Showing posts with label cerith jones. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cerith jones. Show all posts

Wednesday, 25 July 2012

Press release: 'Work for Wales' campaign

On Sunday 29th July, Plaid Cymru Youth, the youth and student wing of Plaid Cymru, will launch its ‘Work for Wales’ campaign.

The campaign will draw attention to the dangerous reality that almost a quarter of 16 to 24 year-olds in Wales are unemployed, and to call on the Welsh Government to act now to reverse this worrying statistic which goes against the UK trend. A petition to the National Assembly calling on the Welsh Government to do more to tackle youth unemployment will be launched the same day.

The campaign will be launched at Plaid Cymru’s Summer School which takes place this weekend at the Urdd Camp in Llangrannog.

Plaid Cymru Youth National Chair Cerith Rhys Jones said:

"Because of the Welsh Government’s lack of action and the Westminster coalition government’s destructive policies, thousands and thousands of young people in Wales are without jobs. There is a grave danger that their generation will become a lost generation.

"Unfortunately, the Welsh Government would rather use the Westminster Government’s misguided policies as a means to score political points. The lives and jobs of Wales’s young people are not a political game, so we are calling on the Welsh Government to act urgently to put effective and positive schemes in place in order to create work for Wales."


Plaid Cymru leader Leanne Wood AM added:

"The figures for youth unemployment are shocking and should act as a catalyst for urgent and direct action from the Welsh government. 23.7% of 16 to 24 year-olds in Wales are out of work; this is unacceptable.

"Youth unemployment is crushing too many hopes and dreams - it is already stifling too many communities, many of which are yet to recover from previous recessions. Plaid Cymru Youth are absolutely right to prioritise campaigning for jobs and opposing the scourge of youth unemployment. I therefore fully support the petition launch as part of the 'Work for Wales!' campaign."


- ENDS -

Contact Cerith Rhys Jones (cerithrjones@live.co.uk) for more information.

Plaid gives you the right to use any of our high-resolution pictures at www.flickr.com/plaidcymru for your publication or online use.

Datganiad i'r wasg: Ymgyrch 'Gwaith i Gymru'

Ddydd Sul y 29ain o Orffennaf, bydd Plaid Cymru Ifanc, adain ieuenctid a myfyrwyr Plaid Cymru, yn lansio ymgyrch ‘Gwaith i Gymru.’

Pwrpas yr ymgyrch fydd dwyn sylw at y gwirionedd brawychus bod bron iawn chwarter o Gymry rhwng 16 a 24 oed yn ddi-waith ac i alw Llywodraeth Cymru i’r gâd i weithredu er mwyn atal y sefyllfa ofidus hon sydd yn groes i’r tuedd Prydeinig. Lansir deiseb i’r Cynulliad Cenedlaethol yn galw ar Lywodraeth Cymru i wneud mwy i taclo diweithdra ymysg pobl ifainc ar yr un diwrnod.

Caiff yr ymgyrch ei lansio yn ystod Ysgol Haf flynyddol Plaid Cymru y’i chynhelir y penwythnos hwn yng Ngwersyll yr Urdd, Llangrannog.

Meddai Cerith Rhys Jones, Cadeirydd Cenedlaethol Plaid Cymru Ifanc:

"Oherwydd llwyr ddiogi Llywodraeth Cymru a pholisïau distrywgar y llywodraeth glymbleidiol yn San Steffan, mae yng Nghymru filoedd o bobl ifainc sydd heb waith. Mae perygl mawr mai cenhedlaeth goll fydd eu cenhedlaeth nhw.

"Yn anffodus, mae’n well gan Lywodraeth Cymru ddefnyddio polisïau ffôl Llywodraeth San Steffan fel modd o ennill pwyntiau gwleidyddol. Nid gêm gwleidyddol yw bywydau a swyddi pobl ifainc Cymru, felly rydym yn galw ar Lywodraeth Cymru i weithredu ar frys i ddodi cynlluniau effeithiol a phositif ar waith er mwyn creu gwaith i Gymru."


Ychwanegodd Leanne Wood AC, Arweinydd Plaid Cymru:

"Mae’r ffigurau ynghylch diweithdra ieuenctid yn ddychrynllyd a dylent weithredu fel catalydd am weithdrediad brys ac uniongyrchol gan Lywodraeth Cymru. Mae 23.7% o bobl rhwng 16 a 24 oed yng Nghymru heb waith; nid yw hwn yn dderbyniol.

"Mae diweithdra ieuenctid yn difetha gormod o obeithion a dyheadau – mae yn barod yn tagu gormod o gymunedau, a nifer o hwythau heb eto ymadfer wedi dirwasgiadau blaenorol. Mae Plaid Cymru Ifanc yn llygad ei lle’n blaenoriaethu ymgyrchu dros swyddi ac yn erbyn diweithdra ieuenctid. Rwyf felly’n llawn gefnogi’r ddeiseb y’i lansir fel ran o ymgyrch 'Gwaith i Gymru!'"


- DIWEDD -

Cysyllter â Cerith Rhys Jones (cerithrjones@live.co.uk) am ragor o wybodaeth.

Mae Plaid Cymru yn rhoi’r hawl i chi ddefnyddio unrhyw rai o’n lluniau ar www.flickr.com/plaidcymru i’w cyhoeddi neu’u defnyddio ar-lein.

Saturday, 19 May 2012

To be or not to be - The President's Club

I was recently asked my view on an institution of Plaid Cymru's which has existed for a good number of years now, The President's Club.

It is possible that many party members and readers of this blog will have no idea of what the President's Club is; in essence, it is the status given to party members who pay a monthly membership fee of £20 or more. Members of the club enjoy a special reception at the Eisteddfod and at Annual Conference, an opportunity to attend a special event with a guest speaker, and a personal Christmas card from the President of Plaid Cymru.

I admit that the President's Club isn't something to which I've given much thought. Personally, I am not a member of the club, and never have been. As a student, I simply can't afford to give the party £20 a month but I hope that my contribution to the party in terms of the work I do for it, not only as Chair of Plaid Cymru Youth, but also on various campaigns and at election time, makes up for what I cannot give financially.

