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‘I have regrets…’

An astonishing civil war has broken out in the Labour party after the extraordinary resignation of controversial First Minister of Wales (FMW) Vaughan Gething, with a supporter saying they would rather “die in a ditch” than back one of the ministers who quit before his hand was forced, The Eye can reveal.

Several politicians have now rushed to Mr Gething’s side, while others have said he is tarnished by what has happened.

Alun Michael has been accused of being too close to the police

One of those in Mr Gething’s camp seems to be former First Secretary Alun Michael, who led the Labour administration in what was then the Welsh Assembly from 1999 to 2000.

He told BBC Radio 4’s The World Tonight: “A lot of people are very angry and frustrated about the fact that Vaughan has been in effect forced out”.

But Mr Michael is himself a controversial figure, who was accused of being ‘too close to the police’ when he was South Wales Police and Crime Commissioner (PCC), and gave apparently misleading information after a major incident.

Violence erupted in Ely, and Alun Michael said it wasn’t true that the boys who died were being followed by police

Following a riot in the Ely area of Cardiff, he had said that rumours the deaths of two youngsters which provoked it had come after a police chase, were ‘not true’.

However footage later emerged which contradicted this statement.

It showed a police van on a road shortly after two teenagers, who later died, had come through frame, riding on an e-bike, and South Wales Police (SWP) later confirmed that police had indeed been following the youths.

The Cardiff riot and one of the boys who died – Alun Michael’s statement was contradicted

15 year old Harvey Evans, and Kyrees Sullivan, who was just 16, were killed before the violence, in which several police officers were injured and 27 people were arrested.

Meanwhile one of the ministers who resigned before the leader’s departure is Jeremy Miles, MS, and he has been touted as a possible successor as FMW, but his role in the controversy makes him a problematic figure for those backing Mr Gething.

One supporter of Mr Gething’s said Mr Miles could not unite the party and there was “a very strong feeling that the person who is associated with a bloodied knife cannot claim the crown”.

Jeremy Miles, MS – one of the ministers who resigned – it was said about him “…the person who is associated with a bloodied knife cannot claim the crown”

It was added: “I’m really worried about what this says to the world, to people in the United Kingdom and especially in Wales who are not white.

“It looks like a bunch of people have drawn daggers and knifed Vaughan without giving him a chance. I do find that really difficult to deal with.”

But a backer of Mr Miles said: “The people who did their best to block Jeremy last time are up to their old tricks, it seems. Let the members decide”.

A supporter of Jeremy Miles’s said it was not “credible” for Vaughan Gething to carry on through the summer

A separate supporter of Mr Miles has also hit back and said it was not “credible” for Mr Gething to carry on through the Summer as he no longer had the support of “the group, cabinet or Senedd.

“That can’t be shrugged off and major decisions continued under a set of caretaker ministers as if the political geography hasn’t altered.”

Mick Antoniw, Julie James, Lesley Griffiths joined Mr Miles in leaving their Welsh Government (WG) positions, citing a lack of confidence in Mr Gething.

Labour have faced derision over what has happened

He lost a no-confidence vote less than 12 weeks after taking office, following a series of scandals that called into question his judgement and transparency.

This was on June 5, but until Tuesday he had clung on, indeed campaigned for Labour in the General Election (GE).

Mr Gething has said he regrets the “impact”of his decision to take £200,000 from a company owned by a man convicted of illegally dumping waste, but at the same time appeared to blame the way this issue has been reported by the media.

Vaughan Gething said at first he wouldn’t resign after a scandal, and walked out of a television interview

However he has crossed swords with the media before.

In August 2017, Mr Gething walked away in the middle of an interview on ITV Wales, when questioned by journalist James Crichton-Smith over his decision not to hold a public inquiry into Abertawe Bro Morgannwg University Health Board (ABMUHB), following allegations that an employee had sexually assaulted vulnerable patients.

Vaughan Gething was so upset at being a loser that he cried in the chamber, but critics said they’d never seen anything like it

He was in tears before the confidence vote was held in the Welsh Parliament/Senedd Cymru (WP/SC) last month, and commentators said they had never seen anything like it.

It was only in March that Mr Gething had made history when he became the first black leader of any European country (succeeding Mark Drakeford) as the FMW, yet after a succession of controversies it seemed that MSs (Members of the Senedd) had had enough.

‘Good luck Vaughan – I hope none of your ministers resign!’

The main issue (although certainly not the only one), has been his connection to the man with a dubious past.

There have been months of rows over the donations to Mr Gething’s leadership campaign from the company owned by a man previously convicted of environmental offences.

The company is owned by David John Neal, who was given suspended sentences in 2013 for the illegal dumping of waste, and in 2017 for not cleaning it up.

David John Neal wouldn’t comment on his large donation to Vaughan Gething’s campaign

It emerged during the recent leadership contest that Mr Gething had lobbied on behalf of one of Mr Neal’s companies, before his first run in 2018.

In a separate row, Mr Gething found himself having to defend a message he sent during the pandemic, where the then-health minister told colleagues he was deleting texts from a ministerial group chat.

He later sacked Hannah Blythyn, alleging she was the source of a leak to Nation.Cymru (NC) (which, perhaps ironically in the circumstances, is partly funded by the WG meaning that its journalism is compromised).

‘We are too ill to vote in favour of Vaughan Gething’

Opposition parties demanded evidence, which Mr Gething has declined to provide.

Two MSs were ‘off sick’ during the no-confidence vote, and this would not have been unhelpful to his opponents.

They were Ms Blythyn herself, and Lee Waters, the former transport minister who had previously called for the donations at the centre of the main scandal to be returned.

Different camps have formed in the civil war

It’s pretty obvious which camp they are in!

 

The memories of Phil’s, decades-long award-winning career in journalism (when commenting on major political stories was always paramount), as he was gripped by the rare disabling condition Hereditary Spastic Paraplegia (HSP), have been released in a major book ‘A GOOD STORY’. Order it now!

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Regrettably publication of another book, however, was refused, because it was to have included names.