So Gordon Brown has ordered a review into the Barnett formula which gives Scotland £1,500 extra per person than England, paid for inevitably by English taxpayers. To be honest, I doubt we'll hear anything back about it, in either a few months or a few years. Certainly so long as Labour remain in power, reliant on Scotland for their majority.
As much as this is a good thing to hear, under a Scottish Prime Minister elected in a Scottish constituency bugger all will be done, no matter what the conclusion made is. Especially considering that the Chancellor is Scottish as well.
Not to mention the SNP being right up Labour's arse, too.
So, no matter what Brown says, bugger all will actually happen.
07 March 2008
An End To The Money Transfer?
06 January 2008
SNP MPs Only Interested In Scotland
Alex Salmond is an MSP, First Minister of Scotland, and MP for Banff & Buchan. The Conservative Party recently called on him to stand down as an MP as he is treating his constituents "with contempt" after speaking in only 15 debates and voting in only 22% of divisions in the past year.
But what I found quite shocking is the statement that SNP MPs "only [take] part in votes on Scottish issues". What the hell? They are elected to represent their constituency in the national parliament on all issues. Not voting on legislation that only applies to England and Wales is good, but there are also a lot of issues that aren't "Scottish issues" but British issues, and affect all members of the electorate, wherever in the UK they live. So not participating in debates or voting on those issues is definitely showing contempt for their constituents and of Parliament.
Quite frankly, if SNP MPs only intend take part on votes on "Scottish issues" then they shouldn't stand for election to Westminster at all. They are simply not doing their job. If they only want to deal with Scottish issues, then they should only stand for election to the Scottish Parliament - not Westminster. They should either do their job as MPs properly or not at all.
Posted by ThunderDragon @ 11:44 am
Labels: Alex Salmond, Parliament, Scotland
13 December 2007
Fishier And Fishier In Scotland
More fishiness up in Scotland as the councillor who caused the rejection of Donald Trumps £1 billion golf course, which was later approved by Alex Salmond after he had a meeting with Trump's representative, has been sacked from his position as chairman of Aberdeenshire Council's infrastructure services committee.
Seems rather fishy to me.
And Salmond begins to crack under the pressure...
Posted by ThunderDragon @ 11:37 pm
Labels: Alex Salmond, Scotland
10 December 2007
Something Fishy In Salmond's Scotland?
In his first big political test since becoming First Minister of Scotland, Mr Salmond has been asked to explain the circumstances and timing of the meeting with Mr Trump’s representative at a hotel near Aberdeen last Monday. The next day, the Scottish Executive said that it was “calling in” the application for the project in Aberdeenshire, which had been rejected by local councillors the previous week...
Last night Mr Salmond denied any impropriety and insisted that he had attended the meeting in his capacity as MSP for Gordon. He said: “As the constituency MSP not only am I absolutely entitled but I have a bounden duty under the parliamentary code to meet people on all issues of importance to my constituency...
As First Minister I have been advised to make no public statement either for or against the proposed development, and I have abided by that to the letter.” (The Times)
Posted by ThunderDragon @ 12:33 am
Labels: Alex Salmond, Scotland
18 November 2007
Sorrowful Scotland And An Expectant England
Scotland's dram of getting to Euro 2008 has been ended by an Italian victory on Saturday. This is a real pity, they had been doing so well. But coming third in a group including France and Italy is successful indeed. To have got through, and causing the dropping out of either of those teams would have been incredible.
Whilst there was bad news for Scottish football on Saturday, there was good news for England, as Russia lost to Israel, putting England's chance of staying in the competition back into their own hands. To get through, England now need to just not lose to Croatia. So long as they get at least one point, then they are definitely in the main part of Euro 2008.
If Scotland had got through, there is no doubt that English supporters would have supported them in the competition had they got through, in any match except that was not vs England. But can Scottish supporters do the same? Unfortunately it doesn't seem likely.
18 September 2007
Britain To Follow Belguim's Route To Divorce?
