The six main parties set out their full programmes

With every main party’s manifesto now published, Cytûn has released an updated analysis of party positions to help faith communities engage with the Senedd election on 7 May — and reminds voters that independents and smaller parties will also be on the ballot.

Now that all six of the main parties contesting the Senedd election on 7 May 2026 have published their full manifestos, Cytûn – Churches Together in Wales has released a Senedd Election 2026 Manifesto Briefing Update — a detailed supplement to the document published in March 2026.

The original briefing drew on pre-manifesto policy signals and party commitments available at that time. The update reviews the completed manifestos in full, together with independent economic analysis — including assessments by the Institute for Fiscal Studies — to offer a sharper and more comprehensive comparison of what each party is actually promising.

What’s new in the update?

The update examines all six parties across Cytûn’s five priority policy areas: Health, Education, the Economy, International Affairs and Climate Change, and the Church and the Citizen.

On health, NHS waiting times dominate every party’s agenda. Labour proposes a £4 billion Hospitals of the Future Fund; Plaid Cymru sets specific waiting time targets; the Conservatives would declare a health emergency on taking office; the Liberal Democrats would invest £300 million in social care funded by a 1p income tax rise; and the Greens place prevention and early intervention at the centre of their health vision. Reform UK commits to cutting waiting times through efficiency savings.

On the economy, the sharpest divergences concern taxation. The Welsh Conservatives propose a 1p cut to the basic rate of income tax and the abolition of Land Transaction Tax on home purchases — commitments the Institute for Fiscal Studies has described as difficult to reconcile with the party’s wider spending plans. The Liberal Democrats are the only party proposing a tax rise. The Greens propose replacing council tax entirely with a Land Value Tax.

On the Nation of Sanctuary — Wales’s framework of support for refugees and asylum seekers — Labour, Plaid Cymru, the Liberal Democrats, and the Greens all support maintaining and developing the policy, while the Conservatives and Reform UK have both pledged to scrap it. Members should be aware that most immigration pledges in this election cannot be delivered by the Senedd, as immigration remains a reserved matter for Westminster.

Hear from the parties directly

Cytûn has published interviews with representatives of five of the six main parties, exploring their positions on issues of concern to faith communities in Wales. The interviews are available now:

Peredur Owen Griffiths Plaid Cymru

Darren Millar Conservative

Paul Rock The Green Party

James Evans Reform UK

Huw Thomas Labour

An interview with a Welsh Liberal Democrat representative is currently being arranged and will be published on the website in due course.

Cytûn encourages readers to engage with all of the interviews as part of their prayerful reflection ahead of polling day on 7 May.

Who will be on your ballot paper?

While the six main parties — Wales Labour, Plaid Cymru, the Welsh Conservatives, the Welsh Liberal Democrats, Reform UK, and the Wales Green Party — have all published full manifestos and are contesting seats across Wales, voters may find candidates from a wider range of political viewpoints on their ballot papers. Smaller parties and independent candidates will be standing in constituencies across Wales and, under the new proportional system, their votes carry real weight.

This is the first Senedd election held under a proportional system: 96 Members will be elected across 16 six-member constituencies using the D’Hondt method. No single party is expected to win an overall majority, meaning that the priorities of smaller parties and independents may prove decisive in shaping the next Welsh Government.

To find out who is standing in your constituency — including all smaller party and independent candidates — visit whocanivotefor.wales, an independent, non-partisan resource listing every candidate on the ballot in your area.

Engaging prayerfully and thoughtfully

Cytûn does not endorse any party or candidate. These briefings exist to help denominational leaders, local church communities, and individual members of faith to engage with this election thoughtfully, prayerfully, and well-informed. Faith communities are encouraged to host or attend hustings events with candidates from across the parties, to use this briefing as the basis for group discussion, reflection, or prayer, and to encourage all eligible members to exercise their democratic right and vote on 7 May 2026. The full Senedd Election 2026 Manifesto Briefing Update is available at www.cytun.co.uk. For further information, contact post@cytun.cymru.

Manifestos Update