It was put to me that the President's Club isn't fair, as it excludes those who cannot afford to give much to the party financially, and I accept that. The person with whom I was speaking suggested that if we want to build a society of equals, why do we need a special club like this in the first place, because surely it goes against all our principles? After all, our party's constitution states that one of our core aims as a national movement is
to build a national community based on equal citizenship, respect for different traditions and cultures and the equal worth of all individuals, whatever their race, nationality, gender, colour, creed, sexuality, age, ability or social background.

I'd like to briefly set out my view on the President's Club. I do find myself feeling slightly uncomfortable that there should be some sort of 'special club' for those in Plaid Cymru who can afford to give more money to the party than others; I find that to be something rather more suited to the unionist parties which we so vehemently oppose.

Having said that, Plaid Cymru is extremely fortunate in that we have hundreds, if not thousands, of committed activists all across Wales who play such a vital role in the development and promotion of the national movement, and it is only right that the party appreciates them, even if it is only with a couple of receptions and a Christmas card. Plaid Cymru activists are by no means half-hearted in their work for our party, so they deserve our thanks.

The problem is that the President's Club does not recognise their contribution - it only recognises those who give in financial terms.

Having said all of that, I am lucky to be in a position to know how the party works, to know the challenges that it faces, and the difficulties involved in running a national movement such as ours with only a limited number of staff at HQ, who, I have to say, work extremely hard for the cause. I imagine that it would be terribly difficult for the party to keep a record of all those who give so much to this party in non-financial terms, and it would be costly to thank them with three such events every year.

Of course, Dr Eurfyl ap Gwilym's internal review made reference to getting closer to party members - for there to be a better connection and relationship between party officials and staff in HQ and our activists on the ground - but I would suggest that it would be beneficial for the party to find a mechanism for officially appreciating hard-working party activists. I think the internal report by Dr ap Gwilym goes a long way in doing this, by raising the possibility of party members being invited to HQ to see how the party works, and of course, all party members are allowed to attend conference.

So, being that the party is working with a view to developing and strengthening the relationship between the party in central office and the activists at grassroots level, and also the fact that it would be very difficult to include hard-working party activists in some sort of club, I am not of the view that the President's Club ought to be scrapped.

I know this blog has been a bit dry, but I thought that I'd better clarify my position on it, as I'd been asked by a party member.

Cerith Rhys Jones
National Chair

For more information: http://www.english.plaidcymru.org/presidents-club-1/

Friday, 4 May 2012

Better luck next time!

We didn’t win in Cathays but I am happy to say that we beat the Conservatives.

I didn’t manage to get down the votes per candidate in Cathays last night but I’ve tallied up the votes per party:

1. Labour - 3345 - 3 Lab elected
2. Liberal Democrats - 3087 - 1 LD elected
3. Green Party - 2221
4. Plaid Cymru - 950
5. Conservatives - 835
6. Independent - 139

As for the national result for Plaid Cymru, there’s no escaping the fact that it’s disappointing. Plaid Cymru lost some fantastic councillors and it’s disappointing that in some places, there were hard-working local champions from Plaid Cymru barely holding onto their seats, or not getting elected. It really does make you wonder how that can be, when the people they’re up against do nothing for their communities.

There is a possible answer to be had in that Plaid Cymru was the only party that ran this local election campaign in the way that local election campaigns ought to be run. The clue’s in the title - it ought to be about LOCAL issues. Unfortunately, the British parties decided to use this LOCAL election to fight WESTMINSTER battles. Couple that with the influence of the British press and hey presto, what have you got? People up and down the country wanting to use this vote - which ought to be a vote on local issues - as a protest vote.

Perhaps Plaid Cymru was silly not to join in with the extreme coalition-bashing. Perhaps we ought to have set ourselves up as the real alternative to the Con Dems, and asked the people to vote for us in order to send a message to David Cameron and Nick Clegg.

Politically speaking, that would probably have been the right thing to do. But we can take pride in the fact that we were the only party to run this campaign properly. Even if that means that Plaid Cymru had a disappointing night, I’m glad that that’s how we did it. We were fair and honest.

I really am desperately sorry for the Plaid Cymru councillors across Wales who lost their seats, and for the candidates who didn’t get elected. I know that they won’t give up though, because despite how cheesy it may sound, in Plaid Cymru, you don’t get politicians. You get real, local champions, and one disappointing evening won’t stop those people from showing Labour up over the next five years.

On the flip side, there are some positives. I’m pleased that Plaid Cymru has retained two councillors in Cardiff, and I know that Neil McEvoy and Lisa Ford will continue to do a fantastic job in Fairwater.

And then of course, as Chair of Plaid Cymru Youth, I am over the moon that two of my members have been elected as Councillors. Mair Rowlands will do a brilliant job in Bangor, and of course my good friend and colleague Rebeca Lewis won fantastically against the Labour incumbent in Trebanos, Neath Port Talbot.

I am tremendously proud of you both and want to wish you the best of luck for your five years as councillors. I know you’ll do a brilliant job representing your constituents, and will show Labour up for who they really are.

Overall, it’s a dim picture, but having said that, there’s a silver lining to every cloud. Our task for the next five years is to hold Labour to account and show the people of Wales that Plaid Cymru is the only real party of Wales and the only party that really cares about local communities up and down our country.

In the words of a wise woman - YMLAEN!

