Monday, 9 December 2013

More than a whiff of hypocrisy?

There have been more than a whiff of hypocrisy  in  David Cameron, George Osborne and Commons Speaker John Bercow hailing   Nelson Mandela as an inspiration.
But throughout the 1980s, when they were young Tory activists, Margaret Thatcher was refusing to lift sanctions on South Africa’s racist government.
And as late as October 1987 she was dismissing Mr Mandela’s African National Congress party as “a typical terrorist organisation”.
Harry Phibbs, a Hammersmith councillor who was then prominent in the Federation Of Conservative Students  FCS, said.: 

“A group of people at Warwick University made stickers that were a parody of the stickers people were wearing saying ‘Free Nelson Mandela and all ANC prisoners’, which said ‘Hang Nelson Mandela and all ANC terrorists’.
“The motive was to disrupt the conference of the National Union of Students [NUS]. It was never proposed by the FCS officially. I suspect that it wasn’t even a view really held by the people wh
o produced that sticker. It was a rather immature way to stir things up.”
The FCS was disbanded by Norman Tebbit,  the party chairman. This was for publishing an article, penned by Harry Phibbs (above ), following Nikolai Tolstoy's accusation that former Conservative Prime Minister Harold Macmillan was complicit in war crimes for his involvement in the forced repatriation of Cossack prisoners of war to Soviet Russia in the aftermath of World War II.

Si it was disbanded not for backing apartheid but for attacking a former party leader. 

Defenders of  Cameron claim that in 1985 was just about to start university and never did become active in student politics – so was not a “top member” of FCS, nor involved in printing the slogan.
But my memories of the Conservative Students at one University during the period 1986-1989 was that they clearly had not changed  when "reformed".
Whilst s Student a a mature student at  Aberystwyth  I was generally shocked when Conservatives students 

  • Dressed in Springbok rugby jerseys in order to show their support for the South African apartheid regimes .Some of whom greeted each other with Nazi salutes claiming they were being ironic.
  • Racially abused a member of the Student Union Staff for which individual members were suspended from the Union.
  • Went on a drinking Binge to celebrate the rise of Adolf Hitler to power. Which was too much for the Conservatives 
  • themselves and they were disbanded.from the current association emerge.
I have no reason this was not replicated throughout the University system at the time.

Cameron et al may be innocent but some of those they associated with were guilty of supporting Apartheid  and if you can at least claim that Norman Tebbit  was not being hypocritical 

He said: 
“He (Mandela) was the leader of a political movement which had begun to resort to terrorism.”

But one wonders how many of those praising Mandela also condemned him in the past.
And how many preferred the Apartheid Regime that denied the majority of it Citizens the basic rights of democracy in being able to vote?

How many have really  changed?



Sunday, 8 December 2013

Note Toby Young but ignore his solutions

The  argument over Wales PiSA standing goes on and it at times like these we need Syniadau to repeat that... "the extremely strong relationship that exists in Wales, compared to more successful countries, between living in relative poverty and disadvantage and not doing well in PISA".

What we don't need is  the like of "Toby Young, co-founder of free school, claiming Welsh education system is 'a basket case' while health service is a 'death trap' and economy is 'in the toilet' so he can premote his own education agenda.

