Tag: Mark Drakeford

  • Mark Drakeford – 2022 Christmas Message

    Mark Drakeford – 2022 Christmas Message

    The Christmas message from Mark Drakeford, the Welsh First Minister, on 25 December 2022.

    In his Christmas message the First Minister says:

    Nadolig Llawen i bawb.

    I wish you all a Merry Christmas and hope this will be a time of rest and of peace.

    For the first time since the pandemic started, we will have a chance to spend this time of year with friends and families – as we have done for years before.

    As we do, think about all those who can’t be with their families; who are affected by war and famine around the world.

    Christmas is a time for generosity, for giving and community spirit.

    Let’s also think about all those people who will be working this Christmas to keep us safe over the festive period.

    From community volunteers to NHS staff and our emergency services.

    Thank you for everything you do.

    Diolch yn fawr i chi gyd.

    I wish you all a happy, restful and peaceful Christmas.

    Merry Christmas.

    Nadolig Llawen i chi gyd.

  • Mark Drakeford – 2022 Statement on Senedd Reform

    Mark Drakeford – 2022 Statement on Senedd Reform

    The statement made by Mark Drakeford, the First Minister of Wales, on 16 December 2022.

    Following the Senedd’s endorsement in June of the recommendations made by the Special Purpose Committee on Senedd Reform (SPC), the Welsh Government issued its formal response, committing to prepare and introduce legislation to take those recommendations forward.

    As the Welsh Government response noted: “In some cases, the Senedd’s Business Committee is also asked to consider the recommendations. The Welsh Government will work with the Business Committee on these specific areas”.

    I am grateful to the Business Committee for its recent work in respect of Senedd Reform, and for the conclusions set out in its report published on 9 December. We will take into account these conclusions – which relate to the number of Welsh Ministers, Presiding and Deputy Presiding Officers, and Senedd Commissioners, as well as issues related to Senedd Members seeking to change party between elections – as we develop the relevant legislation and the associated policy and delivery work.

    The Welsh Government continues to progress the overall programme of work required to translate the SPC recommendations into the legislation necessary to implement the reforms, in line with the timescales outlined in the Co-Operation Agreement. In doing so, we will continue to work in partnership with the Senedd Commission and with other partners in developing the overall delivery programme for the reforms. Further engagement with external partners is planned for the new year.

    We will provide a further update to the Senedd on progress with this work by Easter 2023.

  • Mark Drakeford – 2022 Answer to Andrew RT Davies in the Welsh Assembly

    Mark Drakeford – 2022 Answer to Andrew RT Davies in the Welsh Assembly

    The answer given by Mark Drakeford, the First Minister of Wales, in the Welsh Assembly on 18 October 2022.

    Llywydd, the prescription of the Welsh Government is to invest more money in the ambulance service, to have more staff working in the ambulance service, to have a wider range of people able to provide those services and for ambulances to know that, when they arrive at hospitals, the hospital will be in a position to receive that patient so that the ambulance can get back on the road again and attend in a timely way to other people who are waiting. That is the prescription of the Welsh Government.35

    What do people who work in the service—? And as I say, they’ll have heard the way that the Member has described the service they provide this afternoon. What do they face? They—[Interruption.] He has chosen to use that language this afternoon, he didn’t—[Interruption.] And you have chosen to use that language here this afternoon. What do those people face? They face cuts to their pay because of the policy of your Government, and now they face cuts to the budgets that the health service itself will have at its disposal. It is shocking. It is absolutely shocking to me that you think that you can turn up here this afternoon, with the mess that your party has made of the budgets of this country, of the reputation of this country around the world, and that you promise those people that there will be more to come—[Interruption.] And you think you can turn up here this afternoon and claim some sort of moral high ground. What sort of world do you belong in?

  • Mark Drakeford – 2022 Comments on the Resignation of Liz Truss

    Mark Drakeford – 2022 Comments on the Resignation of Liz Truss

    The comments made by Mark Drakeford, the Welsh First Minister, on Twitter on 20 October 2022.