Cerith Rhys Jones
National Chair, Plaid Cymru Youth

Monday, 23 April 2012

Diwrnod Gweithredu | Day of Action

Ddydd Sadwrn 21 Ebrill 2012 - penblwydd Mrs Windsor - fe gynhaliodd Plaid Cymru Ifanc ddiwrnod gweithredu, yn ymgyrchu gydag ymgeisyddion y Blaid yng Nghathays a Phenarth. Cawsom ddiwrnod da o daflenni ac ymgyrchu yn y dau ward, lle mae gan y Blaid chwe ymgeisydd ifanc. Yng Nghathays, mi ein Cadeirydd Cenedlaethol Cerith Rhys Jones yn sefyll wrth ochr ein Is-Gadeirydd Cenedlaethol Emyr Gruffydd, ein Swyddog Cyfathrebiadau Cenedlaethol Glenn Page, ac Andrew Pearc. Ym Mhenarth, mi fydd ein Swyddog Polisi Cenedlaethol Osian Lewis, a'n Cyn-Gadeirydd, sydd bellach yn Llywydd ar Undeb Myfyrwyr Prifysgol Abertawe Luke James, yn ymgyrchu i ennill y ward oddi wrth y Ceidwadwyr. Fe ymunodd arweinydd newydd Plaid Cymru, Leanne Wood AC, gyda ni am sesiwn o daflenni ar brif ffordd siopa Caerdydd, Heol y Frenhines, lle'r oeddem oll yn hapus gyda'r ymateb addawol a gafwyd gan siopwyr Caerdydd.
On Saturday 21 April 2012 - Mrs Windsor's birthday - Plaid Cymru Youth hosted a Day of Action, campaigning with our candidates in Cathays and Penarth. We had a great day leafleting and canvassing in the two wards, in which Plaid will be fielding six young candidates. In Cathays, our National Chair Cerith Rhys Jones will be standing alongside our National VC Emyr Gruffydd, our National Comms Officer Glenn Page, and Andrew Pearce. In Penarth, our National Policy Officer Osian Lewis and former Chair, now President of Swansea SU, Luke James, will be heading up Plaid's campaign against the incumbent Conservatives. The new Leader of Plaid Cymru, Leanne Wood AM, joined us for a leafleting session on Cardiff's main shopping street, Queen Street, and we were all pleased with the positive reaction shown by Cardiff's shoppers. Lluniau / Photos © Kirsten Whitney

Friday, 16 March 2012

Llongyfarchiadau! || Congrats!

Mae'n bleser gen i allu danfon neges o longyfarchiadau enfawr i Leanne Wood AC ar ei hetholiad fel Arweinydd newydd Plaid Cymru.

It's a pleasure for me to be able to send a message of congratulations to Leanne Wood AM on her election as the new Leader of Plaid Cymru.

Mae cael Leanne fel Arweinydd y Blaid yn rhoi gobaith imi fod gan y Blaid flynyddoedd disglair iawn o'i blaen a chyda digon o waith, nid wyf yn amau mai Leanne Wood fydd Prif Weinidog Cymru yn 2016.

Having Leanne as Plaid Cymru's Leader gives me hope that the party still has a sparkling future ahead of it and with plenty of work, I have no doubt that Leanne Wood will be the First Minister for Wales in 2016.

Ar lefel bersonol, rwyf i'n edrych ymlaen yn fawr iawn at weithio gyda Leanne tra fy mod i'n Gadeirydd ar y mudiad myfyrwyr ac ieuenctid, ac hoffwn ddiolch iddi am ei charedigrwydd tuag at ein mudiad ni ar hyd y blynyddoedd.

On a personal level, I am very much looking forward to working with Leanne while I am Chair of the student and youth movement, and I would like to thank her for her unwavering support of our movement.

Yn ogystal, hoffwn dalu teyrnged i'r dau ymgeisydd arall - Elin Jones AC a'r Arglwydd Dafydd Elis-Thomas AC. Fe frwydron nhw ymgyrchoedd da iawn wir a does dim amheuaeth yn fy meddwl i y bydd y ddau ohonynt yn aelodau annatod o dîm Leanne yn y Cynulliad.

I would also like to pay tribute to the other two candidates - Elin Jones AM and the Lord Dafydd Elis-Thomas AM. They both fought good campaigns and there is no doubt in my mind that they will both form important parts of Leanne's team in the Assembly.

Pob lwc - ymlaen! Good luck!

Cerith Rhys Jones
Cadeirydd Cenedlaethol || National Chair

Wednesday, 14 March 2012

Daw'r diwedd

Yfory, cyfrir y pleidleisiau yn etholiad arweinyddol Plaid Cymru a dyma ddiwedd ar gyfnod Ieuan Wyn Jones fel Arweinydd y Blaid, swydd y mae ef wedi'i dal ers 12 mlynedd.

Bydd y sawl ohonoch sy'n dilyn y blog hwn yn gwybod mai polisi swyddogol CymruX yw cefnogi ymgyrch Leanne Wood i'w olynu. Os nad ydych chi wedi pleidleisio eto, fe'ch hanogaf i ddewis Leanne fel eich dewis cyntaf i fod yn Arweinydd ac i ddanfon eich papur pleidleisio at Dŷ Gwynfor yn syth fel ei fod yn cyrraedd cyn yfory.

Ond wrth i'r ymgyrch Arweinyddol ddirwyn i ben, hoffwn gymryd moment i dalu teyrnged i Ieuan am ei arweinyddiaeth am dros ddegawd. Y mae wedi arwain ein Plaid gyda sgil ers blynyddoedd, ac wedi bod yn wyneb arbennig o dda i'n mudiad cenedlaethol yn ystod y cyfnod hwnnw. Mae'r teyrngedau a dalwyd iddo o ar draws llawr y Siambr yn ystod ei sesiwn FMQs olaf fel Arweinydd y Blaid ddydd Mawrth yn adlewyrchu'i boblogrwydd.

Ef wnaeth arwain y Blaid i mewn i Lywodraeth am y tro cyntaf ac fe wasnaethodd ein gwlad fel ei Dirprwy Brif Weinidog. Fel Arweinydd Plaid Cymru, fe arweiniodd ni at ddelifro senedd go iawn i'n Cenedl. Ac yn y dyddiau cynnar, roedd yn un o'r bobl wnaeth droi'r prosiect datganoli i mewn i'r llwyddiant y mae heddiw.

Edrychaf ymlaen at ei weld ar ôl-feinciau'r Blaid, yn brwydro dros bobl Ynys Môn ac ys dywedodd Kirsty Williams, gobeithiaf y bydd yn cymaint o drwbl o'r ôl-feinciau ag y mae cyn-arweinwyr eraill wedi bod.

Ar ran mudiad myfyrwyr ac ieuenctid Plaid Cymru, hoffwn ymestyn fy niolchiadau calonog i Ieuan am ei wasanaeth ar hyd y degawdau, a dymuno'n dda iddo wrth iddo ymadael wrth yr Arweinyddiaeth.

Cerith Rhys Jones
Cadeirydd Cenedlaethol

The End is Near

Tomorrow, votes will be counted in Plaid Cymru's leadership election and Ieuan Wyn Jones will cease to be Leader of Plaid Cymru, a post he has held for 12 years.

Those of you who follow this blog will now that official CymruX policy is to support Leanne Wood's campaign to succeed him. If you haven't already voted, I would urge you to select Leanne as your number once choice for Leader and get your ballot paper in the post to Tŷ Gwynfor so that it gets there before the deadline tomorrow.

