
Senedd criticises 'ill-judged' decision on renters' rights
He said the Welsh Government provided no clear rationale for "piggybacking" on a UK bill, adding that a bill tailored to Wales' needs could have already become law by autumn 2024.
"This would have meant that the benefits of the legislation could have been felt sooner by citizens in Wales," said the Labour Senedd member.
"Moreover, the provisions could have been consulted on by Senedd committees and subject to more debate and scrutiny, with a view to producing better outcomes."
The renters' rights bill amends two Senedd Acts – with little input from elected members in Cardiff Bay.
Mr Hedges warned: "The Senedd is in effect being provided with a fait accompli: vote in favour or risk losing important legislation on housing".
Wales' housing minister Jayne Bryant responded: "Practically, we could not deliver within the timeframe of this bill without making sacrifices elsewhere.
"We could have looked to deliver a discrete bill but it would have been delivered further down the line and I'm not prepared to make tenants in Wales who are being discriminated against wait… and nor did I want to jeopardise other important legislation."
She added there was nothing to stop people in Wales responding to the UK Government's consultation.
Labour's Alun Davies intervened: "This is essentially an argument to go back to the pre-2011, 1999 settlement, that there's no need for Welsh consultation."
"That is unacceptable, minister, I'm afraid."
But he said he would vote along party lines.
Laura Anne Jones, the Conservatives' shadow housing secretary, opposed the bill due to concerns surrounding a potential ban on no-fault evictions.
Senedd members backed legislative consent for the bill, 37-14, with the Tories and Rhys ab Owen – who sits as an independent – voting against.

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We're grateful to Abby for sharing her story to help show exactly why Full Fact exists to counter the harm caused by misinformation. Old tsunami video circulates amid Pacific evacuations A video circulating online amid major evacuations across the Pacific is claimed to show a tsunami which has taken 'thousands of lives'. But this is misleading. The footage shows three people, including the person filming, narrowly escape huge waves that crash into some small boats on a shore. It was shared online following news of an 8.8 magnitude earthquake off the coast of Russia, which triggered the evacuation of almost two million people across Japan. Warnings were also put in place in other locations including Hawaii, Ecuador, Indonesia, Peru and China. A caption shared with the video said: 'Massive Earthquake triggers Tsunami taking thousands of lives in seconds with little to no warning.' But this footage is not current, or related to the earthquake in Russia or the subsequent tsunami warnings. It actually showed a tsunami which occurred on the west coast of Greenland in 2017, triggered by a landslide. That tsunami did not kill 'thousands', as stated in the social media posts. Four people were killed, and nine others were injured. The same footage has been wrongly shared in the wake of other earthquakes before. Has Labour carried out 'record deportations'? Labour MP Mike Tapp recently claimed that the Government has carried out 'record deportations'. We've frequently seen MPs and ministers using the word 'deportations' when referring to all immigration returns. Not all immigration returns are 'deportations'. We don't actually know how many meet the official definition of a deportation, which the Home Office defines as 'a specific subset of returns which are enforced either following a criminal conviction or when it is judged that a person's removal from the UK is conducive to the public good'. We do know, however, that enforced returns – the category of returns which includes deportations – account for a minority (26%) of all returns carried out under Labour during its first year in office. According to ad-hoc figures published by the Home Office, during Labour's first year in office a total of 35,052 returns were recorded. We don't have the data to compare this exact period to the same period in previous years, but official immigration statistics show that this figure is not a record for the number of immigration returns over a 12-month period, going back to 2004 when this data series began. These figures show that immigration returns over a 12-month period were consistently above 40,000 between 2010 and 2016, for example. It does appear, however, that the 35,052 returns in the first year of this Labour government represents the highest 12-month figure since 2017. While we don't know how many of these returns were official 'deportations', the figures show that the 9,115 enforced returns carried out between 5 July 2024 and 4 July 2025 also do not represent a record. While this figure is the highest number of enforced returns carried out over a 12-month period since 2018, prior to 2018 enforced returns were consistently above 10,000 over a 12-month period. MPs should use statistics transparently and with all relevant context and caveats, and quickly rectify oversights when they occur.