Significantly
Plaid lost seats to Llais Gwynedd (Gwynedd’s Voice) which was formed
primarily to stop school closures in the countyOverwhelmingly working people
are sick of all the parties. All the opposition parties talk of change but
they all implement similar policies when in power.Working people are craving
a real change and the situation is crying out for genuine alternative to the
stale diet of all the parties. People’s Voice’s and Llais Gwynedd
gains show the potential for a new mass workers party.
A warning and an opportunity for socialists
The increased vote for the BNP is also a warning to the labour movement if
it fails to provide an alternative to the pro-capitalist parties. However,
despite a big press campaign against immigrants before the election, the BNP
failed to make a major breakthrough in Wales. Only in Swansea did this racist
party succeed in making gains in the number of votes.
The Socialist Party standing as Socialist Alternative achieved the best results
of the left with creditable results in Cardiff and Swansea. However at this
stage the support for our ideas is not reflected in votes. Working people
realise that we need a bigger vehicle to deliver real change.
A serious discussion must begin in the Welsh trade union movement to look
at the unions forming a new party through which the working class can fight
to offer a real change form the policies of all the pro-capitalist parties.

Support
for whoever could beat Labour -
No enthusiasm for Tories
David
Cameron has tried to ride the crest of the wave of his party’s gains.
But there is no enthusiasm or illusions in any of the other parties in Wales
and certainly not the Tories. This was a vote against Labour, not a vote for
any of the other parties. In fact this election represented a further rejection
of the Tory policies that New Labour has promoted. The Tories re-gained some
seats in their old Welsh strongholds of Monmouth and Vale of Glamorgan, but
have not broken through in most of Wales. They only gained control of Vale
of Glamorgan council.
Voters supported whoever could beat Labour and in most areas that was not
the Tories. Most old Labour voters stayed at home. In the valleys it was People’s
Voice and Independent candidates as well as Plaid Cymru who broke Labour control.
In Cardiff the Liberal Democrats, Plaid Cymru and Tories gained as Labour
was pushed back to the 3rd party in the capital.
The Liberal Democrats benefited from the anti-Labour mood and held onto to
their control of Cardiff and Swansea but there is no enthusiasm for their
councils and they made few gains.
Plaid Cymru suffered serious losses as well as gains, losing control of Gwynedd,
their only council.