] Clement Attlee, then UK Secretary of State for Dominion Affairs, voiced concern over Welsh nationalists after a deputation of Welsh Labour UK parliamentarians met with him about ignoring Welsh issues during the conflict.

Attlee characterised Welsh nationalists as "mischievous [who] tend to be against the war effort".[24] In an effort to root-out Welsh nationalist sympathies in army units, the UK government minister of Labour and National Service reported that Welsh speaking men were posted to predominantly Welsh speaking units to report on anti-war sympathies.[24]

Additional plans were developed to counter growing Plaid Cymru influence and included "rolling out" a member of the U.K. Royal Family to "smooth things over", according to then constitutional expert Edward Iwi.[12] In a report he gave to then Home Secretary Herbert Morrison, Iwi proposed to make the then Princess Elizabeth Constable of Caernarfon Castle (a post then held by the Earl Lloyd George of Dwyfor), and patroness of Urdd Gobaith Cymru, and a touring of Wales as Urdd's patroness.[12]

The idea of posting the princess as constable of Caernarfon Castle was rejected by the Home Secretary as it might cause conflict between north and south Wales, and King George VI refused to let the teenage princess tour Wales as to not add undue pressure on her.[12] Additionally, the plan to make the princess patroness of Urdd Gobaith Cymru was dropped as it was thought unsuitable to link the princess to an organisation two of whose leading members were conscientious objectors".[12]

Bards under the bed was one term coined by UK officials referring to Welsh nationalists and nationalism during the war years.[24]

If ignoring the largely pacifist traditions of Welsh nationalism, some articles in the Welsh language press could be seen to give credence to Attlee's fears that Welsh nationalists would be used to spearhead an insurgency.[25] However, this characterisation misrepresented Welsh nationalist sentiments, as "[Welsh nationalists] did far more to bring victory than hasten defeat".[26]

Welsh Guards (Gwarchodlu Cymreig) in action near Cagny in France 19 July 1944. Plaid Cymru members served in the armed forces during the war
Welsh Guards (Gwarchodlu Cymreig) in action near Cagny in France 19 July 1944.
Plaid Cymru members served in the armed forces during the war

Ambrose Bebb, a founding member of the party, was one of the most outspoken party members in support of the War. Bebb considered Nazi Germany's total defeat in the war as essential.[27] Additionally, many of the Plaid Genedlaethol Cymru served in Britain's armed forces.[27] Lewis maintained a strict neutrality in his writings through his column Cwrs y Byd in Y Faner. It was his attempt at an unbiased interpretation of the causes and events of the war.[27]

Outside of the party's initial position on the war, party members were free to choose for themselves their level of support for the war effort. Plaid Genedlaethol Cymru was officially neutral regarding involvement the Second World War, which party leaders considered a continuation of the First World War. Central to the neutrality policy was the idea that Wales, as a nation, had the right to decide independently on its attitude towards war,[28] and the rejection of other nations to force Welshmen to serve in their armed forces.[28] With this challenging and revolutionary policy Lewis hoped a significant number of Welshmen would refuse to join the British Army.[27]

South Wales Borderers Cap BadgePlaid members served in the armed forces during the war
South Wales Borderers Cap Badge
Plaid members served in the armed forces during the war

Lewis, who served in the South Wales Borderers during the First World War, was not anti-military. Rather Lewis and other party members were attempting to strengthen loyalty to the Welsh nation "over the loyalty to the British State".[28] Lewis argued "The only proof that the Welsh nation exists is that there are some who act as if it did exist".[27]

However, most party members who claimed conscientious objection status did so in the context of their moral and religious beliefs, rather than on political conviction.[27] Of these almost all were exempt from military service. About 24 party members made politics their sole grounds for exemption, of which twelve received prison sentences.[27] For Lewis, those who objected proved that the assimilation of Wales was "being withstood, even under the most extreme pressures".[27]

[edit] University of Wales by-election, 1943

Prior to 1950, universities could elect and return representatives to the UK parliament. In 1943 Lewis contested the University of Wales parliamentary seat at a by-election, his opponent was former Plaid Genedlaethol Cymru deputy vice-president Dr William John Gruffydd. Gruffydd had voiced doubts about Lewis' ideas since 1933,[29] and by 1943 he had joined the Liberal party. The "brilliant but wayward" Gruffydd was a favourite with Welsh-speaking intellectuals and drew 52.3 per cent of the vote, to Lewis' 22 per cent, or 1,330 votes.[29]

The election effectively split the Welsh-speaking intelligentsia, and left Lewis embittered with politics.[30] However, the experience proved invaluable for Plaid Cymru, as they began to refer to themselves, as "for the first time they were taken seriously as a political force".[30] The by-election campaign led directly to "considerable growth" for the party's membership.[30]

[edit] The Evans Legacy 1945-1981

With Lewis retreating from direct political involvement, and with the party drawing a modest increase in membership, Dr Gwynfor Evans was elected party president in 1945. Evans, born in Barry in Glamorgan but spending most his life in Llangadog in Carmarthenshire, only learned to speak Welsh as an adult. Evans was educated at the University of Wales, Aberystwyth, and at St John's College Oxford, where he founded a branch of Plaid Cymru while he was a student.[31] As a devout Christian pacifist, Evans was unconditionally released from conscription during the Second World War on grounds as a conscientious objector.

Building on a higher profile the party fielded more candidates in elections; and in the 1945 UK parliamentary election the party won 25 per cent of the vote in Caernarfon and 16 per cent in the Neath by-election.[30] By 1945 Plaid Cymru was in a "better position then it had been in 1939," wrote Dr Davies.[15]

Responding to Welsh nationalism; and despite opposition by Labour politicians such as Aneurin Bevan, Morgan Phillips and Attlee, the U.K. government felt it prudent to establish the Council of Wales in 1948, an unelected assembly of 27 with the brief of advising the UK government on matters of Welsh interest.[32] The Council of Wales held no authority on its own, to the frustration of many of the councillors.[33]

At a party conference in 1949 fifty members left Plaid Cymru over over Evans' strict observance of a pacifist political doctrine, and over the party's continued emphasis on the Welsh language.[34]

These disaffected radicals founded The Welsh Republican Movement, characterised as "socialist, secular and disrespectful," which provided a home for radical ideas while Plaid Cymru matured as a political party, wrote historian John Davies.[34] Breaking up the following decade, some of its aspects were later absorbed into Plaid Cymru, such as the use of English and the engagement in English-speaking Welsh communities. This was "key ... to the party's increasing acceptability" to voters, wrote Davies.[34]

Following the war Plaid Cymru challenged the UK government's continued military conscription in peace time, and protested the War Office's use of Welsh lands for training exercises. First in the Preseli Hills in 1946, then in Tregaron in 1947, and then Trawsfynydd in 1951.

Through-out the 1950's Evans reached out to other political parties in Westminister to establish a parliament for Wales.[31] Though failing to establish a Welsh assembly, there was movement on devolution. With Plaid Cymru expanding its influence further into the industrial south-east constituencies, the UK government gave in on small concessions towards devolution.[35] First with the established a Minister of Welsh Affairs in 1951, then a Digest of Welsh Statistics began publication in 1954, and in 1955 Cardiff (Caerdydd) was recognised as the Welsh capital city.

