{"id":22239,"date":"2026-04-26T07:31:19","date_gmt":"2026-04-26T07:31:19","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/britain\/22239\/"},"modified":"2026-04-26T07:31:19","modified_gmt":"2026-04-26T07:31:19","slug":"after-a-century-together-wales-and-labour-face-a-brutal","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/britain\/22239\/","title":{"rendered":"After a century together, Wales and Labour face a brutal &#8230;"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><a role=\"link\" href=\"https:\/\/observer.co.uk\/topics\/politics\" class=\"is_Anchor font_body _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _ws-pre-wrap _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _fs-f-size-true _cur-pointer\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\"><\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-7048 _fs-f-size-16 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500603 _col-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal _tt-capitalize\">Wales<\/p>\n<p><\/a><\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonDoric _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-4048 _fs-f-size-14 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500599 _col-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">Sunday 26 April 2026<\/p>\n<p>Keir Starmer\u2019s \u2018toxic\u2019 party is falling apart. Now Plaid Cymru and Reform UK are ready to pick up the pieces<img decoding=\"async\" loading=\"eager\" fetchpriority=\"high\" src=\"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/britain\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/04\/WEB_ce188c7a0d10bd0270606fbd0dc5b377c6a9cdeb.jpg\" alt=\"Labour Councillor, Paul James\"   style=\"width:100%;height:100%;object-fit:contain;object-position:left top\"\/><\/p>\n<p role=\"note\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonDoric _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-4048 _fs-f-size-14 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500599 _col-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal _width-10037 _pr-t-space-16 _pl-t-space-16\">Labour Councillor, Paul James<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" loading=\"lazy\" fetchpriority=\"auto\" src=\"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/britain\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/04\/Ceri_Thomas.jpg\" alt=\"Photo of Ceri Thomas\"   style=\"width:100%;height:100%;object-fit:cover;object-position:center\"\/><\/p>\n<p>Ceri ThomasEditor<\/p>\n<p tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _fs-_lg_f-size-16 _lh-_lg_f-lineHeigh3500603 _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-14 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500600 _col-c-seville_p930930286 _select-auto _ws-normal\">Share<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal drop-cap-paragraph\">Wales fell head over heels for Labour 100 years ago and has been steadfast ever since. For the whole of that century Labour has won every general election in the country, and when devolution came along in 1999, the nation and the party renewed their vows. Labour has always been in power at the Welsh parliament, the Senedd, but <a role=\"link\" href=\"https:\/\/observer.co.uk\/the-sensemaker\/culture-1\/article\/labour-faces-election-rout-in-three-countries\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Anchor font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _ws-pre-wrap _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _cur-pointer _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-18 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-inherit _col-orange_600 _textDecorationColor-orange_600 _td-underline _textDecorationStyle-solid\" style=\"font-weight:var(--f-weight-300)\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">a divorce is coming<\/a>, and it will be nasty, noisy and consequential.<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">For months, the opinion polls for the Senedd elections on 7 May have been settled at the top of the rankings, skittish lower down. The nationalist <a role=\"link\" href=\"https:\/\/observer.co.uk\/news\/politics\/article\/plaid-cymru-topple-labour-in-historic-caerphilly-byelection-victory\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Anchor font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _ws-pre-wrap _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _cur-pointer _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-18 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-inherit _col-orange_600 _textDecorationColor-orange_600 _td-underline _textDecorationStyle-solid\" style=\"font-weight:var(--f-weight-300)\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">Plaid Cymru<\/a> and <a role=\"link\" href=\"https:\/\/observer.co.uk\/news\/politics\/article\/reform-cant-keep-its-councillors\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Anchor font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _ws-pre-wrap _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _cur-pointer _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-18 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-inherit _col-orange_600 _textDecorationColor-orange_600 _td-underline _textDecorationStyle-solid\" style=\"font-weight:var(--f-weight-300)\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">Reform UK<\/a> are out in front, and Labour is a distant third at 17% on a good day and 10% on a bad one. The last big poll had Labour winning 12 seats out of 96, and the Conservatives 3.<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">Welsh hearts and guts have both played a part in bringing the country to this point. The heart has become more comfortably Welsh over the past 25 years, and especially over the past 10. From the campaign trail, the same story comes back time and again: the gut reaction to <a role=\"link\" href=\"https:\/\/observer.co.uk\/news\/politics\/article\/the-dysfunction-in-downing-street-is-no-laughing-matter\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Anchor font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _ws-pre-wrap _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _cur-pointer _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-18 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-inherit _col-orange_600 _textDecorationColor-orange_600 _td-underline _textDecorationStyle-solid\" style=\"font-weight:var(--f-weight-300)\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">Keir Starmer<\/a> is brutal.