He writes ...
The poor showing of Wales in the Pisa international league tables published earlier this week is a reminder of just what a mess Labour has made of the Welsh education system. In 2006, Welsh schoolchildren were ranked 30th in maths, 29th in reading and 22nd in science. In the latest tests, they fell to 43rd in maths, 41st in reading and 36th in science. Wales isn't simply the worst performer in the UK, it's well below the OECD average.
The blame for this pitiful state of affairs can be laid squarely at the feet of the Labour Party, which has been in charge of education in Wales since 1999. The education reforms that successive governments have introduced in other parts of the UK in that time have left Wales largely untouched. League tables were abolished in 2001 and not a single academy or free school has been set up. As the Economist points out inthis damning analysis, parental choice in Wales is limited to deciding whether to send a child to a school where lessons are taught in English or Welsh. The country has indulged in what David Reynolds, an educationalist at the University of Southampton, describes as “producerism's last hurrah”. Hardly surprising, then, that 26 per cent of the Welsh population over 16 have no recognised qualifications, according to the 2011 census.
But education isn't the only devolved area that the Welsh National Assembly, which has been Labour-controlled since 2000, has messed up. The Welsh health system is, incredibly, even worse than the Welsh education system. As the Prime Minister pointed out in the House of Commons earlier this year, the Welsh NHS hasn't met a cancer target since 2008 or an A&E target since 2009. (FactCheck confirmed the first of these claims here.) The picture is no better when it comes to waiting lists. Between March and September of this year, the number of patients waiting more than nine months for treatment in Wales more than doubled, increasing from 5,414 to 11,672. The Welsh Ambulance Service has failed to hit its target of responding to 65 per cent of the most urgent calls within eight minutes for the past 16 months
It is embarrassing that a right wing journalist like Toby Young who has his own  agenda in education, should be  given this ammunition

 Young is the lead proposer and co-founder of the West London Free School, the first free school in Britain to sign a Funding Agreement with the Secretary of State for Education, and now serves as the chair of the charitable trust that established the school The trust opened a primary school in Hammersmith in September and has been approved by the Department for Education to open a second primary in Earls Court in 2014

We must ask is whether Young agenda is also Anti-Welsh or Anti-Labour. but clearly he ca mix both . Interestingly he doesn't point to the Scottish Government better PISA scores because that would mean praising both Labour and the SNP there to some extent.

But one thing we can't do is either listen to Young's solution of Free Schools  or believe defending Welsh Education from attacks by right wing English journalist means we have to defend Labours record.

We need a radical rethink over Education here the problem is that it would probably take a decade for any changes to show results and in the mean time the Toby Young's of this world will be gleefully claiming we are still failing.

But no change will come when Labour still hold the reins in this country we need a change of government but I bet it isn't what Toby Young would approve of.


Friday, 6 December 2013

Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela (18 July 1918 – 5 December 2013) World Statesman

This is the first time I've created to Blogs one after the other (Cardiff Election Results below).

But like many  I have to add my piece on the death of Nelson Mandela.




My first experience of him was as a 16 year old taking part in the  1969-70 Stop the tour demonstrations against the Sprinbbox Rugby team.

How could I even dream then when watching th1995 Nelson Mandela, in his first term as the South African President would be seen wearing a Springboax Rugby jersey uniting the whole nation.

Few people desevre the title of Statesman but Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela was truly one of the greats .

He showed us all dreams can come true and that it is more imprtant to bulid a future than reflect on the past even when you have sufferd great injustice.

R.I.P Mr Mandela you inspired not only your people but the world at large.

Riverside and Splott By - Elections Result


Riverside and Splott By - Elections Result

Riverside Electoral Division By-Election, 5th December - results
Candidate
Description
Votes Cast
BEER, Joel
Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition
   70
CROW, Aled
Welsh Conservative Party Candidate
  107
DONNE, Sian
Liberal Democrats/Democratiaid Rhyddfrydol
  58
GOULD, Elizabeth
Plaid Cymru - The Party of Wales
  773
WILLIAMS, Darren
Welsh Labour/Llafur Cymru
  1120 ELECTED
ZEIGLER, Simon
UKIP Wales/UKIP Cymru
  97
Candidate
Description
Votes Cast
JOHN, Elys
Independent
  94
MASON, Daniel Robert
Welsh Conservative Party
  86
MATTHEWS, Jamie
Liberal Democrats/Democratiaid Rhyddfrydol
  604
MORRIS, Brian
UKIP Wales
  209
STUBBS, Edward Joseph
Welsh Labour/Llafur Cymru
  706 ELECTED
WILLIAMS, Katrine
Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition
  80

The Libdems can take some comfort from this but for Plaid it's a bitter disappointment . For labour who have led a controversial regime on  Cardif Council  since the last election it shows that Labour Hegenomy seems to be unchallenged.