On Evans' initiative in response to a lack of Welsh-medium education at the collage level, the University of Wales set up a committee for the creation of a Welsh-medium college in 1950.[36] By 1955 the university announced its expansion of a Welsh-medium curriculum, and its continued expansion in relation to the demand for classes in Welsh.[37] Additionally, Plaid Cymru was attracting members from other parties, such as one time Plaid Cymru critic Huw T. Edwards, who resigned from the Council of Wales and left Labour in 1958 over what he described as "Whitehallism."

[edit] The flooding of Capel Celyn 1956

Tryweryn memorial chapel at Llyn Celyn
Tryweryn memorial chapel at Llyn Celyn

see also Capel Celyn, Llyn Celyn

In 1956, a private bill sponsored by Liverpool City Council was brought before the UK parliament to develop a water reservoir from the Tryweryn Valley, in Meirionydd in Gwynedd. The development would include the flooding of Capel Celyn (Holly Chapel), a Welsh speaking community of historic significance. Despite universal and bi-partisan objections by Welsh politicians (thirty five out of thirty six Welsh MPs opposed the bill, and one abstained) the bill was passed in 1957.

Evans joined Dr Tudor Jones and Capel Celyn farmer David Roberts, aged 65, at the Liverpool Town Hall to protest, and had to be forcibly ejected by police.[38]

The building of the reservoir was instrumental in an increase in support for Plaid Cymru during the late 1950s.[38] Almost unanimous Welsh political opposition had failed to stop approval of the scheme, a fact that seemed to underline Plaid Cymru's argument that the Welsh national community was powerless.[39] At the subsequent General Election the party's support increased from 3.1% to 5.2%.

Plaque recording the loss of a Quaker meeting place
Plaque recording the loss of a Quaker meeting place

Of perhaps greater significance, however, was the impetus the episode gave to Welsh devolution. The Council of Wales recommended the creation of a Welsh Office (Swyddfa Gymreig) and Secretary of State for Wales early in 1957, a time when the governance of Wales on a national level was so demonstrably lacking in many people's eyes.[40]

The flooding of Capel Celyn also sharpened debate within Plaid Cymru about the use of direct action. While the party emphasised its constitutional approach to stopping the development, it also sympathised with the actions of two party members (who of their own accord) attempted to sabotage the power supply at the site of the Tryweryn dam in 1962.[40]

Remember Tryweryn - famous graffiti
Remember Tryweryn - famous graffiti

In October 1965 the Llyn Celyn reservoir opened to a sizeable Plaid Cymru organised demonstration. During the opening ceremonies, "posters reading ‘Hands Off Wales’ were displayed and pieces of rock where thrown at Liverpool’s Lord Mayor and Chief Constable".[38]

In 2005, the Liverpool City Council formally apologised for the flooding and "[f]or any insensitivity by our predecessor council at that time, [and we] hope that the historic and sound relationship between Liverpool and Wales can be completely restored".[38]

[edit] Tynged yr Iaith and the 1961 census

Tafod y Ddraig (the Dragon's Tongue), The Cymdeithas' logo
Tafod y Ddraig (the Dragon's Tongue), The Cymdeithas' logo

see also Tynged yr iaith

In 1962 Saunders Lewis gave a radio speech entitled Tynged yr iaith (The Fate of the Language) in which he predicted the extinction of the Welsh language unless action was taken. Lewis' intent was to motivate Plaid Cymru into more direct action promoting the language, however it led to the formation of Cymdeithas yr Iaith Gymraeg (the Welsh Language Society) later that year at a Plaid Cymru summer school held in Pontardawe in Glamorgan.[41] The foundation of Cymdeithas yr Iaith Gymraeg allowed for Plaid Cymru to focus on electoral politics, while the Cymdeithas focused on promoting the language.

Lewis gave his radio speech responding to the 1961 census, which showed a decrease in the number of Welsh speakers from 36% in 1931 to 26%, out of a population of about 2.5 million.[42] In the census; Merionnydd, Ynys Mon, Carmarthen, and Caernarfon averaged 75% concentration of Welsh speakers, with the most significant decrease in the counties of Glamorgan, Flint, and Pembroke.[42][14]

Responding on the calls of Welsh devolution, in 1964 the Labour Government gave effect to these proposals establishing the unelected Welsh Office (Welsh: Swyddfa Gymreig) and Secretary of State for Wales.

[edit] Evans' election 1966

If Plaid Cymru had been disappointed at the U.K general election, 1966, then the Carmarthen by-election of 14 July 1966 was reason for celebration. The contest was significant in that it resulted in the election of Gwynfor Evans, the first ever Plaid Cymru M.P. The contest was caused by the death of Lady Megan Lloyd George, Liberal MP and daughter of Lord David, 1st Earl Lloyd George of Dwyfor.

Evans' surprise win is credited with laying the foundations for Winnie Ewing's victory for the Scottish National Party at the Hamilton by-election, 1967, an event of equal significance for Scottish nationalism.

This was followed by two further by-elections in Rhondda West in 1967 and Caerphilly in 1968 in which the party achieved massive swings of 30% and 40% respectively, coming within a whisker of victory as both also won a higher proportion of the vote then it had won in Carmarthen.

The results were caused partly by an anti-Labour backlash. However, in Carmarthen particularly, Plaid Cymru also successfully depicted Labour's policies as a threat to the viability of small Welsh communities.[43] Expectations in coal mining communities that the Wilson government would halt the long-term decline in their industry had been dashed by a significant downward revision of coal production estimates.[44]

[edit] Welsh Language Act 1967

With Plaid Cymru's electoral successes the issue of devolution was back on the national political agenda, wrote Dr Davies.[45] A Plaid Cymru under Evans and a Labour party influenced by Gwilym Prys Davies (Gwilym Prys Davies had published a Labour pamphlet calling for a National Assembly of Wales in 1963[46]) and James Griffiths, the argument "in favour of a political system in Wales more answerable to the electorate" was plausible.[46]

But by 1967 Labour retreated from endorsing home rule mainly because of the open hostility expressed by other Welsh Labour MPs to anything "which could be interpreted as a concession to nationalism",[46] and because of opposition by the Secretary of State for Scotland, who was responding to a growth of Scottish nationalism.

By 1967 the Welsh Language Act was passed, giving some legal protection for the use of Welsh in official government business. The Act was based on the Hughes Parry report, published in 1965, which advocated equal validity for Welsh in speech and in written documents, both in the courts and in public administration in Wales. However the Act did not include all the Hughes Parry report's recommendations. Prior to the Act, only the English language could be spoken at government and court proceedings.

[edit] 1970s

In the 1970 General Election Plaid Cymru contested every seat in Wales for the first time and its vote share surged from 4.5% in 1966 to 11.5%. Also in that year, founding member Saunders Lewis was nominated for the Nobel Prize for Literature. Evans, however, lost Carmarthen to Labour, lost again by three votes in February 1974, but regained the seat in October 1974, by which time the party had gained a further two MPs, representing the constituencies of Caernarfon and Merionethshire. Alarmed at the decrease in the number of Welsh speakers, Evans began a campaign for the establishment of a Welsh language television channel.[31]

At the 1979 General Election the party’s vote share declined from 10.8% to 8.1% and Carmarthen was again lost to Labour.

