Tuesday, 6 May 2008

Ready for the fight!????


Seeing New Labour/Old Tory going into meltdown means that we could be looking at a right-wing resurgence, something Brown and Co have been promoting for some time now.

The only answer to this is to get the “Real Left” in gear for the general elections set to happen in the next 24 months or so.

Can the Left raise a campaign in time? Well let’s hope those manoeuvring for position in their local pond don’t miss the opportunity that beckons at sea!

Tuesday, 29 January 2008

Fat Cats win again

A Labour friendly think-tank, the Institute for Fiscal Studies, has produced two damning reports which expose New Labour’s failure to address issues of poverty and inequality.

In Poverty and Inequality in the UK: 2007 the IFS find that the number of people living in relative poverty (living in households with less than 60% of median incomes - that is less than £363 per week disposable income) rose from 12.1 million in 2004/05 to 12.8 million in 2005/06 (the last available figures).

Despite Labour promises, these figures show a rise in child poverty and working adult poverty.

The second report, published last week, called Racing Away: Income Inequality and the Evolution of High Incomes suggests that inequality is higher today than at anytime during the present Labour or proceeding Tory administrations.

Inequality is measured using the "gini coefficient." It gives a measure as a single number between 0 and 1. The closer to 0 a country scores the greater the levels of equality; the closer to 1 the country scores the greater the inequality.

In 1979 Britain’s score was 0.25. During the 1980s inequality grew sharply, reaching a peak in the early 1990s at 0.34. This was a rise in inequality without historical parallel. There was a slight fall in the inequality measure between the early and mid-1990s, but it rose again during the early New Labour years (reaching a peak in 200/2001 of 0.35).

Although there was a slight drop in the inequality score after this, it has now gone back up to 0.35 - a higher level of inequality than when Labour came to office in 1997.

Under New Labour the top 10 per cent of earners now take home 40 per cent of all earned income in Britain, while the top 0.1% have an average pre-tax income of £780,000 (the average pre-tax income for the UK is £25,000).

Since New Labour came to power in 1997 the average income of the top 10 per cent of earners has grown faster than any other group in society. Meanwhile, the average income of the lowest 15 per cent has grown at a slower rate than that of any other group.

So there you have it. Under New Labour the rich get richer and richer, and the poor fall further and further behind.

(As seen on RESPECT www site)

Monday, 27 August 2007

Abuse of Protesters Human Rights

Anyone who thinks that human rights in the UK are a one-sided affair in favour of hardened criminals and others who usually would not attract much sympathy should take time to look through the court injunction obtained by npower who want to dump 500,000 of waste ash into Radley Lakes, an area rich in wildlife and much loved by the ordinary folk of the surrounding community.

A copy of it can be seen at: http://www.epuk.org/News/475/the-npower-injunction-in-full

RWE NPower and Oxfordshire County Council have between them concocted a scheme which will destroy a beautiful lake, an area rich in bio-diversity that should be protected. To ensure there is no reporting of the ongoing devastation nor many voices raised in protest, the same legal team who tried (unsuccessfully)to injunct £5million folk on behalf of BAA have done a similar hatchet job on protesters, press photographers and others who now face jail and/or ruin for even uttering a person’s name or protesting against the destruction.

When we protested that freedom from harassment legislation would be abused to stifle legitimate protest we were condemned by Cameron et al and the right-wing press as rabble rousing liberals.

How right it appears we were when the right to defend these wetlands is defeated by the abuse we warned would follow.

Monday, 30 July 2007

Millions of criminals in green wellies

What do 5 million people have in common?

They are all to be banned from approaching Heathrow airport as members of the National Trust, Woodland Trust, RSPB, Greenpeace, Friends of the Earth and the Campaign to Protect Rural England.

What a sight it will be to see commuters on the Piccadilly line, or lads nipping off for a knees up in a European city hiding behind a rubbish bin, or breaking down in tears confessing to our well armed police officers seeking out terrorists, that they forgot to cancel that direct debit that maintains their membership of the National Trust and therefore are law breakers in defiance of the injunction.

Motorists on the M25 and M4 will be swerving from lane to lane as they rummage in the glove box for the receipt they were given when they visited that bird sanctuary last year just in case they signed up to the RSPB.

What planet would a judge have to be on to allow that one to slip through under the guise of stopping Swampy and friends from disrupting CO2 gushing flights leaving the capital’s best known airport?

Apparently this one.

If this wasn’t actually happening, you’d have to wonder if you were still asleep.

Monday, 23 July 2007

No justice for dead workers

So the Government have conceded defeat and published an amendment to extend the scope of the Corporate Manslaughter and Corporate Homicide Bill to allow Prisons and police authorities to be prosecuted over deaths of people held in custody.

This is indeed a right decision (arm up the back or not), but it is really an amendment to a proposed law that falls well short of holding the real criminals responsible - the directors and senior management who pocket the dosh whilst workers are mutilated and killed.

Lets take a look at the reality.

Firstly, the bill proposes criminalizing a firm as opposed to the managers or directors. We’ll see massive fines and public humiliation. What a load of tripe!

