Morgan ‘appalled’ ex-Wales Reform leader took bribes

The Prime Minister said that she was “dismayed” that the former chief of reform in Wales admitted to having made bribes to make declarations in favor of Russia while being a member of the European Parliament.
Nathan Gill, who was also a politician at Cardiff Bay, pleaded guilty to the former Bailey on Friday at eight corruption chiefs between December 6, 2018 and July 18, 2019.
Questioned on Tuesday, Eluned Morgan said that the reform posed “a real possibility of corruption and chaos”.
Recent surveys suggest that the reform, with Plaid Cymru, is well placed to win the Seedd elections next year.
Referring Tuesday to Gill pleadings during the Prime Minister’s questions, the leader of the Conservative group Sened Darren Millar asked Morgan if he had agreed that “the reform is a clear and present danger for our national security here in Wales and through our United Kingdom”.
The Prime Minister replied: “I do it absolutely.”
“I must say that we knew that the reform is a threat to the land of Wales, that there is a real possibility of corruption and chaos, and now we have proof of it through someone who was the former chief of reform in Wales.
“I think we were all dismayed by the act of the former chief of the reform in Wales, a person who was a member of this room,” she added.
Gill was one of the seven UKIP politicians elected in Senedd in 2016 when the party was led by the current chief of reform, Nigel Farage.
Millar also interviewed Morgan in terms of the British Labor Government to introduce digital identity cards across the United Kingdom.
“How can you justify such waste expenditure on a digital identity document when there are so many people who languish [NHS] The waiting lists, so many young people leaving our illiterate schools, and so many people in our communities who fight to save their libraries, their leisure centers and their public loyals, it is a shame and do not know it, “he said.
Darren Millar said that reform was a “clear and present danger” for national security [Senedd Cymru]
Morgan, who has already said that digital identifiers for the Welsh should transport the Welsh flag, said: “We use all of our mobile phones in so many different ways in our daily life.
“It seems very strange to me that the state will not be part of it, and I think there are opportunities here.
“Obviously, there must be a lot of work to ensure that all the information is secure and that personal details are secure, but it is something that is very common in many, many nations of the world.”
Plaid Cymru, Rhun AP Iorweth, called Morgan to “think” about the comments she made in her speech at the Labor Conference on Sunday where she described Plaid Cymru and the Reformation like “a different poison, the same bottle”.
“Of course, no one thinks a second that plaid Cymru and the reform offer the same proposal.
“However, in her speech, the Prime Minister used the fairly incontesting language of her office to describe her political opponents.”
“Why does she really think that Plaid Cymru and the reform are so similar? Where we promote unity, they betrayed the division,” he added.
Morgan replied that “the reform wants to divide our communities and the plaid wants to divide our nation” with its position of pro independence.

