Step on to the pages of Conservative Home – or on to social media – in the last few weeks and you might have found a row playing out about the future of the Welsh Tories.
An anonymous blogger, Jack Welsh, accused Senedd leader Darren Millar of a "war" on the party's Welsh Tory devo-sceptic base, and called for him to go.
The reason? An interview with Welsh-language news website, Golwg360, where Millar was reported to have said that it should come "as no surprise" that any Conservative candidate must be supportive of devolution.
The implication, according to some grassroots Conservative members, is that you cannot stand for the party at the next Senedd election if you don't believe in the institution's continued existence.
The row has spilled over onto the social network formerly known as Twitter – X – where some Conservative activists have attacked the party's Cardiff Bay leadership.
The policy has not been confirmed in firm terms, but it hasn't precisely been denied by senior figures in the party either.
BBC Wales has been told by the party's Welsh chairman that while candidates can hold views privately, they would be expected not to campaign on such an issue.
One anti-Senedd Tory activist – a councillor – has claimed on the record that he was removed from an approved list of potential candidates for his views. A party spokesperson says he was never on the list for the 2026 election.
Meanwhile a Tory member who has publicly complained about Darren Millar has said he has been suspended from the party.
To some outside the party the whole row might seem odd. If you want to stand for the Senedd why would you scrap it?
Even if you campaigned in a Senedd election to abolish the parliament, the powers to do that lie in Westminster and not Cardiff Bay.
But despite the pro-devolution leaning of the party's current leadership, there have always been mixed views on the issue among Conservatives, who are currently picking who can stand for the next Welsh Parliament due in May 2026.