But as the Leadership campaign draws to a close, I want to take a moment to pay tribute to Ieuan for his leadership for more than a decade. He has led our party with skill for years, and has been a fantastic figurehead for our national movement during that period. I think that the tributes paid to him from all across the Siambr floor during FMQs on Tuesday - his last as Leader - reflect how popular he is.

He led Plaid Cymru into Government for the first time and served our country as its Deputy First Minister. As Leader of Plaid Cymru, he led us to delivering a proper law-making parliament for our Nation. And in the early days, he was one of those people who helped turn the devolution project into the success that it is today.

I look forward to seeing him on the backbenches, fighting for the people of Ynys Môn and as Kirsty Williams put it, I hope he's as troublesome from the backbenches as other former leaders have been.

On behalf of Plaid Cymru's student and youth movement, I would like to extend my heartfelt thanks to Ieuan for his service over the decades, and wish him all the very best as he takes his leave of the Leadership.

Cerith Rhys Jones
National Chair

Thursday, 1 March 2012

Peint i'r Blaid | Pint for Plaid

Gyfeillion oll,

Heddiw, ry'n ni'n lansio ymgyrch i gynyddu incwm misol mudiad ieuenctid a myfyrwyr Plaid Cymru, er mwyn inni allu cyflogi trefnydd a fydd yn hwyluso'n gwaith a'n hymgyrchu ledled Cymru.

Yr hyn ry'n ni'n ei ofyn yw gwerth peint rhad o gwrw bob mis - rhyw £2. Os ellwch chi fforddio rhoi mwy, felly gwych! Mi fydd pob un ohonom yn gwerthfawrogi unrhyw faint bynnag y gellwch chi fforddio rhoi.

Os y'ch chi'n fodlon buddsoddi yn nyfodol eich cenedl, yna cysylltwch gyda Cadeirydd y mudiad ar cerithrjones@live.co.uk am ffurflen ddebyd uniongyrchol.

Diolch enfawr ichi.

Friends,

Today we're launching a campaign to increase Plaid Cymru's student and youth movement's monthly income, so that we can employ an organiser who will facilitate our work and campaigning across Wales.

What we're asking is that you give us the value of a pint a month - some £2. If you can afford more, then great! We will all appreciate however much you can give very much.

If you want to invest in the future of your nation, then contact the movement's Chair at cerithrjones@live.co.uk for a direct debit mandate.

Thank you so much.


Cerith Rhys Jones
Cadeirydd | Chair

Saturday, 25 February 2012

CymruX Chair: Why I support Leanne

My Plaid Cymru ballot paper arrived this morning and I'm proud to report that everyone in the Jones Household has placed Leanne Wood as their first preference as Leader of Plaid Cymru. Personally speaking, Leanne is my first preference, Elin Jones my second, and Lord Elis-Thomas my third.

If I might, I'd like to take a minute or two to tell you why I believe that Leanne is the best choice of the candidates in this race to lead Plaid Cymru.

Leanne is a staunch nationalist, an unwavering republican and a socialist to the bones. But one could also say that of the other woman in this race, so what gives Leanne the edge? For me, what makes Leanne a fantastic candidate is her vision for Wales, the freshness of her campaign, and how exciting a prospect it is to have her as Plaid Cymru's leader.


Masses of experience are not on Leanne's side - at least, not as a Government Minister or a statesman. But despite that, Leanne has managed to inspire people all across Wales more than either of the other campaigns. Some have said that Leanne is too radical or too left-wing to unite the party. But to those people let me ask: are you as excited by the other campaigns as you are with Leanne's? It's a lively campaign, full of new ideas, and I have no doubt that Leanne will be a lively Leader, one who is full of ideas.

Her Greenprint for the Valleys is the basis for Plaid Cymru's local election manifesto this year, and as many - including former Party President and the Welsh legend Dafydd Iwan - have noted, her politics goes back to Plaid Cymru's core, original politics. It's a politics of community and cooperation. But what's special about her campaign is that it combines that element of standing by Plaid Cymru's key principles and indeed its roots, but it is also a modern campaign and a symbol of a woman who will move our party forward and create it as a natural political home for people all across Wales - from our heartlands in the north and the west, to the north-east, and her native industrial south.

Leanne will be an excellent leader of Plaid Cymru and so, I encourage you all to place her as your first preference on your ballot papers. For more information on her campaign, go to her website.

- CERITH RHYS JONES
National Chair of CymruX

P.S. Although it is official CymruX policy to support Leanne, please note that my opinion as portrayed above is my own.

Cadeirydd CymruX: Pam 'dw i'n cefnogi Leanne

Fe gyrhaeddodd fy mhapur pleidleisio Plaid Cymru'r bore 'ma a 'dw i'n falch iawn o allu dweud fod pawb yn fy nhŷ i wedi gosod Leanne Wood fel eu dewis cyntaf ar gyfer Arweinydd y Blaid. Yn bersonol, Leanne yw fy newis cyntaf, Elin Jones fy ail ddewis, a'r Arglwydd Elis-Thomas yn drydydd.

'Dw i am gymryd munud neu ddwy i ddweud wrthych chi pam 'dw i'n credu mai Leanne yw'r dewis gorau allan o'r tri sydd yn y ras hwn, os ga'i.

Y mae Leanne yn genedlaetholwraig i'r carn, yn weriniaethwraig gref ac yn sosialydd ddiamod. Ond mae modd dweud yr holl bethau hyn am y fenyw arall yn y ras hefyd, felly beth sy'n rhoi mantais i Leanne dros yr ymgeisyddion eraill? Imi, yr hyn sy'n gwneud Leanne yn ymgeisydd ffantastig yw ei gweledigaeth i Gymru, ffresni'i hymgyrch hi, a pha mor cyffrous o beth yw'r rhagolwg o'i chael hi'n arweinydd ar Blaid Cymru.


Nid oes profiad helaeth ar ochr Leanne - o leia, nid profiad fel Gweinidog yn y Llywodraeth neu fel gwladweinydd uchel ei fri. Ond eto, y mae ymgyrch Leanne wedi llwyddo i ysbrydoli pobl ledled Cymru'n fwy na'r ymgyrchoedd eraill. Mae 'na rhai sydd wedi dweud bod Leanne yn rhy radical neu'n rhy dryw wrth adain chwith y Blaid i allu ei huno. Ond wrth y bobl hynny, mae'n rhaid imi ofyn - ydych chi'n cael eich cyffroi cymaint gan yr ymgyrchoedd eraill ag ydych chi gan ymgyrch Leanne? Ymgyrch fywiog, llawn syniadau ydyw, a does dim amau mai arweinydd bywiog, llawn syniadau fydd hi.

