2024 in Wales

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2024
in
Wales
Centuries:
Decades:
See also:List of years in Wales
Timeline of Welsh history
2024 in
The United Kingdom
England
Scotland
Elsewhere
Welsh football: 2023–24

Events from the year 2024 in Wales.

Incumbents[edit]

Events[edit]

January[edit]

February[edit]

March[edit]

  • 1 March – The annual Cân i Gymru (Song for Wales) contest is held in Swansea, and is won by Sara Davies with the song "Ti".[56]
  • 3 March – Train fares in Wales increase by 4.9%.[57]
  • 4 March
    • Consultants and specialist doctors vote to take strike action over pay.[58]
    • Lee Waters announces he is stepping down as Transport Minister when the new First Minister is elected.[59]
  • 5 March – A bid by the Welsh Conservatives and Welsh Liberal Democrats to change planned reforms to the way Senedd members are elected from the 2026 election is rejected by the parliament.[60]
  • 6 March – Senedd member Rhys ab Owen is to be banned from the Senedd for six weeks after an investigation by the Senedd Commission found he inappropriately touched two women during a night out in June 2021.[61]
  • 7 March – Pembrokeshire Council votes to increase its council tax by 12.5%.[62]
  • 9 MarchAneurin Bevan Health Board apologises after a mix up lead to the wrong body being released from a hospital mortuary for burial, the second such mix up made by a hospital in the health board.[63]
  • 10 MarchNerys Evans, a former Senedd member for Plaid Cymru, calls for the parliament to have the powers to remove members for inappropriate behaviour.[64]
  • 11 March
    • The occupants of around forty houses in Hirwaun managed by Trivallis Housing Association are advised to evacuate the properties following the discovery of reinforced autoclaved aerated concrete.[65]
    • After the Welsh Government publishes plans to require parties in the Senedd to draw up lists of candidates composing of 50% of women, presiding officer Elin Jones says that the Senedd does not have the power to enforce gender quotas.[66]
  • 13 March – The Senedd agrees to exclude member Rhys ab Owen for six weeks following a night out where he inappropriately touched two women; ab Owen apologises "unreservedly" for his behaviour.[67]
  • 14 March – Former Conservative MP Guto Bebb is appointed interim chair of S4C.[68]
  • 15 March – Speaking to the BBC ahead of the results of the Welsh Labour leadership election, First Minister Mark Drakeford cites drunks waiting at A&E as the reason A&E waiting time targets have never been met in Wales, and suggests it would be better if the targets did not include treating those who have been drinking.[69]
  • 16 MarchVaughan Gething is elected to lead Welsh Labour, and will become First Minister of Wales. He will be Wales's first black leader, and the first black person to lead a country in Europe.[70]
  • 18 March – Licence points and fines can now be issued for anyone breaching the speed limit in a 20mph zone.[71]
  • 19 March – Mark Drakeford attends his final First Minister's Questions as First Minister of Wales.[72]
  • 20 March
    • The Senedd approves Vaughan Gething as First Minister of Wales, and he is duly sworn in.[73]
    • The Prisons and Probation Ombudsman launches an investigation following the deaths of six prisoners at HMP Parc near Bridgend in a period of three weeks between 27 February and 19 March.[74]
  • 21 MarchVaughan Gething announces his cabinet. Appointments include Jeremy Miles, who becomes Economy and Environment Minister and Lynne Neagle, who becomes Education Minister.[75]
  • 22 March – At Swansea Crown Court, James Smith is sentenced to life imprisonment with a minimum of 28 years for the September 2022 murder of Ashley Sersero in Llanneli.[76]
  • 24 MarchOVO Energy has been accused of "degrading" the Welsh language by campaign group Cymdeithas yr Iaith after axing its Welsh service and suggesting customers could use online translation tools to read their energy bills instead.[77]
  • 25 March – Junior doctors in Wales begin a four-day strike, their longest to date.[78]
  • 27 March – Luke Avaient and Gavin Sheppard of Cardiff are married by Lorraine Kelly live on her daytime ITV programme to mark the tenth anniversary of the first same-sex marriage to occur in the UK.[79]
  • 28 March – School absence figures for the year ending July 2023 indicate 28.9% of primary school children were persistently absent, meaning they missed at least 10% of lessons, compared to 12.9% for the 2018–19 academic year.[80]
  • 31 March
    • The Welcome Ticket scheme, introduced by the Welsh Government in March 2022 to provide refugees with free bus travel, ends after two years.[81]
    • East Camp in St Athan, Vale of Glamorgan, is to be used to house people who worked with the British military in Afghanistan before the Taliban retook power in 2021.[82]

April[edit]

  • 3 April – Sinead Cook, an investigator at the Public Services Ombudsman for Wales, is suspended for posting anti-Conservative abuse on social media.[83]
  • 4 April – Cardiff is announced as the host of the 2027 EuroGames, Europe's largest LGBTQ+ sporting event, becoming the first UK city to stage the event.[84]
  • 5 AprilSwansea University announces it is cutting 200 posts due to "financial challenges" in higher education.[85]
  • 6 April – Pembrokeshire Council gives the go-ahead to a £5.7m new bridge in Haverfordwest.[86]
  • 7 AprilSophie Ingle announces she is stepping down as Wales captain after nine years in the role.[87]
  • 9 April – A two-day strike by senior consultants and doctors planned to begin on 16 April is suspended following "constructive talks" and a "significant" pay offer from the Welsh Government.[88]
  • 11 April – Steelworkers belonging to the Unite union vote to take industrial action over Tata Steel's UK restructuring plans.[89]
  • 14 AprilMuseum Wales announces the loss of 90 jobs, and says it may be forced to close its building in Cardiff, after its funding was cut by the Welsh Government.[90]
  • 15 April – Tata Steel threatens to withdraw a "significantly enhanced" redundancy package if workers go on strike.[91]
  • 16 April – The Welsh National Opera announces it is cutting back on performances because of cuts in funding from the Arts Council of Wales and the Arts Council of England.[92]
  • 17 April
    • Transport Minister Ken Skates says there will be changes to Wales's default 20mph speed limit in built up areas, with schools, hospitals and nurseries targeted as areas where it should be applied.[93]
    • The Equality and Human Rights Commission warns that plans to enforce gender equality in the Senedd may be unlawful because it may breach the Equality Act if candidates can self-identify as female when that is not their legal sex.[94]
  • 20 April – Transport Minister Ken Skates announces that some roads will revert to a 30mph speed limit following public backlash over the default 20mph restrictions.[95]
  • 21 April – Cardiff teenager Lloyd Martin, who had Down's syndrome, makes history as the youngest person in his learning disability category to complete a marathon after he finishes the 2024 London Marathon.[96]
  • 23 April – Transport Minister Ken Skates announces that the process of reverting the speed limit on some roads from 20mph back to 30mph will begin in September.[97]
  • 24 April – Three people are injured and one other is arrested in a stabbing at Ysgol Dyffryn Aman in Ammanford.[98]
  • 25 April – A 13-year-old girl is charged with three counts of attempted murder following the previous day's school stabbing at Ammanford.[99]

Arts and literature[edit]

National Eisteddfod of Wales[edit]

  • TBD

Music[edit]

Albums[edit]

Broadcasting[edit]

English language television[edit]

Sport[edit]

Deaths[edit]

Holidays[edit]

Source:[129][130]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

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External links[edit]