    This has been a complete and utter failure of government with everyone in this country now having to pay the price.

    The deep division within the UK Government means that any successor will face the same challenges.

    A #GeneralElection is now the only way forward for the country.

  • Mark Drakeford – 2022 Speech to Labour Party Conference

    Mark Drakeford – 2022 Speech to Labour Party Conference

    The speech made by Mark Drakeford, the First Minister of Wales, on 26 September 2022.

    Jo, thank you for that very kind introduction and for everything you and our Welsh Labour MPs do and thank you Chair for this opportunity to address conference.

    Whenever I come to Liverpool, I’m always glad to be able to say how great it is to be back in North Wales.

    And there is a very special reason for that Welsh celebration this year.

    This autumn it will be one hundred years since the Labour Party first won a majority of seats in a General Election in Wales.

    And we’ve done it in every election across the whole of the century which has followed.

    It’s a remarkable achievement, but the celebration is very powerfully accompanied by a growing sense of disappointment and disillusion.

    Because, in the 100 years during which Wales has voted, time and time again, for Labour, only 33 of those years have resulted in a Labour Government at Westminster.

    The message I bring is a simple one:
    The central reason for our Party’s existence;
    The reason why our members do those things we ask of them: knocking those doors, delivering those leaflets, making those phone calls is this:
    We exist to seek and to win political power.

    Not as an end in itself, but because only in that way can we change for the better the lives of those who rely on the Labour Party to fashion that better future for us all.

    And, Conference: we can do better.

    Whether that’s through a Welsh Labour Government, or a Labour Mayor, or a Labour council, we show every day the difference that Labour can make.

    And when we don’t do it, when we don’t win power on their behalf, let’s be clear: we let those people down.

    We can carry on winning our own elections in Wales and doing the things which only we can do.

    But without a Labour Government at Westminster, the story can never be complete.

    And Conference, using the privilege of power, even in the toughest of times, is an obligation, not a choice.

    In our local elections in May of this year, while the Tories lost 44% of all the seats they held, we won councils across the country.

    For those of you wondering what to do when this Conference is over, I can now offer you the opportunity to walk from the northern shores of Wales to the southernmost tip, without ever leaving territory where Labour is in power.

    What a sense of excitement, of new possibility there is when we, at last, are able to put our priorities into practice.

    Whenever we’ve had the chance, it is Labour Governments which have shaped the lives of our citizens for the better.

    Without Labour in power there would have been no NHS, no National Minimum Wage, no devolution to Wales and Scotland and no peace in Northern Ireland, either.

    And, because in Wales we have had the opportunity, we are able to show what a Labour Government can do.

    In this Senedd term we won’t be restarting fracking, because we never allowed it in the first place.

    But we are paying all our social care workers the real living wage.

    And we’ll provide universal free school meals for every child in our primary schools.

    Conference, let me just set all this in the context of two current discussions inside our own Party.

    First of all, the Senedd, with its unbroken Labour Governments, has always been elected by proportional representation, a system put on the statute book – twice! – by a Labour Government at Westminster.

    And, in a special conference, earlier this summer, over three quarters of the entire Welsh Party voted to strengthen the proportionality of our voting system, to make sure that every Labour vote will count towards creating that next Welsh Labour Government.

    And secondly, conference, while Labour has always formed the Government in Wales, we’ve never governed alone.

    The fault line in Welsh politics runs right down the middle of the Senedd. On the one side, a reactionary, out-of-touch, deeply unloved Conservative Party.

    On the other side, those Parties committed to social and economic progress.

    Do the Parties of the centre left agree on everything? Of course not.

    But we focus on those areas where progressive parties can agree; a politics which recognises the dominant position of Labour, but which also recognises that no Party has a monopoly on progressive ideas.

