Support our Nation today - please donate here
News

MP calls for devolved assembly in Cornwall to recognise its ‘unique’ culture

16 Oct 2024 3 minute read
St Piran’s Day 2017, St Buryan, Cornwall. Picture by Tom Goskar (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0).

Cornwall should have its own assembly to recognise its “unique culture” and the Cornish language, a Liberal Democrat MP told the Commons.

Ben Maguire, who represent North Cornwall, argued that devolution is essential to unleashing the region’s economic potential.

This comes after Labour MP Perran Moon made similar calls in his maiden speech in September, as he argued that Cornwall should have a devolution arrangement like its “Celtic cousins in Wales”.

Manifesto

In their election manifesto, Labour committed to transferring more power away from Westminster with “landmark devolution legislation to take back control”.

During Prime Minister’s Questions, Mr Maguire said: “North Cornwall is an amazing place to live and work, but a top-down approach from Westminster has failed us.

“Public services are chronically underfunded, young people forced to move away to pursue careers elsewhere, and affordable housing is a promise that it simply never kept.

“Will the Prime Minister meet with all six Cornish MPs to discuss devolution for Cornwall, with a Cornish assembly which recognises our unique culture, language and national minority status?

“So we can finally unleash Cornwall’s economic potential.”

‘Transferring power’

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer replied: “I do believe in transferring power out of Westminster and into the hands of leaders who know their communities best, those with skin in the game know what’s best for their communities.

“We are already making steps in the South West by signing the devolution agreement for Devon and Torbay, I actually encourage local authorities to work with their neighbours to pursue deeper and wider devolution for their area.

“And I’ll make sure he has the meeting that he’s asking for.”

Last month Mr Moon, MP for Camborne and Redruth, used his maiden speech to “throw open the cage door and unleash the Cornish Celtic Tiger”.

In his first speech in Parliament, he said: “My hope and my focus in coming weeks and months will be on persuading Government that the most appropriate devolution arrangement for Cornwall is an assembly similar to that of our Celtic cousins in Wales.

“So, in terms of economic development, culture and governance, the time has come to throw open the cage door and unleash the Cornish Celtic Tiger.”

Since its establishment in 1997, the Welsh Parliament has progressively gained more law-making powers and now has jurisdiction over a number of areas including health, education, transport, agriculture, and some taxes.


Support our Nation today

For the price of a cup of coffee a month you can help us create an independent, not-for-profit, national news service for the people of Wales, by the people of Wales.

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
2 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Jeff
Jeff
1 month ago

Cornwall is HRH Son/Daughter No 1 piggy bank. I hope that is unpicked here. Removed from Cornwall.

J Jones
J Jones
1 month ago

Be careful Kernow, those immigrants in the east bear a huge grudge against natives showing pride in their indigenous heritage. From beating kids at school for speaking their natural language, pillaging natural resources, diverting outside funding back to London, charging us money for our land and giving it to their King, etc, however duplicitous their words and actions are.

But after a thousand years of this they will never stop us being Cymru am Byth.

Our Supporters

All information provided to Nation.Cymru will be handled sensitively and within the boundaries of the Data Protection Act 2018.