Walesâ new first minister to name health secretary
Eluned Morgan is expected to appoint Walesâ new health secretary on Wednesday, on her first full day as first minister.
She became the first woman to lead the Welsh government on Tuesday and has held the health role herself since 2021.
Her successor in the health department will inherit record NHS waiting lists and be the subject of frequent attacks from opposition parties.
Ms Morgan will also confirm Huw Irranca-Davies as deputy first minister, and she will also announce who will be who her counsel general, or chief legal adviser.
Mr Irranca-Davies, the climate change and rural affairs aecretary, stood on a âjoint unity ticketâ with Ms Morgan for the Welsh Labour leadership.
The health portfolio can be seen as something of a poisoned chalice, given the huge challenges facing the NHS and social services.
But the last three first ministers had all previously done the health job.
Whoever takes on the post might not be there long.
It is possible the appointment will be temporary, ahead of a full cabinet reshuffle next month.
The new first minister was nominated by Senedd members, recalled from their summer break to replace Vaughan Gething, who resigned last month.
He quit after four members of his cabinet resigned their jobs, and Ms Morgan was elected unopposed as Welsh Labour leader.
Mr Gething, Walesâ first black first minister, became mired in controversy after accepting donations from a man twice convicted of environmental offences for his election campaign and sacking one of his cabinet ministers over leaked messages.
âWeâve got to be realisticâ
Ms Morgan said she would now embark on a summer âlistening exerciseâ to gauge the priorities of the people of Wales and help the Welsh government to âprioritiseâ.
She told BBC Wales Today she thought public priorities would include tackling âthe longest waitsâ for NHS treatment, improving âeducational standards, turning the economy around, all of those thingsâ.
But she warned that âweâve got to be realisticâ.
âWeâve got 18 months to the next [Senedd] election.
âWeâve got a limited budget, but what we do have now thatâs different is a Labour government in Westminster who are anxious and keen to work with us.â
She said Keir Starmerâs UK Labour government would ârespect the devolution settlementâ but âwhere we can, thereâs no reason why we shouldnât work togetherâ.
Asked if her government might receive more money from the UK Treasury, she said: âWell, letâs have a look. Certainly they have offered more money now to people in certain public sectors.
âWe will get a certain amount of money as a result of that, so there will be some more money coming into the system.â