    And, in the face of the dreadful decisions of last week, the obligation to do everything we can to take and exercise power on behalf of that great mass of decent people, the length and breadth of the UK is more powerful than ever.

    How has it come to this?

    A country in which the rich are rewarded while a cruel and casual kick is aimed at the family struggling by on bare bones Universal Credit.

    Conference, of course we are better than this.

    People across our country want what we want as a Party: a country in which the broadest backs bear the greatest burden;

    Where we protect, not punish, those made vulnerable by sickness or disability or old age;

    Where extraordinary windfall profits are put to work for the benefit of us all;

    Where borrowing is used to invest in the skills and infrastructure which really create economic growth, not squandered in pursuit of a dogma which has been disproved time and time again around the world.

    Today, a fearful United Kingdom looks on in dismay and disbelief at the wreckage caused by a government which they had no hand in creating.

    Towards the end of his too-short life, Nye Bevan’s great friend and agent, Archie Lush said to him, ‘you see, Nye, you could have been Prime Minister if you’d wanted to’. Bevan replied, ‘I never wanted to be anything. I wanted to do something’.

    And that, Conference, is the simple difference between the Tories and us.

    They scrap like ferrets in a sack, just to become Prime Minister.

    We want Keir Starmer to be Prime Minister, because we know that he will want to do the things which only Labour can do.

    Britain really can be better.

    And that’s why nothing is more important for Wales than making sure that happens.

  • Mark Drakeford – 2021 Statement on Covid-19

    Mark Drakeford – 2021 Statement on Covid-19

    The statement made by Mark Drakeford, the Welsh First Minister, on 4 June 2021.

    I want to thank everyone in Wales for everything they have done to control the spread of coronavirus and keep rates low. The emergence of the delta variant shows the pandemic is not over yet and we all need to continue to take steps to protect ourselves and our loved ones.

    The risk of infection is significantly less outdoors than it is indoors. This is why we are phasing in the changes in this three-week cycle. This will allow more people to enjoy events outdoors and take advantage of the Welsh summer, while we continue to roll out the vaccination programme to all adults.

    We will review the public health situation again in a couple of weeks to see whether we can continue to relax the restrictions and restart indoor events.

  • Boris Johnson – 2021 Letter to Mark Drakeford

    Boris Johnson – 2021 Letter to Mark Drakeford

    The letter from Boris Johnson, the Prime Minister, to Mark Drakeford, the Welsh First Minister, on 8 May 2021.

    Text of letter (in .pdf format)

  • Mark Drakeford – 2020 Speech in the Welsh Assembly on the Brexit Deal

    Mark Drakeford – 2020 Speech in the Welsh Assembly on the Brexit Deal

    The speech made by Mark Drakeford, the Welsh First Minister, in the Welsh Assembly on 30 December 2020.

    Llywydd, first of all I would like to thank you for agreeing to this recall of the Senedd today. In introducing this debate, I want to make three points. First of all, we must welcome the fact that we have avoided the chaos that would have existed if we had left the transition period without a further deal with the European Union. Until the last minute there was a very real possibility that we could face tariffs on trade with our most important market and providers. It’s difficult to believe that we are facing such a scenario. No responsible Government should have considered breaking its links with European networks that allow us to stay safe from systematic terrorism and crime, but we have a Home Secretary who was willing to consider just that.

    This is not the deal that Wales was promised, but, in a world where we were only days away from the catastrophe of a ‘no deal’ Brexit, at least we have a deal in place, despite its inadequacies. As the Welsh Government has regularly argued, at least with a deal in place we now have a foundation on which to build. The relationship with our closest and most important trading partners has been safeguarded and we can now build upon this and strengthen it for the future. Indeed, the agreement allows for an ongoing process of review, and the Welsh Government will be arguing in favour of a review process that lays a foundation for positive evolution rather than it just being a way for the EU and the UK to keep each other in order.

