Tory blasts Senedd leaderâs abolish stunt
The Welsh Conservativeâs Senedd leader has been warned against going down a âblind alleyâ of trying to debate the abolition of the Welsh Parliament.
Andrew RT Davies took to X, formerly Twitter, to say that he raised the issue at the Vale of Glamorgan agricultural show as he was âkeen to find out peopleâs viewsâ.
But Tory peer Nick Bourne, a former leader of the party in Wales and a member of the then Welsh Assembly, said there were âvery many good things about devolved politicsâ.
While the abolition of the Senedd is not a policy of the Conservatives, Mr Davies said he was keen to find out peopleâs views.
âOnce the vote was taken over 25 years ago, we determined that the correct approach was to make the assembly work, now the Senedd, for the good of the people of Wales,â said Lord Bourne on BBC Radio Walesâ Sunday Supplement programme.
âThat remains very much the position. I donât understand why weâre going down this blind alley.
âIt doesnât seem to make a lot of sense to me.â
Earlier in the week, Mr Davies shared a photo on X from the Vale of Glamorgan Show, showing how people were being asked to drop a ball into one of two buckets to highlight whether they wanted to abolish the Senedd or not, which he admitted was an âunscientific pollâ.
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Responding to criticism on X, Mr Davies said: âWeâre just keen to find out peopleâs views. Itâs important to find out what people think.â
Lord Bourne also questioned why Mr Davies had raised an issue of the availability of non halal food in Welsh schools, prompting the Welsh Tory leader to be accused of engaging in âIslamophobic race-baitingâ by the Muslim Council of Wales.
Lord Bourne said: âWe do have to make clear that weâre a one nation party.â
In response, Mr Davies said: âWelsh Conservatives stand against all forms of racism, including anti-Muslim hatred.
âRepresentations from across Wales have been made to me about the availability of non-halal meat in schools.
âThese are legitimate queries and I make no apologies for taking them forward.
âIt is important to have these discussions in a measured way and we will continue to do so.â
Lord Bourne called for Conservative Members of the Senedd (MSs) to have a group meeting to discuss its âone nationâ stance despite Welsh Parliament being in recess.
He went on to say that his partyâs âfocus should be how are we going to make things better for the people of Walesâ after the Conservative general election wipe-out in Wales and with the Reform party setting their sights on the Senedd elections in 2026.
âI think thereâs a great danger of talking Reform up,â he added.
âWeâve had UKIP before, and they were represented in the Senedd previously, and then it fizzled out.
âThe exposure that Reform is going to get now that theyâve got elected politicians in Westminster may well show what a busted flush they are.
âWeâre not that party.
âWeâre a party of the moderate right, and that should be reflected in the way we approach politics in Wales.â