Today is "Devolution Day" in Wales, a decade since the referendum narrowly in favour of devolution, which is now claimed by First Minister Rhodri Morgan to be the glue which unites Wales and allows it to "grow up". Bloggers such as Ordovicius want the Welsh Assembly to gain more powers and become a parliament like that in Scotland. I can but agree with him that it should be - and there should be an English Parliament as well.
But will - or could - this lead to the situation that Belgium is in now?
Despite increasingly desperate calls by Belgium's King Albert for national unity, the federal state has hit its worst crisis for 177 years after national elections on June 10 failed to produce a government and coalition talks descended into ugly squabbling between francophone Walloons and the Dutch-speaking Flemish...
At the core of Belgium's crisis is a democratic deficit hardwired into a federal system that institutionalises divisions between Flanders, in the north of the country, and the southern region of Wallonia.
Belgium's 10.5 million citizens vote along ethnic lines, there are no national political figures in the country's 11 parties and there are five parliaments organised on rigid regional and linguistic lines. (The Telegraph)
But the UK is in far more serious danger for as long as there is unequal devolution. There should be English, Scottish, and Welsh Parliaments all with equal powers, and equal sized constituencies for the federal government. That is the only way that the UK can prevent getting into a similar and as degrading state as Belgium currently is. Devolution must be equal or non-existent.
Sources: The Telegraph, icWales
Posted by ThunderDragon @ 9:50 pm
Labels: Democracy, Devolution, English Parliament, Scotland, Wales
07 September 2007
Pay If You're English
If you live in England, get ready to write yet another blank cheque for Scotland...
Scots who study north of the border will no longer have to pay a "graduate endowment" of £2,289 once they finish their course.
Students from other countries will still have to pay. This has angered critics, who believe English taxpayers are subsidising the Scots.
Plans to table the legislation, part of the 11 bills that Scottish ministers are planning for the next year, could come into force by April 2008....
EU students will also benefit as they must receive the same treatment as the indigenous population. Undergraduates from other parts of Britain will still be expected to pay £1,700 a year for their courses. (The Telegraph)
No matter if Wendy Alexander [Scottish Labour leader] thinks that the English shouldn't complain about Scotland living off of us, we will. Especially when the abuse of our taxes extends to such a level as £1,236 more on every person in Scotland.
As much as Salmond may not like it [politically, though obviously not financially], Scotland is still part of the UK. As such, to discriminate in such a way against students from England is utterly wrong.
This is yet another example of the educational apartheid in Britain. Scottish students shouldn't get university - or any other - education on a different financial basis, such as no Student Loans for Scottish students, to that which exists in the rest of the United Kingdom. We are one state, under one Government, even if Salmond disagrees even on that level with his pronouncement of the "rebranding" of the Scottish Executive as the Scottish Government with £100,000 of English money.
Has Salmond never heard of equality - as in where everyone is equal? Apparently not.
Source: The Telegraph
01 September 2007
England Shouldn't Complain About Scotland's Financial Benefiting?
The second leader of a Labour party to be crowned in the last few months is telling the English to stop complaining about the extra money that goes to Scotland:
Figures from the Scottish Executive show that the Government spends £1,236 more on every person in Scotland than it does in England. But Ms Alexander said: “It does not come down to numbers. Every part of the UK outside London is a net beneficiary from the Exchequer, and Scotland does not get a uniquely good deal.
“That argument, that England would be better off without Scotland, would lead you to declare UDI for London . . . and would lead to California seceding from the rest of the United States.” (The Times)
Wendy Alexander is trying to switch the debate round and say that if you support the reorganisation of the extremely disproportionate level of public funding in Scotland then you can't be a Unionist, but instead must, by her definition, be anti-Union. I'm sorry, but that is one of the worst arguments I have ever heard.
Other regions of the UK benefit from London in far smaller numbers and not because a formula says that they deserve more money. The Barnett formula isn't even based on need, but population numbers, whilst the "redistribution" everywhere else is.
To claim that the people of England should "stop whingeing" over the excessive extra expenditure that is spent in Scotland is ignoring the very simple fact that it creates huge inequalities within this state. Whilst to claim that the same amount of public expenditure should be allocated to every individual would obviously not be appropriate or effective, it should be based far more on what is actually needed in an area.
