Personally I think their timing is off as the next leader is going to have to carry the can for 'the blank cheques that Starmer and McSweeney wrote start to bounce' at this rate, but the crazy people here are the 'save our Starmzy' types.
Personally I think their timing is off as the next leader is going to have to carry the can for 'the blank cheques that Starmer and McSweeney wrote start to bounce' at this rate, but the crazy people here are the 'save our Starmzy' types.
Problem for Anas Sarwar is while he needs Starmer to go before the May elections, anyone likely to be part of a post-Starmer government needs it to be after May.
A chart from the January 2026 ITV Cymru Wales / YouGov poll, showing Plaid Cymru on 37%, Reform UK on 23%, Wales Green Party on 13%, Labour on 10%, Conservative on 10%, Lib Dem on 5%
Skipping to one of the other devolved legislatures, if you are not watching the developing political earthquake in Wales, you need to start. A lot of the potential drama of the Holyrood election has evaporated, and good gods has the Senedd stepped up. www.itv.com/news/wales/2...
People are fretting way too much about this.
Looking at the electoral systems and current polling, Plaid should easily take 3 seats in Sir GΓ’r and be on the hunt for a 4th.
If Plaid lose out on a 3rd seat they likely have much bigger problems than Adam Price being unseated.
Been very hard to sit on this since the numbers first came through, but worth noting it's a picture consistent with breaks in our GB Westminster polling, which show Labour being hit most in Wales and (even more so) in Scotland.
NFU says Land Use Framework βneeds to give food production same priority as delivering environmental targetsβ
Great - so instead of devoting 70% of English land to intensive agriculture & just 3% for nature, can we now make it 50-50?
Or, yβknow, just meet 30x30
www.nfuonline.com/updates-and-...
Honestly I think chaos among UKIP MEPs, MSs, Councillors etc. is an under explored reason for their lowish vote ceiling - and I don't think they were even properly involved in any administrations/governments.
On the basis of these numbers (plus plus if Reform is able to run any councils) Reform's ability to govern is going to be put to the test rather quickly.
If their candidates fail to prove sensible and pragmatic there could well be a lot of scare stories about the party's record in a few years.
Senedd Voting Intention:
LAB: 27% (-2)
RFM: 24% (+5)
PLC: 24% (+4)
CON: 15% (-3)
LDM: 5% (-2)
GRN: 5% (-2)
Via @survation.bsky.social, 10 Mar - 3 Apr.
Changes w/ 18 Oct - 4 Nov.
If Carney gets past 1 I think liberals have enough structural advantages (+ enough help from Trump) to win a minority, but of course that's far from ideal from his perspective
The questions now are 1) will Carney avoid faltering on contact with actual politics (can't be an apolitical technocrat in an election campaign) and 2) will the impact of Trump and renewal give him a majority despite the Liberals' long tenure/cost of living/Carney's stilted french/Polievre's talent
That said I feel like Carney is precision engineered to appeal to Canadians' sense of themselves vis a vis the US (especially with Trump there as a contrast)
Mind you the ol' leader switcheroo doesn't exactly have a history of success in Canada (See John Turner, Kim Campbell, Paul Martin)
LPC: Lazarus Party of Canada
real danger I'll turn this into a column eventually but on the ADHD over diagnosing/over medicalising point - if you really do think that's a problem, why not, for example, try and build an actually inclusive world where all manners of people actually feel like they can lead fulfilling lives?
Huge win! Government announces plans to open up the Land Registry.
If delivered, will finally reveal more about who owns land in England and Wales.
Read my blog post for more details & how you can write to the Minister to make sure this now happens:
whoownsengland.org/2025/03/06/h...
π§΅1/
Also the utter chaos that was UKIP in the National Assembly for Wales from 2016. A leadership coup was announced on day one and it all devolved (ha) from there.
Only 7 members and they were constantly changing leader, forming new groups or rowing about whether they supported devolution.
Agreed. Building strategic independence from the US will be such a colossal activity that buying time to do it is a strategic imperative in itself.
bsky.app/profile/robe...
Even then, just think how much US things we're reliant on (software, IT hardware etc.). It's going to take a long while to be able to switch to alternatives.
And that's just for starters. The same applies to a huge amount of our foreign (and even some domestic) work. We can start to untangle and pull away but it's going to take at least 4/5 years.
Until then we can't treat the US as even neutral or our ability to do anything will be severely hampered.
To be fair I don't think it's *just* a reluctance to face hard truths.
The reality is our military and intelligence infrastructures are at best very intertwined with the US. At worst we're essentially reliant on them to be at all effective.
I don't think most people realise how completely our military and intelligence services are entwined with the US.
We may well need to become more independent, but it's not something that can happen overnight.
www.bbc.co.uk/news/article...
π¨ Highly critical report of Welsh Government's @welshgovernment.bsky.social lack of action or progress to reverse biodiversity declines in Wales
Published today by @senedd.wales Climate Change & Environment Committee
π§΅π
I just don't think the SNP would have had quite the same impact in the 70s of they'd gone with "devolve powers over the crown estate" over "it's Scotland's oil".
I'm not sure you could design a phrase that sounds drier and more trifling to the average Welsh vote.
To be fair I think there's maybe something in this for Plaid. Something along the lines of resources (energy) being extracted with no clear dividend for local communities.
That said, they need a much better framing than this whole "devolution of the crown estate".