Reform Party Politician’s Racist Remark Causes Significant Hurt

Members of the Chinese community in Wales say a racist slur used by Reform politician Laura Anne Jones has caused significant hurt.

Dec 3, 2025 - 12:21
Reform Party Politician’s Racist Remark Causes Significant Hurt
Reform Party Politician’s Racist Remark Causes Significant Hurt
A racist slur used by a Reform politician has "caused a lot of hurt", members of the Chinese community in Wales have said.
Laura Anne Jones, the party's only Welsh Parliament member, returns to the Senedd chamber on Wednesday after she was banned for two weeks for using a racial slur to describe Chinese people in a WhatsApp chat in August 2023.
It meant her pay was docked and she could not take part in proceedings in the Welsh Parliament.
 
The Chinese in Wales Association (CIWA) welcomed the action taken by the Senedd but said the term Jones used carried "deeply hurtful and racist connotations" and it was "deeply disappointing to hear such language from an elected representative".
 
After being hit with the punishment, Jones apologised for what she called "regrettable comments" in a "private message".
Speaking on 19 November, Jones said she and her staff had completed Senedd respect and conduct training and she had "actively been in contact and helped the community that is being referred to".
 
She added: "I have reflected deeply on this and I wholly accept the need to take greater care with my language at all times."
Reform UK leader Nigel Farage called it a "pretty minor offence".
 
"Compared to what happens in public life and the mistakes that people make in their everyday lives what she's done is a pretty minor offence. Now she's been quite harshly punished for it," he said.
 
"She used a word that colloquially probably was meant in a nice way 20 years ago."
 
He added that Jones had "absolutely made a mistake".
Shirley Au-Yeung, founder and CEO of CIWA, said Jones's remark was "very upsetting", especially coming from a politician.
"This word is sometimes used without people fully understanding its impact, but public figures should be especially mindful of the harm such language can cause.
"We don't want to live in a society where racially derogatory language is normalised or dismissed."
 
In August 2023, Jones, then a Conservative Member of the Senedd, used the slur in a WhatsApp group in response to a discussion about TikTok - at the time, there were fears the Chinese government could use the app to spy.
 
Jones, who defected to Reform in July and represents South Wales East, also referred to an ex-staffer as "a wanker" and a "bitter, twisted, useless person" in the group chat.
The number of residents in Wales identifying as Chinese in 2021 was 14,000, according to census data.
 
Outside of Cardiff, Swansea has the highest proportion of Chinese people in Wales.
 
Yan Wu is a professor in media communications at Swansea University and has been studying Chinese immigration in Europe since 2005.
 
She said Chinese immigration to the UK had been through three phases since the end of World War Two.
 
Post-war Britain attracted immigrants to address labour shortages and shifting consumer demands while the late 1970s saw students and scholars coming for education.
 
Since 2000, Chinese immigrants further diversified, including political dissidents, naturalised citizens, economic immigrants and Chinese medical practitioners, as well as "a number of migrants from Hong Kong," said Prof Wu.
Ms Au-Yeung, from Swansea, said "many ethnically Chinese people born in Wales have shared that their Welsh identity can feel questioned at times because of how they look".
 
She added: "People look at their face and think they are migrants. They feel they are Welsh but other people question and this hurts them so much.
"We don't use this word in our language. It exists in English, there is no direct translation.
 
"This term has historically been used in negative and racist contexts, and its impact is still felt deeply."
 
Foo Seng, advocacy lead at CIWA said: "By using that word you are telling the public that it is OK to use that word to talk about the Chinese community.
"The upset we feel is difficult to express, but it just is demeaning."
 
Angela Hui, author of Takeaway: Stories From Behind the Counter, said it was a word that "might look harmless to someone on the outside... but for a lot of east and South East Asian people in the UK, it's a word that cuts to the core".
The 34-year-old from Beddau, Rhondda Cynon Taf, said using language such as this "teaches people that it's fair game to use that word and to mock".
 
She added: "It encourages people to ignore our struggles, dismissing pain and discrimination as 'banter' instead of racism.
"So when people defend it as 'didn't mean any harm', 'joking around', 'just what everyone says', they miss that the issue was never simply a word but how it shaped the way others treated us.
 
"Many of us grew up in a system that taught us to stay quiet, to swallow our hurt and dismiss our personal and shared experiences. So when 'little things' like the c-word is being thrown around so casually in messages it piles up and turns into something bigger."
She said that, repeatedly, elected leaders have made inappropriate and offensive comments, so "this is nothing new and not surprising."
 
"We must speak out against racism because it is wrong, no matter who it is used against."
 
Ms. Au-Yeung said she did not believe Jones considered the impact of his language: "I understand it has been difficult for him, but it is also important to acknowledge the experiences of members of the Chinese community who face this negative language in their daily lives. Many suffer in silence."
 
She said she was glad the Welsh Government was addressing the issue and hoped it would let people know it was unacceptable.
"We must ensure people are educated and understand the distress caused by this word and ultimately stop using it."
CIWA said Jones' suspension was "an important reminder that racism must be taken seriously, especially by those trusted by the public."
 
"We hope this incident will serve as a catalyst for deeper reflection within political parties and the Senedd on the culture, norms, and practices that allow racist language to emerge."
It added that the organization welcomed the Senedd's invitation to discuss the incident and related issues.
 
 
 

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