A REFERENDUM on Welsh independence will be held by 2026 if Plaid Cymru forms the next government in Cardiff Bay.

In its manifesto for the May 6 Senedd elections, Plaid promised to implement the most radical programme since the 1945 Labour government.

The manifesto promises that a Plaid first minister “will let the people of Wales, not Westminster, decide on our future” within the next five years.

Meanwhile, Welsh Conservative leader Andrew RT Davies was using a campaign speech to attack Labour’s record in office since devolution.

And in a swipe at Plaid, he claimed “independence would put our recovery after coronavirus at risk” and a referendum “would plunge Wales into chaos”.

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Launching the Plaid Cymru manifesto, party leader Adam Price promised to create 60,000 green jobs, extend free school meals to all primary age pupils, cut council tax bills and build 50,000 homes.

On the NHS, Plaid is planning on recruiting an extra 1000 doctors and 5000 nurses and other health professionals – and guaranteeing a £10 an hour minimum wage for care workers.

Price said: “For the first time in a Senedd election the people of Wales will be able to vote to take their own future into their own hands.

“We believe independence to be the only sure and sustainable means to achieving social and economic progress.

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“So, a Plaid Cymru government will empower the people of Wales to decide the future of our nation in an independence referendum.

“We are not the country that we should be. We are not the country that we can be. And we are not the country we want to be.”

Among the other policies within the manifesto are a youth jobs guarantee for 16 to 24-year-olds, zero-interest loans to support small businesses to bounce back from the pandemic, and recruiting 4500 extra teachers and support staff.