
Ex-Plaid Cymru leader Price unlikely to be re-elected in 2026
Plaid's selection process is more competitive than Labour's or the Conservatives as the party is not giving its current MSs any preferential treatment and is prioritising gender balance in how it determines the order of candidates.In Sir Gaerfyrddin, this means that if a woman tops the local members' selection, another woman must also be placed second on the list of up to eight candidates on the ballot.
If a man takes the top spot, a woman would still be required to take second place.With Campbell and Evans occupying the top spots, the prospects of Price securing a seat seem more uncertain.The exact votes cast for each member is yet to be confirmed but it is understood the selection process concluded on Thursday evening.
Who is Adam Price?
Price became leader of the Plaid Cymru in 2018 and led the party into the 2021 Senedd election with a pledge to hold a referendum on Welsh independence within five years if it won power.However, the party finished third behind Labour and the Welsh Conservatives. Following the election, Price signed a co-operation agreement with the Labour government, helping to deliver policies such as universal free school meals.In 2022, the party became engulfed by claims of a toxic culture, culminating in a report by Evans that said it had tolerated "too many instances of bad behaviour".Price stepped down as leader in 2023.
Evans was an Assembly Member from 2007 to 2011, with Campbell elected to the Senedd in 2021.Behind Price on the list is former Llanelli candidate Mari Arthur, who now works in marketing and the sustainable energy sector.Iwan Griffiths, a Carmarthenshire councillor, is fifth, followed by Abi Thomas, a former Carmarthen West and South Pembrokeshire candidate.Wales' new election map has 16 seats, each electing six MSs, with the voting system electing members from party lists.Plaid Cymru has been asked to comment.
Analysis - BBC Wales political editor Gareth Lewis
Had Adam Price had his way we could be on the verge of a referendum on Welsh independence.Holding one within five years was central to his pitch at the 2021 Senedd election, but Plaid finished third.He seemed resigned to coming third again - this time in his party's list - when I spoke to him at Plaid's spring conference in March.For some in the party his resignation in 2023 and the scandal surrounding Jonathan Edwards - the former MP in Price's Carmarthen East and Dinefwr constituency - still cast a long shadow.It is not impossible for Price and Plaid to win three seats in Sir Gaerfyrddin, but they would need a good night.Despite having topped a recent poll, Plaid's selection process could cost them two big names - Price and economy spokesman Luke Fletcher.
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Daily Mail
10 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Trustee who used sermon to say Muslims would 'kill Jews' six days after October 7 attacks is disqualified - as Islamic charity is handed formal warning
An Islamic charity trustee who used a sermon to say Muslims would 'kill Jews' six days after Hamas 's October 7 attacks has been disqualified - with the charity also receiving a formal warning. Harun Abdur Rashid Holmes delivered the talk at Nottingham Islam Information Point where attendees heard 'the hour will not begin until the Muslims fight the Jews and the Muslims will kill them until a Jew hides behind a rock or a tree'. Guests at the event held by the charity, which is said to help victims of Islamophobia and teach about the religion, were also told not to 'busy yourselves with politics and voting'. Such an 'inflammatory and divisive' sermon has now seen the Charity Commissioner hit Nottingham Islam Information Point with a formal warning. The regulator, which operates across England and Wales, said this is one of more than 300 cases involving charities in the past 18 months related to conflict in the Middle East. They said the sermon delivered by Mr Holmes 'did not further the charity's purposes, including to provide relief to those in need, and was not in the charity's best interests', therefore amounting to misconduct and/or mismanagement. Mr Holmes, who is not a trained imam, was deemed not to have acted in accordance with his duties as a trustee and was disqualified in July last year. This means he is now not allowed to hold any senior management position in a charity in England and Wales for three years - and he has been noted by the commission to lack the good judgement expected of a trustee. The watchdog said while it recognised some of the sermon's content had come from a specific hadith - from the Islamic prophet Mohammed - the appropriate context had not been given and it therefore was 'inflammatory and divisive'. The regulator also said 'no consideration' had been given to the timing of the sermon, coming six days after the October 7 Hamas attacks in Israel, which Mr Holmes later accepted. The commission's assistant director of investigations and compliance, Stephen Roake, said: 'In times of conflict, people expect charities to bring people together, not to stoke division. In this case, we found due consideration had not been given to the words and rhetoric used. 'The sermon was inflammatory and divisive, and we acted robustly and disqualified the trustee who gave the sermon. We also issued the charity with a formal warning. 'Following our intervention, the charity's remaining trustees have taken positive steps to improve their governance. This includes the introduction of a more robust events policy. All charities that host events and speakers should take note of this case and ensure they have sufficient due diligence in place.' MailOnline has approached Nottingham Islam Information Point for comment. Charity Commission chief executive David Holdsworth said such instances were 'undermining' charity's 'potential for good' in an opinion piece for the Sunday Telegraph. He wrote: 'Over the past few years, and particularly since the escalation of conflict in the Middle East in October 2023, we have seen charities misused to promote the personal views of those linked to the charity, in some cases inciting hate, or condoning violence. 'While trustees, like all of us, have personal rights to freedom of speech, there can be no hiding place for those who seek to use charities to promote hate or harm to others. 