Plaid Cymru’s manifesto for the Senedd elections in Wales was unveiled in early April 2026, with a focus on public services, economic growth, and greater devolution powers for Wales. The party framed the plan as a bold alternative to Westminster, emphasizing fairness, investment in NHS waiting times, childcare support, and measures to boost the Welsh economy.[2][3][4]
Key themes from the latest manifesto coverage
- Public services and NHS: pledges to cut waiting times and improve care, alongside expanding wellbeing and social supports.[3][4]
- Economic plan: proposals for a stronger Welsh economy, local procurement levers, and longer-term ideas like a Wales Wealth Fund.[4][3]
- Devolution and governance: calls for greater powers for Wales and a more assertive stance toward Westminster.[2][3]
- Social protections: commitments to asylum and refugee policy direction, and reforms to hostile environment measures in the UK system.[1]
If you’d like, I can pull out specific policy proposals (e.g., childcare subsidies levels, NHS targets, or proposed tax or funding arrangements) and summarize them in a side-by-side comparison. Would you like a concise table of the top 6 promises and their potential impact?
Sources:
- Plaid Cymru manifesto details and party positioning.[1]
- Live coverage of the manifesto launch and leader’s comments.[2]
- National coverage outlining the vision and priorities ahead of the manifesto launch.[3][4]
Sources
Stephen Price Plaid Cymru has launched its ‘bold’ manifesto for the Senedd election, with calls for devolution of the Crown Estate, a free childcare offer, a new literacy and numeracy plan and a ‘sustainable and integrated’ health and care service for Wales. The launch comes as the latest Beaufort Research poll for Nation.Cymru puts Plaid […]
nation.cymruWhat is Plaid Cymru promising voters in its manifesto for the Welsh Parliament elections?
www.bbc.comThe full Plaid Cymru manifesto can be found here. International LawPlaid Cymru supports upholding of international law and organisations that maintain international law such as the International Court of Justice and the International Criminal Court. Governments and countries cannot pick and choose which international rules to follow based on their own self-interest.
www.caabu.orgWatch the latest from ITV News - Plaid Cymru manifesto 2024: All you need to know
www.itv.comThe party's leader said it offered "a different path" with "no more bending to Westminster's will".
www.bbc.comPlaid Cymru is to unveil its manifesto for the Senedd election later today, as recent polling suggests the party is on course to emerge as the largest group in the Welsh Parliament. The party will set out what it describes as a “bold and confident vision” for Wales, focused on public services, economic growth and […]
nation.cymruI'm supporting Plaid Cymru. Go to their website to find out why.
www.partyof.wales