That said it does show that Plaid have despite this showing disappointment have still a presence in our Capital something which was quite unthinkable in recent memory.

Thursday, 5 December 2013

A Slice of Welsh PISA

On Tuesday, triennial Programme for International Student Assessment (Pisa) results showed Wales was at the bottom of the UK pile in key skills.
Teenagers were revealed to have scored lower in reading, maths and science than their contemporaries in England, Northern Ireland and Scotland.
Now it may be that before we find ourselves getting into a spiral of despair  or blame game
The figures are pretty stark with the UK itself  doing poorly  Overall, the UK ranked 26th out of 65 countries. Despite spending more per head on education than most, our results are flatlining. In maths, a British 15-year-old is a full three years behind a similar teenager in Shanghai.

Wales However comes out even worse
Overall:
  • Scotland scored 498 points
  • England scored 495 points
  • Northern Ireland scored 498 points
  • Wales scored 480 points
Reading:
  • Scotland scored 506 points
  • England scored 500 points
  • Northern Ireland scored 498 points
  • Wales scored 480 points
Science:
  • England scored 516 points
  • Scotland scored 513 points
  • Northern Ireland scored 507 points
  • Wales scored 491points

So it appears that this is not as some would claim a failure of devolution . Because Scotland at least is doing better.

The  problem for the Labour politicians running the Welsh Government. Firstly it is they who made PISA results such an important measure of progress in education and it's they who have been in charge of education here since the Assembly began sometimes with LibDem or Plaid help but they always held the Education remit  even when it was run with them in coalition governments.

Just a few weeks ago Carwyn was trying to persuade Scottish voters that they won't see a better education system by giving an example of his own governments...

....that is grown up politics. And that is the point about the nationalist case for independence – is it grown up politics?  I’m not sure that it is.What is the case for independence – a strong economy? No, the IFS has sunk that boat. Better health or education? No, both Scotland and Wales can already develop their own policies in these areas.In Wales, we have taken best practise from Scandinavia and introduced our Foundation Phase – a ‘learn through doing’ curriculum for our 3-7 year olds; we have the Youth Guarantee, which will ensure every young person in Wales has access to a place in post-16 education and training;
Carwyn Jones was forced to acknowledged that the PISA results for Wales are 'not good enough.' Responding to criticism from opponents during First Minister's Questions, he listed reforms that the Welsh Government had introduced since the last set of PISA figures.

But he agreed the figures were 'disappointing' and accepted the need to improve but said it will 'take some time for these measures to bear fruit.'

There are arguments that PISA is flawed but  if the world looks at us they will not be impressed.
It is perhaps ironic that Labour controlled Rhondda Cynon Taf are seeking to close my local Library as well us others in our County . Just as we fall further behind in reading.
It may be that what we need is for a fresh approach to Education here but that will need a change in the ruling party and that does not seem likely.
But we will continue to fall further behind and our government will continue to be disappointed but do nothing if we ourselves  do nothing and seek change in those who have ruined the opportunity Devolution has given them.


    Tuesday, 3 December 2013

    Fuel Poverty-Political Poverty.

    It probably says more about the Labour Party leadership when the only policy they seem to have come up with that has rattled the Con/LibDem Coalition is ED Miliband's plan for a two year freeze in fuel bills.

    The Coalition has been on the back foot over energy costs since Mr Miliband's announcement at his party conference in September that he intended to freeze prices for 20 months if Labour wins the next general election in 2015.

    So from early next year the cost of the Energy Company Obligation (ECO), an insulation scheme, will be reduced in a move that should shave £30 to £35 from bills.

    There will also be a taxpayer-funded £600 million rebate on the Warm Homes Discount, which helps those in fuel poverty, saving customer another £12 on average.

    Yippee. But of course it not money taken of the Energy Suppliers its a form of direct taxation transferred   to indirect taxation. 

    However the Coalition government will son be able to say that they have reduced the number of people in fuel poverty at a stroke.

    By  simply change the definition of what being poor is.


