Leanne Wood

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Leanne Wood
AM
Leanne Wood.jpg
Leader of Plaid Cymru
Assumed office
16 March 2012
Preceded by Ieuan Wyn Jones
Member of the Welsh Assembly
for South Wales Central
Assumed office
1 May 2003
Preceded by Pauline Jarman
Personal details
Born (1971-12-13) 13 December 1971 (age 52)
Rhondda, Wales
Political party Plaid Cymru
Spouse(s) Ian Brown
Children 1
Alma mater University of Glamorgan (now the University of South Wales)
Website Official website

Leanne Wood AM (born 13 December 1971) is a far-left Welsh politician and the leader of Plaid Cymru.

Born in the Rhondda, Wales, she has represented the South Wales Central region as a Member of the National Assembly for Wales since 2003. She was elected leader of Plaid Cymru on 15 March 2012.

Wood, a socialist, republican and a proponent for Welsh independence, is the first female leader of Plaid Cymru and the first party leader to be a Welsh learner rather than already fluent in the Welsh language.

Early life

Wood was born in Llwynypia Hospital on 13 December 1971,[1][2] the daughter of Jeff and Avril Wood.[3] She was brought up and still lives in the nearby village of Penygraig. She was educated at Tonypandy Comprehensive School (now Tonypandy Community College), and the University of Glamorgan (now the University of South Wales).[4][5]

Career

From 1997 to 2000, Wood worked with the Mid Glamorgan Probation Service as a probation officer. From 1998 to 2000 she was co-Chair of the National Association of Probation Officers.[2] Wood worked as a support worker for Cwm Cynon Women's Aid from 2001 to 2002, where she has been Chair since 2001.[2][6] Wood lectured in social policy at Cardiff University from 2000, until her election to the National Assembly for Wales in 2003.[7][8]

Political career

Wood credits her political awakening to reading Marge Piercy's 1976 feminist classic Woman on the Edge of Time, and the 1984/5 UK miners' strike.[4] Her political heroes include Lewis Lewis, one of the leaders of the 1831 Merthyr Rising.[4]

After joining Plaid Cymru in 1991 aged 20,[4] Wood was elected a councillor on Rhondda Cynon Taf County Borough Council from 1995 to 1999.[2] She unsuccessfully stood in both the 1997 and 2001 elections to the Parliament of the United Kingdom as a candidate in the Rhondda constituency.[4] After leaving the probation service in 2000, she was Jill Evans MEP's political researcher until 2001.[2] Wood was Chair of Cardiff Stop the War Coalition from 2003 to 2004.[2]

Welsh Assembly

Wood was then elected as a Member of the National Assembly for Wales (AM) in the election of 1 May 2003, representing the South Wales Central region for Plaid.[1] She was the party's Shadow Social Justice Minister between 2003 and 2007.[1]

In December 2004,[4] Wood was the first assembly member to be ordered out of the chamber for referring to the Queen as "Mrs Windsor" during a debate. Lord Elis-Thomas asked Wood to withdraw the remark on the grounds of discourtesy. When she refused, she was ordered to leave.[9] She later said: "I don't recognise the Queen ... I don't think I was treated fairly, I don't think it was necessary. I called her that because that's her name."[10]

Wood was arrested on 8 January 2007 for protesting against the UK's Trident nuclear missile programme at Faslane naval base in Scotland.[11][12]

Wood became Plaid Cymru's sustainability spokesperson from the formation of the One Wales government, a coalition between Labour and Plaid Cymru in July 2007, remaining in the role until the end of Assembly's term in 2011.[1] While in the role, Wood campaigned on green issues, including calling for more land to be made available for growing food.[13]

During the 2011 referendum on extending the National Assembly for Wales' law-making powers, Wood was Plaid Cymru's representative on the all-party Yes for Wales steering group, which campaigned successfully for a 'Yes' vote.[14][15] She is Chair of the PCS Cross-Party Group in the Welsh Assembly.[6] According to the BBC, Wood's particular areas of interest are: poverty; women's issues; social services; criminal justice; social exclusion; mental health; anti-privatisation; and anti-war.[1] Her Plaid Cymru profile includes her commitment to working "for Wales to become a self-governing decentralist socialist republic".[16]

Scrutiny

Between 2009 and 2011, Wood led the exposure of excesses at the Wales Audit Office, while under the control of Jeremy Colman, Auditor General for Wales.[17] Through the Freedom of Information Act, she uncovered a severance package of £750,000, personally authorized by Colman, to the former chief operating officer Anthony Snow.[18] Further scrutiny uncovered more self-authorised expenses, including training costs for Colman and Snow and the £464 cost of hiring a chauffeur-driven Mercedes for Snow to attend a meeting on how to save public money.[19][20] Colman resigned in February 2010 following an internal investigation, subsequently pleading guilty to possession of child pornography.[21][22]