Y mae ei Chynllun Gwyrdd i'r Cymoedd hi'n sylfaen ar gyfer maniffesto etholiadau lleol y Blaid eleni ac fel mae nifer - gan gynnwys cyn-Lywydd y Blaid a'r arwr Cymraeg, Dafydd Iwan - wedi nodi, y mae ei gwleidyddiaeth hi'n mynd yn ôl at graidd gwleidyddiaeth Plaid Cymru. Mae'n wleidyddiaeth o gymuned ac o gyd-weithredu. Ond yr hyn sy'n arbennig - sy'n sbesial - am ei hymgyrch hi, yw ei bod yn cyfuno'r elfen honno o fod yn dryw wrth egwyddorion a gwreiddiau ein Plaid ni, ond y mae hefyd yn ymgyrch fodern ac yn symbol o fenyw y bydd yn symud ein Plaid ymlaen ac yn ei chreu hi'n gartref gwleidyddol naturiol i bobl o bob cwr o Gymru - o'n cadarnleoedd yn y gogledd a'r gorllewin, at y gogledd-ddwyrain, a'i deheubarth diwydiannol brodorol.

Mi fydd Leanne yn arweinydd gwych ar Blaid Cymru ac felly, dwi'n eich hannog chi oll i'w gosod hi'n ddewis cyntaf ar eich papurau pleidleisio. Am fwy o wybodaeth am ymgyrch Leanne, ewch i'w gwefan.

- CERITH RHYS JONES
Cadeirydd Cenedlaethol CymruX

O.N. Er mai polisi swyddogol CymruX yw i gefnogi Leanne Wood, noder mai fy marn i yw'r hyn y sydd uchod.

Friday, 21 October 2011

Prifysgol Caerdydd / Cardiff University

Hoffai'r Pwyllgor Gwaith Cenedlaethol estyn longyfarchiadau cynnes iawn at ddau o aelodau CymruX, sydd hefyd ar bwyllgor CymruX Caerdydd (Myfyrwyr Plaid Cymru), Emyr Gruffydd a Dan Lawrence yn eu llwyddiant yn is-etholiadau Cyngor Myfyrwyr Prifysgol Caerdydd.

Pam na ddewch chi draw i noson gymdeithasol CymruX Caerdydd i ddathlu'u llwyddiant heno 'ma? Hon fydd y noson gymdeithasol gyntaf. Bydd yn dechrau am 7yh ym Mango's (Cathays, Caerdydd).

Llongyfarchiadau eto, fechgyn!

The National Executive Committee wishes to extend its congratulations to two of CymruX's members, who are also committee members of CymruX Cardiff (Plaid Cymru Students), Emyr Gruffydd and Dan Lawrence, in their success in Cardiff University's Student Council by-elections.

Why don't you come along to CymruX Cardiff's social evening tonight to celebrate their success? This will be the first social evening. It will start at 7pm in Mango's (Cathays, Cardiff).

Congrats once again boys!


Cerith Rhys Jones
Ar ran y Pwyllgor Gwaith / On behalf of the NEC

Noson Gymdeithasol CymruX Caerdydd Cardiff Social Evening

Chwilio am rywbeth i'w wneud heno? Dewch draw i noson gymdeithasol CymruX Caerdydd (Myfyrwyr Plaid Cymru) am 7yh ym Mango's (yn agos at dafarn y Flora yng Nghatays, Caerdydd) i gwrdd, trafod a mwynhau gyda'ch cyd-genedlaetholwyr!

Looking for something to do tonight? Come to the CymruX Cardiff (Plaid Cymru Students) social evening at 7pm in Mango's (near the Flora in Cathays, Cardiff) to meet, talk and enjoy with your fellow nationalists!

Tuesday, 30 August 2011

Cynllun Polisi / Policy Programme

Mae CymruX yn y broses o ddechrau ymgynghori cyn inni ysgrifennu'n Cynllun Polisi newydd.

Mae cyfansoddiad CymruX yn gofyn ein bod yn adolygu'n polisïau bob hyn ac hyn, ac yn hyn o beth, dyma ni'n gofyn ichi fod yn rhan o'r broses hon.

Os hoffech chi fod yn rhan o'n hymgynghoriad a chyfrannu at ein Cynllun Polisi newydd, cysylltwch â'n Swyddog Polisi Luke Nicholas, drwy'i ebostio ar luke_nicholas@hotmail.co.uk.

Diolch.

*****

CymruX is in the process of beginning its consultation for its new Policy Programme.

CymruX's constitution states that we have to review our policies every so often, and as such, we're asking you to be part of this process.

If you would like to be part of our consultation and contribute to our new Policy Programme, please email our Policy Officer Luke Nicholas at luke_nicholas@hotmail.co.uk.

Thank you.


=====

Cerith Rhys Jones
Swyddog heb Bortffolio - Pwyllgor Gwaith CymruX Plaid Cymru Ifanc
Non-portfolio Officer - CymruX Young Plaid Cymru NEC

Tuesday, 30 November 2010

The value of devolution - fairness for students

Cerith Rhys Jones (Executive Non-Portfolio Officer and Public Rep) writes:

"Today’s announcement from the Labour-Plaid Cymru Welsh Assembly Government regarding tuition fees comes as what can only be described as a relief for students and prospective students like myself especially. One Wales has shown the value of devolution this afternoon, in declaring that Welsh students will not have to pay any more than £3,290 a year for their Higher Education – wherever they study in the UK.

"Students who are currently in University and who will go to University next year will not be affected by the announcement, meaning that they will still pay £3,290, but today’s news will affect 2012/13 students who would otherwise have to pay upwards of £6,000 for their HE – thanks very much to the Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition government in London.

"This move from WAG really does show our commitment to HE here in Wales, and more than that: that we believe in our young people and believe that they don’t deserve such extortionate costs. Supporters of the ConDems’ plans ask why it matters – we don’t repay until after graduation anyway! Let me tell you: if I went into Uni knowing that I would leave with £30,000 or £40,000 worth of debt, I really would question whether it’s worth it.

