A week off =unfinished business
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After a week in the Tenby sunshine what do you get? A list of unfinished business.
1. Now that Plaid Cymru have called off the (disciplinary) dogs against former leader and Presiding Officer Dafydd Elis-Thomas, who had accused his party of behaving like Tory (lap) dogs, will peace break out for good? I doubt it.
Will the former Presiding Officer be tempted to cross the floor by Labour's sweet nothings? No. He does admit, though, that he thought about it, dismissing the idea because of the support he got from local Plaid members in Dwyfor Meirionnydd.
Now, you may at this point be tempted to slip into theorising about whether simply thinking about being unfaithful is as bad as actually being unfaithful? As in, if your mind is elsewhere darling, your body might as well be there too. (No need to ask what sort of books I spent my time reading last week.) On the other hand you may debate what 'being unfaithful' in this case actually means and whether Lord Elis-Thomas was, in his view, being perfectly true to the values of the Plaid Cymru he represents.
Either way, this feels like unfinished business.
2. Is the vote that highlighted the Plaid member's absence from the chamber history now? It is. But while the Health Minister now knows her opponents in the chamber doubt her grip on her brief, what she'll really want to know is whether the First Minister intends to leave her in the job. Oh, and the business of persuading those who use the NHS in Wales that the changes proposed are absolutely necessary, right and considered? Barely started, not just unfinished.
3. Just when you thought the very first Welsh law that was 'made in Wales, for Wales' was on the verge of getting the Queen's blessing, it turns out to belong to this list.
The UK government's opposition to the measure is "ridiculous" says a spokesman for the First Minister. Don't they know that the people of Wales voted in a referendum to cut Westminster out of the law-making loop?
Don't they know in Cardiff Bay, ask Westminster sources, that you've got to get these things right and that the new law, as it stands, encroaches on territory that isn't devolved? This isn't about blocking devolution, they say. It's about bad drafting. That's why the Attorney General intervened.
This bit of unfinished business won't end with the usual finger pointing and spat out references to the respect agenda. It'll end in the Supreme Court in the spring of 2013 at the earliest.
4. The concerns of the people of Cefn Coch and the 'route corridor' to Lower Frankton isn't that the business of connecting new wind farms in mid Wales to the electricity network in Shropshire is unfinished. The problem, as they see it, is that it will go ahead at all.
Given the strength of numbers and feeling of the crowd that came to Cardiff Bay to shout their protest last year, National Grid will be well aware that finishing this bit of business won't just take a lot of hard hats. It will be hard work.