
Senedd told 'business as usual' budget planned by government
He told the Senedd: 'This will not be a budget which focuses on new priorities or fresh policies. That, I believe, will be for political parties to put before the Welsh electorate.'
Prof Drakeford confirmed the Welsh Government will publish an outline draft budget on October 14, 2025, with a more detailed draft to follow on November 4.
In previous years, the draft budget has been published in mid-December – just before the Senedd breaks for Christmas, prompting concerns about scrutiny being curtailed.
The earlier timeframe will pose its own challenges with the UK Government autumn budget, which is likely to affect funding for Wales, expected in late October or early November.
Prof Drakeford will be presenting his sixth and final budget to the Senedd before standing down at the next election after decades at the centre of Welsh politics.
He told the Senedd: 'We cannot let uncertainty over the UK Government's autumn budget drive our own timelines and plans.'
Prof Drakeford said the politically neutral budget will make hundreds of millions available to get the next Senedd off to a stable and ambitious start.
He stated he would have liked – ideally – to bring forward a multi-year budget but the cabinet decided on a single-year 'business-as-usual' budget due to the election.
Sam Rowlands, the Tories' shadow finance secretary, welcomed an earlier-than-usual timeline, recognising the driver as next year's poll.
Peredur Owen Griffiths, the Plaid Cymru chair of the Senedd's finance committee, welcomed a return to a two-stage budget process for the first time in seven years.
Following the statement, a Plaid Cymru spokesperson said: "It is the responsibility of the Labour Welsh Government to develop and publish spending plans up to and including the final year of the Senedd term.
'Plaid Cymru will scrutinise the budget when it is laid and will, as ever, act in the best interests of the people of Wales.'
Following scrutiny in the Senedd, the final 2026/27 budget will be published on January 20, with a debate and key vote to follow on January 27.

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Sir John said that parties such as Reform and the Greens offer more choice to voters wanting to express their discontent with Labour while the Tories continue to flounder in the polls. 'The character of the challenge is different from what it has been historically,' he said. Tim Bale, professor of politics at Queen Mary University, said people had been expecting bold change on areas such as workers' rights and growth, and the Government's achievements so far were 'pretty small beer' by comparison. Critics say the first year has instead been marked by a series of U-turns, including a partial reversal of cuts to the winter fuel payment and the move to launch a national inquiry into grooming gangs after months of resisting opposition pressure to do so. The Government disputes that framing, pointing out for example that ministers had never explicitly ruled out a statutory probe into child sexual exploitation but waited for a review to be carried out before making a decision. Prof Bale said he believed the first year had gone 'worse than most people imagined' and warned 'it's difficult for a leader who starts badly to persuade people that he or she is what they need.' But he said the problems were not necessarily fatal, adding that setbacks early on in a premiership have an upside in allowing for more time to 'turn it round'. 'If you look back to Margaret Thatcher, she was able to do that, so it's not a foregone conclusion that all is lost, even for Keir Starmer himself,' he said. Arguing that the Government could recover in the polls if its plans for the economy and public services pay off, he added: 'I think you can see the light at the end of the tunnel, but it's a very long tunnel.' Sir Keir has pledged to lead a 'decade of national renewal' through a phased approach to Government, the first year of which he said would involve 'cleaning up the mess' his administration had inherited. 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