Neil McEvoy says he will not rejoin Plaid Cymru
- Published
The independent assembly member Neil McEvoy says he will not attempt to rejoin Plaid Cymru after one of his supporters failed to become chairman of the party.
Attacking the party that expelled him, Mr McEvoy claimed Plaid's AMs had held "the national movement back".
Dewi Evans, who wanted Mr McEvoy reinstated, failed to oust Alun Ffred Jones at Plaid's autumn conference.
Plaid Cymru said only it could deliver "transformational change".
Mr McEvoy was expelled from Plaid Cymru last year after he was found guilty of misconduct over his allegedly disruptive behaviour at the 2017 Plaid Cymru spring conference.
He was expelled for 18 months, later cut to 12. The politician had been thrown out of the Plaid Cymru assembly group over a separate matter.
The AM, who is also a Cardiff councillor, had tried to rejoin the party earlier in 2019 but called his bid off in July.
A disciplinary panel had been examining his application at the time. He did not rule out joining the party again and it thought he might do so if Mr Evans was successful.
On Monday Mr McEvoy tweeted he "will not be seeking to rejoin Plaid Cymru", and intends to stand against Labour first minister Mark Drakeford .
He said he would remain independent and claimed: "Plaid Cymru's monopoly of nationalist politics ended on Saturday".
A Plaid Cymru spokesman said: "As highlighted in our highly successful conference, only Plaid Cymru candidates can deliver transformational change and we look forward to making the case in the constituency of the First Minister."
Mr McEvoy tweeted that while Alun Ffred Jones got 400 votes Mr Evans got 135.
A Plaid Cymru source would not confirm the figures but said the margin of victory was "substantial".
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