I had a look at Reform’s manifesto for the Welsh elections - so you do not have to.
It is an interesting document, though not always in the way intended. Quite a lot of it reads as if it has been written for a parliament that does not actually exist.
The first thing that strikes you is how many of the big themes sit firmly outside the powers of the Senedd. Immigration is a good example. Asylum policy is not devolved. Border control is not devolved. Visa policy is not devolved. These are matters decided in Westminster. The Welsh Parliament can debate them, complain about them, pass motions about them, but it cannot actually change them.
Unless, of course, the plan is to put a booth on the Severn Bridge and start checking English passports before they are allowed in to buy holiday homes. That would at least solve two Reform complaints at once.
Yet immigration sits right in the middle of the manifesto. One rather gets the impression that the document is aimed less at governing Wales and more at provoking nods of agreement in the pub. Which is perfectly fine as campaigning goes, but it does raise the small question of what exactly you would do with the levers of power if voters handed them to you.
There is a second difficulty, and this one is structural. Welsh politics is not organised in quite the same way as English politics. A large slice of the electorate places real weight on language and cultural identity. Support for the Welsh language, in one form or another, runs through Labour, Plaid and even parts of the Conservative vote. It is one of the few things that crosses party lines.
So proposing to dismantle large parts of the language policy framework is not quite the clever insurgent move it might appear from the outside. In significant parts of north and west Wales it simply puts a hard ceiling on how far you can go. Plaid’s vote in those areas is not just political. It is cultural. Outsiders tend to underestimate how sticky that kind of loyalty can be.
Which is slightly ironic for a party that spends much of its time talking about culture and identity. Welsh language policy is exactly that. It just happens to be Welsh culture rather than English culture, which appears to cause a certain conceptual difficulty.
Then there is geography. Reform’s support, where it exists, is likely to be spread thinly across the country. The new Senedd electoral system is proportional, which helps smaller parties, but it still rewards parties whose votes are concentrated in particular regions. Plaid benefits from that. Reform probably does not.
And finally there is the rather awkward matter of credibility. It is one thing to run as a protest movement. It is another to look like a party that has seriously thought about how devolved government actually works. When large chunks of your programme involve policies the Senedd cannot deliver, opponents do not have to deploy devastating rhetoric. They merely have to hand you a copy of the devolution settlement and a highlighter pen.
None of this means Reform will fail. They may well pick up a share of the protest vote, particularly at the expense of the Conservatives, who are having a fairly miserable time in Wales. Under the new voting system that could translate into a respectable number of seats.
But there is a difference between being a disruptive presence and being a party capable of governing. At the moment the manifesto feels much more like the former. It reads as though someone has mistaken the Senedd for Westminster and written a campaign accordingly.
Which is an unusual approach to running Wales, though it may save time when it comes to writing the next manifesto.