It is.

"The difference between Cardiff Bay and Westminster is that we here in Wales have made the right decision to make it possible for students and prospective students to what is right for them in the long-run.

'We have a responsibility to Welsh-domiciled students, wherever they choose to study. We also have a responsibility to ensure that Wales benefits, economically, socially and culturally, from the investment that the Assembly Government makes in higher education in Wales.'


"That’s what our Education Minister Leighton Andrews AM had to say today. He’s darned right. A strong and accessible HE sector will benefit our country in more ways than simply meaning that more people can afford to go to Uni. What Wales needs is a strong, forward-looking and innovative economy, and a good HE sector will stand us in good stead for achieving that.

"Plaid is proud of its socialist principles and so am I. I am proud to be a citizen of a country whose government cares; whose government recognises its responsibility to ensure that education is indeed a right and not a privilege.

"Of course, on that note, we’re not quite there, but CymruX is committed to fighting for free HE because we believe that a cost of even £3,290 shouldn’t stop anyone from going to University. (Naturally, if cuts weren’t coming from every angle thanks to David and Co. that’d be a rather more realistic aim.)

"For now though, we are happy with the best that’s on offer: fairness. Something that Wales can offer, and the ConDems seem not yet to have grasped. Will they ever? Doubt it.

Diolch, Leighton, a diolch, Llywodraeth Cymru.
Thank you, Leighton, and thank you, Welsh Government.


To read the Welsh Assembly Government’s statement on-line, go to the Welsh Assembly Government's website.

And remember that you can now follow @yesforwales and @iedrosgymru on Twitter, as well as add a Yes4Wales badge to your Twitter and Facebook avatars. More powers for Wales next March combined with a successful election for us means more fairness and indeed more actions like today’s!

Sunday, 28 November 2010

The trials and tribulations of S4/C continue...

Cerith Rhys Jones, CymruX Non-Portfolio Officer writes:

"S4/C is having a tough time of it, of that there is no doubt. We all know about the cuts that are coming to it, and the fact that its independence is in jeopardy; and now, its former Chief Executive, Iona Jones, has filed notice to take the broadcaster to an employment tribunal for unfair dismissal, after her sudden departure earlier this year.

"Let me first clarify my position on the broadcaster’s funding. From where I stand as a Welsh-speaking Welshman, having a Welsh-medium public service broadcaster is essential to the future of the Language, and the Language is a fundamental cornerstone of our Nation’s culture. Unfortunately, the Welsh language is still seen by many people as something for the ‘crachach,’ and that it isn’t a ‘real’ language. Of course, the role that S4/C plays in all of this is the normalisation of the Language and showing that she is still alive, and is still growing. With huge cuts coming its way, S4/C will find it even harder to do its job. The Coalition in London has shown a breath-taking lack of respect for our People and our Language in dropping the axe square on our national broadcaster’s head, and adds insult to injury by transferring S4/C funding to the BBC. When we as a Party are calling for broadcasting to be devolved to Cardiff Bay, the Con-Dems seem to want to bring more responsibility back to London. Dim diolch. Funding S4/C directly from the BBC will only lead to more pressure being put on the broadcaster to have English-language programmes, and will, in my view, lead to the broadcaster’s decline (or at least, the broadcaster as we know it.)

"But do we want an S4/C which broadcasts in English? Some may want that. I don’t. All those years ago when Gwynfor did what we did so that we could have a channel of our own, the purpose of it was not for it to be a bit of this and a bit of that – a mish-mash of Welsh and English; S4/C is a Welsh-language broadcaster.

"As much as I support S4/C and totally condemn (get it?) the Con-Dems’ actions, S4/C really does desperately need to have a sit down and get its act together. It’s just not good enough for many of its programmes to have been rated as having zero viewers. It isn't good enough for the S4/C Authority to announce the resignation of its Chair, only for the Chair himself to announce separately that he would stay on until spring 2011. It isn’t good enough for the circumstances surrounding Iona Jones’ departure (or is the word ‘dismissal’ more appropriate?) to be totally hushed up (and supposedly never to be spoken of again).

"We recently saw how excellent S4/C can be with Pen Talar, the 9-part series following a set of people from before Gwynfor’s election up to the modern day where we have our National Assembly. We need more of this! I sat down with my non-Welsh-speaking mother to watch Pen Talar every Sunday night for over two months, and it really did showcase what S4/C can be. After the series finished however, we’re back to the same old programmes which, quite frankly, don’t draw new viewers in.

"My message to all concerned, including Jeremy Hunt at DCMS, and at the S4/C Authority: ‘For God’s sake, wise up. The future of our Language could very well be in your hands.’

"And so the trials and tribulations (Chief Exec-orientated play on words, there) continue…"

Tuesday, 24 August 2010

An important lesson for Plaid to learn...

Today, Cerith Rhys Jones, non-portfolio officer on the National Exec writes about an important factor that Plaid should consider, as it moves with Wales towards independence:

"A discussion with my grandfather (who, for the record, is English) got me thinking yesterday, about one of Plaid’s major challenges in the years to come. One of the biggest misconceptions people have, is that a nation is the same thing as a nation-state. People will gladly say that they are Welsh before they are British, but they will sometimes think of their citizenship as being the same thing as their nationality.

"There has been plenty of discussion about Plaid being in a crisis. As a party activist and an executive member of the party’s youth wing, I would take the view that the party is not in a crisis but rather, that it really needs some thinking time about its way forward. No matter how much Plaid members and activists say that the election wasn’t all that bad, the truth is that we didn’t do as well as we had hoped and expected and we, as a party, need to think long and hard about our message for the Assembly elections next year, and the local elections on 2012.

"In the long term however, as Wales works towards, first, a full parliament with fiscal autonomy, and eventually, an independent Wales, Plaid needs to focus on changing people’s view of a ‘nation’. (I would say that this would go for other parties too, but how keen they’d be to do this is another matter.)

