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UK Local Elections 2026
6MAY

Welsh Labour at 12%, lowest since 1906

4 min read
17:39UTC

YouGov's final Senedd MRP and an Ipsos Wales poll concur at roughly 12% for Welsh Labour, projecting the worst Welsh vote share recorded for the party since the 1906 general election.

PoliticsDeveloping
Key takeaway

Welsh Labour projects at 12% on Thursday 7 May, the party's lowest Welsh share since 1906.

Welsh Labour has governed Wales continuously since the Senedd opened in 1999. The final YouGov Senedd MRP and a closing-week Ipsos Wales poll concur at roughly 12% of the vote, which would be Labour's lowest Welsh vote share since the 1906 general election 1. Eluned Morgan remains projected below the constituency threshold in Ceredigion Penfro. The £4 billion NHS investment programme Welsh Labour launched at the end of March has not moved the curve. The Wales Governance Centre's mid-April reading holds: voters did not switch parties on the manifesto; they realigned tactically inside an unfamiliar counting system.

The closing-week debate stage made the gap visible. BBC Wales's 'Your Voice Live' debate on Tuesday 28 April put all six leaders before Bethan Rhys Roberts in Cardiff . The Spectator's read was that Nigel Farage would be 'disappointed', with a Welsh net rating of minus 18 points (32% doing well against 50% doing badly) 2. Rhun ap Iorwerth held a positive net rating at plus 10. Morgan accused ap Iorwerth of 'crumbling under scrutiny' on net zero; ap Iorwerth quoted Reform UK Welsh policy chief Dan Thomas confirming Reform nationally wants to privatise the NHS, and Farage said Welsh Reform would not.

In January 1906 a Liberal landslide reduced the Conservatives to a single Welsh seat; Welsh Labour did not yet exist as a serious electoral force. The 12% projection is the lowest Welsh Labour vote share recorded, which means the comparator is the era before Labour was a national party. The defensive infrastructure built for FPTP devolved elections does not absorb the share into seat margins; the new closed-list PR system shows the collapse cleanly because it counts shares rather than wins.

The Welsh contest is now between a nationalist party and a hard-right party on Labour-built devolved infrastructure, with Labour supplying the coalition arithmetic from third place.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Welsh Labour has governed Wales since devolution began in 1999, for 27 years without a break. The party built Welsh public services, created the NHS Wales structures, oversaw the expansion of the Senedd, and has been in government so long that many Welsh voters could not remember an election where Labour was not in charge. The final polls put Welsh Labour at about 12% of the vote, which would be the party's worst result in Wales since 1906, before women could vote and before Labour was a national force. Two things happened simultaneously: progressive voters moved from Labour to Plaid Cymru, preferring a Welsh nationalist alternative that offered similar left-leaning policies; and Labour's traditional working-class base in the Valleys moved toward Reform UK. The new voting system, which allocates seats in direct proportion to votes, shows this collapse cleanly: there is no longer a mechanism to translate a 12% vote share into a governing position.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

1. **NHS Wales waiting times as a tangible governing failure.** Wales has the longest NHS waiting times of any UK nation. In January 2026 NHS Wales recorded 750,000 patients waiting more than 26 weeks, against a target of near-zero. Eluned Morgan's £4 billion NHS investment pledge, launched 30 March 2026, did not alter polls because it addressed a problem voters attributed to 27 years of Welsh Labour governance.

2. **Closed-list PR eliminating the seat-margin buffer.** Under the previous 60-seat mixed-member system, Labour's declining vote share still produced disproportionate seat retention because FPTP constituency seats absorbed the losses. The new closed-list PR system in 96 seats returns seats in direct proportion to vote share, removing the defensive mechanism Welsh Labour's infrastructure was built around.

3. **Plaid's explicit consolidation strategy.** Rhun ap Iorwerth's campaign deliberately avoided a headline independence pledge and positioned Plaid as the competent centre-left alternative to an exhausted Welsh Labour government. The strategy attracted exactly the progressive-Labour-to-Plaid migration the Wales Governance Centre described.

4. **Reform's working-class Labour base capture.** Welsh Labour's traditional base in the Valleys towns shifted substantially toward Reform on NHS and cost-of-living framing. Reform's 29% Welsh vote projection draws heavily from communities where Welsh Labour held near-absolute dominance through the twentieth century.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Eluned Morgan is projected below the constituency threshold in Ceredigion Penfro; if the projection holds, Welsh Labour may enter the new Senedd without its current First Minister.

    Immediate · 0.75
  • Risk

    Welsh Labour's 120-year continuous Welsh dominance ending in a PR system means the party's recovery path runs through winning list seats, a fundamentally different electoral strategy requiring different candidate networks and funding structures than the party has historically built.

    Long term · 0.8
  • Precedent

    The Scottish Labour collapse of 2015 is the structural parallel: that party has not recovered to pre-collapse seat levels in 11 years. Wales Governance Centre researchers will watch whether the Welsh pattern follows the same long floor.

    Long term · 0.6
First Reported In

Update #6 · 1 Days to Go: D'Hondt squeezes Welsh Greens

North Wales Daily Post· 6 May 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Green Party
Green Party
Zack Polanski's campaign delivered the Hackney and Lewisham mayoralties and both councils, plus 543 English council seats, establishing the first Green governing base in outer London. The 153-seat MRP undershoot was attributed to FPTP tactical dynamics in marginal wards rather than a polling error in vote share.
UK Labour Government
UK Labour Government
Keir Starmer's government faces the immediate test of whether to intervene in Lancashire's withdrawal from the UK refugee resettlement scheme and the longer question of how to respond if the SNP tables a Section 30 vote. MHCLG's posture on Reform-controlled councils sets the template for the next four years of divided local government.
Scottish National Party (SNP)
Scottish National Party (SNP)
John Swinney committed to a Section 30 vote on the first Holyrood sitting day post-appointment and a draft referendum bill within 100 days, reframing the 58-seat result as a working mandate despite missing his own 65-seat trigger. Westminster's pre-stated refusal of a Section 30 order means the constitutional confrontation is now a matter of timing.
Plaid Cymru
Plaid Cymru
Rhun ap Iorwerth confirmed on 8 May that Plaid would attempt to govern Wales as a minority, ruling out immediate coalition talks and naming budget priorities as the test of cross-party support. The 43-seat result leaves Plaid six seats short of the 49-seat majority threshold.
Reform UK
Reform UK
Nigel Farage claimed 7 May as a historic breakthrough, pointing to 1,448 new councillors and 14 councils won from a near-zero base. The internal reckoning is that transition teams built for 22 councils must now govern 14, and three of those 14 produced immediate governance disputes.
Wales Governance Centre
Wales Governance Centre
The Centre framed Wales's mid-campaign Green-to-Plaid consolidation as 'consolidation, not conversion' in April, meaning voters did not migrate ideologically but regrouped tactically inside the same bloc because closed-list PR made it arithmetically rational. The final MRP result confirms that framing.