'This is not only to put a stop to fundamentally uncharitable activity, but also to help protect and promote public trust in the wider charitable sector.' Mr Holdsworth added that he will 'not shy away' from using 'more robust powers' to stop those 'undermining the incredible positive impact of charities at home and abroad'. Of the 300 cases considered since the end of 2023 in relation to conflict in the Middle East, around a third have resulted in formal statutory guidance being issued by the commission. More than 70 referrals to police have been made where the regulator considered that a criminal offence might have been committed. In January, a London charity was handed an official warning after fundraising for a soldier in the Israel Defence Forces. The Chabad Lubavitch Centres North East London and Essex Ltd, which describes itself as working for the advancement of the Orthodox Jewish religion, raised more than £2,000 after setting up an online page in October 2023 for a soldier stationed in northern Israel. Some £937 was sent directly to an individual soldier but the commission said the trustees of the charity were unable to account for how the money was spent and the regulator concluded the charity's actions had amounted to misconduct and a breach of trust. While charities in England and Wales can legally raise funds to support the UK armed forces, they cannot legally provide aid or military supplies to any foreign armed force, the commission said. It was believed to be the first time the regulator had used its powers to issue an official warning on the issue of fundraising for a foreign military. The case was not one among those referred to police, as the commission said its unlawfulness related to charity law rather than criminal law.


Times
12 hours ago
- Times
Met chief calls for regional mega-forces in radical police overhaul
The country's most senior police officer has called for the number of forces in England and Wales to be slashed by two thirds and urged the government to conduct the most radical overhaul of crime fighting in 60 years. Sir Mark Rowley, the Metropolitan Police commissioner, said the model of 43 county-based forces has not 'been fit for purpose for at least two decades' and suggested they should be replaced by 12 to 15 regional mega-forces. Writing for The Sunday Times, Rowley said these 'bigger and fully capable' forces would be able to make better use of modern technology and the 'limited funding available'. There would also be less replication of back office services, such as human resources departments. • Sir Mark Rowley: police exist to protect the public, we are not social workers The regional forces would be supported by a new national policing body responsible for 'key capabilities', such as police helicopters and intelligence. Rowley said that chief constables were now 'united' on the urgent need for reform, adding that the home secretary Yvette Cooper shared a 'commitment to reform'. It is Rowley's first major intervention since Rachel Reeves's spending review last month, the run up to which was dominated by a public row between the chancellor and police and security chiefs over cuts to law enforcement. While Reeves announced a 2.3 per cent annual increase in funding, chief constables argued it would not plug the gaps, which have been compounded by a £300 million additional cost resulting from the government's early release scheme for prisoners. Rowley describes the cash settlement as 'disappointing' and argues that while the Met was making progress tackling a number of offences, its budget would need to 'increase by 50 per cent to match policing spend per capita in New York or Sydney'. He also warned that Sir Keir Starmer's key crime targets may not be met unless the government removes 'the distractions and bureaucracy that diverts' the police 'away from crime fighting'. Starmer has pledged an additional 13,000 police officers, as well as halving knife offences and violence against women and girls in a decade. In a direct appeal to ministers, the commissioner said: 'Recruits join the police to protect the public — but too often officers effectively take on the role of social workers. Police chiefs are trying to correct this, but we need the government and public sector to help us.' He highlighted the impact on the Met and other forces of children and adolescents regularly going missing from care homes, which he said drew 'heavily on police time'. Last year alone, there were 80,000 reported incidents nationally of missing vulnerable children, who are often 'exploited by gangs and lured into crime', he said. He continued: 'Not only does this absorb thousands of officer hours, it cannot be right — financially or morally — that often the only place for vulnerable children to be held in moments of crisis is a police building.' The problem has previously been highlighted by Festus Akinbusoye, the former police and crime commissioner for Bedfordshire. He said in 2023 that force control rooms were receiving a 'deluge' of so-called 'concern for welfare' referrals from social workers every Friday evening about children who have gone missing from local authority care. Akinbusoye, who had volunteered as a special constable prior to his election as a PCC, recalled how social services were regularly sending their caseloads of missing children to the police at the start of the weekend, with officers having 'no choice but to go and find them'. Rowley has also railed against the amount of time his officers spend responding to emergency call-outs involving mental health incidents. In June 2023, he said they would no longer do so unless there was an immediate threat to life. Ahead of the new football season, he also said it was 'particularly astounding that the Met is still being asked to pick up 80 per cent of the £24 million annual cost of policing football matches in London, including the Premier League's'. There are seven Premier League clubs in the capital, with Rowley citing the fact some could 'splurge over £100 million on a single player and pay them a weekly wage equivalent to more than 600 constables'. Clubs only pay towards the cost of officers who enter their grounds. But the Met has to fund hundreds of other police who patrol the streets and transport hubs on match days, diverting them from other frontline duties. His Majesty's Inspectorate of Constabulary suggested 20 years ago that the number of forces in England and Wales should be drastically streamlined. The proposal failed to get off the ground due, in part, to resistance from local police chiefs. Reform would probably mean some of the smaller rural forces, such as Warwickshire, being subsumed by the largest force in a region, such as West Midlands police. Some smaller constabularies already share resources. For example, Cambridgeshire, Bedfordshire and Hertfordshire have a tri-force arrangement for major incidents, armed policing and forensics.


