Politics Busy morning so let's get to it. As with all the parties, Plaid Cymru's website is a bit of a mess in terms of navigation. Nowhere in the visible part of the front page is there a link to the manifesto you have to dig through menus upon menus to find a hyperlinked version and even further to a pdf. If I was a political party, I'd have a link to the manifesto at the top of the front page in big letters so that a voter can find out what I stand for. Only the Tories have a direct link even if its at the bottom of the page underneath a scary collage of headlines from newspapers about bloodbaths along with Angela Rippon's face twice.
Anyway, back to Wales.
The BBC
The corporation isn't directly mentioned by name in the manifesto but there are a couple of things which might impact.
Sporting events would be free-to-air if terrestrial broadcasters could afford the rights. The BBC would still have live cricket or premiership football if they could justify bidding for them. Presumably PC isn't proposing to offer direct funding.
Honestly, I'm not completely against devolving participation in Eurovision. Perhaps S4C could join the EBU as a separate entity.
Global Emissions
Net-zero targets aren't mentioned in the main text but on one of the title pages:
Wales wants to reach net-zero in ten years, which is immensely ambitious. But just in Wales mind. A lot of this manifesto feels like it was written for a Welsh Assembly rather than Westminster election.
They're really scared of pylons and panels fucking up the landscape:
They mention this twice:
I agree with them. But Plaid Cymru, roof-tops are right there.
Nothing particular about fossil fuel subsidies but the section about farming mentions cutting taxes on renewable liquid fuels.
Libraries
Never said in the manifesto.
Film Industry
Never said in the manifesto.
Gender Equality
LGBTQ+ has a whole section in the manifesto, and it's brilliant:
Not even the Green Party manifesto goes that hard, especially in its support for trans people. Well done. No notes.
Democracy
On enfranchisement:
It's true, since May 2021, 16 and 17 year olds have been able to vote in the Senedd Elections under a Labour government in Wales.
On voter ID:
On proportional representation:
So not quite proportional representation in terms of the number of MPs rather more of a chance for people's second or even third choice candidates to win a seat, the system used for Deputy Speakers elections in the House of Commons, Northern Ireland Assembly elections and local elections in Scotland and Northern Ireland (source).
No sundries.
I can't vote for Plaid Cymru.
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