The Scottish wanted devolution and they got it. If they want independence then they'll have to survive without English subsidisation. So why not start now?
Source: The Times
Posted by ThunderDragon @ 5:44 pm
Labels: Devolution, Money, Scotland, Taxes
21 August 2007
Another Labour Coronation
The Labour Party are holding another coronation. After Gordon Brown was unopposed for the leadership of the main party, the same is happening in the Scottish Labour Party:
Nominations for the post will close at noon, with Ms Alexander, 44, the only candidate...
Her leadership is expected to be formally confirmed at a special conference of MSPs, MPs, union leaders and party members next month...
Left wingers have failed to raise the six MSPs needed to sign the nomination papers for any challenger in the leadership contest. (BBC)
This is despite Wendy Alexander being wanted as Scotland's First Minister by only 7% of Scottish voters, behind Alex Salmond on 38% and even her predecessor Jack McConnell, who is off to Malawi, on 10%. She is level with Annabel Goldie, the Scottish Conservative leader, and with only Nicol Stephen, leader of the Scottish Liberal Democrats, being more unpopular, with just 5% wanting him to be First Minister.
This spate of coronations in the Labour Party, when contrasted with the last leadership elections in the other main parties, is odd. David Cameron and Ming Campbell had to actually fight and be elected to become the leaders of their parties. Thus, it can mean one of three things: either Gordon Brown and Wendy Alexander really are "head and shoulders" above any other possible candidates, including their own colleagues, that there is a concerted attempt to get and keep Brown and his cronies in the top positions in the Labour Party, or no-one dares challenge anyone else. None of these are good options, really.
If Brown and Alexander really are "head and shoulders" above the others, then that is (a) a damning indictment of Labour talent, and (b) means that when they're gone, Labour really are screwed. If none of their colleagues are even good enough to even challenge for the leadership, why are they good enough for a high-powered Cabinet job?
Sources: BBC, The Times
Posted by ThunderDragon @ 11:13 am
Labels: David Cameron, Election, Gordon Brown, Labour Party, Menzies Campbell, Scotland
17 August 2007
It's "Unfair" All Right!
It seems that even some on the Left are coming around to the inherent problems with the current constitutional situation:
Gordon Brown, himself a Scottish MP, was urged by a Left-of-Centre think-tank [IPPR] to remedy the perceived constitutional unfairness stemming from the creation of the Scottish Parliament in 1999.
As a result of devolution, English MPs can no longer vote on key issues such as health and education in Scotland. But Scottish MPs at Westminster, the majority of whom are Labour, can still have decisive say on English domestic policy...
The Conservatives have previously called for a system of "English votes for English laws" as their solution to what is known in constitutional terms as the West Lothian Question. That would involve only MPs representing seats in England being able to vote on purely English-legislation...
[T]he IPPR report, entitled The End of the Union?, said "they [the Scottish] are still over-represented compared to England". (The Telegraph)
The "English votes for English laws" idea can only possibly work as an immediate, short-term solution. Fundamentally, the entire political system in the UK needs some sort of overhaul to reconcile devolution to all constituent parts of the United Kingdom and fit it with out constitution. The IPPR idea of a "British Constitutional Convention" is a good one. Instead of piecemeal approaches to change, the entire system needs to be considered as a whole.
An "English votes for English laws" programme should be instituted immediately whilst considerations on the final format of the solution is decided. This is the minimum requirement. As far as I am concerned, an English Parliament is essential. It does require any [or certainly many] extra politicians, as MPs could carry out their role in both devolved and national parliaments. Neither would an English parliament need a new building - Westminster Palace can serve fine for both. English nationalism is growing, and must be heeded - sooner or later.
Source: The Telegraph
Posted by ThunderDragon @ 9:15 pm
Labels: Democracy, Devolution, English Parliament, Scotland, Wales
15 August 2007
How Much Of The UK To Vote On It's Future?
If there is a referendum on Scottish independence, should the rest of the UK get a vote? The SNP says not:
Speaking as he unveiled a White Paper on independence, Alex Salmond, Scotland's First Minister, said only Scots would be given a vote in a referendum on the issue.