The Independent
12 hours ago
- The Independent
Islamic charity warned over ‘inflammatory' sermon following October 7 attacks
A British Islamic charity has received a formal warning and had one of its trustees disqualified following an "inflammatory and divisive" sermon delivered in the days after the 7 October Hamas attacks. The Charity Commission stated the sermon included the phrase: "the hour will not begin until the Muslims fight the Jews and the Muslims will kill them until a Jew hides behind a rock or a tree." Attendees were also reportedly encouraged not to "busy yourselves with politics and voting." This case is one of more than 300 involving charities related to the Middle East conflict that the regulator, operating across England and Wales, has addressed in the past 18 months. The latest case involved Nottingham Islam Information Point, a charity said to provide support to victims of Islamophobic attacks and address misconceptions about the religion of Islam. But a sermon, given on October 13 2023 by trustee Harun Abdur Rashid Holmes 'did not further the charity's purposes, including to provide relief to those in need, and was not in the charity's best interests', therefore amounting to misconduct and/or mismanagement, the regulator said. Mr Holmes, who is not a trained imam, was deemed not to have acted in accordance with his duties as a trustee and was disqualified in July last year. He is prevented from holding any senior management position in a charity in England and Wales for three years – and noted by the commission to lack the good judgement expected of a trustee. While the charities watchdog said it recognised some of the sermon's content had come from a specific hadith – a narration of historical events ascribed to the prophet Mohammed – the appropriate context was not given and it therefore was 'inflammatory and divisive'. The regulator also said 'no consideration' had been given to the timing of the sermon, coming six days after the October 7 Hamas attacks in Israel. The commission said Mr Holmes had accepted that, with hindsight, the hadith was sensitive, and that he had not given sufficient context to it. The commission's assistant director of investigations and compliance, Stephen Roake, said: 'In times of conflict, people expect charities to bring people together, not to stoke division. In this case, we found due consideration had not been given to the words and rhetoric used. 'The sermon was inflammatory and divisive, and we acted robustly and disqualified the trustee who gave the sermon. We also issued the charity with a formal warning. 'Following our intervention, the charity's remaining trustees have taken positive steps to improve their governance. This includes the introduction of a more robust events policy. All charities that host events and speakers should take note of this case and ensure they have sufficient due diligence in place.' Nottingham Islam Information Point has been contacted for comment. Charity Commission chief executive David Holdsworth said some people are undermining charities' 'potential for good' in an opinion piece for the Sunday Telegraph. 'Over the past few years, and particularly since the escalation of conflict in the Middle East in October 2023, we have seen charities misused to promote the personal views of those linked to the charity, in some cases inciting hate, or condoning violence,' Mr Holdsworth wrote. 'While trustees, like all of us, have personal rights to freedom of speech, there can be no hiding place for those who seek to use charities to promote hate or harm to others. 'This is not only to put a stop to fundamentally uncharitable activity, but also to help protect and promote public trust in the wider charitable sector. 'I will not shy away from using the more robust powers Parliament has granted us when that is necessary, and taking action against those who risk undermining the incredible positive impact of charities at home and abroad,' he added. Of the 300 cases considered since the end of 2023 in relation to what is happening in the Middle East, about a third have resulted in formal statutory guidance being issued by the commission. More than 70 referrals to the police have been made where the regulator considered that a criminal offence might have been committed. In January, a London charity was handed an official warning after fundraising for a soldier in the Israel Defence Forces (IDF). The Chabad Lubavitch Centres North East London and Essex Ltd, which describes itself as working for the advancement of the Orthodox Jewish religion, raised more than £2,000 after setting up an online page in October 2023 for a soldier stationed in northern Israel. Some £937 was sent directly to an individual soldier but the commission said the trustees of the charity were unable to account for how the money was spent and the regulator concluded the charity's actions had amounted to misconduct and a breach of trust. While charities in England and Wales can legally raise funds to support the UK armed forces, they cannot legally provide aid or military supplies to any foreign armed force, the commission said. It was believed to be the first time the regulator had used its powers to issue an official warning on the issue of fundraising for a foreign military. The case was not one among those referred to police, as the commission said its unlawfulness related to charity law rather than criminal law.