Susan Lesley Griffiths (born 1960) is a Welsh Labour politician who was Cabinet Secretary for Culture and Social Justice from March to July 2024. She previously served as Trefnydd of the Senedd and Minister for North Wales from 2021 to 2024, and Minister for Rural Affairs from 2016 to 2024. She worked as a secretary to John Marek and the constituency assistant to Ian Lucas, successive Members of Parliament for Wrexham, and was elected to the Senedd from the Wrexham constituency in 2007. She has held a number of cabinet positions in the Welsh Government. In December 2009 she was appointed Deputy Minister for Science, Innovation and Skills.
In 2011, she was appointed Minister for Health and Social Services. She was then appointed Minister for Local Government and Government Business in March 2013. In September 2014 she was appointed Minister for Communities and Tackling Poverty. Following the 2016 election, she was appointed Cabinet Secretary for Environment and Rural Affairs following her own re-election. She retained her post in a Welsh Government Cabinet reshuffle in November 2017, but with a revised portfolio of Energy, Planning, and Rural Affairs with Hannah Blythyn becoming her Deputy Minister for the Environment.
2003 campaign
Griffiths was the secretary of
John Marek, who represented Wrexham as a Labour member of the Welsh Assembly. However, in 2003 Marek was de-selected by the local party and Griffiths was selected in his place. There followed a Labour Party inquiry, in which Marek was first contacted by telephone half an hour before the result was announced, and his de-selection was upheld. Marek then decided to fight to retain his seat as an Independent,
[Martin Shipton, "Marek likely to stand as independent", Western Mail, 12 March 2003.] and Griffiths struggled during the campaign; an early poll showed Marek beating her by 40% to 29%.
[Kirsty Buchanan, "Marek beating Labour", Western Mail, 11 April 2003.] In the event, on polling day Marek beat Griffiths by 973 votes.
Subsequent elections
Having been a supporter of Wrexham Football Club, Griffiths was elected to the board of the Wrexham Supporters Trust. In December 2005 she was selected again as Labour candidate for the Wrexham constituency for the 2007 Assembly elections. She benefited from high-profile support as the party saw an opportunity to recapture the seat; John Marek appealed to the large
Polish people immigrant population by translating his election material into
Polish language.
[Allegra Stratton, "'Glosuj na mnie!'", New Statesman, 30 April 2007.] However, Griffiths increased her numerical vote while Marek's vote fell, and she won the seat by 1,250.
In 2011, Griffiths faced Marek for a third time, though by now Marek had joined the Conservatives. Both of them saw increases in their votes compared to 2007, but Griffiths held the seat with an increased majority of 3,337. Griffiths was re-selected to defend her seat at the 2016 election, and retained it with a reduced majority of 1,325 over the Conservative candidate.
Ministerial responsibility
Griffiths was appointed Deputy Minister for Science, Innovation and Skills in December 2009.
After the 2011 election, she was promoted to the Minister for Health and Social Services, a post she held until March 2013 when she was appointed Minister for Local Government and Government Business. In September 2014 she was appointed Minister for Communities and Tackling Poverty.
She was appointed Cabinet Secretary for Environment and Rural Affairs following re-election in May 2016,
before being appointed Cabinet Secretary for Energy, Planning, and Rural Affairs in November 2017. She became Minister for Environment, Energy, and Rural Affairs in the First Drakeford government
in December 2018 and then Minister for Rural Affairs and North Wales, and Trefnydd in May 2021.
In March 2024, Griffiths was appointed Cabinet Secretary for Culture and Social Justice in the Gething government.
In October 2018 Griffiths used her ministerial office to overturn the decision of a planning inspector to refuse a proposed wind farm near Llandrindod Wells. In November the Campaign for the Protection of Rural Wales announced that it was challenging this in the High Court.[Josie Le Vay, Llandrindod Wells: CPRW launch High Court bid to challenge Lesley Griffiths AM's Hendy Wind Farm decision in Powys County Times dated 30 November 2018, accessed 1 December 2018]
In July 2024, Griffiths resigned from the Welsh Cabinet, alongside three other cabinet members, from First Minister Vaughan Gething's government, prompting Gething's subsequent resignation as First Minister.
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Offices held