[edit] The Yes Campaign 1979

See Also Welsh devolution referendum, 1979

Plaid Cymru led the Yes Campaign in favor of devolution, though some party members were somewhat ambivalent toward home rule (as opposed to outright independence).[47] The referendum was held on St David's Day (March 1) 1979, but the people of Wales voted against proposals to establish a Welsh Assembly.

Only 12% of the Welsh electorate voted to set up a directly elected forum which would have been based in Cardiff's Coal Exchange. The Assembly would have had the powers and budget of the Secretary of State for Wales. The plans were defeated by a majority of 4:1 (956,330 against, 243,048 for). The Wales Act contained a requirement that at least 40% of all voters backed the plan. After the referendum results many in the party questioned its direction.[47]

[edit] Hunger Strike for S4C

see also S4C, Hunger strike

S4C Logo 2007-present
S4C Logo 2007-present

Following the Yes Campaign's defeat, and believing Welsh nationalism was "in a paralysis of helplessness," the UK Conservative government Home Secretary announced in September 1979 that the government would not honour its pledge in the previous May's election campaign to establish a Welsh language television channel,[48] much to widespread anger and resentment in Wales, wrote Dr Davies.[48]

In early 1980 over two thousand members of Plaid Cymru pledged to go to prison rather than pay the television licence fees, and by that spring Evans announced his intention to fast to death if a Welsh language channel were not established. In early September 1980, Evans addressed thousands at a gathering in which "passions ran high," according to Dr Davies.[46] The government yielded by 17 September, and the Welsh Fourth Channel (S4C) was launched on 2 November 1982.

[edit] The Wigley & Elis presidencies 1981 - 2000

Dafydd Wigley Popular two-term president
Dafydd Wigley
Popular two-term president

Caernarfon MP, Dafydd Wigley succeeded Gwynfor Evans as president in 1981, inheriting a party whose morale was at an all-time low after the defeat of the Yes Campaign. In 1981 the party adopted "community socialism," or a "decentralised socialist state," as a constitutional aim. This was in part as a consequence of Thatcherism's effect in Wales. While the party embarked on a wide-ranging review of its priorities and goals, Evans continued his successful campaign to oblige the Conservative UK government to fulfil its promise to establish S4C.[31]

Wigley's election was seen as instrumental in deciding the future direction of Plaid Cymru. Though Wigley described his own politics as 'right-wing', at the time he represented a moderate, pragmatic social democracy policy, in sharp contrast with rival candidate Dafydd Elis Thomas' far-left socialism. Wigley's triumph was also somewhat a pyrrhic victory - he won the presidency, but Thomas would have a greater influence over the party's ideology throughout the 1980s.

In 1984 Wigley resigned from the presidency because of his children's health. In the 1984 party leadership elections Dafydd Elis-Thomas was elected President, defeating Dafydd Iwan, a move that saw the party shift to the political left. Wigley returned to the job in 1991 after the resignation of Elis-Thomas.

Ieuan Wyn Jones captured Ynys Mon from the Conservatives in 1987.

The 1991 census revealed that the decline in the number of Welsh speakers was arrested, and remained at the 1981 levels of 18.7% in a Welsh population of over 2.8 million. Gwynedd retained the highest concentration of Welsh speakers with 61%, followed by Powys, Clwyd, and Dyfed averaging in the mid-twenty percentile.[49]

[edit] The Yes for Wales campaign, 1997

Yes for Wales logo
Yes for Wales logo

See also National Assembly for Wales, Yes for Wales

After the 1997 general election, the new Labour Government argued that an Assembly would be more democratically accountable than the Welsh Office, echoing calls for self government since 1918.

For eleven years prior to 1997 Wales had been represented in the UK cabinet by a Secretary of State who did not represent a Welsh constituency at Westminster.[50] Plaid Cymru joined a bi-partisan Yes for Wales campaign, alongside the Labour and Liberal Democrat parties.

Official logo of the National Assembly
Official logo of the National Assembly

During the campaign for a Welsh Assembly, Diana, Princess of Wales was killed in a car accident in France. The campaign had been temporarily suspended and it was wondered what effect the death of the Princess of Wales would have on the election.[51] Commentators pondered what effect the death of the princess and focus on the UK Royal Family would have on the devolution debate and turn out.[51]

A second referendum was held on 18 September 1997 in which voters approved the creation of the National Assembly for Wales by a majority of just 6,712 votes.[52]

The following year the Government of Wales Act was passed by UK parliament, establishing the National Assembly for Wales (Welsh Cynulliad Cenedlaethol Cymru).

[edit] First Welsh Assembly, 1999 - 2003

Lord Elis-Thomas Two-term presiding officer of the Welsh Assembly
Lord Elis-Thomas
Two-term presiding officer
of the Welsh Assembly

In the 1999 election Plaid Cymru gained seats in traditionally-Labour areas such as in the Rhondda, Islwyn and Llanelli and achieving by far their highest share of the vote in any Wales-wide election. Ieuan Wyn Jones was the campaign director during Plaid Cymru's first elections to the Welsh Assembly in 1999.[53] While Plaid Cymru presented themselves as the natural beneficiary of devolution, others attributed their performance in large part to the travails of the Labour Party, whose nomination for Assembly First Secretary, Ron Davies, was forced to stand down in an alleged sex scandal. The ensuing leadership battle did much to damage Labour, and thus aid Plaid Cymru whose leader, by contrast, was the more popular and higher profile Dafydd Wigley. The UK Labour national leadership was seen to interfere in the contest and deny the popular Rhodri Morgan victory. Less than two months later, with a further slump in Labour support, Plaid Cymru came within 2.5 percentage points of gaining the largest vote share in Wales. Under the new system of elections, the party also gained two MEPs.

Lord Elis-Thomas was elected Presiding Officer of the National Assembly for Wales.

[edit] Jones' presidency; 2000 - 2003

In a speech at the 2000 National Eisteddfod at Llanelli, Cynog Dafis, Plaid Cymru AM for Mid and West Wales, called for a new Welsh language movement with greater powers to lobby for the Welsh language at the Assembly, UK, and EU levels.[54] Dafis felt the needs of the language were ignored during the first year of the Assembly, and that in order to ensure a dynamic growth of the Welsh language a properly resourced strategy was needed[54] In his speech Dafis encouraged other Welsh language advocacy groups to work closer together creating a more favorable climate in which in which using Welsh was "attractive, exciting, a source of pride and a sign of strength".[54] Additionally, Dafis pointed towards efforts in areas such as Catalonia and the Basque country as successful examples to emulate.[54]

Lord Elis-Thomas dissagreed with Dafis assessment, however. At the Urdd Eisteddfod Lord Elis-Thomas said that there was no need for another Welsh language act, citing that there was "enough goodwill to safeguard the language's future".[55] His controversal comments prompted Cymdeithas yr Iaith Gymraeg to joined a chorus calling for his resignation as the Assembly's presiding officer.[55]

