NEWSAR
Multi-perspective news intelligence
SRCThe Guardian - World News
LANGEN
LEANCenter-Left
WORDS901
ENT12
SAT · 2026-05-09 · 16:31 GMTBRIEF NSR-2026-0509-74926
News/Why Welsh voters turned their backs on the Labour party
NSR-2026-0509-74926Analysis·EN·Political Strategy

Why Welsh voters turned their backs on the Labour party

Welsh Labour experienced a historic collapse in the recent Senedd elections, falling to third place with only nine seats, a dramatic decline from its century-long dominance. This outcome, described as "astonishing" and "mullered," has paved the way for pro-independence Plaid Cymru to form a minority government.

Bethan McKernan and Jamie GriersonThe Guardian - World NewsFiled 2026-05-09 · 16:31 GMTLean · Center-LeftRead · 4 min
Why Welsh voters turned their backs on the Labour party
The Guardian - World NewsFIG 01
Reading time
4min
Word count
901words
Sources cited
2cited
Entities identified
12entities
Quality score
100%
§ 01

Briefing Summary

AI-generated
NEWSAR · AI

Welsh Labour experienced a historic collapse in the recent Senedd elections, falling to third place with only nine seats, a dramatic decline from its century-long dominance. This outcome, described as "astonishing" and "mullered," has paved the way for pro-independence Plaid Cymru to form a minority government. The scale of the defeat was so significant that outgoing First Minister Eluned Morgan lost her seat, becoming the first UK government leader to do so while in office. Labour's previous lowest seat count was 26 in a 60-seat chamber, highlighting the severity of their loss in the newly expanded 96-seat parliament. The party acknowledged the rejection by the Welsh people and committed to listening and rebuilding.

Confidence 0.90Sources 2Claims 5Entities 12
§ 02

Article analysis

Model · rule-based
Framing
Political Strategy
Human Interest
Tone
Sensational
AI-assessed
CalmNeutralAlarmist
Factuality
0.60 / 1.00
Mixed
LowHigh
Sources cited
2
Limited
FewMany
§ 03

Key claims

5 extracted
01

Labour had previously never held fewer than 26 seats in a 60-seat chamber.

statistic
Confidence
1.00
02

The first minister, Eluned Morgan, lost her seat in Ceredigion Penfro and resigned immediately.

factual
Confidence
1.00
03

The director of the Wales Governance Centre described Labour's collapse as 'astonishing' and 'mullered'.

quoteRichard Wyn Jones
Confidence
1.00
04

Labour experienced a significant collapse in the Senedd elections in Wales, falling to third place with nine seats.

statistic
Confidence
1.00
05

Plaid Cymru is set to form a minority government in Wales.