British politicians, including Margaret Thatcher, had accepted that the question of self-determination was for the people of Scotland alone to choose, he said. (The Telegraph)
You can say 'only the Scots should vote because it's their country'. This is indeed true - it is Scotland, and they are deciding on their future. However, you can also say 'not only the Scots are affected by this decision, but the entire UK.' Which is also true - if the Scottish vote for independence [seemingly unlikely since "fewer than 30%" support it] it will effect both England and Wales as well. Since a vote for Scottish independence would thus greatly effect England and Wales as well, should not the people in those countries have a say too?
Both sides have good arguments. The situation really is a conundrum. Democracy says that "the people" should decide - but in this case, who the hell are the people? Are "the people" those of the UK, or of Scotland? If only Scots are "the people" in this case, who are "the Scots"? Those of Scottish ancestry, those born in Scotland, those who live in Scotland? Theoretically, if you decide that it is only "the Scots" who should get to vote, you could say that anyone who could have a claim to citizenship of an independent Scotland should get to vote as well.
One of the problems with democracy is defining "the people". I have done some rather crude characterisations above, and in the end it just means that the issue is actually even more clouded than before! Whilst thinking about this topic before writing, I have moved positions between just those in Scotland, to the electorate of the entire UK, and back again, and along some various complicated ideas in-between.
What is the answer? The best conclusion that I can reach is that I just don't know. The simplest, obvious, answer is to say just those in Scotland, but that raises issues about sovereignty and the constitution of "the people" in a democracy. But to say that the referendum should be UK-wide opens just asa many, if not more and possibly more serious ones.
Source: The Telegraph
Posted by ThunderDragon @ 10:09 pm
Labels: Democracy, Devolution, Scotland
14 August 2007
Just Let Them Vote!
The SNP have launched a "national conversation" in Scotland on the issue of Scottish independence. Very simply, we should just let them vote. It took me a while tor each this decision because my gut, knee-jerk reaction was to say "no" simply because it could be divisive. But I have moved away from that opinion.
I am a Unionist, but the debate over Scottish independence seems that it needs to be had - and sooner is better than later. Opinion polls are showing that the majority of Scottish voters do not favour independence from the United Kingdom. They should have this referendum, held with a caveat that this decision would be final if the vote came out against independence. Another caveat that should be added in is that for independence to be voted for, it would require a minimum of 40% or so of the entire electorate, whether or not they voted - either that or compulsory voting [something which I am usually against] be required.
I don't think that the SNP would win a referendum on independence. I think that the majority of the Scottish population wants the Union to continue, and so if they have their referendum and lose, then they will at least content themselves with the current level of devolution.
Another reason that I support the idea of a referendum on Scottish independence is that it is likely to stir English nationalism up as well,. and could very easily lead to the establishment of an English Parliament with the same powers as the Scottish one.
Sources: BBC, The Times, The Telegraph
Posted by ThunderDragon @ 10:24 pm
Labels: Democracy, Devolution, Scotland
29 July 2007
Which Flag To Fly?
Gordon Brown announced back in July that the Union flag could now be flown from public buildings on any day, rather than the previous restrictions of 18 days a year. However, this now seems to not apply to Scotland:
"Proposals to fly the Union flag every day on public buildings are set not to apply to Scottish Executive sites.Whilst it is understandable that on a few places, such as Holyrood, the Saltire [the Scottish flag] be flown alongside the Union flag, it should not replace it. We are all still in the United Kingdom, whichever part you may be in.
The government published the plans earlier this week, and they follow Gordon Brown raising the issue of celebrating Britishness in January.
The SNP said Justice Secretary Jack Straw assured the policy would not cover executive buildings.
SNP leader Alex Salmond, now first minister, previously said Britishness "went bust long ago" in Scotland." (BBC)
What this shows mostly, however, is that despite Gordon Brown's oft-made commitment to Britishness, he is still at heart a Scot - and will give things to Scotland that he won't to England. I have no problem at all with Scottish public buildings being allowed to fly to Saltire - but it should not be allowed as a replacement for the Union flag. And if Scottish public buildings can fly the Saltire, then English public buildings should be allowed to fly the St. George's Cross, and Welsh public buildings the Red Dragon.