Lord Elis-Thomas was also under fire from Welsh Labour's Alun Michael for his endorsement of Ieuan Wyn Jones as Plaid Cymru's president, however Elis-Thomas said he volenteered his preference as a matter of public interest and as a party member, not in his position as Assembly presiding officer.[55]

Dafydd Wigley resigned late 2000, citing health problems but amid rumours of a plot against him.[56][57][58] Ieuan Wyn Jones was elected President of Plaid Cymru with 77% of the vote over Helen Mary Jones[59] a few months later. Jones reshuffled the party leadership with Jocelyn Davies as Business Manager; Elin Jones as Chief Whip and Agriculture & Rural Development Officer; Phil Williams as Economic Development; and Helen Mary Jones as Environment, Transport and Planning, plus Equal Opportunities.[60]

The party's move toward the political centre during this period may have been made easier by the formation of Welsh language pressure group Cymuned (Community) and the Cymru Annibynnol (The Independent Wales party), which provided another home for "radicals".[61]

Plaid Cymru and the Scottish National Party, having cooperated together since the 1980s, formalised their relationship by establishing the Celtic Alliance voting block in 2001.[62] The Celtic Alliance created the third largest oppositional voting block in the UK parliament.

Llandudno Party Conference

At the Llandudno Plaid Cymru party conference of 2002, Jones called for greater Assembly authority "[on parity] with Scotland's parliament", and "opposed any military conflict in Iraq, saying it would destabilise the Middle East".[63] Jones also criticized health and public services policies and would end the "endless revamping of structures and administration".[63]

[edit] Language and Housing Controversy

see also Commuter town, gentrification

Controversy erupted in mid-winter 2001 when Seimon Glyn, Gwynedd County Council's housing committee chairman and Plaid Cymru member, voiced frustration over "English immigrants" moving into traditionally Welsh speaking communities.[64] Glyn was commenting on a report underscoring the dilemma of rocketing house prices outstripping what locals could pay, with the report warning that '...traditional Welsh communities could die out..." as a consequence.[65]

Much of the rural Welsh real-estate market was driven by a cycle of growing dormitory towns, which was exacerbated by second home buyers and growing retirement communities. Many buyers were drawn to Wales from England because of relatively inexpensive house prices in Wales as compared to house prices in England.[66][67] The rise in home prices outpaced the average earnings income in Wales, and meant that many local people could not afford to purchase their first home or compete against commuter or second-home buyers.[67]

In 2001 nearly a third of all properties in Gwynedd were bought by buyers from out of the county, and with some communities reporting as many as a third of local homes used as holiday homes.[68][69] Holiday home owners spend less then six months of the year in the local community. Additional concern was expressed by Cymuned, which included disillusioned Plaid Cymru members, when it was pointed out that real-estate in North Wales was specifically marketed to affluent buyers in England rather than locals. These growing dormitory towns along the North Wales Expressway serve more as commuter communities for Chester and other cross-border cities, effectively driving-out Welsh-speaking communities, activists pointed out.[70][71]

In housing markets where commuters are wealthier and small town housing markets weaker than city housing markets or suburbs, the development of a bedroom community may raise local housing prices and attract upscale service businesses in a process called gentrification. Long-time residents may be displaced by new commuter residents due to rising house prices. This can also be influenced by zoning restrictions in urbanized areas that prevent the construction of suitably cheap housing closer to places of employment.

The issue of locals being priced out of the local housing market is common to many rural communities throughout Britain, but in Wales the added dimension of language further complicated the issue, as many new residents did not learn the Welsh language.[68][72][73][74]

Concern for the Welsh language under these pressures prompted Glyn to say "Once you have more than 50% of anybody living in a community that speaks a foreign language, then you lose your indigenous tongue almost immediately".[75]

Plaid Cymru had long advocated controls on second homes, and a 2001 taskforce headed by Dafydd Wigley recommended land should be allocated for affordable local housing, and called for grants for locals to buy houses, and recommended council tax on holiday homes should double, following similar measures in the Scottish Highlands.[69][72][75]

However the Welsh Labour-Liberal Democrat Assembly coalition rebuffed these proposals, with Assembly housing spokesman Peter Black stating that "we [can not] frame our planning laws around the Welsh language", adding "Nor can we take punitive measures against second home owners in the way that they propose as these will have an impact on the value of the homes of local people".[75]

In contrast, by fall 2001 the Exmoor National Park authority in England began limiting home ownership there which was also driving up local housing prices by as much as 31%.[73] Elfyn Llwyd, Plaid Cymru's parliamentary group leader, said that the issues in Exmoor National Park were the same as in Wales, however in Wales there is the added dimension of language and culture.[73]

Reflecting on the controversy Glyn's comments caused earlier in the year, Llwyd observed "What is interesting is of course it is fine for Exmoor to defend their community but in Wales when you try to say these things it is called racist..."[73]

Llwyd called on other parties to join in a debate to bring the Exmoor experience to Wales when he said "... I really do ask them and I plead with them to come around the table and talk about the Exmoor suggestion and see if we can now bring it into Wales".[73]

By spring 2002 both the Snowdonia National Park (Welsh: Parc Cenedlaethol Eryri) and Pembrokeshire Coast National Park (Welsh: Parc Cenedlaethol Arfordir Penfro) authorities began limiting second home ownership within the parks, following the example set by Exmoor.[76] According to planners in Snowdonia and Pembroke applicants for new homes must demonstrate a proven local need or the applicant had strong links with the area.

In the 2001 General Election, Plaid Cymru lost Jones' old seat of Ynys Môn to Labour's Albert Owen. An internal report commissioned by Plaid Cymru following the 2001 General Election attributed the loss of significant votes directly to Glyn's controversial comments.[77] Despite this, Plaid Cymru recorded their highest ever vote share in a General Election of 14.3%, gaining Carmarthen East and Dinefwr and electing Adam Price.

[edit] 2001 Census and tickbox controversy

see also Demography of Wales, Welsh people

Percentage  of Welsh speakers by principal area
Percentage of Welsh speakers by principal area

According to the 2001 census the number of Welsh speakers in Wales increased for the first time in 100 years, with 20.5% in a population of over 2.9 million claiming fluency in Welsh, or one in five.[78] Additionally, 28% of the population of Wales claimed to understand Welsh.[78] The census revealed that the increase was most significant in urban areas; such as Cardiff (Caerdydd) with an increase from 6.6% in 1991 to 10.9% in 2001, and Rhondda Cynon Taf with an increase from 9% in 1991 to 12.3% in 2001.[78] However, the percentage of Welsh speakers declined in Gwynedd from 72.1% in 1991 to 68.7%, and in Ceredigion from 59.1% in 1991 to 51.8%.[78] Ceredigion in particular experienced the greatest fluctuation with the a 19.5% influx of new residents since 1991.[78]

The census also revealed that one-third of the population of Wales described themselves as of British nationality, with respondants having to write in whether or not they were Welsh.[78] Controversy surrounding the method of determining nationality began as early as 2000, when it was revealed that respondents in Scotland and Northern Ireland would be able to check a box describing themselves as Scottish or Irish, an option not available for Welsh respondants.[79][80]

Prior to the Census, Plaid Cymru backed a petition calling for the inclusion of a Welsh tickbox and for the National Assembly to have primary law-making powers and its own National Statistics Office.[79]

With an absence of a Welsh tickbox, the only other tickbox available was 'white-British,' 'Irish', or 'other'.[78][79] Critcs expected a higher porportion of resondants describing themselves as of Welsh nationality had a Welsh tickbox been available. Additional criticism targeted the timing of the census, which was taken in the middle of the Foot and Mouth crisis of 2001, a fact organizers said did not impact the results.[81] However, the Foot and Mouth crisis did delay UK General Elections, the first time since the Second World War any event postponed an election.

