Welsh Labour faces existential crisis, says former minister
Key takeaways
- Labour came third behind Plaid Cymru (43 seats) and Reform (34 seats) after winning every Cardiff Bay election since 1999.
- A Welsh Labour spokesperson: "These were catastrophic results for us and we need to take the time to determine what went wrong."
- Waters said, while there was "no single reason why Labour collapsed... confronting the extent and the depth of the defeat is the first thing".
Why this matters: political developments that affect policy direction and public trust.
Nicholas Bourne BBC Wales Getty Images Former Labour minister Lee Waters, who masterminded Wales' controversial default 20mph limit in built-up areas, admitted it came at a cost to the party Welsh Labour faces an existential crisis and should learn lessons from its poor performance in the Senedd election, according to a former minister.
Lee Waters, who was a Labour transport minister in the last Welsh government, described it as a "painful and frustrating experience watching the slow-motion car crash" with the party being "saved from wipe out" with just nine seats.
Labour came third behind Plaid Cymru (43 seats) and Reform (34 seats) after winning every Cardiff Bay election since 1999.