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UK Local Elections 2026
15APR

Welsh Lib Dems leave Reform door open

3 min read
13:21UTC

Lowdown

PoliticsDeveloping
Key takeaway

Lib Dems cannot put Reform in power on the Senedd numbers, but they have declined to say they would refuse.

The Welsh Liberal Democrats published their 96-page Senedd manifesto in Cardiff on 14 April 2026, led by Jane Dodds, and declined to rule out backing a Reform UK First Minister in any post-7 May confidence vote. 1 Headline pledges include £300 million for social care, free childcare from nine months, and a hospital repair programme, under the unionist title "A Stronger Wales in a Stronger UK".

The non-exclusion is rhetorical, not arithmetical. YouGov's Senedd MRP projects Plaid Cymru on 43 seats, Reform on 30, Welsh Labour on 12 and the Wales Green Party on 10 , inside a closed-list proportional system no Welsh voter has used before . A Reform-led Government at 30 seats would need 19 additional votes, and every route to 49 passes through Plaid or Labour in numbers the Lib Dems cannot supply. The statement does not change the maths; it changes what is on the record. No Welsh party has yet put in writing that it will not cooperate with Reform, and the Lib Dems are the first to make that formally ambiguous.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Wales has its own parliament, called the Senedd, which is elected on 7 May 2026. It uses a voting system (closed-list proportional representation) that usually produces no party with an outright majority, meaning several parties have to negotiate and agree to work together to form a government. The Welsh Liberal Democrats published their election programme on 14 April. When asked whether they would support a Reform UK First Minister (the Welsh equivalent of a Prime Minister) if the numbers worked out that way after the election, they declined to say no. This is notable because every other Welsh party has either ruled out cooperating with Reform, or has not been asked directly. The Welsh Lib Dems' answer keeps open the possibility, even though the projected seat numbers make it arithmetically almost impossible.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    The non-exclusion is likely to trigger formal responses from Plaid Cymru and Welsh Labour clarifying whether they will exclude Reform from government formation, creating a public record of coalition boundaries before polling day.

  • Risk

    If YouGov's Senedd MRP projection substantially changes before 7 May and Reform outperforms, the Lib Dems' non-exclusion could become a live question rather than a rhetorical one.

First Reported In

Update #4 · 22 Days to Go: Greens Take a Reform Seat in Kent

ITV News Wales· 15 Apr 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
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Electoral Commission
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Welsh Labour
Welsh Labour
Welsh Labour enters the Senedd election projected to fall from 29 seats to 12 under a closed-list PR system the party introduced, with First Minister Eluned Morgan polling below the constituency entry threshold. The party faces becoming third-largest in the chamber it redesigned, a devolution-era first.
Scottish National Party
Scottish National Party
The SNP is projected on 67 Holyrood seats, two above the majority threshold, on the first election under redrawn boundaries; John Swinney has stated a majority constitutes a mandate for a second independence referendum. A confirmed majority would reopen the constitutional question dormant since 2014 with no current Westminster route to a Section 30 order.
Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government
Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government
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HM Government / UK-wide parties
HM Government / UK-wide parties
The government frames the Representation of the People Bill as a proportionate foreign-influence response implemented at unusual speed. Reform UK holds its polling position while staying silent on crypto donation quantum. The Liberal Democrats frame the English local elections as a binary contest against Reform.
Scottish parties (SNP, Conservatives, Labour)
Scottish parties (SNP, Conservatives, Labour)
The SNP enters the regulated campaign as projected majority government through opposition fragmentation, not a vote surge. The Scottish Conservatives defend a manifesto the IFS dismisses and face zero constituency seats. Labour is the only party projected to retain any constituency presence beyond the SNP.