Figures obtained by Wood under the Freedom of information Act revealed the level of pay among university vice-chancellors in Wales. Over 270 people were paid over £100,000 per annum by Welsh universities in 2009. It was noted that all Welsh university vice-chancellors received more pay than the £134,723 salary of Carwyn Jones, Wales' First Minister, and some were paid more than the £197,000 entitlement of David Cameron, the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom.[23]

Information obtained by Wood showed thousands of workers in Wales to have been paid below the Minimum Wage since 2002-03. The underpayments involved over 1000 employers in Wales. The Department for Business, Innovation and Skills subsequently asked HM Revenue and Customs to "press for prosecution where there is clear evidence that the employer has committed an offence", in 2010. No prosecutions had begun by June 2011.[24]

Policy development

Wood has produced two major policy documents. In 2008, she published Making Our Communities Safer. Drawing on her four years’ previous experience as Plaid Cymru’s Social Justice and Regeneration spokesperson and committee member, as well as her previous work as a Probation Officer, it argued for the criminal justice system in Wales to be devolved.[25]

A Greenprint for the Valleys was published in 2011, in which Wood argued for a job creation programme aimed at regenerating the former coalfield areas of the valleys. It contains initiatives including: a Green Construction Skills College; implementing an integrated transport plan for the valleys; creating a land bank for renewable energy and food production; and a programme to renovate heritage buildings. It also suggests providing financial support for home energy efficiency measures and for setting up of green co-operatives.[26]

Leader of Plaid Cymru

Wood was elected leader of Plaid Cymru on 15 March 2012, defeating Elin Jones and Dafydd Elis Thomas. In winning the election she became the first female leader of the party. She is also the first leader of the party not to speak fluent Welsh but is currently learning the language.[27][28] Her leadership platform included a call for "real independence — genuinely working to end war, inequality and discrimination", emphasising economic and environmental concerns alongside constitutional reform.[29] Supporters of Wood's leadership campaign included: former Plaid Cymru MP Adam Price; former Plaid Cymru president Dafydd Iwan; and former Cymdeithas yr Iaith chair Menna Machreth.[30][31]

In June 2012, discussing the 2014 Scottish independence referendum, Wood addressed the concept of 'Britishness'.[32] She explained that feeling British was not dependent on a British state. Wood said she was sure Wales would be an independent sovereign state within a generation, and would exist within a "Neighbourhood of Nations", following the break-up of the United Kingdom.[33][34]

Wood was one of seven party leaders who took part in a televised debate ahead of the 2015 general election.[35] ICM Research, ComRes and YouGov all took polls immediately afterwards, all three of them putting her in last place.[36] In the second debate on 16 April, Wood challenged Labour leader Ed Miliband to hold an emergency budget if the party won the election, to reverse spending cuts she believes have been particularly harmful in Wales.[37] On 30 April, she took part in Ask Leanne Wood, a 30-minute debate on BBC One Wales in which she answered questions from a live audience, and suggested Plaid Cymru would support a Labour government.[38] Wood appeared on Question Time on 1 October 2015 and stated that her party performed badly at the general election "because our time has not yet come".[39]

Personal life

Wood and her long-term partner, Ian Brown, have a daughter, Cerys Amelia Wood.[3] In 2002, her then-partner David Evans committed suicide by ingesting an overdose of antidepressant drugs used for treatment of chronic fatigue syndrome.[4]

Elections contested

UK Parliament elections

Date of election Constituency Party Votes  %
1997 Rhondda Plaid Cymru 5,450 13.4
2001 Rhondda Plaid Cymru 7,183 21.1

Welsh Assembly elections

Date of election Region Party Votes  % Results
2003 South Wales Central Plaid Cymru 27,956 15.44 Elected Multi-members party list
2007 South Wales Central Plaid Cymru 32,207 15.5 Elected Multi-members party list
2011 South Wales Central Plaid Cymru 28,606 13.7 Elected Multi-members party list

References

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  3. 3.0 3.1 "Wood, Leanne", Who's Who 2014, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 2014; online edn, Oxford University Press, 2014 ; online edn, Nov 2014. Retrieved 9 May 2015 (subscription required).
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  39. http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b06g03vp/question-time-01102015

External links

National Assembly for Wales
Preceded by Assembly Member
for South Wales Central

2003–present
Incumbent
Party political offices
Preceded by Leader of Plaid Cymru
2012–present
Incumbent