According to this morning's Daily Post, all of the Labour MPs in North Wales are against the coalition with Plaid Cymru.
It can only be assumed, from this, that all the region's constituency parties will also vote against any deal, except probably Caernarfon, given Martin Eaglestone's views.
If that is the case, then the arithmetic suggests that the Gogs, along with all the South Wales Valleys areas, may just about get the majority for the constituency vote in today's meeting of the Welsh Labour Party at the CIA (although I am sure backstage deals are being done as I write).
As a result, it is highly likely that Rhodri will have to rely on the unions, his metropolitan friends and the few Labour supporters across rural Wales to get the Red-Green deal agreed.
Will Welsh Labour ever be the same again?
It can only be assumed, from this, that all the region's constituency parties will also vote against any deal, except probably Caernarfon, given Martin Eaglestone's views.
If that is the case, then the arithmetic suggests that the Gogs, along with all the South Wales Valleys areas, may just about get the majority for the constituency vote in today's meeting of the Welsh Labour Party at the CIA (although I am sure backstage deals are being done as I write).
As a result, it is highly likely that Rhodri will have to rely on the unions, his metropolitan friends and the few Labour supporters across rural Wales to get the Red-Green deal agreed.
Will Welsh Labour ever be the same again?
Comments
I think the answer is 'no' - irrespective of how the vote finally pans out today.
Four years. If they behave. Then it's anyone game, again.