<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">\u201cLabour in Westminster is the most toxic issue on the doorstep,\u201d says Paul James. \u201cStarmer\u2019s got the personality of a Waymo driver.\u201d Waymos, of course, are driverless.<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">James, a standup comedian by trade, is a Labour councillor and mayor of the small historic market town of Neath, 40 miles down the coast from Cardiff. It may never look better than on a sparkling day this week, when the sun could take people\u2019s minds off the empty shops on its high street and the vacant stalls in its market. \u201cThank you and goodbye,\u201d says the sign where Marks &amp; Spencer used to be. \u201cYour nearest store is M&amp;S Swansea.\u201d The shop in Swansea city centre is now closing as well.<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">\u201cWe\u2019re going to get taken to the cleaners,\u201d says James. \u201cI can see us coming third. It could come down to Reform versus anti-Reform. Losing strongholds like Neath, we could see what happened in Scotland replicated in Wales.\u201d<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">How will the party find a way back? \u201cI\u2019m not sure even if there will be a way back.\u201d<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">The most likely beneficiary of this upheaval, and odds on to be first minister, is Rhun ap Iorwerth, the leader of Plaid Cymru, a party born almost at the moment when Labour first rose to power. One of its founders spoke of a mission to restore Welsh pride and overcome \u201ca sense of inferiority\u201d.<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" loading=\"lazy\" fetchpriority=\"auto\" src=\"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/britain\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/04\/WEB_6ae4359e189f751f8b83cf0607d6ebecbf03e19f.jpg\" alt=\"Former Labour stronghold Neath, left. Below, Plaid Cymru leader Rhun ap Iorwerth\"   style=\"width:100%;height:100%;object-fit:contain;object-position:left top\"\/><\/p>\n<p role=\"note\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonDoric _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-4048 _fs-f-size-14 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500599 _col-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">Former Labour stronghold Neath, left. Below, Plaid Cymru leader Rhun ap Iorwerth<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">There is work still to do, says ap Iorwerth, based on how voters see Wales now: \u201cUnderperforming. Short of its potential. Broken, in some ways, by being told to stay in your place, but with a real sense of agitation that this is not as good as it could get. On the doorstep, people are fed-up of that lack of confidence that we have, that lack of belief in ourselves. I have a firm belief that there is an untapped determination there to be more than this.\u201d<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">In a political situation this fluid, paradoxes are everywhere. Plaid placards stand in areas where they would never have been seen before, while in old Labour heartlands such as the south Wales valleys, Welsh flags are cable-tied to lampposts. The dragons signify not nationalist feeling, as you might expect, but much more likely a vote for Reform UK, the only major party standing candidates that does not have either \u201cWales\u201d or \u201cWelsh\u201d in its name. There are times when the political compass seems to be gyrating but its needle still shows true north when it points to identity as the most profound shift in Wales since devolution.<\/p>\n<p>NewslettersChoose the newsletters you want to receive<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-_xl_block _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-33333335 _select-auto _ws-normal _dsp-none _text-left _shrink-1\">Clear, calm analysis on the stories driving the day\u2019s news.<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-_xl_block _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-33333335 _select-auto _ws-normal _dsp-none _text-left _shrink-1\">The very best of our journalism, reviews and ideas \u2013 curated each day.<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-_xl_block _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-33333335 _select-auto _ws-normal _dsp-none _text-left _shrink-1\">How to live well \u2013 new writing on food, style, design, travel and shopping from our best writers, including Nigel Slater<\/p>\n<p><a role=\"link\" tabindex=\"0\" href=\"https:\/\/observer.co.uk\/newsletters\" class=\"is_Anchor font_body _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _ws-pre-wrap _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _fs-f-size-true _cur-pointer _col-color _td-none is_ButtonUnderlined \" style=\"display:inline-flex;color:var(--text_primary);align-items:center;margin-top:var(--t-space-8);margin-bottom:var(--t-space-16);cursor:pointer;align-self:flex-start\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\"><\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonDoric _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-4048 _fs-f-size-14 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500599 _col-text_primar121 _select-auto _ws-normal _borderBottomColor-seville_pri3344091 _borderBottomWidth-1px _pb-16px _borderBottomStyle-solid\">For information about how The Observer protects your data, read our <a role=\"link\" aria-label=\"Privacy Policy Link\" href=\"https:\/\/observer.co.uk\/policy\/privacy\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Anchor font_caslonDoric _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _ws-pre-wrap _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _cur-pointer _fs-f-size-14 _lh-inherit _ff-f-family _col-orange_600 _fw-f-weight-4048 _textDecorationColor-orange_600 _td-underline _textDecorationStyle-solid\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">Privacy Policy<\/a><\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">The question that matters most is how people see themselves: Welsh or British? Welsh first or British first? Its importance is summed up by the political scientist Dr Jac Larner from Cardiff University. In Scotland, a comfortable majority of people think of themselves as Scottish only. In England, people tend to think of Englishness and Britishness as the same thing. But, says Larner, \u201cin Wales you have a lot of people who feel Welsh only, a lot of people who say they\u2019re British only, and a lot of people who feel comfortable with being both. Which national category people say they belong to has been a really powerful way to predict how someone is going to vote.