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UK Local Elections 2026
9MAY

Plaid and Wales Greens trade public blows

3 min read
17:17UTC

Lowdown

PoliticsDeveloping
Key takeaway

Two parties projected to form a majority are publicly arguing over the same voter base three weeks out.

Tensions between Plaid Cymru and the Wales Green Party moved into public view during April 2026, with a Wales Green candidate calling Plaid "not a left-wing party" and Green leader Anthony Slaughter describing The Greens as the "only left-wing party in Wales". 1 Plaid's Carrie Harper responded by warning that voting Green would "let Reform in" in many Welsh seats.

The friction matters because the same YouGov Senedd MRP that sets Plaid close to a majority also hands The Greens the seats needed to get them there . In the closed-list proportional system now in force , voters pick a party rather than a candidate, and votes split between ideologically adjacent parties divide the same list bloc across fewer effective seats. Both are publicly disputing who represents the Welsh left on the same polling curve that projects them into a potential Coalition.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Wales uses a new voting system for its parliament (the Senedd) in 2026 that gives more seats to smaller parties. Under this system, both Plaid Cymru (the Welsh nationalist party) and the Wales Green Party are projected to win seats and could together form a majority government. But in the weeks before the election, the two parties have been publicly arguing. A Wales Green candidate said Plaid was 'not a left-wing party'. Plaid's Carrie Harper responded by saying that voting Green could 'let Reform in', meaning that votes for the Greens might help Reform UK win seats at the expense of progressive parties. Her argument is contested. Under Wales's new voting system, voting for a smaller party like the Greens is less 'wasted' than under traditional first-past-the-post elections. But the public dispute is real, and it is happening three weeks before an election where both parties are projected to need each other to form a government.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Public friction between Plaid and the Wales Greens may depress the turnout motivation of voters who want a progressive coalition government but are uncertain which party to back, particularly among under-30 voters new to Welsh politics.

  • Risk

    If the friction continues into the final week, it may damage the post-election coalition negotiation by creating public commitments each party will find difficult to abandon when forming a government.

First Reported In

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

New Statesman· 15 Apr 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.