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Peer apologises for using term 'welching' in Lords debate | Peer apologises for using term 'welching' in Lords debate |
(35 minutes later) | |
A government minister has apologised after inadvertently insulting Welsh members of the House of Lords by using the term "welching". | A government minister has apologised after inadvertently insulting Welsh members of the House of Lords by using the term "welching". |
Lady Williams was answering a question about tackling rogue landlords, when she suggested a need to stop some "welching" on their obligations. | Lady Williams was answering a question about tackling rogue landlords, when she suggested a need to stop some "welching" on their obligations. |
Labour peer, Lord Morris of Aberavon, challenged her on the use of the term, describing it as "inappropriate". | Labour peer, Lord Morris of Aberavon, challenged her on the use of the term, describing it as "inappropriate". |
The origins of the term are disputed. It can be spelled 'welsh' or 'welch'. | The origins of the term are disputed. It can be spelled 'welsh' or 'welch'. |
The exchange took place during a short debate on protection of tenants in the private rented sector. | The exchange took place during a short debate on protection of tenants in the private rented sector. |
Lord Morris, a former attorney general who represented the Welsh town of Aberavon as its MP for 42 years until 2001, said: "If I heard the term correctly, the minister used the inappropriate term welching. Would she define it please?" | Lord Morris, a former attorney general who represented the Welsh town of Aberavon as its MP for 42 years until 2001, said: "If I heard the term correctly, the minister used the inappropriate term welching. Would she define it please?" |
In response, Baroness William of Trafford said: "I did not mean it as a derogatory term to the Welsh... There is a term to welsh on an agreement... It is not an insult... I simply meant to not meet their obligations." | |
The Conservative local government minister later clarified that she "did not realise in using the term 'welch' it was an insult to anybody, and I do apologise if any bad feeling was felt by that term". | The Conservative local government minister later clarified that she "did not realise in using the term 'welch' it was an insult to anybody, and I do apologise if any bad feeling was felt by that term". |
Baroness Williams is not the first government minister to apologise to the House for using the term "welch". | |
In 2012, the then education secretary Michael Gove apologised for his use of the word, and assured the Commons that he did not want to be accused of "Cymryphobia". | |
According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the term's first recorded usage was in the 1860s in relation to a dispute over a horse racing bet, being understood to mean to "renege on payment of money owed as winnings". | According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the term's first recorded usage was in the 1860s in relation to a dispute over a horse racing bet, being understood to mean to "renege on payment of money owed as winnings". |
In subsequent use, the OED says it has come to be defined as to "renege on a promise or agreement with someone", to "cheat or dupe" or to "fail to honour a debt or obligation". | In subsequent use, the OED says it has come to be defined as to "renege on a promise or agreement with someone", to "cheat or dupe" or to "fail to honour a debt or obligation". |
It notes that the phrase is "sometimes considered offensive in view of the conjectured connection with Welsh people". | It notes that the phrase is "sometimes considered offensive in view of the conjectured connection with Welsh people". |