    The coalition government has been accused of "shifting the goalposts" to bring down the number of households classed as living in fuel poverty.
    Amendments to the Energy Bill would change definitions so that 2.4 million are classed as fuel poor rather than 3.2 million.
    Bloody clever 
    But to me one thing is clear. When this is the only issue that the government is forced to take action on, (even if it is by "shifting the goalposts") by attacks of the main opposition we are not only living in fuel poverty but political poverty.
    One idea from the Labour Leadership that has resonated in the media that has worried the coalition just one and only 18 months to go to the next election.
    And it wasn't that brilliant a two year freeze and then what A massive hike by the companies?
    When it is the poorer in our society who have suffered worst from the Coalition Cuts . Ed Miliband has chosen a safe battleground, But is it not time he started defending those who are being maligned by the Coalition and Media or is he scared of the taunts from Cameron that he leads the "Welfare Party".
    But then there no easy votes to be gained by doing this is there. So we have an opposition that offers nothing the poor and dispossessed preferring to appease Tory voters in marginal seats in the South of England  rather than those who have always voted for them. 

    In the Guardian on Saturday Kevin Mckenna attacked the The poverty of the Better Together campaign. His final words can be used throughout the UK but if I was Leanne Wood I would use them as a basis fo the  in the next election.
    "There are many reasons why Better Together would never dare to produce its own white paper entitled "Britain's Future". For how could any Scottish Labour supporter subscribe to a document that would talk of penalising the poor; cutting the taxes of the rich; allowing our defence and intelligence policies to resemble those of Texas and re-introducing a light touch for bankers? Not to mention leaving Europe and telling immigrants to go home".

    Monday, 2 December 2013

    Ukip's suicide in Scotland not yet replicated in Wales.

    It seems that Ukip have committed suicide in Scotland 


    According to the Herald UKIP chief Nigel Farage has sacked Scottish party leader Lord Christopher Monckton in an attempt to end infighting north of the Border.

    The move has prompted the chairman and chief fundraiser of Ukip in Scotland to quit in protest. The party's administrative body has also been dissolved.
    Monckton told the Sunday Herald: "There isn't any Ukip in Scotland. It's been wiped out."
    This newspaper recently revealed the internal divisions ripping apart the anti-Europe party in Scotland.
    Key figures, including Monckton and chairman Mike Scott-Hayward, believed a trio of senior party members, including former by-election candidate Otto Inglis, were plotting a takeover.
    The grievances came to a head when six of Ukip Scotland's nine shortlisted candidates for the European parliament elections, including Monckton, resigned.
    They did so in protest at Inglis's alleged tactics during the selection contest, which was eventually won by Farage ally David Coburn, who is Ukip's London chairman.
    Relations are now at an all-time low and last Monday, Farage fired Monckton by email.
    The party leader wrote: "After much thought and many weeks of dialogue between yourself, your committee and the officers of the party I have decided, with the support of the NEC, to remove from you the position of leader of Ukip Scotland."
    One thing you can say about Farage he doesn't pretend that Ukip in Scotland are a Scottish Party.

    In Wales alas Ukip  have a presence . Though only having  2 County Councillors they still have an MEP though John Bufton who wil be standing down next year. But there is no reason to give they will not retain that seat in the 2014 European Election.

    An indication o UKip strength might come from the to Council by-elections (Splot and Riverside) in Cardiff on Thursday.where  Ukip are standing in both wards .


    The threat to Labour however comes probably from the Liberal Democrats in Splot and Plaid  in Riverside.

    There no Plaid Candidate in Splot  and they seem to be concentrating on Riverside . Whilst although the LibDems are running a candidate in Riverside this seems to have not registered with their ALDC website as details of only the Splot candidate are given.

    Thursday will go some way to telling us if Plaid can reestablish themselves in Cardiff West and the LibDems start making the sort of gains that led them only recently to be the largest party on Cardiff Council.

    Or will Ukip take enough of the Anti-labour vote to scupper their ambitions.?

    IA failure for Ukip to match their progress in Byelections in England could lead to increased arguments that they are an English Party.

    They are clearly seen as such in Scotland hopefully Wales will flow suit.