of its bases in Leeds, Birmingham, Manchester and Ivybridge in Devon in May.
Some of Wales' rural areas will share constituencies with the urban valleys - including Monmouthshire and Torfaen.Carmarthenshire will be a seat to itself, merged from Caerfyrddin and Llanelli.
Meanwhile Brecon, Radnor and Cwm Tawe - which was controversial at the last boundary review because of the inclusion of the Swansea Valley with the rural Brecon and Radnorshire - will be paired with Neath and Swansea East.The commission has used the names of the original Westminster seats where there is not a name in common use.It is seeking comment from the public on its own proposed names - with the longest, Brecon, Radnor, Neath and Swansea East, stretching to six words.
The electorates likely to be similar in size, but not identical, in each constituency.That's with the exception of Bangor Aberconwy Ynys Môn, however, because the small size of the Ynys Môn constituency was protected in the Westminister review, meaning the combined seat is likely smaller.
The map is all part of the plan to reform the Senedd and elect more politicians in Cardiff Bay, originally penned by former first minister Mark Drakeford and ex-Plaid Cymru leader Adam Price.
The Senedd - and the Welsh government which is formed from it - have more powers than the predecessor National Assembly to make laws and set taxes.The government now aims to put more money into ordinary Chinese people's pockets and help cut the country's reliance on exports and investment.
Beijing's plans include issuing 1.3 trillion yuan ($179bn; £140bn) in special treasury bonds this year to help fund its stimulus measures. Local governments will also be allowed to increase the amount of money they borrow to 4.4 trillion yuan, up from 3.9 trillion yuan, according to the annual "Work Report".In a rare move, Beijing raised its fiscal deficit - the difference between the government's spending and revenue - by one percentage point to 4% of gross domestic product (GDP), the highest level in decades.
The hike signals Beijing's commitment to increase spending to shore up growth. It has long sought to keep the deficit at or below 3% of GDP to demonstrate fiscal discipline.It also announced plans to create more than 12 million jobs in cities, setting a target for urban unemployment at around 5.5% for 2025. The figure stood at 5.1% last year.