How the campaign evolved

This campaign started after a panel discussion on the Future of the Welsh Crown Estates during the Tir a Môr Festival, St. Davids. Concluding that the Crown Estates was not something that was going to be ‘given’ to us, we decided to put pressure on our democratic institutions from below. In practice, one strategy is to lobby local authorities to take a stand with us. We have spent the last year asking councillors to table Notice of Motions in favour of devolving the Welsh Crown Estates. If all councils in Wales take this position, it will place serious pressure on the Senedd to make this an issue of greater priority than it is now. This pressure is then transferred onto the UK parliament.
In October 2024, the first local authorities in Wales passed motions in favour of devolving the Crown Estates, namely in Gwynedd and Monmouthshire. Others began to follow, and going into 2025 this started to snowball to the point where all councils have backed the campaign save two (Pembrokeshire and Torfaen). The campaign continues until all local authorities are in favour of devolving ownership of Wales to its people.
Why is this important?
Political Strategy: We recognise that both UK Labour and the Conservative Party will not want to devolve the Crown Estates to Wales. This is in light of both their ideologies on centralisation and their commercial interests in Wales’ natural resources, particularly in relation to our seabed. This means that regardless of who is in power in the British Parliament, our campaign will face stiff resistance.
We also recognise that Welsh Labour, the main party in the Senedd, officially support the devolution of the Crown Estates. English Labour will dismiss any Labour politician who creates real dissent, whether in Parliament or in the Senedd. In this way, English Labour have a near stranglehold on the Senedd. It is therefore not good enough for Senedd politicians to be ‘on our side’. We need to create a much larger movement that exists at all levels of democracy in Wales. When the call comes from a much wider breadth of society, UK Labour and the Conservative party will not have the strength to deny us taking back ownership of the Crown Estates. Among other strategies, building a larger movement has meant gaining the support of local councils.
Democracy: Aside from a strategic perspective, it makes sense to get local councils to understand their role in bringing us closer to our lands. Many of these lands are the Crown Estates. When the Crown Estates are eventually devolved, we don’t want control of those lands to simply be transferred from MP’s to MS’s. We want ordinary people to have a greater say in how these lands are managed, and how the financial wealth that emerges from these lands is distributed. Local Councils are far from perfect and have failed to represent us historically. This is, in part, because Councils being impoverished by central governments mean they lack agency in fulfilling their responsibilities. By drawing councils once step closer to Crown Estate lands the money that comes with them, democracy becomes more accountable to us and more responsive to our demands.
Get involved
If you would like to find out more about how you can lobby your local authority and help with this campaign, get in touch with us by clicking here.