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UK Local Elections 2026
14MAY

Wales Greens projected as Senedd kingmakers

3 min read
20:05UTC

YouGov's Senedd MRP gives the Wales Green Party 10 seats it has never held, creating a coalition route no one planned for. Anthony Slaughter says the party is ready.

PoliticsDeveloping
Key takeaway

Ten projected Green Senedd seats create a Plaid-Green majority route that bypasses Labour.

The YouGov Senedd MRP projects the Wales Green Party at 10 seats, which would be the party's first ever Senedd representation . Combined with Plaid Cymru's projected 43 seats, a Plaid-Green coalition reaches 53, four seats above the 49-seat majority threshold 1. The alternative, a Plaid-Labour combination, yields 55 seats with a six-seat cushion.

Anthony Slaughter, the Wales Green leader, told ITV News the party is "ready to be kingmakers" 2. The New Statesman examined the coalition arithmetic on 1 April, noting that both parties have consulted Scottish counterparts about the SNP-Scottish Greens cooperation template 3. Green policy demands for any deal include rent freezes, council tax replacement, lower bus fares, and public control of water. The Scottish Greens' withdrawal from governance when principles were compromised is the precedent both parties reference.

Friction exists. Green candidate Tessa Marshall called Plaid "not a left-wing party", triggering pushback about vote-splitting that could let Reform through. The Wales result will test whether closed-list PR produces coalitions where FPTP produces ungovernable councils. On the same night, England votes under first past the post, Scotland under AMS, and Wales under its brand-new proportional system. Three electoral systems processing the same five-party fragmentation will produce visibly different outcomes by breakfast on 8 May.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Wales is holding its first Senedd (parliament) election under a new voting system in 2026. The Senedd has expanded from 60 to 96 seats, and voters now vote for a party rather than a candidate (called closed-list proportional representation). This system is more proportional than the old one, meaning smaller parties get a fairer share of seats. YouGov's projection puts the Wales Green Party on 10 seats. The Wales Greens have never had any Senedd seats before. Their leader, Anthony Slaughter, says they are "ready to be kingmakers" in coalition negotiations. Plaid Cymru (the Welsh independence party) is projected to win 43 seats, not enough for a majority on its own (49 seats needed). A Plaid-Green coalition would reach 53 seats, four above the majority threshold. This makes the Wales Greens potentially decisive about who governs Wales.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    If the Wales Greens win 10 seats and enter a coalition with Plaid, Welsh Government policy on climate, housing and transport would need to satisfy two parties for the first time in Welsh devolution history.

  • Precedent

    The Wales Green Party's first Senedd representation would confirm that closed-list PR systematically produces more party diversity than FPTP or even AMS, a finding with direct implications for the Electoral Reform Society's Westminster PR campaign.

First Reported In

Update #3 · Both flanks fracture

YouGov· 13 Apr 2026
Read original
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