\u201d<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">Plaid is a magnet for the Welsh-only and Reform for the British-only, but it is the first of those categories, along with Welsh-first, which is younger and growing.<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">Devolution set Welsh people off in that direction and Brexit nudged them further down the path. Most paradoxically of all, the pandemic may have helped them complete the journey.<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">\u201cCovid was very important in that respect,\u201d says ap Iorwerth. \u201cIt happened 20 years after the Senedd was established but it took until then for people to understand that things could be done differently in Wales.\u201d<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">But hang on: differently and worse. Death rates in Wales from Covid, certainly in the deadly second wave, were the highest in the UK. \u201cSo, I agree,\u201d he responds. \u201cBut at the time it became clear in people\u2019s minds that it was possible to take different decisions. It was crazy. The border was closed at times because it was deemed by a government that things needed to be done differently in Wales, and the fact that they listened to a first minister of Wales [Labour\u2019s Mark Drakeford], not a UK prime minister, made a difference to our sense of empowerment as a nation.\u201d<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">If it is a case of my country right or wrong then, objectively, devolution has got a lot more wrong than right. Asked to point to a notable success in devolved policies, ap Iorwerth picks out recycling. Meanwhile, the Welsh NHS is in crisis and Welsh children are sliding down the international education league tables.<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">For older generations of Welsh people, the lack of care for education is not just worrying but sad \u2013 a sign of how badly the country has lost its way.<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">\u201cWhen I see the proud record we have as an educating nation,\u201d says ap Iorwerth, \u201cone of the first generally literate populations in the world, and now having seen a significant slide in education standards, that makes me angry.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" loading=\"lazy\" fetchpriority=\"auto\" src=\"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/britain\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/04\/WEB_b32cc6cd4d880b561201323e8168720423efe251.jpg\" alt=\"Plaid Cymru leader Rhun ap Iorwerth\"   style=\"width:100%;height:100%;object-fit:contain;object-position:left top\"\/><\/p>\n<p role=\"note\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonDoric _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-4048 _fs-f-size-14 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500599 _col-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">Plaid Cymru leader Rhun ap Iorwerth<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">For Paul James, a lecturer before he was a comedian, the change he has seen is chastening. \u201cI\u2019ve got a postgraduate education, I work in the arts, but I still consider myself working class,\u201d he says. \u201cWhen I was brought up, it was \u2018doctor, lawyer, teacher\u2019 said in the same breath. That was the professions. Now these kids in college talk about hair or care. Are they going to go into working with kids, or makeup and hair? When I was in school, that wouldn\u2019t have been your either\/or option.\u201d<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">For generations, the only either\/or in Welsh politics has been the Labour way or the highway. The signs now are that the charm that has kept the nation under Labour\u2019s spell has been broken.<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">Ap Iorwerth describes a moment on the campaign trail trying to persuade an 80-year-old woman with a lifetime of loyalty to Labour to vote for Plaid Cymru. Her eyes filled with tears: she could not do it. But, barring a miracle, on 8 May she, and Labour, will wake up to find themselves in a minority \u2013 and whatever happens in England and Scotland, the shock value alone may propel Wales to an unusual place as the greatest symbol of Keir Starmer\u2019s failings.<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">Photographs by Francesca Jones for The Observer<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"Wales Sunday 26 April 2026 Keir Starmer\u2019s \u2018toxic\u2019 party is falling apart. Now Plaid Cymru and Reform UK&hellip;\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":22240,"comment_status":"","ping_status":"","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[4],"tags":[1360,94,183,958,5,6,38],"class_list":{"0":"post-22239","1":"post","2":"type-post","3":"status-publish","4":"format-standard","5":"has-post-thumbnail","7":"category-uk","8":"tag-elections","9":"tag-keir-starmer","10":"tag-labour","11":"tag-reform","12":"tag-uk","13":"tag-united-kingdom","14":"tag-wales"},"share_on_mastodon":{"url":"https:\/\/pubeurope.com\/@UnitedKingdom\/116469844065910329","error":""},"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/britain\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/22239","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/britain\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/britain\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/britain\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/britain\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=22239"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/britain\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/22239\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/britain\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/22240"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/britain\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=22239"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/britain\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=22239"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/britain\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=22239"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}