If you are a doctor or driver, or indeed the ordinary 5’8” in the street, you can be held personally liable for causing a death by doing something otherwise lawful so badly as to come under the legal definition of manslaughter. If this is the case, then why not someone like the head of an oil company who could be said to have run the company so badly as to be liable for deaths caused by his firm when they cut the safety budget?

If you are looking for logic in this proposed law, then you are looking in the wrong place. Try a glance toward who really holds the power – big business.

They wield power unimaginable to the ordinary citizen – they get what they want, when they want. Just look at the bribes scandals; the cash for honours; and now this poor cousin to the original quest and desire for justice.

Blair leaves office wealthy beyond the means of the combined wealth of thousands in the poverty trap and he lets his big business friends off the hook.

RIP all those who will never see justice, and those yet to die who will leave families in the same situation because our MPs were spineless.

Tuesday, 17 July 2007

George is the only one with RESPECT here!!

We are told that Respect MP George Galloway is facing suspension from the House of Commons for 18 days, following an investigation by Parliament's standards committee.

The MPs say he "damaged the reputation of the House" in his comments about the inquiry into his Mariam Appeal charity. Apparently he should have looked a little closer at the money he received (all of which was used for the charity) before allowing the funds into the charity. Worse still, he actually had the cheek to enter a debate in an institution that is a debating chamber!

What an absolute joke!

Parliament - full of parties who have nominated peers who have (by sheer coincidence) provided them with a nice little wedge, and who have received donations from rapists and other dodgy characters - now feel that George Galloway’s conduct has damaged the reputation of that place.

I’m sure that the rapists, donors and lobbyists who have provided “support” to all the major parties must be laughing their socks off.

Catch a grip – parliament has the reputation it deserves and it’s not down to the alleged actions/omissions of one MP alone. The reality is that they simply can’t handle anyone who doesn’t fall over when they demand it.

Hear what the condemned has to say for himself: http://politics.guardian.co.uk/otherparties/story/0,,2128329,00.html

Tuesday, 26 June 2007

Time for change on our terms!

Some of the runners in the deputy leader’s election within New Labour have mooted an interest in revising the constitution of the UK. Of course New Labour will never let this happen, at least not to their detriment when it comes to imposing draconian laws on the ordinary working man and woman.

So, despite this, if we are to ensure that ordinary working people are protected from the likes of New Labour now and in the future, should we not be debating whether there needs to be a fundamental restructuring of our constitution? Indeed, do we actually have one today based on how it operates in reality as opposed to what scholars and academics think?

In this short article, I will discuss what we actually have and how it is being manipulated. I will also look at issues we should be debating now.

We need to look at what we do have by way of a constitution and thereafter how it works today.

The UK constitution has no fundamental written source, and is ever changing. It relies much on unwritten convention. This results in what has been described as an electorate that are politically sovereign. In reality, Parliament is legally sovereign and our constitution is an uncodified body of law which constitutes the rules for how the country functions. It consists mostly of written sources (not a document(s) such as the American constitution), including statutes, judge made case law and international treaties.

A constitution should impose limits on what Parliament could do without a legal majority. To date, the Parliament of the UK has no limit on its power other than the possibility of extra-parliamentary action (by the people) and of other sovereign states (pursuant to treaties made by Parliament and otherwise).

What prevails is a system that uses of the parliamentary party’s lobby fodder to push through the unacceptable, such as de-listing the Commons from freedom of information legislation.

What we have seen at under New Labour is an abuse of the constitutional system we supposedly have in this country with decision making removed from the collective responsibility of the cabinet (when is the last time any of them retired following a political/ministerial error) and ultimately either no scrutiny by the commons, or railroaded, knee jerk legislation pushed through by use of pagers to call the faithful to vote.

Today we are more likely to be subject to laws that started off on a settee in the PM’s office, or in a focus group meeting where what sounds good is advanced as being good if it can be pushed through in spite of our so called constitution.

On top of this, we see attempt after attempt to bring in laws that avoid even this limited scrutiny combined with constitutional skulduggery by going straight to the Queen seeking the archaic royal prerogative such as was granted to New Labour to crush the courts judgment in 2000 when the Chagos islanders won a historic victory in the high court, which ruled their expulsion from Diego Garcia was illegal.

So what should we be looking for?

The first step could be a codified constitution setting out who could do what and providing a clear separation of powers between the normal division of branches of government into the Executive (in our case the closest we have is the Prime Minister and his Cabinet), the Legislative (Parliament), and the Judicial (Courts) to avoid situations such as we have seen recently with the Attorney General stopping the investigation of crimes for political reasons as with the BAE bribe allegations where Blair is alleged to have personally intervened.

Also, with a written constitution we could set in stone the ability of the courts to intervene or for the citizen to ask them to do so on their behalf. The present system of Judicial Review can only ask the decision maker to go away and reconsider their actions. The exception we see to this system at present is the court’s ability to overrule on Human Rights matters.

