Is Westminster Breaking the Law on Welsh Funding? Grass Monster, June 20, 2025 GRASSMONSTER SAYS: The £432 Million Question – Is Westminster Breaking the Law on Welsh Funding? In a bold move that could drag Westminster into court, Plaid Cymru has demanded legal action against the UK government over what they say is a £432 million funding shortfall owed to Wales. At the heart of the dispute is something deceptively dry – rail funding. Specifically, HS2 and Northern Ireland transport projects that were classed by the Treasury as “England and Wales” spend, even though the steel, concrete, and jobs barely touched Welsh soil. The result? Wales missed out on Barnett formula compensation – a mechanism designed to ensure devolved nations get a fair share of the UK purse when England gets a big spend. Plaid’s argument is simple: Wales has been robbed. And now, party leader Adam Price says it’s time to call in the lawyers. He claims this isn’t just bad politics – it may be a breach of public finance rules and constitutional equity. This isn’t a new row. For years, Welsh leaders have protested that London’s funding models favour shiny infrastructure projects in England while treating Wales as an afterthought. But now, with pressure building and finances tight, the conversation has turned legal. If a court agrees that classifying HS2 as a benefit to Wales is fiction – and that Westminster’s refusal to trigger the Barnett formula amounts to legal negligence – it could force a back payment running into hundreds of millions. The Treasury denies any wrongdoing, of course. It says the classification was appropriate and followed established rules. But behind that neat phrasing is a more uncomfortable truth: if London can decide what counts as “shared spending,” it can quietly bypass fairness altogether. This legal threat is more than regional grumbling. It cuts to the heart of devolved democracy – a test of whether Wales has meaningful control over its own finances or is simply expected to smile politely while Westminster decides what’s “good” for it. The case – if it proceeds – could open the floodgates for a broader reckoning on how the UK shares its wealth. And for once, it’s Wales asking the hard question: where’s our share? @grassmonster #WalesFundingCrisis #BarnettFormula #PlaidCymru #HS2Dispute #PublicFinanceLaw #WestminsterVsWales #LegalActionNow #UKPolitics #DevolutionMatters #GRASSMONSTER Related Posts:Victims Left Short Because Justice Had No BudgetYour Partner’s Loan Could Land You in CourtThe End of Abortion Prosecutions in England and WalesSoftware Glitch That Could Let Fraudsters Walk FreeArbitration Gets a MakeoverMPs Move to Ban Websites That Promote ProstitutionDROUGHT - AND YOUR INBOX X-ARTICLES