No 10 accepts people are ‘disappointed with the pace of change’ as Plaid Cymru celebrates Caerphilly byelection win – as it happpened

No 10 accepts people are ‘disappointed with the pace of change’ as Plaid Cymru celebrates Caerphilly byelection win – as it happpened


Downing Street: government understands ‘people are disappointed with the pace of change’

The prime minister’s press secretary has responded to the Caerphilly Senedd constituency byelection, which saw a huge swing away from Labour, by saying that “Byelections are always difficult for incumbent governments,” PA Media reports.

It quotes them saying:

This one is no different, but we are determined to show the people of Caerphilly and working people across Wales the change the UK Government is delivering hand in hand with the Labour government in Wales.

(We are) determined to go further and faster, understand people are disappointed with the pace of change, and that is what the Government is relentlessly focused on delivering for working people in Wales and across the UK.

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Key events

Summary of the day …

Martin Belam
Martin Belam
  • The prime minister’s press secretary has responded to the Caerphilly Senedd constituency byelection, which saw a victory for Plaid Cymru with Reform UK in second place and a huge swing away from Labour, by saying “By-elections are always difficult for incumbent governments. [We] understand people are disappointed with the pace of change”

  • Lindsay Whittle has been sworn in as the Plaid Cymru Senedd member for Caerphilly in Cardiff after taking 47% of the vote with 15,961. Reform UK’s Llŷr Powell polled 12,113 with Labour’s Richard Tunnicliffe a distant third on 3,713

Chart showing vote outcome
  • Plaid Cymru leader Rhun ap Iorwerth said the result was “real evidence” people are turning to the party, and it was “clear” that “momentum is with Plaid Cymru now” heading into the 2026 Senedd election

  • Liz Saville Roberts, the Plaid Cymru leader in Westminster said “Plaid Cymru’s hope beat Reform’s hate” and that the result was another blow to Labour, showing the party’s “limp managerialism won’t cut it”

  • The leader of Reform UK, the Clacton MP Nigel Farage, said next year’s Senedd election – the first to be held under a proportional representation system – will be a “two-horse race between Reform UK and Plaid Cymru”

  • Nick Thomas-Symonds, a Cabinet Office minister and MP for Torfaen in south Wales, told Times Radio that Labour’s defeat in Caerphilly was “disappointing” and that the party had “a very tough fight” on its hands ahead of next year’s Senedd elections

  • In other news, the Liberal Democrats have decided gone on the offensive against Kemi Badenoch and the previous Conservative government over the collapse of the China spy trial, demanding “radical transparency” after it emerged that Rishi Sunak was the only politician to see a witness statement by the deputy national security adviser at the centre of the controversy about the collapse of a case against two British men

  • Your Party, the new left-wing movement led by Jeremy Corbyn and Zarah Sultana, has secured its first elected representatives in Scotland after three Glasgow councillors defected from the Scottish Greens

  • Volodymyr Zelenskyy arrived in Downing Street for a bilateral meeting with Keir Starmer. Sarah Haque has been following that story on our Europe live blog

That is it from me, Martin Belam, today. Thank you for reading and all your comments. I will see you on the website somewhere soon.



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