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Plaid vote to change peer policy | |
(about 9 hours later) | |
Plaid Cymru has voted to send people to the House of Lords to represent the party - reversing its historic opposition to the move. | |
Plaid had always rejected the policy of creating its own peers because it wanted the Lords to be fully elected. | |
But Plaid parliamentary leader Elfyn Llwyd argued new powers for the Welsh assembly which are ratified by Parliament mean the party needed peers. | |
Members voted on the policy change at a meeting in Aberystwyth on Saturday. | |
The process of nominating and selecting suitable candidates to go to the Lords will now begin. | |
A meeting to decide the matter will be held in January. | |
At Plaid's conference in September representatives agreed to review the policy after Mr Llwyd argued that peers were required to ensure planned legislation for Wales was not blocked at Westminster. | At Plaid's conference in September representatives agreed to review the policy after Mr Llwyd argued that peers were required to ensure planned legislation for Wales was not blocked at Westminster. |
The members were also required to reflect the views of the people of Wales in the Upper Chamber, he said. | The members were also required to reflect the views of the people of Wales in the Upper Chamber, he said. |
The Welsh assembly's new powers under the Government of Wales act allows it to make its own laws in devolved areas, with the permission of Parliament. | The Welsh assembly's new powers under the Government of Wales act allows it to make its own laws in devolved areas, with the permission of Parliament. |
We have seen with the cash for honours scandal and all the problems that this has induced that the Lords is not a very democratic institution Bethan Jenkins AM | We have seen with the cash for honours scandal and all the problems that this has induced that the Lords is not a very democratic institution Bethan Jenkins AM |
Mr Llywd warned that many in the House of Lords might want to block such permission, known as Orders in Council. | Mr Llywd warned that many in the House of Lords might want to block such permission, known as Orders in Council. |
The Welsh assembly's presiding officer Dafydd Elis-Thomas, the only Plaid party member to sit as a peer, also believed his party's policy should change. | |
He has sat as a cross bencher, not as a party appointee, since 1992. | He has sat as a cross bencher, not as a party appointee, since 1992. |
Speaking after the vote, he said: "I think it's long overdue because we have not been represented as a party and as a point of view in the politics of Wales in the second chamber of the UK, especially now when legislation, the orders that empower the assembly, are being made through Westminster." | |
But there was some opposition within the party ranks. | |
Reform | |
Bethan Jenkins AM argued the Lords needed to be completely reformed before Plaid representatives were sent there. | |
"We have seen with the cash for honours scandal and all the problems that this has induced that the Lords is not a very democratic institution," she said. | "We have seen with the cash for honours scandal and all the problems that this has induced that the Lords is not a very democratic institution," she said. |
"We should be utilising our resources in other ways. | "We should be utilising our resources in other ways. |
"We should be looking forward to the referendum in 2011 or before - that is where we need to put our best people." | "We should be looking forward to the referendum in 2011 or before - that is where we need to put our best people." |
Plaid last discussed this issue in 1999 when a vote went against the motion. | Plaid last discussed this issue in 1999 when a vote went against the motion. |
Meanwhile members of Plaid's national council also decided not to back its vice president's paper which queried the party's support for a new military training academy in the Vale of Glamorgan. | |
MEP Jill Evans, who also chairs CND Cymru, said the proposed 5,000-job centre was inconsistent with the spirit of the party's defence policy. | |
The council said more work was needed on the paper. | |
A party spokesman denied that they were avoiding the issue. |
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