Opinion
Equal status with Scotland? Labour knows best
Stephen Price
Welsh Secretary Jo Stevens formally confirmed that the UK Government will not devolve Crown Estate revenues to Wales this week in response to a letter sent to Keir Starmer from YesCymru
In a letter addressed to YesCymru’s directors, Ms Stevens stated: “The Crown Estate has played a significant role in attracting international investment into Wales to support the UK's net zero target and will continue to do so. In June, the Crown Estate announced a partnership with Equinor and Gwynt Glas to develop two new floating offshore wind projects in the Celtic Sea. It is estimated that this new industry will support over 5,000 new jobs and deliver a £1.4bn boost to the UK economy. This is hugely significant to Wales and will help to deliver transformational change to areas such as Port Talbot.
“I am therefore pleased that the Crown Estate is contributing to clean and renewable energy generation in Wales in a number of ways. This includes investment for Welsh projects to help build the supply chain for the offshore wind sector as part of £400m of Crown Estate funding to support new infrastructure for offshore wind projects across the UK.
“Wales will also benefit from the Crown Estate's first commercial leasing round for floating offshore wind, as well as investment in tidal energy development and support for the HiNet carbon capture cluster."
“The Crown Estate works closely with the Welsh Government and Natural Resources Wales in support of shared priorities, ensuring that these resources are sustainably managed for the long term. This government's focus is on taking maximum advantage of the opportunities floating offshore wind presents for Wales using all available levers within the existing devolution settlement.
“The Crown Estate's work will continue to deliver for Wales, particularly in creating well paid green jobs, advancing research and development across various sectors while reducing domestic energy costs. This is why I have worked across government to create a Crown Estate Commissioner with special responsibility for Wales for the first time. This will ensure the interests of Wales are fully reflected in the Crown Estate's work.
“The work of the Crown Estate will be further strengthened by its partnership with Great British Energy, which has the potential to leverage up to £60bn of private investment into the UK's drive for energy independence. It is this government's view that devolving the Crown Estate and introducing a new entity would risk market fragmentation, complicate existing processes, and delay further development offshore."
[mid-content-banner]
Blah blah blah
The letter continued:“Furthermore, devolution would mean Wales losing access to Crown Estate investment that comes from its revenues in England. It would also risk undermining investment in floating offshore wind, which is needed to provide lower bills, cleaner energy, and better jobs. This government is focussed on delivering these objectives and so does not support the devolution of the Crown Estate in Wales.
“Even if devolution could be done without risking the revenues the Crown Estate generates, this would not automatically lead to an increase in the funding available to the Welsh Government. This is because any revenues retained by the Welsh Government in a devolved system would likely be offset through reductions to their block grant as is currently the case in Scotland.
“Creating an artificial border through the Celtic Sea would also complicate crucially important work to develop the floating offshore wind industry, particularly as floating offshore wind lease areas straddle the Wales/England border. I hope this information proves useful to you.”
The condescension of that last line.
[lower-mid-content-banner]
"Westminster says no"
In a social media post, YesCymru’s directors said: “Despite the backing of all 22 Welsh councils and the clear economic case for Welsh control over our own natural resources, Westminster says no.
“Instead of trusting Wales to manage our seas, energy, and future, they’re protecting the status quo – where decisions about Wales are made in London, and profits flow out of Wales.
“This is not just a constitutional issue – it’s about fairness, democracy, and economic justice.”
🟥 Westminster betrays Wales – again!
In a letter to YesCymru, Welsh Secretary Jo Stevens MP, on behalf of the UK Government, has officially refused to transfer control of the Crown Estate to Wales.Despite the backing of all 22 Welsh councils and the clear economic case for… pic.twitter.com/BDuK5kxbHC
— YesCymru (@YesCymru) August 7, 2025
In response, a protest demanding justice for Wales met at the YesCymru stall on the Eisteddfod Maes in Wrexham at 1pm on Friday August 8.
During the protest, Yes Cymru Chair Phyl Griffiths and Director Rob Hughes delivered powerful speeches demanding control of our own resources.
Phyl Griffiths said: "The Crown Estate proves that the practice of extraction is still alive in 21st century Wales and has resulted in all 22 authorities speaking with one voice, underlining the fact we're a nation.
"The London government's response to our call to transfer control of the Crown Estate to Wales, however, only proves that they see us as nothing more than a region of the UK."
Rob Hughes said: "Jo Stevens' insulting response to the will of the people of Wales is a dark day to those who still cling to the hope that the union will prevail.
"A growing number of Welsh citizens now see independence as inevitable and YesCymru firmly believes that it will come far quicker than anyone expects."
YesCymru has pledged to intensify the campaign in response to Westminster’s refusal to respect the will of the Welsh people, with further actions and announcements to be shared with members and supporters in the coming weeks.
Insufficiently other
The issue of disparity between the devolved nations rears its angry head on quite the regular basis, but the question over the fairness of the situation has reached boiling point lately amid growing dissatisfaction with the Crown Estate.
Spurred on by the green energy gold-rush, along with scrutiny over the large swathes of land (and their profits) owned by a colonising power here in Wales, calls are being repeated for Wales to receive the same control over the Crown Estate that Scotland has.
But it's not just this one area where Wales lacks both the same level of power granted by the land next door.
Even down to the number of public holidays we have, Wales always seems to be last in line.
Devolution
The UK has had devolved governments since the late 1990s, which work alongside the Westminster Parliament.
There are different types of devolution across the UK's nations and parts of England.
For many years England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland were run by the UK government, based in Westminster in London, but there were growing calls to transfer some of this power to Edinburgh, Cardiff and Belfast.
