Posts Tagged ‘Labour’
Electoral reform
Posted by: Gav in Gavin Ayling's blog on February 7th, 2010
There has been plenty of comment recently deriding Gordon Brown for suddenly discovering electoral reform. The naive part of me allows me to believe that the expenses ‘scandal’ may have influenced his opinion slightly, but the alleged comments by Blair to Ashdown about Brown’s veto of electoral reform does make one wonder…
I have deliberately kept posts light of late because there are plenty of people commenting on these topics, and my lone voice would not normally add too much. In this case, though, I think it’s important to comment because the stakes are so high.
I am delighted that a more proportional system could be in place after the next election and I am delighted that, despite appropriate reservations (like that the proposals are not the best system and don’t go far enough), the Liberal Democrats are in favour of the proposals.
One thing does trouble me though. And it’s nonsense articles like this from the Times. There’s no way people would vote in the same way if there was ATV.
I suspect, for example, that more first votes would go to smaller parties like UKIP and the Cannabis Alliance. I suspect second choices would not follow the patterns that experts expect; as far as I am aware, pollsters do not actually check on second preferences routinely at the moment.
There are many people, I am sure, who do not bother to vote LibDem in Tory/Labour seats. And many people who don’t bother to vote Labour in LibDem/Tory seats. But there are probably a similar number who don’t vote for the smaller party because there’s no hope of them getting in. It is simply wrong to extrapolate from FPTP and add some unsupported assumptions RE: second-choices.
But electoral reform needs to happen before I can be proved right. Which I am
The NHS for the US
Posted by: Gav in Gavin Ayling's blog on August 15th, 2009
The US has polarised the argument about the NHS and made unreasonable arguments the order of the day.
Just because I say (as I have in the real world) that the NHS doesn’t do a particularly good or efficient job does not mean to suggest I am criticising the NHS’s staff or that I think it is anything but a moral imperative that people are treated for injuries and ailments regardless of their ability to pay. It’s just that I believe that the inevitable redundancy required in genuine competition would provide a better, more efficient and, if well-regulated, a fairer healthcare solution for the British people.
There are many problems in the UK which result in our current levels of excessive taxation, and the NHS is just one of the bigger of those problems. Even if people thought that the current levels of taxation were reasonable, shouldn’t we have at least one service provided by them that is world class?
For goodness sake (BNP)
Posted by: Gav in Gavin Ayling's blog on June 11th, 2009
Labour Party plays into the hands of racist bigots.
The new imperative: freedom
Posted by: Gav in Gavin Ayling's blog on February 16th, 2009
There are times, when you write a blog, that you wonder whether you get a little carried away, a little over obsessed with a particular concept or theme. There is a risk that I have started to become overly concerned about civil liberties.
Obviously I don’t think my views are being skewed but I am willing to accept that they may be.
For example, it would be easy to think that the Serious Crime Act 2007 (SCA), the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act (RIPA), amendments to the Freedom of Information Act (FOI), the Anti-terrorism, Crime and Security Act 2001 and the Terrorism Act 2000 (TA2000) are leading inexorably towards a police state.
A new ban on taking photographs of police; reports that in Brighton, political activists were filmed doing nothing wrong entering an environmental meeting; allegations that stop and search under the TA2000 are being used more than 99% of the time against non-terrorists… etc. could lead a naive person to imagine that the government, and maybe Her Majesty’s police have decided that free and open debate amongst proles is a danger to the status quo.
This is worth a read from today’s Guardian. I don’t believe, personally, that it over eggs the pudding.
The time is now for the Conservatives (and the Lib Dems minus Chris Huhne) to start making some noise about freedom. It is time for the people to demand the return of their lost freedoms. It is time to focus on the most important issues.
The EU has been called the EUSSR by those who understand its methods and how it is designed. But the UK is fast approaching the same sort of controls as there are in China and Airstrip One.
On a lighter note (and with an important, if less-important, message):
Freedom under grave threat
Posted by: Gav in Gavin Ayling's blog on February 12th, 2009
I was once described, by the leader of Adur District Council, as a right-wing anarchist. And he may be right — much of what government and Councils do I consider an imposition on freedom.
I have expressed, to the dismay of the Conservatives, my distress that civilian-enforcement of parking restrictions will be introduced in Shoreham, Lancing, Sompting and Southwick. I express, publicly and often, my dismay that there is no party that promises to repeal or amend the Road Traffic Act 1991 and to remove charges for parking on public roads.
But these concerns are nothing — less than nothing — when we, as a country, support the oppression of freedom of speech.
Geert Wilders made some unfortunate comparisons between the Qu’ran and Mein Kampf. Now I cannot pretend to have read either but that does not matter to me. The principle here is that a man of conviction, who criticised a religion not a race, has been stopped from entering this country.
Worse, the Liberal Democrats, the Liberal Democrats support this ban (Chris Huhne’s quote).
As I said in 2006, we are under attack by people who would rather control our thoughts and our actions. It’s not enough that we must respect those who do not respect us by law; we must now not say anything against a book written 1,100 years ago. Presumably if I said that the writings of the Ancient Greeks were nonsense, I would not be roundly assaulted by the machines of state, but if I dare criticise a more modern religion I must be censored by the Orwellian machinery?