[edit] The Mittal Affair

Controversy ensued in 2002 as Adam Price exposed the link between UK prime minister Tony Blair and steel magnate Lakshmi Mittal in the Mittal Affair, also known as 'Garbagegate' or Cash for Influence.[82][83][84] Mittal's LNM steel company, registered in the Dutch Antilles and maintaining less than 1% of its 100,000 plus workforce in the UK, sought Blair's aid in its bid to purchase Romania's state steel industry.[84] The letter from Blair to the Romanian government, a copy of which Price was able to obtain, hinted that the privatisation of the firm and sale to Mittal might help smooth the way for Romania's entry into the European Union.[85]

The letter had a passage in it removed just prior to Blair's signing of it, describing Mittal as "a friend".[84]

In exchange for Blair's support Mittal, already a Labour contributor, donated £125,000 more to Labour party funds a week after the 2001 UK General Elections, while as many as six thousand Welsh steelworkers were laid off that same year, Price and others pointed out.[85] Mittal's company, then the fourth largest in the world, was a "major global competitor of Britain's own struggling steel industry, Corus, formerly known as British Steel".[84] Corus and Valkia Limited were two of the primary employers in South Wales, particularly in Ebbw Vale, Llanwern, and Port Talbot.[86]

[edit] Iwan's presidency; 2003 - Current

[edit] Second Welsh Assembly, 2003 - 2007

Popular Dafydd Iwan was elected party president in 2003 to bring the party together
Popular Dafydd Iwan was elected party president in 2003 to bring the party together

In the May Assembly election of 2003 Plaid Cymru lost five seats, with critics pointing towards a less organised electoral organisation which often found difficulty articulating the party's message in the media.[87] This was in sharp contrast to the electoral organisation and performance of 1999.

Within a week of the Assembly elections, there were accusations of a plot headed by AM Helen Mary Jones and four other Plaid Cymru Assembly Members manoeuvering for Jones' removal.[88][89] But Helen Mary Jones denied involvement.[90] However, Ieuan Wyn Jones resigned as both party president and leader of the assembly group.[53]

By summer 2003 the party underwent a constitutional reorganisation dividing its Cardiff Bay and Westminster responsibilities. The organisational change prompted new party elections, with Ieuan Wyn Jones standing again for Assembly group leadership, having received both grassroots support from "all over Wales" and senior party members.[91]

With the move towards digital programming, Plaid Cymru urged the "UK government to make Wales one of the first areas to completely switch over to digital television from the current analogue service".[92]

[edit] Impeachment of Blair Campaign, 2004 - 2007

Adam Price led the impeachment campaign of Tony Blair
Adam Price led the impeachment campaign of Tony Blair

see also Impeach Blair campaign

In August 2004, Adam Price began a campaign to impeach then Prime Minister of the United Kingdom Tony Blair over the alleged misleading of the UK Parliament and for allegedly making a secret agreement with then US President George W. Bush to overthrow Saddam Hussein, amongst other charges.[93] Plaid's Parliament group leader Elfyn Llwyd and then Scottish National Party (SNP) group leader Alex Salmond co-drafted the motion.

Impeachment had not been used in the UK for one hundred and fifty years. If successful, it could have seen Blair tried before the House of Lords; however, as expected, the measure failed.[93]

On 17 March 2005 Price was ejected from the Commons chamber after accusing the Prime Minister of having "misled" Parliament and then refusing to withdraw his comment, in violation of the rules of the House.[94]

In November 2005, the campaign announced a new motion (this time with the support of the Liberal Democrats) asking for a Commons committee to examine the conduct of ministers before and after the war. The campaign tabled an Early Day Motion:

"Conduct of Government Policy in relation to the war against Iraq"
"That this House believes that there should be a select committee of 7 Members, being members of Her Majesty's Privy Council, to review the way in which the responsibilities of Government were discharged in relation to Iraq and all matters relevant thereto, in the period leading up to military action in that country in March 2003 and in its aftermath".

The motion collected 151 signatures, including some Labour back-benchers.

By October 2006, Price opened a three hour debate on an inquiry into the Iraq War, the first such debate in over two years. The SNP and Plaid Cymru motion proposing a committee of seven senior MPs to review "the way in which the responsibilities of government were discharged in relation to Iraq", was defeated by 298 votes to 273, a Government majority of 25, but was supported by a significant number of opposition MPs, and twelve "rebel" Labour MPs, including Glenda Jackson.

Despite the lack of debate on the original impeachment motion, Price pledged to continue his campaign. However, with the resignation of Blair on 27 June 2007, the entire issue of impeachment may now be moot.

[edit] 80th Anniversary and Evans celebrated 2005

In 2005 Plaid Cymru celebrated both the life of iconic figure Gwynfor Evans, who had passed away in April, and of the 80th anniversary of the party's founding. At Evans' funeral in Aberystwyth, attended by thousands, Plaid Cymru president Dafydd Iwan said "For Plaid Cymru members and supporters, young and old, Gwynfor Evans has been Plaid Cymru's spiritual leader and will continue to be so. It is impossible to underestimate Gwynfor's unique contribution to building Plaid Cymru into the party it is today".[95]

Evans was "Wales' most remarkable politician," according to Plaid Cymru parliamentary group leader Elfyn Llwyd, adding that Evans will be remembered for his "fearless dedication to the cause of peace and international understanding".[96] Evans was voted third Top Welsh millennium hero in 2000, and fourth Welsh hero in 2004, according to BBC Wales online polls.[97][98]

[edit] Cymru X

Cymru X was founded in 2005 to merge Plaid Cymru's two existing movements in to one new youth movement. The student federation 'the ffed' and the youth movement were merged to create a brand new youth organisation available to anyone under the age of 30. CymruX is run by its National Committee, chaired by Mabon ap Gwynfor. The committee is elected every March.

While working as President of the Aberystwyth Guild of Students, Bethan Jenkins saw Plaid Cymru defeated in Ceredigion. After leaving Aberystwyth University, Jenkins worked in the office of Leanne Wood AM and used her contacts there to set up the organisation Cymru X. Cymru X launched the first ever interactive text referendum on a Parliament for Wales, as well as campaigns against nuclear arms. Glyn Wise from Big Brother fame also took part in a campaign alongside Cymru X to encourage young people to vote prior to the National Assembly election in 2007.

There are also some link-ups with the student and youth wings of the SNP.

