Plaid Cymru to model Welsh referendum bid on Scotland’s

Welsh nationalists are taking lessons from the 2014 Scottish independence referendum as they campaign for a possible constitutional vote in the country following Brexit.

By CHRIS McCALL Monday, 8th April 2019, 4:32 pm Updated Monday, 8th April 2019, 4:39 pm

Adam Price said a vote could be brought forward. Picture: Getty

Plaid Cymru leader Adam Price has called for a multi-option plebiscite on Wales’ political future by the end of the next decade, but said it could be brought forward depending on the fall-out from the UK’s departure from the European Union.

In an interview with Scotland on Sunday, the Assembly Member said the last thing he wanted was for Wales to be left in a “rump UK state” if Scotland chose to follow a separate path.

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But he admitted that for any Welsh referendum to happen, Plaid would first have to achieve their “2007 moment” – a reference to when the SNP first took power at Holyrood – and win the next Assembly elections scheduled for 2021.

“We’re very fortunate that Scotland is a very useful template that we can draw lessons from,” said Price. “That great SNP victory is exactly the kind of success we need to pull off in 2021 in our case.”

Following his election as leader in September last year, Price appointed Angus Robertson to conduct a root and branch review of the party’s campaign machinery.

The former SNP depute leader said Plaid needed a “more inclusive brand” that appealed across the principality, and suggested a name change – with the New Wales Party the favoured title.

While no final decision has been made on any rebranding, Plaid is for now focusing on Brexit and its aftermath, which the party believes is boosting the case for Welsh independence.

“People are fed up of Brexit casting a dark shadow and are looking for hope, and many of them are finding that in the idea of the Welsh independence movement,” Price added. “People are exasperated by what they see at Westminster. The British constitution is obviously completely dysfunctional.

“We could find ourselves in a position where we are dragged out of the EU without any kind of safety net, and things could then develop very quickly indeed in terms of public opinion across the UK.

“In those circumstances, we would have to put the question on the agenda.

“What happens in Scotland is a matter for people there, but we wouldn’t want to be in a position where we are left in some kind of rump UK state, without asking the Welsh people is this the future we want for ourselves, or is there a better future by charting our own course? We could be in that position and we have to be prepared for it.”

Asked what lessons he took from the pro-independence campaign in Scotland, Price said: “I did take part in the 2014 referendum as a volunteer, as did many other people from Wales out of solidarity. I think it was an incredibly positive and buoyant campaign.