"Too many people think of a ‘nation’ as a physical entity with a clear geography. To me, and I would think, to the party, a nation needn’t have defined borders and the people of that respective nation needn’t share a specific patch of land. Take Patagonia, for instance. The Welsh people who moved there to establish Y Wladfa (the Welsh Settlement), they went there with the intention of creating a ‘second Wales.’ To this day, their descendants think of themselves as being Welsh Argentine. If we look at that phrase – Welsh Argentine, that is – it can be split in two; into ‘nationality’ and ‘citizenship’. The citizenship is clearly Argentine; of that, let there be no doubt. This works in the same way with us here in Wales. I will always say that I am Welsh first, European second, and British third. As much as I may be against the British institution, I can’t escape the fact that I am a Briton, by law. Wales doesn’t have its own sovereignty (yet), so it is legally impossible to be a ‘citizen’ of the country, in the conventional way. The nationality of a Welsh Argentine person, however, is Welsh. This will confuse some people as it did my grandfather. A ‘nation’ to me, doesn’t mean a group of people who inhabit a specific piece of territory; it is a group of people (or peoples, as would probably be appropriate) who share a heritage, a history, and a feeling. So yes, while a resident of Y Wladfa may hold an Argentine passport, his or her nationality is Welsh, in so much as he or she shares our heritage and history here in Wales.

"This very principle will apply to the Quebecois of Canada. They are by law, of course, Canadian. However, in nationality, they are Quebecois. They are a group of people who share a history and a heritage. I guess this principle could go for any group of people within a nation-state, anywhere on Earth.

"Plaid’s challenge is teaching the people of Wales that although they may be subjects of the United Kingdom, they do have their own heritage and history - an Unique Selling Point, if you will - that makes them Welsh in nationality. Let them think of themselves as British, and what makes them so, and they will list things that are primarily English. As Gwynfor said, “Britishness…is a political synonym that extends English culture of the Scots, the Welsh and the Irish.” This hits the nail right on the head!

"The difficulty that Plaid faces of course, is that too many people in Wales still have trouble thinking about Wales as a country in its own right; they challenge that idea, even. The question they should ask themselves though, is ‘what is a country? What makes a country, a country?’ Again, people will often think that Wales can’t possibly be a country, because it’s a ‘constituent region’ of ‘the mother-country’ of Britain. Britain, though, is not a country. It’s a nation-state. Britain is simply the entity, which contains the countries of Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland and England, which are countries and nations in their own right.

"When Plaid looks forward in terms of how it can raise support for full autonomy within the European Union and the United Nations for Wales, it really has to get people to understand that whatever their passport says, their nationality – their heritage, their history, their national persona – is different to that of Britain. If Plaid is to succeed, it needs to ensure that the people recognise Wales as a country in its own right, which is being dictated to by another country.

"Those who disagree with me (or who are unionists), will argue that we are not being dictated to by another country at all; we are part of the UK and so we are governed as part of Britain. Here again, the problem that people think of Wales as a region and the UK as a country, is raising its ugly head. Of course we’re being dictated to by another country – England! Was it not the English who annexed Wales to England, extended English laws unto Wales, and oppressed the Welsh language all those hundreds of years ago – and still do to this day? Does the British government not create laws, which apply only to England and Wales? Is it not true that Wales is treated differently to Scotland? Yes. Yes. Yes.

"The biggest challenge to Plaid, to the SNP, Mebyon Kernow, in fact, any nationalist party, is to show their people, the citizens of their respective nations, that they are their own people, and that there is a huge divide between Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland, Cornwall – wherever – and the nation-state which ultimately governs them.

"It’s all very well and good Plaid in the short term focussing on its successes in the National Assembly as part of the One Wales government (and I wouldn’t for one minute say anything different to that) but if Plaid wants to keep itself as the Party of Wales – to keep its USP, to remain a nationalist party, which will do its best to govern in the short term, but all the while working towards an independent Wales – it has to realise that people still think that they’re country is Britain, and break down that idea.

"People may also rebut my ideas by saying that one’s nationality can also be interpreted as British, in that we as Britons share our own history and heritage. I can accept this to an extent, but here rises Gwynfor’s quote again; that what we perceive to be British is actually English.

"Plaid needs to campaign to teach people that their nation-state is Britain. They are British subjects. They pay their taxes to the British government. But as a people, they are Welsh. Their history is Welsh. Their heritage and their national persona are Welsh. When people grasp and believe this, Plaid won’t have much bother on election day.

"While our passports may tell us that we are subjects of the British crown, we are and always have been citizens of the Welsh nation. It will remain that way until we can look at a Welsh passport and see that we are citizens of the Welsh nation-state.

"The challenge for Plaid is to lead the way on that (long) road to independence, but all the while, making sure that we’re re-elected to the Assembly Government and we continue to do a good job of it."

Saturday, 9 January 2010

Ar aflwyddiant Copenhagen . . .

Ysgrifenna Cerith Rhys Jones, a oedd yn Hyrwyddwr Newid Hinsawdd dros Gymru y llynedd, ac sydd bellach yn Swyddog Ieuenctid ar Bwyllgor Etholaeth Plaid Cymru yn Nwyrain Caerfyrddin a Dinefwr:

"Fisoedd cyn i mi hyd yn oed ddechrau pacio’r bagiau i fynd draw i Gopenhagen, buon ni i gyd yn pregethu mai dyma’n cyfle olaf i ddodi cytundeb deg, uchelgeisiol a rhwymedïol yn ei le, ac i achub y Ddaear a Dynolryw. Mae’r gwyddoniaeth yn glir – rhaid i ni ddodi’r fath gytundeb mewn lle yn fuan, ac rhaid i ni leihau’n hallyriadau nwyon tŷ gwydr yn eithriadol erbyn 2020. Cyn i mi deithio draw at brifddinas Denmarc, ‘roeddwn i’n sicr yr oeddem yn gadarn ar y ffordd i gyrraedd y gytundeb erbyn yr amser i’r Arlywydd Obama gyrraedd, ac y byddai Copenhagen wedi ei droi’n Hopenhagen. Ond na, erbyn diwedd y gynhadledd, amlwg oedd hi mae Nopenhagen oedd y gynhadledd wedi troi i fewn i. Doedd yna ddim gytundeb rhyngwladol o werth, dim targedau lleihau allyriadau nwyon tŷ gwydr, dim ymrwymiad ynghylch cymorth cyllidebol, a dim ffordd glir ymlaen ynghylch rhannu technoleg. Dim yw dim. Pam? Efallai mai’r diffyg o ewyllus gwleidyddol i gyrraedd cyntundeb oedd i fai? Neu hyd yn oed rhai cenhedloedd yn ceisio twyllo eraill allan o gytundeb? Pwy a ŵyr? ond un pheth sy’n sicr yw hollbwysigrwydd cyrraedd cytundeb erbyn dechrau 2011.

