Rhun ap Iorwerth, the Plaid Cymru leader, was elected First Minister of Wales on Tuesday 12 May 2026 and sworn in by Mrs Justice Mary Stacey DBE. 1 "It is the greatest privilege of my life," he told the Senedd, "to be elected First Minister in a nation that means so much to me." He is the first head of the Welsh Government from outside the Labour Party in the 27 years since devolution in 1999, and the first to represent a North Wales constituency (Bangor Conwy Môn).
Plaid won 43 of 96 seats on 7 May 2026 , six short of the 49 needed for a majority under the new closed-list PR (proportional representation) system. Wales Green Party MSs Anthony Slaughter (Cardiff and Penarth) and Paul Rock (Cardiff Ffynnon Taf) provided the 44-vote bloc that carried Tuesday's First Minister vote. The Green pair are the only votes between Plaid's 43 and the 44-vote majority threshold.
The Greens published four conditions on Saturday 9 May 2026 (cost-of-living, NHS, the rental crisis, the natural environment) as the price of their support, including specific demands for rent freezes, an end to no-fault evictions, free bus travel for under-22s, and public control of water. Slaughter said the same day "no decisions have been made at this point." 2 Three days later, The Greens voted ap Iorwerth in anyway. The all-Plaid cabinet announced Wednesday 13 May 2026 contains no Green ministers; The Greens carry the votes and the conditions but hold none of the offices.
Wales operates without a written constitution: the four conditions are political collateral, not contractual obligation. Confidence-and-supply terms have legal weight only where they appear in standing orders, and none of those four do today. The arrangement runs on rolling assurance, vote by vote, on whichever bill The Greens have most leverage over next. Wales Green Party signing a written deal, or refusing to, becomes the new monthly test of whether ap Iorwerth's government has a working majority.
