Government and society

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Also known as: Cymru

Constitutional framework

Because Wales is a constituent unit of the United Kingdom, foreign relations and many domestic matters for Wales are determined in London by the British government and Parliament’s House of Commons, which includes many Welsh members. Thus, the British prime minister is the head of state and chief executive. However, the National Assembly for Wales (Cynulliad Cenedlaethol Cymru), established in Cardiff in 1999, assumed several responsibilities, including urban and rural development, economic planning, health and welfare, culture, education, transportation, tourism, and environmental matters. Before approval of a referendum in 2011 that extended direct lawmaking powers to the National Assembly, however, the assembly had to ask Parliament for primary lawmaking powers on a case-by-case basis. With passage, the assembly assumed the power to enact laws without first seeking consent from Parliament. The National Assembly did not have the power to levy taxes until Parliament’s passage of the Wales Act of 2014, which established the Welsh Revenue Authority to manage and collect taxes for the Welsh government. The 60-seat National Assembly comprises 40 members who are directly elected from the 40 parliamentary constituencies and an additional 20 members who are elected through proportional representation. The National Assembly elects a first minister (formerly known as first secretary), who leads the government with the aid of a cabinet of departmental secretaries.

Local government

The functions of local government in Wales were long divided among 13 historic counties, which now retain only historic and cultural relevance. Parliamentary reforms redrew the administrative boundaries in 1974 and again in the 1990s. Since 1996 Wales has consisted of 22 local governmental units (14 counties and 8 county boroughs). The counties and county boroughs are responsible for all major local governmental functions, including local planning, firefighting, schools, libraries, social services, public health and sanitation, recreation, the environment, and voter registration.

Community councils form the lowest tier of local government in Wales and consist of localities (cities, towns, and villages) within the counties and county boroughs. They have a range of other rights and duties, including assessing surcharges (precepts) on property taxes, participating in local planning, and maintaining commons and recreational facilities.

Justice and security

Unlike Scotland, Wales has no separate justice system. Criminal and civil cases are heard by magistrates’ courts and by a circuit of the Crown Court. The Home Office in Whitehall, London, is responsible for police services in Wales, which are administered through local police headquarters or constabularies. The country has no independent defense forces, although three British army regiments are historically associated with Wales—the Welsh Guards, the Royal Welch Fusiliers, and the Royal Regiment of Wales (the latter two were merged into a single unit and dubbed the Royal Welsh in 2006).

Political process

The Welsh people historically have tended to support liberal and radical governments and have done so in large numbers. Wales has a consistently higher turnout at the polls than does Britain as a whole. The Labour Party is the largest single political party in Wales; Plaid Cymru, the Liberal Democrat Party, and the Conservative Party have more limited electoral support.

During the 19th and early 20th centuries the Liberal Party promoted the policy of Home Rule and produced such figures as Prime Minister David Lloyd George. The electorate in Wales’s industrial regions then began to support socialist Labourites such as Keir Hardie, the British Labour leader and the first independent Labour member of Parliament, who (although Scottish) represented the South Wales constituency of Merthyr Tydfil. Other prominent Labour members of Parliament for South Wales have included Aneurin Bevan, Michael Foot, James Callaghan, and Neil Kinnock.

Plaid Cymru, renamed bilingually as Plaid Cymru–The Party of Wales, was founded in 1925 to promote a full parliament for Wales and direct international representation. The party first won a parliamentary seat in a by-election in 1966 and then captured additional seats at local, national, and European elections. Support for the party is concentrated in areas where Welsh is widely spoken. More radical organizations, such as Cymdeithas yr Iaith Gymraeg (the Welsh Language Society), exist on the fringe of the broader nationalist and separatist movement and are disassociated from Plaid Cymru. Some such groups have engaged in civil disobedience to further their ends, while the more extreme factions have carried out attacks on property, most notably on English-owned holiday homes in rural Wales in the 1980s.