Braint oedd cael fy newis i gynrychioli ieuenctid Cymru yn y gynhadledd – rôl pwysig iawn, yn fy marn i, am ddau rheswm: a) ein cenhedlaeth ni fydd yn dioddef gwaethaf o’r newid yn yr hinsawdd pan mai nyni fydd yr oedolion, a b) Cymry ydym ni, ac mae gennym ni’r gallu i fod yn arweinwyr y byd yn nhermau taclo’r argyfwng hinsawdd. Rhagorfraint hefyd oedd gweithio’r llynedd fel Hyrwyddwr Newid Hinsawdd dros Gymru; ‘rydw i nawr allan o’r swydd ac mai’r Hyrwyddwyr newydd yn aros i gael eu cyflwyno a’u hurddo’n swyddogol gan Weinidog yr Amgylchedd. Fy mhwrpas i yng Nghopenhagen oedd i gynrychioli ieuenctid Cymru ac i wneud y gynhadledd yn berthnasol i’r Cymry.

Siom mawr i mi oedd gweld cyn lleied o drefn ar y gynhadledd – pan oeddwn i fewn yng Nghanolfan Bella, ‘roedd e’i weld fel pe tae nifer helaeth o bobl yn sefyll o gwmpas yn gwneud dim, neu eu bod ar eu cluniaduron yn hytrach na fynd ymlaen â’r gwaith o hybu ymwybyddiaeth ynghylch yr agenda pwysig hwn ac yn gweithio tuag at gytundeb llwyddianus. Wrth gwrs, ‘dw i ddim am un funud yn tynnu i ffwrdd o’r ffaith fod cyfryngau newydd yn annatod o’r cwmpawd gwleidyddol modern, ond mewn cynhadledd mor enfawr â Chopenhagen, onid cyrraedd cytundeb deg, uchelgeisiol a chyfreithlon rhwymedïol yw’r flaenoriaeth i bawb?

Felly beth am yr “Unfrydedd Copenhagen”? Llwyddiant? Ddim o bell ffordd! Am un pheth, dyw e ddim yn deg. Medd Cadeirydd y G77 mai sicrhau sicrwydd cyllidebol cyn lleied o genhedloedd fyddai’r unfrydedd ac yn bwysicach oll, yn fy marn i, dydy’r unfrydedd ddim yn dangos clirdeb ar gymorth cyllidol; nid yw’n dweud o le fyddai arian yn dod o, nid yw’n dweud faint byddai pob gwlad datblygedig yn cyfrannu, na chwaith ydyw’n dweud faint byddai pob gwlad datblygol yn derbyn. Does dim arweiniad go iawn ynddo ynghylch dyfodol unrhyw Gronfa Hinsawdd Fyd-Eang. Yn yr un modd, dyw e ddim yn uchelgeisiol. Nid yw’n gosod ei hun fel olynydd i Gytundeb Kyoto, nac ydyw’n gosod targedau ynghylch lleihau allyriadau nwyon tŷ gwydr, heb son am rai cyfreithlon rhwymedïol, ac sy’n dilyn y wyddoniaeth difloesg ar yr agenda hwn. Nid oes cyfarwyddyd yn y ddogfen ynghylch rhannu technoleg newydd, ac y mae’n gyfan gwbl yn anghofio lliniaru sectoraidd, sydd wrth gwrs yn allweddol wrth i ni ymgymryd â thaclo’r newid yn yr hinsawdd! Afraid yw dweud: nid yw’r unfrydedd hwn yn rhwymedïol. Nid gytundeb ydyw, ac fe’i ddraftwyd gan ddim ond 5 cenedl o’r 193 oedd yn y gynhadledd; yn ychwanegol at hyn, dim ond nodi’r unfrydedd wnaeth y dirprwyon eraill i gyd, yn hytrach na’i fabwysiadu’n swyddogol. Aflwyddiant llwyr, felly.

Felly lle’r ymlaen o fan’ma? Er lles y Blaned hon, mae’n rhaid i ni gyrraedd dêl yng Nghynhadledd nesaf y Partïon. Rhaid i Gynhadledd Mecsico yn hwyrach elenni rhoi gytundeb i ni, neu’n ddiau, mi fyddwn yn rhedeg allan o amser i gymryd camau effeithiol er mwyn atal unrhyw newid pellach y nein hinsawdd. Beth allwn ni yng Nghymru ei wneud? Wel, mae’n rhaid i ni sicrhau ein bod ni’n parhau i newidd y ffordd yr ydym yn byw er mwyn lleihau ôl-troed carbon ein gwlad, ac mae’n rhaid i ni barhau i lobïo’n harweinwyr – yng Nghaerdydd, Llundain a Brwsel – i gofio fod ganddynt hwy ddyletswydd nid yn unig i’w hunain ac i’w gilydd, and i’n disgynyddion hefyd. Nid yw’r penderfyniadau cywir yn hawdd na’n boblogaidd ond mae’n rhaid dangos arweiniaeth ac uchelfryd er mwyn gwneud cyfiawnder i ni ac i genedlaethau’r dyfodol.

Gan orffen, rhaid nodi mai nid methiant llwyr oedd Copenhagen. Mi ddaeth ef â 193 o wledydd at eu gilydd – aflwyddiant ai pheidio – a chyrhaeddwyd unfrydedd, o leiaf. Cofiwch, nid llwyddiant oedd y Gynhadledd. Mae gennym llawer o waith i’w wneud, ac mae’n wir fod gennym ffordd hir iawn i’w deithio, ond gydag ewyllus gwleidyddol digonol, lobîo cryf, hyderus a phendant gan y bobl, ‘dw i’n ffyddiog y byddwn yn cyrraedd cytundeb er mwyn achub y Ddaear a’n rhywogaeth o fewn y ddeuddeng mis nesaf. Dyna yw’r hyn sydd angen; does dim cwestiwn am hynny."

Er nad yw Cerith yn ei swydd fel Hyrwyddwr bellach, croeso i chi ymweld a'i wefan o'i flwyddyn fel Hyrwyddwr, gyda gwybodaeth am yr hyn iddo wneud drwy gydol 2009, a thra yng Nghopenhagen.