    Llywydd, my second point has nothing to do with the UK’s external relationships and everything to do with the deeply disturbing state of our internal constitutional arrangements. This is the most important treaty that the UK will have signed for nearly 50 years. It is simply outrageous that in a democracy where the legislature is supposed to hold the Executive to account, the Bill to implement the treaty is being rammed through both Houses of Parliament in one day. The House of Commons will have the equivalent of 15 seconds to debate each page of the draft treaty—less time than it would take to read it, and this when the text of the treaty was only put in the public domain 72 hours before that debate takes place.

    Now, when Mrs Thatcher was Prime Minister—and we know that there are some in this Senedd who still worship at that unlamented shrine—the European Communities (Amendment) Bill 1986 was introduced into the House of Commons in April and did not gain Royal Assent until November of that year, and Mrs Thatcher had a Commons majority of 140.

    Under her Conservative successor, the Maastricht treaty of 1993 spent 23 sitting days in the House of Commons Committee Stage alone. Llywydd, I suspect that the official record does not contain many instances where I have made positive references to Mrs Thatcher, but at least the notion of parliamentary scrutiny appeared to have meant something to her.

    Of course, the opposition here will say that all this is driven by the lack of time, as if the Conservative Party had not had four and a half years to deliver a deal that we were told would be the easiest ever struck, or the Prime Minister will be threatening us with the consequences if the future relationship Bill is not enacted before tomorrow evening. But all of that is simply wrong. The EU is bringing the treaty into provisional application, and the European Parliament will have several weeks to understand the implications of a text that is about the same length as the Bible. Why are we not able to do the same? How has taking back control collapsed so quickly into having no parliamentary control at all?

    Llywydd, this Senedd should refuse to play along with this pretence of scrutiny. The first time the Welsh Government saw even one clause of the treaty was on Christmas Day. The Bill itself, to which we have been asked to give consent, has been with us for one working day, and that under strict embargo. It is plainly impossible for anyone in this Senedd to have a clear understanding of the ways in which this Bill will affect our competence. When we tabled the motion for debate today, Llywydd, we could not refer to the Bill because it had not been introduced and was not in the public domain. And if we had put the debate off until tomorrow, it would have been after the Bill had been enacted. This is not how a democracy should work. And let me be clear that, in these circumstances, this Government will not bring a motion seeking either to give or refuse consent in such circumstances.

    Now, the amendment laid to the debate from the Conservative Party in Wales invites us to provide legislative consent to a Bill that they cannot possibly have considered. We will oppose that amendment, and the amendment in the name of Caroline Jones, which seeks simply to refight battles that that amendment itself says should be put behind us. We cannot support the third amendment, from Plaid Cymru, which fails to recognise that a deal is better than no deal for the reasons that I have already set out. The Government will abstain on the fourth and final amendment on the order paper today, Llywydd. The Welsh Government does not support the deal, but nor do we believe that it is for the Senedd to instruct MPs as to how they should vote any more than Members of the Senedd would be prepared to take instructions from parties at Westminster.

    Llywydd, all this brings me to my third point. Just why is it that the UK Government has not given more time to Parliament and to the other UK legislatures to scrutinise this treaty? The answer is simple: the UK Government wants to get the Bill on the statute book before all the details of this deal have had time to emerge. But we know here that businesses will have a treaty that will make trade with our largest and most important market more expensive and more difficult—the loss of contracts because of new rules of origin arrangements; the cost in time and money of export health certificates and sanitary and phytosanitary checks for agriculture and food exports; the end of the mutual recognition of professional qualifications; the failure to include access to the single market for UK services, meaning businesses will have to rely on 27 different sets of national rules to trade across the EU where they have only one today. This is a bad deal for business and for business here in Wales.