We are all supposed to be equal partners in the Union - yet inequality is rampant. If England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland are equal constituents of the United Kingdom, then they should all have the same rights and abilities. And it is the English who lose out again and again. It is not acceptable.
Source: BBC
Posted by ThunderDragon @ 5:14 pm
Labels: Britishness, Devolution, Gordon Brown, Scotland, Wales
21 June 2007
British Educational Apartheid
Yet more examples of inequalities within the Union, and when the Scottish Parliament is spending English money to give Scotland superior services. This time is it pledging English money to create an educational apartheid within Britain:
"Scottish Executive plans to cut class sizes north of the Border to 18, while children in England remain in groups of 30, sparked accusations of “educational apartheid” last night.So whilst more than 23,000 children in English schools suffer in classes of more than 30 children, the Scottish Executive plan to use English money to give children in Scottish schools a far superior primary education, with class sizes of just 18. Even my university seminars had 15 students in them!
Fiona Hyslop, Scotland’s Education Minister, promised to recruit 300 extra teachers for nurseries and primary schools in the coming year. A total of £25 million would be spent, she said, cutting the number of pupils in classes in the first three years of primary school from 25 to 18.
The move provoked cries of a postcode lottery among critics in England, who claimed that taxpayers across Britain would pay for an improvement available only in Scotland." (The Times)
Like I said before, I have no problem with the Scottish Executive doing this - and I applaud the aims - but not when it is English taxpayers' money that is funding a far superior educational situation for Scottish kids. That is where the problem lies, and that is what the problem with the current devolutional situation is. Conditions should be equal across the entire UK, and definitely not so specifically distorted.
Source: The Times, The Telegraph
Posted by ThunderDragon @ 7:03 pm
Labels: Absurdity, Devolution, Politics, Scotland
15 June 2007
MSPs Oppose Trident. But No-One Cares.
"The Scottish Parliament has voted against renewing Trident nuclear weapons - the first time Holyrood has taken a clear position on the issue.So why do it?! What is the point?!
The motion, backed by 71 MSPs to 16, with 39 abstentions, also congratulated the majority of Scots MPs for voting against a replacement system.
But it acknowledged that renewal was the responsibility of Westminster." (BBC)
Defence is not a devolved issue. Members of the Scottish Parliament have no more say on whether Britain renews Trident or not than any other citizen of the UK. They have no more say than I or you, and their opinion means no more on this issue.
Britain cannot and must not lose its nuclear deterrent. To do so would be utter foolishness. It is a strategic necessity in the modern world - and without it, Britain would have less power on the world stage.
It is nothing to do with the Scottish Parliament whether or not Trident is replaced. In the discussion it was proposed that Holyrood should use its powers to prevent the movement of nuclear weapons on Scotland's roads and seas. But since this is a defence issue, I don't think they have any.
The Scottish Parliament should concentrate on dealing with the issues that they control - preferably without requiring more and more English money - but that seems unlikely as they just keep on doing it. If they want to prove that Scotland can survive independently, disown the Barnett formula.
Source: BBC
12 June 2007
Can The Union Survive The Inequality?
Is it possible to the United Kingdom to survive the inequalities that exist within it - all of which are to the detriment of the largest constituent part of it, and which provides the funding for the inequalities as well?
Government has been devolved to both Scotland and Wales, with the Scottish Parliament and Welsh Assembly - and yet England lacks any form of self-government as an individual country. This is not acceptable, not in the short-term and certainly not in the long term. The very least that should - nay, must - happen is that any Bill in the UK Parliament that only affects England should only be voted on by MPs with constituencies in England [and any that affect only England and Wales should only be voted on by MPs elected by constituencies in those countries]. This is, of course, a minimum - and only a viable alternative until a long-term solution of an English Parliament is reached.
