Skip to main content
Luke Fletcher
wind farm
Features / 22 March 2025
22 March 2025
LUKE FLETCHER fleshes out Plaid Cymru's plan for the revitalisation of Wales's economy
An elderly woman walks with the aid of a cane in Old Havana,
Features / 25 February 2025
25 February 2025
After Joe Biden’s cynical last-minute clemency for Cuba, the new administration has quickly returned to maximum subversive tactics. This socialist island needs our support now more than ever, writes LUKE FLETCHER MS
STED SYSTEM: Housing in Grangetown, Cardiff
Features / 1 February 2025
1 February 2025
The Welsh government is shying away from the obvious answer to a spiralling rental market and increased housing precarity – well-designed and implemented rent controls, writes LUKE FLETCHER
windfarm
Features / 7 December 2024
7 December 2024
LUKE FLETCHER is concerned by the vagueness of Great British Energy's promised benefits to communities in Wales
NOT ENOUGH: Rachel Reeves leaves 11 Downing Street, with her
Features / 2 November 2024
2 November 2024
The first Budget of the Labour government falls far short of addressing Wales’s needs, maintaining austerity-era policies while providing inadequate funding for critical services and infrastructure, writes LUKE FLETCHER MS
A person leaving  10/09/24 of People seen outside HM Prison
Features / 5 October 2024
5 October 2024
The government’s quick-fix solution to prison overcrowding is backfiring spectacularly, writes LUKE FLETCHER MS
12 -- Port Talbot steel
Features / 7 September 2024
7 September 2024
Labour is abandoning Port Talbot workers and pursuing more austerity — but Wales has an alternative path, one committed to economic justice and sustainability in the face of rising energy bills, writes LUKE FLETCHER MS
12 - Port Talbot steel
Features / 6 July 2024
6 July 2024
As Labour celebrates, the new PM should face immediate pressure to deliver on his steel promises here in Wales — nationalisation and worker ownership must be on the table too, argues LUKE FLETCHER MS
Sir Keir Starmer speaks at the launch of Labour's six steps
Features / 8 June 2024
8 June 2024
As the Starmer regime parachutes in disconnected candidates and offers little more than hot air, Plaid Cymru is mounting a real challenge to the decades of decay and decline forced on us by Westminster, writes LUKE FLETCHER MS
a steel worker wearing a badge on his jacket outside the UK'
22 May 2024
22 May 2024
…these are the choices facing UK and Welsh governments in the fight to save Welsh steel, writes LUKE FLETCHER MS
10 - firefighters
Features / 4 May 2024
4 May 2024
Research at the highest level has shown firefighters are exposed to cancer-causing agents in the line of duty — but unlike many other countries we are not taking necessary steps to address this, writes LUKE FLETCHER MS
Vaughan Gething Keir Starmer
Features / 6 April 2024
6 April 2024
The Cabinet Secretary for Economy, Energy and Welsh Language inherits significant challenges from his predecessor — Wales needs new approaches and solutions to the longstanding challenges it faces, writes LUKE FLETCHER MS
wales copy
Features / 9 March 2024
9 March 2024
Apprenticeships have been hailed as a pathway to skill development, economic development and a promising bridge between education and quality jobs — their future must be secured, writes LUKE FLETCHER MS
Tata steel
Features / 3 February 2024
3 February 2024
Ownership will be the deciding factor of the Welsh steel industry’s future, and that ownership must reside with the state, and eventually the people, if it is to flourish. We must urgently renationalise steel to this end, writes LUKE FLETCHER MS
Cuba stock photo
Features / 4 November 2023
4 November 2023
LUKE FLETCHER MS explains why Plaid Cymru extended solidarity to the embattled socialist island nation during the Welsh party's annual conference
workers control in Wales
Features / 7 October 2023
7 October 2023
Support for worker co-operatives, employee buyouts and other forms of worker ownership has been left wanting — we need a swift shift in the scale of our ambition, writes LUKE FLETCHER MS
raffiti on the side of a building in Port Talbot, South Wale
Features / 8 September 2023
8 September 2023
Gloomy prognoses concerning Wales’s challenges can be confronted if we move away from our fixation with the GDP, and look at the lives of normal people, writes LUKE FLETCHER MS
SPOT THE DIFFERENCE: Rishi Sunak and Keir Starmer appear to
Features / 5 August 2023
5 August 2023
Starmer’s refusal to scrap the two-child benefit cap is the latest reminder that child poverty is a bipartisan issue for Westminster’s governing duopoly, argues Plaid Cymru economy spokesperson LUKE FLETCHER MS
money
Features / 1 July 2023
1 July 2023
Economic productivity is an age-old problem in Wales – it will continue to be so unless we offer genuine and sustainable solutions to the big economic questions, argues Plaid Cymru economy spokesperson LUKE FLETCHER MS
Wales pay gap
Features / 2 June 2023
2 June 2023
Our class origin casts a long shadow over our lives — one of the areas in which this manifests is through the existence of occupational sorting and the class pay gap, writes LUKE FLETCHER MS
The Crown Estate owns land in the sea off the coast of Wales
Features / 12 May 2023
12 May 2023
Despite common conceptions of Wales as a nation founded on communitarian values, it has the fewest statutory community rights in Britain, writes LUKE FLETCHER MS
WL
Features / 31 March 2023
31 March 2023
With the aspirations of socialists among the Labour left in Wales frustrated, what other avenues to radical transformation are there, asks LUKE FLETCHER MS
KEEPING UP THE PRESSURE: A march calling for Welsh independe
Features / 3 February 2023
3 February 2023
The devolution of employment law to Wales would help prevent Tory Westminster from running roughshod over workers in Wales, argues Plaid Cymru economy spokesperson LUKE FLETCHER MS
EMA abolished in England
Features / 2 January 2023
2 January 2023
EMA is a life raft for many young learners in Wales and now also in Tower Hamlets — however, it is now far too small and its current form isn’t fit for purpose given the crises we face, writes LUKE FLETCHER MS