    And for our fellow citizens, what will this deal mean? Queuing at airports, visas for longer stays and the elimination of the freedom to live and work anywhere across the continent of Europe, mobile phones where calls cost far more or may not work at all, fewer people from the European Union able to work in our health and social care system looking after people here in Wales who need their help. And for our young people in particular, Llywydd, the cultural vandalism of cutting them off from the Erasmus+ programme, the largest international exchange programme in history, which people from Wales have done so much to shape and foster. Instead, we will be offered an English system, because, let’s be clear, that is what is now proposed: a scheme made in Westminster and administered in Whitehall, with all the responsibilities that this Senedd holds for further and higher education in Wales not simply sidelined, but written out of the script altogether.

    Llywydd, unlike other parties here in this Chamber, the Welsh Government has always argued that a deal was preferable to no deal. Even this thin and disappointing treaty, so different from what was promised, is better than the bitterness and the chaos that would have followed no deal at all. This Government will now redouble our efforts to work with businesses in all parts of our country to limit the damage that this deal continues to inflict, to work with our public services to limit the damage done to Welsh citizens, young and old, and to work with our friends and our partners in the European Union to reaffirm this Welsh nation’s determination to go on being outward looking, international in perspective, and welcoming to the rest of the world.

  • Mark Drakeford – 2020 Statement on Wales and Ending Lockdown

    Mark Drakeford – 2020 Statement on Wales and Ending Lockdown

    Below is the text of the statement made by Mark Drakeford, the Welsh First Minister, on 8 May 2020.

    The Health Protection (Coronavirus Restrictions) (Wales) Regulations 2020 (‘the Regulations’), impose restrictions on gatherings, the movement of people, and the operation of businesses, including closures, in Wales. They impose requirements on businesses that are open to take reasonable measures to ensure physical distancing between people. This has been done to help protect everyone from the spread of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2).

    Under regulation 3(2) Welsh Ministers are required to review the need for the requirements and restrictions in the Regulations every 21 days. The second review was due by 7 May.

    We carried out this second review using the latest evidence from the UK Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (SAGE) and the advice of the Chief Medical Officer for Wales. While we have passed the first peak of infection and rates continue to fall, it is still too early for significant lifting of requirements or restrictions.

    This means that schools will not be opening up over the next three weeks beyond what is already permissible under the Regulations.

    The reproduction rate of the virus continues to fall. It is below the rate of 1 above which we would see exponential growth. Our NHS has coped well and is continuing to build capacity. Plans are in place to build-up our test, track and trace capability, and to ensure the continued availability of PPE. These conditions, taken together, will allow us to continue to take incremental steps over the coming weeks and months to ease restrictions when it is safe to do so.

    The improving situation and latest evidence on transmission of the virus has meant we have been able to consider some minor adjustments to the Regulations to come into force on Monday. SAGE advises that the risk of infection is diminished outdoors, but physical distancing of 2m must be maintained and groups must not congregate. Given the significant health and wellbeing benefits of exercise, we are bringing forward amendments to the Regulations to allow for exercise more than once a day.

    We will work with our partners across Wales to plan for additional activity that can take place outdoors if conditions continue to improve. Garden centres can open provided they adhere to the physical distancing duty.

    People who can work from home should continue to do so. We will continue to work closely with our partners in the public sector, trade unions, businesses, the third sector and others, to support businesses and employees who cannot work from home to carry out their work safely.

    Amendments will be brought forward to the Regulations to allow people to leave their home to access some specified public services; starting with Household Waste and Recycling Centres and libraries. The timing of these changes will need to be agreed with local authorities and service operators, so that there is time to put in place guidance and protocols.

    To increase democratic oversight, we will amend the Regulations to remove the Welsh Ministers’ power to terminate requirements or restrictions by direction. This means that all changes to the principal Regulations must be brought before the Senedd.

    We keep the Regulations under continuous review so that we can respond to the latest evidence on transmission of the virus, effectiveness of the requirements and restrictions, and levels of compliance, as soon as needed.

    Our preference remains a four-nation response to coming out of lock-down, and we remain in consultation with all parts of the UK. Our duty is to the people of Wales, and our decisions will be based on the evidence and specific circumstances of Wales.