What is most disturbing is the extent to which inequality is rampant within the United Kingdom. Two days ago I blogged on the fact that Scottish university students are gong to get free education - and grants - at the expense of taxpayers in England, just as student debt breaks through the £3 billion mark. Like I said there, and I will repeat again:
It really is hypocritical that the Scottish Nationalist Party will fund their policy on free university education through funding that they would not have were they an independent state. If they want to prove that they can act and live as an economically viable independent state, then they should only use Scottish-raised taxes to fund the elements of Scottish policy on which the Scottish Parliament currently controls.It is just plain wrong when taxpayers in England are funding a policy of free university education in Scotland when England's own student debt problem is soaring. Especially ironic since it is the SNP who are doing it. How can Scotland survive independently if they can't even fund their policies in the areas they already control?!
If the SNP were to provide free university education from their own taxes, I could have no opposition to it - and I would in fact applaud their prioritising. But when they plan to provide free university education off English taxes when English student debt has breached £3 billion, I can have nothing but contempt for their hypocrisy and for this government for allowing it to happen.
And then there is this story on health:
"A drug that improves the eyesight of almost a third of people suffering from the biggest cause of blindness in Britain will be available on the NHS in Scotland from today, but not in England. While Scottish patients with wet age-related macular degeneration (AMD) will receive free Lucentis injections, thousands living south of the border could go blind if they cannot find up to £28,000 to obtain the treatment privately." (The Telegraph)So people in Scotland with this problem get drugs, but not those in England. Nice and equal that, eh?
If these inequalities do not get sorted soon, then I am not sure whether the Union can survive. I am even beginning to question whether it should if this is the state in which it will continue to exist - with a minority having such electoral power over the majority. And I haven't even started on the West Lothian Question, with the still huge over-representation of Scotland and Wales in the Commons, despite having devolved government. There's enough material there for an entire rant on that alone, even disregarding everything else.
Click here to sign the petition for an English Parliament.
Posted by ThunderDragon @ 3:03 pm
Labels: Devolution, English Parliament, Inequality, Scotland
10 June 2007
Student Loans and Student Debt
Student debt, for the first time, has topped £3 billion. Yes, three billion pounds of debt owed by students, a rise of more than £620 million owed by undergraduate in England. This student debt of £3 billion is three times that owed by students in 1997.
Whilst Student Loans may be the cheapest loan anyone is likely ever to get [as interest is only at the rate of inflation] it is not nice to know that there is such a huge amount of debt hanging around your debt. I have more than £9,000 of student loans debt and several thousand pounds of other debt accrued through my time as a student [finally ending in September]. And first-years now will end their time at university with at least £18,000 of student loans debt - so from that perspective, I'm lucky - although my younger brother isn't. I can, however, understand that to some extent students loans are necessary to fund the massive increase in the number of students - despite the fact that I think it is not a good thing.
What really annoys me is that Scottish students are set to have no fees at all - and most annoyingly, funded by English taxes:
"BRITISH taxpayers are to meet the £2 billion cost of reintroducing free university education in Scotland – but students from England and Wales will still have to pay the full fees.It is outrageous that Scottish students get free education whilst English and Welsh students are paying through the nose, especially when the money to make it possible for this to happen is coming from England and Wales. It really is hypocritical that the Scottish Nationalist Party will fund their policy on free university education through funding that they would not have were they an independent state. If they want to prove that they can act and live as an economically viable independent state, then they should only use Scottish-raised taxes to fund the elements of Scottish policy on which the Scottish Parliament currently controls.
Under plans to be announced by the Scottish executive on Wednesday, Scottish students who now pay £2,000 on graduation will be charged nothing from 2009. From 2011 at the latest they will also see loans wiped out and maintenance grants reintroduced." (The Times)
If the SNP were to provide free university education from their own taxes, I could have no opposition to it - and I would in fact applaud their prioritising. But when they plan to provide free university education off English taxes when English student debt has breached £3 billion, I can have nothing but contempt for their hypocrisy and for this government for allowing it to happen.
That a British Prime Minister can have his constituency where his own educational policies are not applied, and where indeed the opposite is happening, I don't understand either.
Sources: The Telegraph, The Times
Posted by ThunderDragon @ 2:52 pm
Labels: Devolution, Education, Inequality, Money, Scotland, Students