[edit] Crossroads, leadership, and rebranding

2005 also saw the party in a kind of "crossroads," as historic tensions within the party resurfaced between Plaid Cymru as a social pressure group and Plaid Cymru as an electoral political party.[99] Professor Laura McAllister, a Plaid Cymru history expert and former party candidate, said that unless the party shed its "pressure group past" it could not expect more than to form a coalition government with other parties.[99]

Helen Mary Jones, however, disagreed with McAllister's assessment and in 2005 said that "Plaid Cymru speaks to and for all the people of Wales."[99] Former Rhondda Cynon Taf Plaid Cymru councillor Syd Morgan agreed with Helen Mary Jones and said that the issue was not with the party's message, but because of a lack of a "modern corporate image" that the "party as a whole does not resonate with the people of Wales."[99]

Old logo (above) and new logo (below)
Old logo (above) and new logo (below)

In February 2006 Plaid Cymru undertook changes to its party structure, including designating the Welsh Assembly group leader as the overall party leader. This move placed Ieuan Wyn Jones again at the head of the party, with Dafydd Iwan remaining party president and popular Dafydd Wigley remaining Honorary President.

Responding to calls from within the party to reinvigorate its image, at a party conference the unveiling of a radical change of image prompted some controversy from within the party. Changes included officially using "Plaid" as the party's name, although "Plaid Cymru - The Party of Wales" would remain the official title. The adoption of Plaid, which had long been used in less formal speech as referring to the party, was a recognition of its use for all party business. Additionally, the party's colours were changed from the traditional green and red to yellow, while the party logo was changed from the 'triban' (three peaks) used since 1933 to a yellow Welsh poppy (Meconopsis cambrica).

[edit] The Government of Wales Act 2006

The Government of Wales Act 2006 was heavily criticised by Plaid for not delivering a fully-fledged parliament. Additionally, Plaid criticised the Welsh Labour Party's allegedly partisan attempt to alter the electoral system. By preventing regional Assembly Members from standing in constituency seats Welsh Labour was accused of "changing the rules" to protect constituency representatives. Labour had 29 members in the Assembly at the time, all of whom held constituency seats.

[edit] Third Welsh Assembly, 2007-2011

Bethan Jenkins at 26, the youngest AM elected
Bethan Jenkins
at 26, the youngest AM elected

In the Welsh Assembly election of May 3, 2007, Plaid increased its number of seats from 12 to 15, regaining Llanelli, gaining one additional list seat and winning the newly created constituency of Aberconwy The 2007 election also saw Plaid's Mohammad Asghar become the first ethnic minority candidate elected to the Welsh Assembly.[100] The Party's share of the vote increased to 22.4%. After a tight race, Helen Mary Jones won back the important Llanelli constituency for Plaid, with a majority of 3,884 votes.

Plaid AM Dr Dai Lloyd hailed the 2007 Assembly election campaign as the "most professional" campaign that Plaid had ran, and made special note that it was funded from exclusively Welsh sources.[101] In the 2007 Assembly election Plaid spent just under £261,286 on the campaign, about three times that of the 2003 Assembly elections.[102][101]

On 19 October 2007, Plaid AM Asghar escaped death as a terrorist explosion in Karachi, Pakistan, killed 130 others.[103] He had been within 35 metres of the blast.[103] Asghar had accompanied Benazir Bhutto, former Prime Minister of Pakistan and intended target, on her return there from exile.[103]

Following the Assembly elections, a UK parliamentary standards and privileges committee found Plaid MPs Elfyn Llwyd, Adam Price and Hywel Williams guilty of improperly advertising during the elections.[104] Though the committee admitted the three did not break any clear rules of the UK House of Commons, the committee believed the timing of the adverts were planned to coincide with the Assembly elections.[104]

Parliamentary funds are available for MPs to communicate with constituents regularly. However the committee found that the three used this communication allowance improperly as part of Plaid's campaigning during the elections as the adverts were placed in publications with a circulation outside of their respective constituencies.[104]

Plaid MP group leader Elfyn Llwyd said that they had "...acted in good faith throughout, and fully in line with the advice that was offered to us by the DFA (Department of Finance and Administration) at the time of the publication of the reports", but that they would comply with the findings.[104] The three had to repay the money, about five thousand pounds each, and report the costs as part of Plaid's election spending.[104]

[edit] The "One Wales" Agreement

see also One Wales

Plaid entered into negotiations with Welsh Labour to form a stable government only after Plaid's initial attempts to form a three-party coalition with the Conservative and Liberal Democrat parties failed.[105] The "One Wales" agreement hammered out promised aid to "first-time house-buyers, pensioners and students and a review of NHS reconfiguration",[106] and with a "commitment by Welsh Labour to campaign favourably for full parliamentary powers, similar to the Scottish Parliament, in a referendum held before 2011".[106] The historic[107]One Wales agreement was approved by both political parties by 7 July.[108][107][109] Only a coalition between Plaid and Welsh Labour would provide the necessary two-thirds majority in the Assembly to trigger the referendum.[110]

The One Wales agreement did receive criticism from fellow Plaid members. Plaid's honorary president Wigley summarized disagreement when he warned that the pact was reached too quickly and not enough planning had gone into it. Wigley believed that the agreement's failings might jeopardise the Assembly receiving full parliamentary powers by a 2011 referendum, and that other provisions of the agreement would not be fully funded.[111] Indeed, with the budget outlined after the coalition was formed Plaid was obliged to defend spending cuts it may have otherwise criticized.[110]

Queen Elizabeth II confirmed Ieuan Wyn Jones as Depuy First Minister of Wales and minister for Economy and Transport on July 11, 2007.[112] Plaid's deputy president Rhodri Glyn Thomas, who argued in favour of the Welsh language channel S4C becoming bilingual after digital switchover despite the circumstances of S4C's founding, was appointed Heritage Minister.[113] Ceredigion AM Elin Jones was appointed to the Rural Affairs brief in the new ten member Cabinet. As if in an effort to underscore Plaid's identity within the coalition, Plaid ministers sit with the Plaid assembly group rather than with Labour cabinet members.[110]

Of Plaid's entering into government for the first time Jones said "The party's role so far has been one of the opposition party, which put pressure on the other parties to move things forward for the benefit of Wales".[53] Speaking about moderation and consensus at the British-Irish Council at Stormont on 16 July 2007, Jones said that Wales has seen "a coming together of parties with different traditions, on the basis of a shared programme for government, and a shared commitment to improve the lives of all our people in all parts of Wales".[114]

Jones joined the Queen representing Wales in Belgium at the 90th anniversary ceremony of the Third Battle of Ypres at Passchendaele (World War I). During the battle celebrated Welsh poet Hedd Wyn had died, along with thousands of other Welshmen.

