Part of 1. Questions to the First Minister – in the Senedd at 1:38 pm on 9 July 2019.
Well, Llywydd, I entirely agree with what Dawn Bowden said at the end of that question. It's the biggest deceit in politics, the claim that there is no alternative, because there is always an alternative in politics, and there was an alternative available to Governments back in 2010. The Government of the time chose the path of austerity. We were promised, as you'll remember, that the sunny uplands would be restored to us by 2015. Now we're told it will be 2025—fully a decade later—before we see any benefit. And Dawn Bowden is right as well, Llywydd, isn't she, that we have had a 40-year project of neoliberalism to shift the economy away from working people, and inequality has risen year on year as a result. It's astonishing, it's surely astonishing, that a decade of austerity should culminate in tax cuts for the wealthy. Where is the sense that we were promised, that we were all in this together, that everybody was forced to share the burden? At the end of it, when the burden has been very unfairly shared, we see the rewards are to be as unfairly shared as well.
To answer Dawn Bowden's question directly, of course, there's been no money promised to Wales. Instead, what we have seen is one of the two contenders in the Tory leadership race saying that the money we do get will now be controlled by London, and by the Conservative Party, rather than this institution and people who elected this institution here in Wales.