The incorporation of the European Convention on Human Rights into UK law has granted us the citizens specific rights and gives the judiciary some power to enforce them. Courts can encourage Parliament to amend legislation by a "declaration of incompatibility," and courts can refuse to enforce or "strike down" any incompatible secondary legislation.

However, any actions of government authorities that violate these rights are only illegal except if carried out pursuant to an Act of Parliament. A written constitution could specifically prevent this happening thus placing rights before political ambition.

Ironically, one of the best examples of a written constitution is that of the United States of America as referred to above. It has clear separation of powers and specific rights that are codified and set out for all to see with a Supreme Court to enforce them if required. Not all rights under the US convention will meet with everyone’s approval (such as the right to bear arms), but they have a mechanism for revising the defined rights under their system. Maybe we should ensure that the ability to revise, remove and add rights is written into any proposed convention.

What is clear is that our present constitution is failing us due to the present regime of spin and be damned with the PM sending the children of the working class off to war (because he can for whatever reason he wants under the current system) without as much as a nod to the millions who took to the streets in protest. Even an attempt under our current system to challenge the decision to go to war was unsuccessful as seen recently in the case of R (Gentle and Clark) –v- The Prime Minister and Others [2006] (which may be successfully appealed).

It is about time we looked at the revision of our constitution before it is hijacked by capitalists who will use any proposed constitution to further erode the rights of working people, whether here at home or in some foreign field where they have been sent to die.

Monday, 25 June 2007

New boss, old routine

What a sight the mounted police in Manchester were during Sunday’s Stop the War demonstration. Indeed, so numerous were they that you could believe there were more horses in Manchester on Sunday than took part in the Charge of the Light Brigade at the Battle of Balaclava during the Crimean War. Of course the GMC mounted force was well supported by many more officers on foot and a very noisy helicopter.

The image of thousands of Stop the War demonstrators hemmed in on all sides as they moved through the city in stops and starts, under the control of the folk in yellow who were clearly instructed not to crack a smile, should have allowed you to consider the strength of feeling and arguments of all involved.

However, the sad reality is that you were denied seeing it in the British “free” press as spin and control seized the helm of the media, just as TB had taken control during his time as PM/Dictator.

Save for a few outlets, there was little if any coverage of a demonstration led by the parents, siblings and friends of those young people sent to die in a far off field so that a gallon of petrol flowing into the tank of an SUV in Jerkwater USA is as cheap as it can possibly be. No respect for their point of view in the press. No acknowledgement of their sacrifice by the media or governmet.

Instead, all we had was a man who stood unopposed and surprisingly “won” bowng to us, with his victorious deputy making a speech wherein she told the great and the good of New Labour that the government should acknowledge the anger felt over Iraq, but at the same time support British troops.

So seriously did Brown and New Labour take her on the day, that not one person in the party acknowledged the thousands outside the conference who were showing their anger, to include people like Rose Gentle who still awaits being told why her son Gordon died at the age of 19, sent to war on a pack of lies.

If anyone thinks that New Labour and the mainstream British media will depart from TB’s idea of spin and lies, then just reflect on just how long it took for Gordon et al to fall back into the same old routine – a matter of hours.

Sunday, 24 June 2007

Not missed at all Goldsmith

So Lord Goldsmith has decided to leave office at the same time as Blair and as he goes, it is clear that no one individual has done more to encourage the call to de-politicise the job before.

The man who was treated with such contempt by Reid when he announced in the press that the new Ministry of Justice would be formed before telling him (even the most senior judge found out from his Sunday paper to be fair), and who when asked by members of a select committee what it was he did even stumbled through that one, will not be missed by some.

His decision to stop the investigations into alleged corrupt dealings between BAE and the Saudi government left him wide open to attack for this and refusing to stand aside from his constitutional role in determining whether any prosecutions should proceed in the cash-for-honours affair. In reality only he and those who depended on him thought this not to be a problem.

What he did more than any other of Tony’s Cronies was to confirm just what little protection those who should be doing an impartial job have from political interference from a Prime Minister determined to win at any cost.

One must wonder if Gordon is any different after fixing even his own rise to the top from any challenge.

Friday, 8 June 2007

Too straight our George is – that’s his crime!!

We hear on the same day that Lord Goldsmith denies that he hid details from the OECD of payments from BAE Systems to ex-Saudi ambassador to the US, Prince Bandar bin Sultan, that the Charity Commission has criticised George Galloway and other Mariam Appeal trustees for failing to make sufficient inquiries into the source of donations.

What a load of rubbish!

We have no evidence of this and the very person they needed to speak to in order that charges and accusations could be put to him and a response obtained – George Galloway – they never even had words with! Where is the natural justice? Where is the evidence of “sufficient” enquiry to be seen here?

The reality is that if you are one of Baby Bush’s cronies, you are given a free ride – oh by the way, did you know Father Bush works for the Saudi royal family? No clash of interests there then.

I am at a loss as to why this hatchet is continually handed on from one government or public body to another in an attempt to land a lucky blow.

Too straight our George is – that’s his crime!!