Thursday, May 17, 2012
   
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BRITAIN GOES SOUR

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Richard Sennett, Sociology Prof. writing in the New York Times says, ”Mr Cameron’s austerity programme is the Tea Party’s dream come true.” That’s right.  In US the lunatics are forcing Obama to cut. In Britain they’re in power and despite the riots Osborne has just said there’s no turning back.
 

Sell-Out

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Just read David Laws book ’22 Days in May'. Should be a sell-out. He was.

Bastard is snide about Labour! Doesn’t he know that we were doing them an enormous favour by helping them better the terms they got with the Tories?

 

   

Poor Old Young

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Poor old Young. Tells it like it is, there isn’t a disaster. No need for massive cuts.

 

The press is having a nervous breakdown. The government is making it up as it goes along. The cabinet is falling out over Defence, Sports, Schools, Health and the EU. The LibDems are revolting, well more so than usual. But what are the pundits obsessed with? Splits in the Labour Party!

At this stage of the game all they want a futile gesture. A confession that everything is our fault and that we would have implemented bigger cuts.

What tripe. Just shows whose side they’re on!

 

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Leaving a Foreign Office School Helen Clark Head of Development at the UN was asked by a very senior FO Official where she was going “To Grimsby to give the Tony Crosland memorial Lecture” “Who’s Tony Crosland?” Said he! Shocking!

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The British Constitution is whatever government can get away with. If the coalition can get away with gerrymandering the electoral system and fixing itself in office until 2015 it can fiddle anything.

Here’s a crucial test of the Lords as defenders of the constitution. Let these bills through and it’s as much use as a condom machine in the Vatican.

 

   

LibDem Lackies

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LibDem Lackies

Simon Hughes justified the LibDem abandoning its principles on Proportional Representation by saying that Cameron would never vote for it. Possibly true but they’d never vote for AV either yet that’s being foisted on us.

A referendum is about consulting the people not MPs. What they want is more important than what we want.

All the poll evidence tells us they prefer PR to AV. But they aren’t allowed to say that because the LibDems were too cowardly to push it.

Gutless too on university fees. Watch the way the amount universities can charge being edged ever upwards despite the LibDems being pledged to no increases at all. Gutless wonders.

 

Great Fiddle Bill

Goodbye to the Great Fiddle Bill to the Lords which the government is swamping to ensure it gets through.

It was good to see Cleggie turn up – not having been near the long debate. He’s been too busy defending the indefensible cuts but he had the decency to come for the last debate to show that he doesn’t understand this bill either

It’s designed to strengthen the executive against a smaller commons, and damage the Labour Party by Blitzkrieg redistribution.

Next the Fixed Term bill to ensure the Tories stay in power for five years however unpopular they get.

 

   

Britain

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What motivates 35 “top” business “leaders” to clamour for Tory cuts and denounces Labours plans to halve the deficit.

 

It can’t be economic sense because the cuts will damage recovery and put people out of work.

It can’t be a concern for the interests of their customers who’ll lose benefits, jobs and income.

It can’t be of concern for their own businesses because demand will fall and growth will slow. It can’t be a prospect of providing new jobs in the private sector – because they’re cutting those!

 

So what’s behind their grovelling?

 

They want Knighthoods, fat cat pensions, higher pay for top people like them.

 

Well done ASDA, B.T., Kingfisher, Carphone Warehouse, Mothercare, Boots, M&S, Diago, Next.

All run by people who’ll  lay down their companies for greed.

   

Too Edstrong

Opinions

The PLP dealt you a poor hand in the Shadow Cabinet shower. No reason for turning a problem into a disaster. You should have consulted me. Alan Johnson is wrong for Chancellor. He’s got a good tough law ‘n’ order image. Keep him at the Home Office. Ed Balls is right on the economy. He must be Chancellor. Yvette Cooper is brilliant, give her social security and jobs to fight the cuts. Bring Blunkett back to Education. Of

 It’s disastrous. Too little talent, too few people who voted for Ed in the first place.

There’s now more talent on the backbenches – me, Blunkett, Hain, Darling, Woodward, and Straw. Certainly more power and experience then in the numpty nineteen.  

In other news IPSAs reign continues. They’ve certainly wasted a lot of mine and my staff’s time trying to deal with the new rules. But they’re the new kids on the block and conscious to prove they’re usefulness when quangos are being killed off.

They want me to move my home 80 miles closer to Grimsby. They want a valuation, costing £700, on my London flat. They won’t say for what purpose they want it, and apparently they’re not going to pay for it. My questions about this go unanswered. 

   

PRESS RELEASE: MPs Pay and Allowances: How not to do it

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Austin Mitchell says: “Whatever Gordon Brown proposes for a quick fix on Pay and Allowances, the issue isn`t going to go away.

 
We`re in a recession. People are losing their jobs and facing pay cuts, some London MPs have abused allowances. They`ve damaged trust in the system. So I understand the anger but we`re missing the point. The problem isn`t that we`re making MPs into secret millionaires. It`s to help them to do a job that`s vital to democracy properly and cover the cost of doing that rather than putting them in the stocks and throwing rotten tomatoes at them”.
 
