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Payments for poor children promised by Plaid Cymru

David Deans
Political reporter, BBC Wales News
Getty Images A woman putting her hand over a radiator, while holding her child in her arms. She is wearing a jumper as is the child. A windowsill can be seen in the left of the picture.Getty Images

Some of the poorest parents in Wales could receive extra cash under a Plaid Cymru-led Welsh government, its party leader has said.

Rhun ap Iorwerth told his party's spring conference in Llandudno he intended to introduce a payment scheme to tackle the "national stain" of child poverty.

BBC Wales understands the party is looking at a £10m pilot scheme, which would see £10 a week for 15,000 children between zero and six whose parents already receive universal credit (UC).

It would be along the lines of a scheme run in Scotland, which was initially piloted at £10 a week and is now £26.70 a week.

The Cynnal payment - Welsh for maintain - is part of Plaid's pitch for the next Senedd election, which is taking place in May 2026.

In a wide-ranging speech, ap Iorwerth likened Nigel Farage to Donald Trump and said his Reform party was so "unserious about winning they don't even have a leader in Wales".

Ap Iorwerth told party in Venue Cymru that child poverty "remains a national stain an indelible mark on communities".

"It's unforgivable that so many of our children go without the basics – not even afforded the decency of good health and the bare essentials, let alone an equal chance to succeed," he said.

"After 14 years of austerity under the Tories and 26 years of ambivalence under Labour – this would be a new government rooted in the values of fairness and social justice.

"The Cynnal payment, as it'll be known, will do exactly that - it will sustain families and communities."

Matthew Horwood/Plaid Cymru Rhun ap Iorwerth speaking at Plaid Cymru conference in LlandudnoMatthew Horwood/Plaid Cymru
Rhun ap Iorwerth likened Nigel Farage to Donald Trump in his speech to Plaid Cymru spring conference

The children's commissioner for Wales said about 30% of children in Wales were living in poverty.

Labour ministers have been criticised for not having targets to tackle the problem – they argued it was difficult to implement them when they do not have powers over benefits.

Plaid sources say such a scheme can be implemented within existing powers – using the same legal mechanism that allowed the now-concluded basic income pilot for care leavers.

Details are to be ironed out, but the BBC was told the pilot would be limited, possibly around geographic lines.

Plaid claimed it would cost £78m a year to run the scheme nationally, but it would focus on helping 15,000 children initially – roughly 10% of children living in households claiming UC, according to a party source.

The pilot would cost £10m a year, Plaid sources say.

Plaid Cymru would need to be in government to implement a pilot. The new electoral system makes it much more likely that whoever wins the next election in May 2026 will need to form a coalition of some kind.

Ap Iorwerth told BBC Wales: "There's only place in Britain where child poverty is starting to go down. It's Scotland – they've done this."

He said the policy is affordable. "To what extent can any country afford not to deal with a problem as deep as this":[]}