Public votes about devolution were held in 1997 in Scotland and Wales, and on both sides of the Northern Irish/Irish border in 1998 as part of the Good Friday Agreement.
The UK government in Westminster remains responsible for policies which affect just England, as well as overall policy in a number of areas.
These include defence and national security, foreign policy, immigration, citizenship and tax - although Scotland has its own powers to raise and lower income tax.
Wales
The Senedd's responsibilities include:
- Agriculture, forestry and fishing
- Education
- Environment
- Health and social care
- Housing
- Local government
- Highways and transport
- Some control over income tax, land transaction tax (known commonly as ‘stamp duty’), and landfill tax
- Welsh language
Scotland
Scotland already had its own legal and education system. After devolution, it has become responsible for many areas, including:
- Agriculture, forestry and fishing
- Education
- Environment
- Health
- Housing
- Justice, policing and courts
- Local government
- Some transport
- Taxes including income tax, stamp duty and air passenger duty
- Some welfare powers
- Crown Estate
Northern Ireland
Devolution in Northern Ireland is different to Scotland and Wales, with government powers divided into three categories:
- Transferred powers are controlled by the Northern Ireland Assembly
- Reserved powers remain with Westminster, but could be transferred in the future, these include prisons and civil defence
- Excepted powers cannot be moved to the Northern Ireland Assembly without special laws being made in Westminster. They include elections and national defence
The main powers of the Northern Ireland Assembly include:
- Agriculture
- Education
- Environment and planning
- Health and social services
- Local government
- Justice, policing and prisons
- Control over air passenger duty
- Transport
- Culture, language and sport
[lower-mid-content-banner]
Wexit
Wales only has control over some areas of tax unlike Scotland. And Wales lacks the same power over justice, policing and courts.
Concentrating on Scotland for ease, though, are we less of a different people to the English than our Celtic cousins, despite having greater numbers still speaking our native language?
Is it our smaller population or land mass?
Is it our reputation for being too friendly for our own good?
Is ‘England and Wales’ already asking for too much?
Or are we just easier to appease at the ballot box with our undying love of a rebranded red rosette?
Various Commissions have recommended the devolution of further powers, such as certain tax powers, policing or the legal jurisdiction, with some but not all of these recommendations having been implemented thus far.
This has led to Wales having fewer areas of responsibility than Scotland and Northern Ireland.
Before the UK blindly walked into the ongoing chaos that is Brexit, many were calling for an 'off the peg' status for the UK in line with others that have 'special relationships' such as Norway, but knowing what we were actually voting for was far too sensible an option for anyone to explore further.
Similarly, wouldn't it be easier, more sensible, for everyone if the devolved nations had equal powers? The same number of public holidays?
Raise your flag
But we shouldn't let equality with Scotland be our end goal.
The last thing we need are squabbles over the amount of crumbs our natural, historical allies have in comparison with our own.
Our goal should be absolute equality with England, too.
While the offer of independence is yet to be presented or (as I would have it) simply declared, in the words of Mike Hedges MS, "we need a full overhaul of the devolution settlement to Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland."
Even when combined, the populations of Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland are dwarfed by England's, and Westminster will naturally reflect the will of the majority - and certainly not the will of the people of Wales.
While it still exists, we need a federal Kingdom united by equality - a devolved England, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales each having the same powers, no more and no less, and the same number of public holidays. How is this acceptable?
We need to be bolder, and not ask for the profits from Crown Estate lands, but the complete handover of the land itself, and greater openness over who else owns our land at our own expense.
"The poor relation"
Back in December, Plaid Cymru again called for Wales to be given parity with Scotland on devolved powers.
Rhun ap Iorwerth warned Wales remains the “poor relation” among devolved nations in policy areas ranging from rail, justice and tax to welfare benefits and the Crown estate.
Huw Irranca-Davies raised concerns about a “for Wales, see Scotland”-style approach, maintaining that the Welsh Government’s guiding principle will always be what is in the best interests of the people of Wales.
In keeping with the attitude of Jo Stevens, he said, quite incredibly: “We don’t want to copy and paste the devolution settlement from somewhere else,” adding: “That would actually be imitation, not devolution.”
Labour has let the entire UK down with one error of judgment after the next, not least its bloody-handed support for the war on Gaza followed by a predictable softening of their approach after the entire region could take no more of our home-grown bombs.
View this post on Instagram
For those who believe that all lives are sacred, that homes, schools, places of worship and hospitals are places of sanctuary (remember when Israel didn't bomb that one hospital, anyone?), and that those waiting in line for crumbs don't deserve to be shot in the testicles, or killed outright, Labour is no longer the party for them.
And for anyone in Wales that wishes to live their lives on equal footing with their neighbours, their brothers and sisters, Labour is no longer the party for them either.
Mercifully, the party is under threat following a surge in support for the new left wing party being set up by Jeremy Corbyn and Zarah Sultana and I for one cannot wait for the next general election, and hope their offering for Wales is a serious one.
The Labour Party (typically) had much to say when in opposition in Westminster, and telling our nation that they know better with regard to the Crown Estate, with our own stolen land, despite every council in Wales saying otherwise, is the final, unforgivable straw.
Without the need for us to vote in the lesser of two evils in our Senedd elections next year, Labour's time is up.
Shame on them.
Support our Nation today
For the price of a cup of coffee a month you can help us create an independent, not-for-profit, national news service for the people of Wales, by the people of Wales.
Get more trusted Welsh news
Choose Nation.Cymru as a preferred source in Google News to see more of our journalism.