[edit] Broadcast news controversy

In August 2007 MP Adam Price highlighted what he perceived as a lack of a Welsh focus on BBC news broadcasts.[115] Price threatened to withhold future television licence fees in response to a lack of thorough news coverage of Wales, echoing a BBC Audience Council for Wales July report citing public frustration over how the Welsh Assembly is characterised in national media.[116] AM Bethan Jenkins agreed with Price and called for responsibility for broadcasting to be devolved to the Welsh Assembly, voicing similar calls from Scotland's First Minister Alex Salmond.[115] Criticism of the BBC's news coverage for Wales and Scotland since devolution prompted debate of possibly providing evening news broadcasts with specific focus for both countries.[115]

[edit] Party Conference 2007 and Peerage Call

At the Llandudno party conference, 2007, Plaid members discussed the new European Union reform treaty, a change in placing women at the top of regional lists in the Welsh assembly elections, and the party's position on nuclear power.[117]

Grass roots party members blame the policy of placing women at the top of regional lists as the cause for Dafydd Wigley's failure to be elected to the Assembly.[117] Plaid began the policy of placing women at the top of regional lists to attract more women into the political process, however opponents pointed out that the policy discriminated against men.[118] In the so called Zip system whoever wins the greatest amount of party votes will be placed at the top of the regional list, followed by the opposite gender candidate who received the next highest vote share.[118]

Additionally, Plaid parliamentary leader Elfyn Llwyd encouraged the party to nominate peers into the UK House of Lords, citing that Plaid peers would "help ensure planned legislation for Wales was not blocked at Westminster", adding that many in the Lords may want to prevent full law-making powers for Wales.[117][119] With consensus building from within the party to nominate peers, honorary party president Dafydd Wigley was nominated for peerage.[119][120] Other Plaid nominees for life peerage include Eurfyl ap Gwilym, and Janet Davies.[118][120] Currently, Lord Elis-Thomas is the lone Plaid peer.

In a recent poll, "83% of the people of Wales now support self-government - with a clear majority of the Welsh electorate supporting a full law-making and a tax-varying Parliament for Wales", according to Plaid MP for Caernarfon, Hywel Williams.[121]

[edit] Plaid Cymru party leaders

[edit] Plaid Cymru Leader

Portrait Entered office Left office Length of Leadership
1 Ieuan Wyn Jones 2006 current

[edit] Plaid Cymru party presidents since 1925

Portrait Entered office Left office Length of Leadership
1 Lewis Valentine 1925 1926 12 months
2 Saunders Lewis 1926 1939 19 years
3 J E Daniel 1939 1943
4 1943 1945
5 Gwynfor Evans 1945 1981 36 years
6 Dafydd Wigley 1981 1984 4 years
7 Lord Elis-Thomas 1984 1991 8 years
8 Dafydd Wigley 1991 2001 10 years
9 Ieuan Wyn Jones 2001 2003 2 years
10 Dafydd Iwan 2003 current Current

[edit] Honorary party presidents

Portrait Entered office Left office Length of Leadership
1 Dafydd Wigley 2001 present 7 years

[edit] Welsh Assembly Group Leaders since 1999

Portrait Entered office Left office Length of Leadership
1 Dafydd Wigley 1999 2001 3 years
2 Ieuan Wyn Jones 2001 current 8 years

[edit] UK Members of Parliament Group Leaders

Portrait Entered office Left office Length of Leadership
1 Gwynfor Evans 1966 1979
2 Dafydd Wigley 1980
3
4 Elfyn Llwyd Current