Start from the basics. Perhaps MPs are paid too much. Some are. Some aren`t. Some could earn more money outside. Some couldn`t. 
 
We could pay them less so their standard of living is closer to that of the mass of the people they represent, but we need to pay them enough to ensure that not only the wealthy can afford to do the job and whatever the basic rate of pay they`ll still need allowances to do the job.
 
They`d still have to have a travel allowance to go up and down to London from the constituency and to travel home. They`d also need some kind of allowance to buy or rent accommodation in London. No use saying put us in a student hostel or a prison hulk moored off Westminster. Most MPs have wives and families and we hope to see both from time to time. We need some kind of home life.
 
MPs also still have to have staffs, offices, computers, telephones and all the paraphernalia of modern communications as well as offices to do their job. We could provide just one in London but the people are in Grimsby. They need somewhere to go and a staff to help them. I also need a staff in London to do the research for all the areas I`ve got to know about, to speak on and to question Ministers on in committees.
 
All this makes up the major part of the allowances – the more work you do the more you get. Are the critics saying we should have no staff and no ability to deal with the constituency problems which pour in ever more numerously? As it is our staffs are underpaid and overworked. The work has increased every year I have been in and it`s increasing ever more now with recession. They should really be paid by the Commons and not feature on my own allowances, but paid they must be and neither I nor Grimsby could manage without them.
 
The argument over pay isn`t one MPs can win. Nor can Gordon Brown fix it quickly. His proposed attendance allowance has already produced another howl of rage and the inevitable question: why should we be paid to go to work? He`d do much better to let the committee now sitting to report and give us an agreed solution. Yet those who complain so loudly but offer no alternative do us no service. The job of MP is basic to democracy.  I`m there to help constituents but can`t spend all week in Grimsby because I have to represent it and help to control and question the Executive. So I must go down to London to raise Grimsby`s needs and problems. Let`s end the abuse and discuss the problem seriously. Most MPs do the job out of a sense of duty, not to make a fortune. It`s pretty hard work and can`t be done without allowances. I`m not suggesting deference or rushing up to MPs in the street to kiss them on both cheeks (if that`s still permitted) to say thank you. But let`s have a sense of proportion and some commonsense. We could start by understanding what the job is about.
   

Letter to John Healey November 2008

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Dear John

 

Thank you for your reply dated 12 November on the docks business rating issue. I am grateful for your full explanation of the problem with which you are attempting to grapple and for the efforts you are making to ease a burden which has been inconsiderately and ineptly imposed on port businesses.

 

Read more: Letter to John Healey November 2008

   

Letter to Paul Myners

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Dear Paul

 

Thank you for your letter dated 31 October. 

 

Sorry to upset you.  I`m not really that nasty.  However, I can`t help noting that my desperate pleas to Treasury Ministers for help in a crisis, which was hitting the import of the Icelandic fish we live by on the Humber, got no response for three weeks, and then only a letter telling me nothing.  However, an attack on the Department and a Minister gets a response in three days.  I`ll bear that in mind.

Read more: Letter to Paul Myners

   
   

Letter to Lord Myners - Payments for Imports from Iceland

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Thank you for your reply dated 22 October which comes disappointingly late.  The crisis has passed, resolved by non-Treasury means.

Read more: Letter to Lord Myners - Payments for Imports from Iceland

   

No More Mr Nice Dave

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Dave Cameron can’t behave for more than a week. It’s a few days of caring conservatism item back to “cut public spending and fire civil servants”. A few days of rally round in the emergency. Then back to his usual mudslinging. Why? Cos acting as little Sir Echo kept him off telly. So within days it was back to “cut borrowing and Labour’s to blame for the crisis. Not US sub prime, oil price creases or the EU recession.

Read more: No More Mr Nice Dave

   

How To Succeed In Politics Without Being Trying

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It's a bit late to say that you're insane to have come here when you could have done a useful job by running a brothel, or a focus group, or even influenced government as a journalist, meeting the great, calling Ministers to account and understanding it all.

Read more: How To Succeed In Politics Without Being Trying

   

What Do We Do Now?A Way Out of The Crisis

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Before we can clear up the mess, let`s assess what went wrong.  Greed and gambling in our inflated financial sector did the damage but the lack of effective regulation allowed it to spread out from the badlands of shadow banking.  There the new cowboys: the hedge funds, the private equity capital and the liquidity factories played with new toys: derivatives.  Collateralised Debt Obligations, “structured investment” vehicles and securitisation.  They prospered enormously.

Read more: What Do We Do Now?A Way Out of The Crisis

   

What is in a name? Vote now!

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The Council are thinking of dropping the name North East Linconshire and are launching a consultation. As one of the areas MPs I have decided to launch an online consultation of my own.

I also want the views of people who live outside of the area so I have created two polls.

Read more: What is in a name? Vote now!

   

Blog

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Having put my application to be made PPS to the Fisheries Minister to all of the Leader (1.5 candidates) and Deputy (5.5 candidates), I now stand back as the only disinterested voter and watch the form.

Read more: Blog

   

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