As I say, I have not read the holy book of Islam or the full-text of the frightening witterings of Germany’s most famous mass-murderer, but some points should be made about Geert Wilder’s claims.
- The Old Testament could safely be described as fascist if taken literally
- The principles of Islamic Finance that I have recently studied are about fair trade and commerce — fairer trade than the Western fiscal model
- Islam is a religion that, unlike Judaism and Hinduism, can be practised by anyone who manages to find faith in the God of Muhammed
- Criticising a religion, and especially Christianity or Islam, is not the same as criticising a race
I suspect that none of those points could be competently criticised as they are not opinions (okay, maybe the first one but then read Leviticus and Exodus and come back to me), but facts.
Some people accept, and I have to say, I have some sympathy here, that there are things people can say that can manipulate people and endanger other peoples’ lives. It is possible, but to criticise a religion (no matter how specifically) is not to tell people to attack any group or individual. Of itself I can see no way that comparing the Qu’ran to Mein Kampf (or by showing video of appalling atrocities committed in the name of Islam) has placed any individual or group in danger (except maybe Geert himself — from his government, ours and the misguided Muslims that he shows).
I know some Muslims (not many, I grant you, and surely not enough to make any statistical sense) and they are not, as a group, different to any other group. You could find, within any organisation, people who would do bad things or twist the meaning or exaggerate and in this respect Islam is no different. In the same way, a group of people who would normally be expected to be in favour of free speech (the Liberal Democrats) have amongst them the mealy-mouthed Chris Huhne.
Having watched a part of Fitna, Wilder’s video, the quotes he gives are not dissimilar from quotes you would find in the Old Testament of the Bible. If Wilder is guilty of anything, he is guilty of suggesting that it is only Islam which, if its Holy Books were taken literally, could be used to commit atrocities.
It is not news that the verbatim words of some religious texts could be used to commit acts of violence. I don’t have the answers but I do know that blocking freedom of speech is not the answer to greater understanding and liberalism in those Islamic countries that we, as a nation, do not count amongst our friends.
I don’t know how much we can trust the claims of the BBC’s Science and Islam programme but if we can, then we must know that Fitna is over the top; that Islam allowed other religions to live alongside it; and that the aggression in the passages that Wilder quotes (and that could be quoted, as I said, just as easily from the Old Testament of the Bible) was not acted upon even shortly after the Prophet passed on his message.
But it is key, is it not, that I can only make these comments, only criticise Wilder, only criticise Islamic extremists, only criticise people who believe in God (any God), only question people who would do something only because their Rabbi, Mullah, Priest, Vicar or whatever tells them to… I can only make these comments, if the other side is available. We cannot debate without hearing all sides.
How could I convince someone on a doorstep in Crawley (as I did at an election in 2006) that the BNP is not for them if the things that the BNP believe and promote are not public knowledge, if what they say cannot be criticised? The same would be true of Respect, if their version of political insanity was under threat of state-censure.
We need free speech in order to ensure all other forms of freedom and I demand it. We must all demand it. We must all vote tactically at every opportunity, to ensure that this Labour government does not continue on its path.
See also montanareddog’s comments on the Guardian.
Final thoughts “A spokesman for the Conservative Party said it did not wish to comment.” according to the Daily Malice.
Tim Loughton: a minority in a good sense
Posted by: Gav in Gavin Ayling's blog on January 21st, 2009
It appears that our MP (here in the constituency of Shoreham & East Worthing), Tim Loughton, is in a minority of one notable MPs on the Conservative side against an amendment to the Freedom of Information Act which would allow MPs and Peers, and only MPs and Peers, to be exempt from the Act.
This from the Guardian:
Last night Tory opposition was also growing with Tim Loughton, the Tory frontbench spokesman on children and MP for Worthing East and Shoreham, cancelling a visit to Birmingham so he could oppose the proposal and Lord Baker, the Tory former cabinet minister, deciding to vote against the measure in the Lords.
At least some politicians appear to care about right and wrong — it’s a shame so many of them are in opposition.
Let’s hope David Cameron can be convinced not to abstain, but instead to show that he believes in democracy and whip up a vote against Gordon Brown’s abuse of power.
England — a nation it’s official
Posted by: Gav in Gavin Ayling's blog on January 12th, 2009
Well this is clearly absolute nonsense.
I’ve lost some of my motivation to resolve the ‘English problem’ because I have realised when talking to normal people that there are more important things in their priority lists (like high taxes and, for them, other perceived ills).
But when the government refuses to answer the question put forward in a perfectly reasonable petition it is asking for my ire.
Consider this sentence from their response: “People in the UK share common citizenship rights, which express in political, legal and social terms what it means to be from the UK.”
Since when exactly? Since 1998 Scottish and Welsh citizens have gained immeasurably in the form of free (read: paid for by English tax payers) prescriptions, free bus travel (genuinely free, unlike the Whitehall imposed version in England which comes out of English Council tax payer’s pockets, the Scottish version is paid for by the Barnet formula), free nursing home care and free university education to name the key items.
See their response here.
What they need to do (now)
Posted by: Gav in Gavin Ayling's blog on October 29th, 2008
Why should I say anything when others do a better job. See what Money Marketing have to say about the yacht.