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ John Davies, A History of Wales, Penguin, 1994, ISBN 0-14-014581-8, Page 547
  2. ^ a b c d e Davies, op cit, Page 547
  3. ^ Davies, op cit, pages 415, 454
  4. ^ Davies, op cit, Page 544
  5. ^ Davies, op cit, Page 523
  6. ^ a b c d e f Davies, op cit, page 548
  7. ^ BBCWales History language map 1911 extracted 12-03-07
  8. ^ BBCWales History language map 1891 extracted 12-03-07
  9. ^ Plaid Cymru: Who We Are
  10. ^ McAllister, L, Plaid Cymru: The Emergence of a Political Party, (2001), Seren “The tentative moves towards elaborating and broadening Plaid's policy portfolio did not allow it to shake off its early identity as a language movement or a cultural pressure group." See also Butt-Phillip, A, The Welsh Question, (1975), University of Wales Press. "It is clear that the Welsh Nationalist Party was at the outset essentially intellectual and moral in outlook and socially conservative.
  11. ^ a b c d e f Davies, op cit, page 591
  12. ^ a b c d e Royal plans to beat nationalism Tuesday, 8 March 2005 Extracted 10-31-07
  13. ^ Davies, op cit, page 590
  14. ^ a b c BBCWales language map 1931 Extracted 12-03-07
  15. ^ a b c d e Davies, op cit, page 593
  16. ^ a b c d e f g Davies, op cit, page 592
  17. ^ Welsh Biography Online, DANIEL, JOHN EDWARD, extracted April 20, 2008
  18. ^ Davies, op cit, pages 591-592
  19. ^ a b Morgan, K O, Welsh Devolution: the Past and the Future in Scotland and Wales: Nations Again? (Ed. Taylor, B and Thomson, K), (1999), University of Wales Press
  20. ^ Williams, G A When Was Wales?, (1985), Penguin.
  21. ^ Davies, D H, The Welsh Nationalist Party 1925-1945, (1983), St. Martin's Press.
  22. ^ Morgan, K O, Rebirth of a Nation, (1981), OUP.
  23. ^ Canadine op cit p52
  24. ^ a b c d Bards under the beds, South Wales police website
  25. ^ Bards under the beds, South Wales police website
  26. ^ Bards under the beds, South Wales police website
  27. ^ a b c d e f g h Davies, op cit, page 599
  28. ^ a b c Davies, op cit, page 598
  29. ^ a b Davies, op cit, page 610
  30. ^ a b c d Davies, op cit, page 611
  31. ^ a b c d Plaid pioneer Gwynfor Evans dies
  32. ^ Davies, op cit, page 622
  33. ^ Davies, op cit, pages 622-623
  34. ^ a b c Davies, op cit, page 623
  35. ^ Davies, op cit, page 662
  36. ^ Davies, op cit, page 649
  37. ^ Davies, op cit, page 650
  38. ^ a b c d Flooding Apology 10-17-05
  39. ^ Davies, op cit
  40. ^ a b Butt-Phillip, A, The Welsh Question, (1975), University of Wales Press
  41. ^ Morgan, K O, Rebirth of a Nation, (1981), OUP
  42. ^ a b BBCWales History language map 1961 extracted 12-03-07
  43. ^ Tanner, D, Facing the New Challenge: Labour and Politics 1970 - 2000 in The Labour Party in Wales 1900-2000 (Ed. Tanner, D, Williams, C and Hopkin, D), (2000), University of Wales Press
  44. ^ Francis, H and Smith, D, The Fed: A History of the South Wales Miners in the Twentieth Century, (1980), University of Wales
  45. ^ Davies, op cit, pages 667-670
  46. ^ a b c d Davies, op cit, page 667
  47. ^ a b McAllister, L, Plaid Cymru: The Emergence of a Political Party, (2001), Seren
  48. ^ a b Davies, op cit, page 680
  49. ^ BBC Wales History language map 1991 extracted 12-04-07
  50. ^ Evidence to Richards Commission of Cllr Russell Goodway. 10 July 2003. Retrieved 9 July 2006.
  51. ^ a b That's When I Ran to the Phone BBC Wales Tuesday, 18 September 2007
  52. ^ Politics 97 by Joshua Rozenberg: BBC website. Retrieved 9 July 2006.
  53. ^ a b c A 'remarkable journey' for Jones, BBC Wales, 11 July 2007
  54. ^ a b c d Call for new language movement Tuesday, 8 August, 2000 extracted 27 Jan 2008
  55. ^ a b c Elis-Thomas in language row Sunday, 4 June, 2000 extracted 27 Jan 2008
  56. ^ Plaid Cymru leader steps down, BBC Wales, 31 May, 2000
  57. ^ 'Wigley downfall' plot denied, BBC Wales, 14 July, 2000
  58. ^ Ousting rumours 'unfair' says Wigley, BBC Wales, 31 July, 2000
  59. ^ The Comeback Kid extracted, BBC Wales, 15 September, 2003
  60. ^ Plaid leader reshuffles cabinet, BBC Wales, 9 August, 2000
  61. ^ Jones' uphill struggle for votes by Simon Morris, BBC Wales, 20 September, 2002
  62. ^ Plaid and SNP form Celtic alliance, Thursday, 28 June, 2001
  63. ^ a b Plaid leader aiming to govern, BBC Wales, 20 September, 2002
  64. ^ Plaid bids to defuse 'racism' row, BBC Wales, 21 February, 2001
  65. ^ 'Racist' remarks lost Plaid votes, BBC Wales, 3 September, 2001
  66. ^ Property prices in England and Wales Wednesday, 8 August, 2001, extracted 24 Jan 2008
  67. ^ a b House prices outpacing incomes Monday, 3 December, 2001, extracted 24 Jan 2008
  68. ^ a b Apology over 'insults' to English, BBC Wales, 3 September, 2001
  69. ^ a b UK: Wales Plaid calls for second home controls, BBC Wales, November 17, 1999
  70. ^ Protest over Welsh home sales Tuesday, 26 November, 2002 Extracted 28 Jan 2008
  71. ^ Language activist's assembly warning Thursday, 14 February, 2002 Extracted 28 Jan 2008
  72. ^ a b Double tax for holiday home owners Thursday, 16 December, 1999, extracted 24 Jan 2008
  73. ^ a b c d e Controls on second homes reviewed Wednesday, 5 September, 2001 extracted 24 Jan 2008
  74. ^ Gwynedd considers holiday home curb Tuesday, 9 April, 2002, extracted 24 Jan 2008
  75. ^ a b c Plaid plan 'protects' rural areas, BBC Wales, 19 June, 2001
  76. ^ Park to ban new holiday homes Wednesday, 6 March, 2002 extracted 24 Jan 2008
  77. ^ 'Racist' remarks lost Plaid votes, BBC Wales, 3 September, 2001
  78. ^ a b c d e f g Census shows Welsh language rise Friday, 14 February, 2003 extracted 12-04-07
  79. ^ a b c Census equality backed by Plaid 23 September, 2000 extracted 12-04-07
  80. ^ Census results 'defy tickbox row' 30 September, 2002 extracted 12-04-07
  81. ^ Census shows Welsh language rise Friday, 14 February, 2003 extracted 12-04-07
  82. ^ Plaid reveals Labour steel cash link Monday, 11 February, 2002, extracted 11-01-07
  83. ^ Lakshmi Mittal, steel mill millionaire Thursday, 14 February, 2002, extracted 11-01-07
  84. ^ a b c d Q&A: 'Garbagegate' Thursday, 14 February, 2002 extracted 11-01-07
  85. ^ a b Plaid reveals Labour steel cash link Monday, 11 February, 2002, extracted 11-01-07
  86. ^ Steel firm condemns 'Mittal aid' Monday, 18 February, 2002, 14:47 GMT extracted 11-01-07
  87. ^ Shadow over Plaid's 80th birthday Friday, 5 August 2005 Extracted Oct 29 2007
  88. ^ Jones The Comeback Kid extracted 07-19-07
  89. ^ Plaid, the president and the 'plot'
  90. ^ Plaid president's comeback attempt extracted 07-19-07
  91. ^ Plaid president's comeback attempt extracted 07-19-07
  92. ^ I'm a celebrity, get me Welsh TV Thursday, 22 July, 2004 extracted 11-01-07
  93. ^ a b Blair impeachment campaign starts Friday, 27 August, 2004
  94. ^ MP thrown out over Blair war jibe MP thrown out over Blair war jibe Thursday, 17 March, 2005
  95. ^ Tributes to Plaid Cymru statesman Thursday, 21 April, 2005 Extracted 29 Oct 07
  96. ^ Plaid supports 'Gwynfor' building Thursday, 19 May, 2005 extracted 29 Oct 2007
  97. ^ Glyndwr is Welsh man of millennium extracted 12-04-07
  98. ^ Bevan is ultimate Welsh hero extracted 12-04-07
  99. ^ a b c d Shadow over Plaid's 80th birthday Friday, 5 August 2005 Extracted Oct 29 2007
  100. ^ First ethnic minority AM elected BBC News, 4 May 2007. Retrieved 6 May 2007.
  101. ^ a b Parties triple election spending BBC News, Thursday, 30 August 2007,retrieved 30 August 2007
  102. ^ Plaid outspent Labour at election 6 December 2007 extracted 12-08-07
  103. ^ a b c AM speaks of Bhutto bomb horror BBC Wales, 19 October, 2007
  104. ^ a b c d e MPs' adverts broke election rules Monday, 19 November 2007 extracted 22 January 2008
  105. ^ Labour calls coalition conference, BBC Wales, Friday, 15 June 2007
  106. ^ a b Details of Labour-Plaid agreement, BBC Wales, 27 July 2007
  107. ^ a b Labour agrees historic coalition, BBC Wales, 6 July 2007
  108. ^ Historic Labour-Plaid deal agreed, BBC Wales, 27 June 2007
  109. ^ Labour-Plaid coalition is sealed, BBC Wales, 7 July 2007
  110. ^ a b c Waltzing to political pas de deux Friday, 28 December 2007
  111. ^ Wigley's coalition deal criticism, BBC Wales, Tuesday, 7 August 2007
  112. ^ "Jones confirmed as deputy leader", BBC Wales, 11 July 2007]
  113. ^ Digital S4C 'could be bilingual'
  114. ^ Jones and Brown meet at Stormont, BBC Wales, 16 July 2007
  115. ^ a b c Plaid MP's BBC licence fee threat Monday, 20 August 2007
  116. ^ BBC audiences 'want modern Wales' Monday, 16 July 2007
  117. ^ a b c Plaid is urged to nominate peers BBC Wales Thursday, 13 September 2007
  118. ^ a b c First Plaid peers to be nominated Saturday, 26 January 2008, Extracted 26 Jan 2008
  119. ^ a b Wigley accepts Plaid peerage call Monday, 14 January 2008 Extracted 16 Jan 2008
  120. ^ a b Wigley is nominated as Plaid peer Saturday, 26 January 2008 extracted 27 Jan 08
  121. ^ Plaid 'aspirations' under attack BBC Wales Saturday, 22 September 2007


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