V. Evolution: The Path to Embedded Authority
We must recognize that the current devolved settlement is not a destination. It is a stage in our national evolution. At the moment, our powers are on loan from Westminster, a precarious arrangement that can be undermined at any time. To truly advance, Cymru must transition toward ‘Sovereign Authority’, in whatever form that takes.
A nation is not just a culture - it is a legal and political entity. This means having a recognized government with the power to make and enforce its own laws across all internal affairs - not just health and education, but justice and taxation. We cannot truly shape our economy or protect our environment if we do not have the levers of power in our own hands.
As part of this evolution Cymru must consider developing a defined citizenship, even if it is within the wider British Union. Moving towards a national passport, perhaps only visually and in name whilst we reside within the current constitutional framework would be relatively easy but powerfully self-identifying. This would be a symbol of belonging recognized on the global stage.
To be clear, this isn't about isolation but maturity. More widely, it is about having the ability to discuss and define our relationship with other nations, to have a presence on the world stage, and to represent our own interests in ways that the filter of an UK lens, that often prioritizes the South East of England, can never achieve.
Sovereignty and ownership is also about the civic infrastructure that sustains society. It’s about reliable transport, a robust welfare system, and a healthcare service that is truly our own. We must move from a province to a partner, and perhaps eventually, to a peer in every sense. This evolution is a natural process of people coming to realize that in today’s world we are the best people to manage our own affairs, and the only people who will always put the interests of Cymru and the people who live here, front and centre at all times. It is also a dawning of the understanding that as the global world order evolves and the UK becomes increasingly diminished within that structure, there is no longer anything to be gained from the kind of union that currently exists. This does not mean not having an extraordinary close and cooperative relationship, that goes without saying for a neighbour with whom the ties that bind are vast and myriad, but it does mean leaning into the understanding that small, nimble nations are beautiful.