The Landworkers’ Alliance is a union of farmers, growers, foresters and land-based workers.

Feedback for us

If you have any comments, critiques, considerations, compliments, complaints, about anything the Landworkers Alliance is or isn’t up to, do let us know your thought. We love feedback, it keeps a system healthy. Please fill in this quick form.

Membership / Supporter / Donation Queries

Please contact Lauren.Simpson@landworkersalliance.org.uk

Requests for work, volunteering or internships

We are currently not recruiting for any roles but please read our newsletters for any announcements. We currently do not offer any volunteer or internship placements directly with the LWA, but keep an eye out in the newsletter or on the forum for any members looking for volunteers or workers.

Academic/Research Enquiries

Please look at the Agroecology Research Collaboration to see if it fits your area of research/work.

Membership Support / Advice

Currently the LWA does not have capacity or resources to help individual members or potential members on their specific projects, farms or programmes. We get a lot of requests for individual support and would love to have the time to respond to each request in full. We are fundraising for a new role for somebody to focus on membership support and services as we have identified it is a gap in our offering so please watch this space. Having said that, if your query is critical and urgent please email info@landworkersalliance.org.uk including the word URGENT in the subject header and it will get picked up and we can try our best to help.

Contacting Individual Staff

Please take the time to explore our staff page here to see who the most relevant contact for your enquiry is.

Our addresses format is firstname.lastname@landworkersalliance.org.uk

Please bear in mind we all work part time and have limited capacity to respond to enquiries outside our core areas of work.

You can also find information under the About Us header about branch and regional organising, and identity groups within the LWA membership.

Press/Media Enquiries:

For any queries relating to press please email press@landworkersalliance.org.uk

Merchandise/calendar Enquiries

For any enquiries to do with shop sales including the calendar please email merchandise@landworkersalliance.org.uk

To Include an Item in Our Newsletter:

You can fill in this quick form to submit it to be included in the next bulletin/newsletter. The deadline to submit is the end of Friday each week for the following week’s member bulletin. With the same form you can also submit to the monthly non-member newsletter which goes out in the first week of the month.

All Other Enquiries:

For any other enquiries that are URGENT please email info@landworkersalliance.org.uk with the word ‘urgent’ in the subject header and we will do our best to help.

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Welsh Elections Q&A

(2021)

Who are the Senedd Members (formerly Assembly Members)?

Everyone in Wales is represented by 5 Senedd Members. One member is a representative of the constituency that you live in (which is the same as the constituency for UK General Elections).  In addition, Wales is divided into five regions, each of which has four Senedd Members representing the entire region.  The regions are: 

  • North Wales 
  • Mid and West Wales
  • South Wales West
  • South Wales Central
  • South Wales East

The upcoming elections for the Senedd elections are different from the General Elections which were last held on Thursday 12 December 2019, and which are scheduled again for Thursday 2 May 2024. During the general elections British citizens vote for their representative in the House of Commons of the UK Parliament (Member of Parliament or MP). 

How are Members of the Senedd elected?

Every voter has two votes: one for their constituency and one for their region.   Constituency candidates are elected on a ‘first past the post’ basis. This means that parties will put forward one candidate to represent the constituency in the Senedd and the candidate who receives the largest number of votes in the constituency will win the seat.

The regional vote or ‘list vote’ works through a form of proportional representation, using a formula that takes into account the regional vote share for each party and the number of seats already won in the constituencies, to calculate the number of top-up seats each party is entitled to. This is explained here: https://www.instituteforgovernment.org.uk/explainers/elections-2021-senedd-cymru 

What do the Members of the Senedd do?

The Senedd legislates on matters that are devolved’ to Wales. Such devolved topics include many areas of law and policy that are very relevant to the work of the Landworkers’ Alliance in Wales:

  • Agriculture, forestry and fisheries
  • Environment
  • Education and training
  • Health and social services
  • Housing
  • Local government
  • Tourism and economic development

The UK Parliament legislates on topics that are ‘reserved’. These topics such as foreign policy, trade and industry, crown estates and MOD estates, policing and justice, and some matters of taxation, financial and fiscal policy have UK-wide or international impacts. England doesn’t have its own Parliament, so the UK Parliament legislates for all areas for England.  

What is the Welsh Government and how does it relate to the Senedd? 

The Welsh Government is usually made up of the party that has the majority seats in the Senedd or a coalition of parties that together form a majority. It is led by the First Minister of Wales (currently Mark Drakeford, Welsh Labour Leader), who appoints the Welsh ministers that are responsible for different policy areas. 

The Welsh Government normally proposes new laws (known as a ‘Bill’) within the scope of the devolved competences. Bills can, however, also be presented by a Senedd committee or by an individual Senedd Member.  In order to become law (or an ‘Act’) the Bill must go through a process including scrutiny, debate and voting.  More details here: https://senedd.wales/senedd-business/legislation/guide-to-the-legislative-process/ 

The Welsh Government is responsible for carrying out the legislation that has been passed by the Senedd. Its work is supported by the Welsh civil service.

What about the Welsh Assembly?

In May 2020, the Welsh Assembly changed its name to Senedd Cymru or Welsh Parliament.  This name change reflected the increased powers since the institution was first established in 1999. See here for more information: https://commonslibrary.parliament.uk/senedd-cymru-why-has-the-national-assembly-for-wales-changed-its-name/  


Who are the candidates for the Senedd election on the 6th of May 2021?

The parties that are standing include:

We have summarised the main points from the party manifestos on the production of food, fuel and fibre and land use for you, which can be found here.

Information on other political parties that have put forward candidates in your region can be found here: https://whocanivotefor.co.uk/

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