prediction
Confidence
0.90
§ 04

Full report

4 min read · 901 words
By Friday night, Keir Starmer and much of the Westminster Labour group were quietly relieved that the local election results in England hadn’t been quite as bad as feared. In Wales, however, Labour’s collapse in the Senedd was even more total than the most pessimistic predictions.For more than 100 years, Welsh Labour was the democratic world’s most successful election-winning machine, but the political behemoth limped into third place this week with just nine seats in a 96-seat parliament. A new chapter in Wales’s political and cultural history has opened: pro-independence Plaid Cymru is set to form a minority government.“For those of us who’ve only known Labour domination … the fact that it could collapse with such dramatic completeness – it’s quite hard to convey the shock. It was just astonishing. Labour was absolutely mullered,” said Richard Wyn Jones, the director of the Wales Governance Centre at Cardiff University.“We’ve known Labour was in deep trouble in the post-industrial valleys … but the fact that Plaid could win half of the 12 seats in Cardiff? Genuinely everywhere you look, it’s hard to identify any solid territory they can actually rebuild on.”In an extraordinary admission of defeat before a single constituency result was declared, Labour released a statement saying it expected to return just 10 MSs out of 96 available seats in the newly expanded Senedd chamber. The party previously never held fewer than 26 seats in a 60-seat chamber.The first minister, Labour’s Eluned Morgan, cut a tragic figure as the results were announced at the count in her west Wales constituency of Ceredigion Penfro. Three of the six seats available went to Plaid Cymru, two to Reform and one to the Conservatives, making Morgan the first ever leader of a government in the UK to lose their seat while in office.She immediately resigned in a concession speech. The party announced on Saturday that Ken Skates, MS for Fflint Wrecsam and former cabinet secretary for transport, would serve as interim leader.“I am proud of what Welsh Labour has achieved for this nation over so many years … But the people of Wales have rejected us and we owe it to the people of Wales to listen. To understand. And to rebuild,” she said.Morgan received lengthy applause from the room. The successful candidates expressed admiration for the Cardiff-born first minister’s energetic campaign, and praised her career in public service.But nothing Morgan could do would have been enough to stop the haemorrhage. Support for the party was already ebbing before she took over in 2024 after the disastrous, short-lived tenure of her predecessor, Vaughan Gething.Wales embarked on devolution more cautiously than Scotland and Northern Ireland, and initially very limited powers hampered Cardiff Bay administrations. Supporters insist the party held the line against 14 years of Conservative government in Westminster, protecting public services from the impact of austerity, Brexit and the Covid pandemic.Welsh Labour partly had an incumbency issue – but it had also to contend with the growing criticism of its track record in office, much of it justified. After nearly 30 years of Labour management of public services, Wales has fallen behind the other UK nations, particularly in poverty, education and the NHS, which is underperforming despite significant spending increases.Starmer’s election was expected to strengthen Welsh Labour as a “partnership in power” in Cardiff and London, but Starmer’s unpopularity dragged it down instead – and left the Cardiff Bay administration unable to blame the Conservatives for perceived failings.Starmer did not appear to have much interest in how the Welsh wing of the party fared, warning his cabinet against “overly deferential relations” with the devolved governments.Last year, 11 Labour Senedd members took the extraordinary step of writing to the prime minister claiming his administration had been either “deeply insensitive” to Wales or guilty of “constitutional outrage” by failing to deliver on devolution promises, including justice, policing and the crown estate.Alun Davies, a long-serving Labour member of the Senedd who lost his seat in Blaenau Gwent, told Channel 4 News that the party’s defeat was “manufactured in Downing Street” by Starmer’s “disregard” for Wales.“This is not simply midterm blues or a protest vote. This is a very deep turning away from a party that people have felt almost a cultural attachment to for more than a century,” he said.Another Labour source said: “This result has been a long time coming. On the doors, people felt let down by the Welsh government’s handling of the NHS and education. We have to take responsibility for that. People also haven’t felt the changes of a UK Labour government fast enough. It’s on all of us to rebuild the party in Wales.”Welsh Labour will elect a new leader in the coming weeks, but the contest will reflect the scale of its defeat. There are only nine people to choose from, since the leader must be a Senedd member – and nominees need the backing of 20% of MSs.The party must be “more muscular about its Welshness” if it wants to survive, said Laura McAllister, a professor of public policy at Cardiff University.“There’s a steady increase in the number of people who see themselves as Welsh only, or Welsh first and British second. If [Labour] want to capture that group, they need to show again that they are different to UK Labour, with their own identity and agenda, as in the early days of devolution and the ‘clear red water’,” she added.
§ 05

Entities

12 identified
§ 06

Keywords & salience

10 terms
welsh labour
1.00
local election results
0.90
political collapse
0.80
plaid cymru
0.70
senedd
0.70
independence
0.60
minority government
0.50
keir starmer
0.50
election-winning machine
0.40
post-industrial valleys
0.40
§ 07

Topic connections

Interactive graph
Network visualization showing 51 related topics
View Full Graph
Person Organization Location Event|Click node to navigate|Edge numbers = shared articles