Wales Heads For Reform Vs Plaid. The Boats Keep Coming. Workers Pay More.
The Welsh election is becoming Reform versus Plaid, while in Westminster the government announces plans to pay some failed asylum seekers to leave and keeps asking workers to carry more of the burden.
Britain has had another week of big political headlines.
In Wales, the countdown to 7 May is now on, with Plaid and Reform increasingly shaping up as the real fight. In Westminster, the government has announced plans to pay some failed asylum seekers to leave, while small-boat arrivals have picked up again with better weather. And in the wider economy, workers are still being asked to shoulder more of the burden.
Strip away the slogans, and the same pattern keeps appearing. The system is not being fixed. It is being managed, patched up, and sold back to the public as progress.
🏴 Wales: Countdown To May 7
In Wales, the countdown to 7 May is now properly underway.
Welsh Labour kicked off its campaign in Newport, talking about “a new chapter for Wales.” After nearly three decades in power, that line is difficult to hear with a straight face. If Wales needs a new chapter, the obvious question is simple: who wrote the last one?
But politically, Labour is starting to feel almost irrelevant to the real argument. The sharper dividing line now looks more like Plaid versus Reform.
Plaid spent its conference trying to present itself as the voice of people who feel unheard and left behind. But when you strip away the branding, its offer still looks like more of the same Cardiff Bay consensus: more green targets, more pressure on motorists, more constitutional debate, and not enough evidence that any of it will improve outcomes for ordinary Welsh families. Plaid itself has tried to frame the election as a straight choice between Plaid and Reform.
Reform, by contrast, is trying to turn this election into a revolt against how Wales has been run. At its Welsh launch, it pushed a set of simple retail policies: scrap the default 20mph policy, oppose pay-per-mile, and revive the M4 relief road to tackle the Newport bottleneck that has turned the M4 into a rolling car park. Reform has also floated a toll as one possible funding option for that road.
Critics say a toll would hit drivers. But the truth is, the road would have to be paid for either way. If it is funded through general taxation, motorists still pay for it anyway. If it is funded through a toll, motorists still pay — but at least they get a choice over whether they use it.
And that is why the latest polling matters. A recent More in Common poll put Reform UK and Plaid Cymru level on 26% each, with Labour on 20%. The same poll projected 28 seats each for Reform and Plaid, with Labour on 26.
So yes, Labour may have started the campaign. But the real fight increasingly looks like this:
Plaid is offering more of the same in a slightly different accent. Reform is offering a revolt against the way Wales has been run.
💷 The £40,000 “Leave Britain” Offer
This week, Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood announced a trial scheme offering families of failed asylum seekers with children up to £10,000 per person, capped at £40,000 per family, if they agree to leave the UK within seven days.
The pilot is aimed at about 150 families. Officials say it could save money because accommodation costs for a typical family can run to around £158,000 a year.
And yes, on a narrow level, that maths explains why they are trying it. But that is also the indictment. Britain has built an asylum system so slow and so expensive that paying failed claimants to leave can now be presented as value for money.
Then look at the scale. The Home Office says around 101,000 people claimed asylum in the year ending December 2025. So a pilot aimed at around 150 families is tiny beside a system dealing with claims in the six figures. It is not a solution to the wider problem. It is a small back-end clean-up operation in a much bigger failing system.
That is why this risks looking like another gimmick.
A big headline.
A small pilot.
And a very weak signal to the outside world.
Because people smugglers and would-be migrants will not study the policy footnotes. They will see the headline: Britain may pay failed claimants up to £40,000 to leave.
🚤 Small Boats: Good Weather Returns — And So Do The Crossings
Talking of paying people to leave, this week also saw the return of small boat arrivals on consecutive days as the weather improved. Government figures show 204 arrivals on 3 March, 275 on 4 March, 66 on 5 March and 157 on 6 March — 702 in four days.
And it raises an obvious question: When was the last time you heard Keir Starmer talk about “smashing the gangs”?
That line was everywhere when Labour wanted to sound tough. Now that the weather has improved, the boats are coming again, and the rhetoric has gone quieter.
Because this is the reality. Winter suppresses crossings. Better conditions bring them back. And once again, the system looks reactive, not in control.
As people arrive, in many cases, documents are missing or disputed, identities can be difficult to verify quickly, and people can then be housed around the country while their cases drag on.
That is not a serious system of control. It is a system built on delay, weak enforcement and crossed fingers.
And the public instinctively understands the risk. If just one person who should never have been here goes on to commit a serious, violent or sexual offence, that is one too many.
Paying people to leave. Boats are still arriving. Gangs not smashed. System not fixed.
⛽ Energy Security: The Ed Miliband Problem
Energy has been back in the argument again this week, and it matters because this is about more than just bills. It is about energy security.
Britain is still using gas. The question is whether that gas comes more from our own waters, under our own tax base and regulatory control, or whether we become more exposed to imports and international shocks.
And right now, the government is making that harder by taxing the North Sea so heavily that companies have less incentive to invest in finding and developing new domestic supply. The Energy Profits Levy has pushed the sector’s headline tax rate up to 78%, and the industry has repeatedly warned that this kind of regime damages confidence and deters long-term investment.
At the same time, ministers keep talking as if piling further into intermittent wind and solar automatically means more security. It does not.
You do not strengthen energy security by making yourself more dependent on the weather and less willing to back your own domestic supply.
Because this is the reality. More intermittent power without enough firm backup is not secure.
Punishing North Sea investment is not security. Becoming more dependent on imports is not security. That is not an energy strategy built on resilience.
That is managed dependence.
📉 The Spring Statement Shows Who This Government Is Really For
The wider economic picture has not improved either.
My earlier Spring Statement piece made the core point clearly: Britain is still stuck in the same loop of weak growth, higher taxes, and a welfare bill that keeps rising.
That is the trap Reeves cannot escape.
When growth disappoints, government falls back on the same two levers: squeeze more from taxpayers and borrow more to keep the machine going.
And workers are the ones left carrying the burden.
That is why the bigger picture matters:
• Britain downgraded
• tax burden rising
• frozen thresholds dragging more people into higher tax bills
• welfare spending is climbing
• and still no serious growth plan to break the cycle
The public gets told there is a plan. The numbers suggest Britain is drifting.
Workers are paying more, keeping more of the system afloat, and getting less back in return.
So when Starmer talks about being on the side of workers, people should judge him by the outcomes, not the slogans.
Because the argument is not complicated.
If you tax work harder, reward dependency more, and still cannot deliver growth, then you are not making life easier for the people who keep the country going.
✍️ Jamie Jenkins
Stats Jamie | Stats, Facts & Opinions
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Thanks Jamie.
I think Reform under Dan Thomas will lead them to beat Plaid , save the motorists and lead to a renewal of Wales !
Here in Kent we've been enjoying dense fog for the last week or so, interspersed with the odd day of nice sunshine. Can't even see the wind turbines that aren't turning or the fields of solar panels sitting damply on the former agricultural land. Old Milliband has a permanent expression of rabbit-in-headlamp these days. As for those damn boats floating over - the solution is so frigging easy and wouldn't cost more than the price of a cheese sandwich, a coach and a flight out. These blokes destroy their papers but then, presumably, have to say where they are fleeing from in order to apply for asylum. (Obviously, they are all fleeing France but...) The same applies to every single bloke in free accommodation. I seriously doubt there are hundreds of actual families of failed asylum seekers. When did anyone last see women and children arriving?