Wednesday, 23 May 2007

Poverty Target Will Be Missed

According to a report recently published by Barnado's, the government is on track to fail to fulfill its own targets to halve child poverty by 2010.

Eight years ago, Tony Blair pledged to drastically reduce child poverty. While the number of children living in poverty steadily fell during the late '90s, the progress that had been made has now stalled and estimates suggest that the government need to earmark an extra £3.8billion to meet the targets that it set itself -- less than half of the cost of hosting the 2010 Olympics.

The report also claims that children in poverty suffer more health problems than their counterparts from more affluent families, attain worse examination results and are more likely grow into an adult life consisting of unemployment and debt. Since the NHS is currently facing an unparralleled budget crisis, which is only going to grow worse with out current population growth rates, surely it would make sense to invest the money and nip future problems in the bud?

See: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/6682029.stm

Friday, 18 May 2007

Tony: Then & Now

There's an interesting article on the Telegraph's website detailing the differences between the Tony before power and the Blair that we know today.

As an example:

On Oct 30, 1994, Mr Blair said:


"I support the Prime Minister's establishment of the Nolan inquiry into standards of conduct in public life, but its remit is narrow.

In at least one crucial respect it is seriously flawed, as the funding of political parties is excluded from investigation. Yet this issue best symbolises the decline in standards in political life. This is not a partisan point. There is legitimate concern from all sections of the population that the governing party is being funded from undeclared sources of private and corporate wealth, much from overseas. The Conservatives' unwillingness to declare the names behind large donations is hard to justify. We would ensure that all donations above £5,000 had to be declared, and that corporate donations were subject to shareholders' approval. Of course, trades unions give money to the Labour Party and sponsor MPs. We must nail the lie that this is remotely equivalent. Money is given openly and declared in our accounts."

Now

Labour is embroiled in the so-called "loans for peerages" scandal, with Scotland Yard investigating whether the party sold honours or other favours, such as lucrative government contracts, in return for money. Tony Blair has admitted exploiting a loophole in the party funding rules he introduced after coming to power in 1997 to secure £14 million in "secret" loans to fund Labour's general election campaign last year. He then nominated for peerages four of the businessmen who made loans - but did not inform the independent House of Lords Appointments Commission of their financial link to the Labour Party.


(see: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml;jsessionid=TFKD0Y131IEHJQFIQMGCFF4AVCBQUIV0?xml=/news/2006/03/31/nblair131.xml&page=2 for the rest of the article)

Iraq: A Legacy Of Failure

At least six of the ten years of Tony has been spent at war. Apart from our usual presence in hotspots needing UN intervention, most of our fighting has been done to support America and cement our special relationship with them.
Blair had visions of Britain being the bridge between America and Europe: we're tied to the EU but remain America's largest foriegn investor. We're physically closer to Paris than Pennsylvania, but we're culturally nearer to New York than Nuremberg. It made sense for Britain to bridge the gap between the two powers and help negotiate treaties between the two that ensured commonality in purpose.

Unfortunately, the Iraq war happened. Taking sides with America alienated us from our two biggest rivals in the EU, as France and Germany's concerns at the UN were swept aside and ignored. To make things worse, Tony displayed no control over the US -- Bush was going to war despite lack of evidence of any involvement in terror and lack of public support from both sides of the Atlantic, and he was taking us with him.

Rather than help build a bridge between Europe and the US, Blair helped enlarge the divide. And he did so by capitulating to Bush so cravenly that he lost respect amongst his voters, respect from our EU allies. From that momoent, we no longer had a truly special relationship with the States, we were simply at their beck and call.

As Professor Victor Bulmer-Thomas, Head of the Chatham House think tank, has stated "The post 9/11 decision to invade Iraq was a terrible mistake and the current debacle will have policy repercussions for many years to come," he said. "Tony Blair's successor will not be able to offer unconditional support for US initiatives in foreign policy and a rebalancing of the UK's foreign policy between the US and Europe will have to take place." (see: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml;jsessionid=C2NMURAQ3TVQFQFIQMGCFF4AVCBQUIV0?xml=/news/2006/12/19/wpal119.xml

Thursday, 17 May 2007

Judges "May Be Forced Into Lighter Sentences"

As the Home Office has now been split into two seperate entities, their are fears that the new Ministry of Justice will lead to shorter prison sentances being passed on convicted criminals.

Because of the way that the split has occured, the Prison Service and the Courts Service are now included in the same budget, meaning that the ministry will have to chose between cutting staff levels within the Courts system or setting shorter custodial sentances.

Lord Phillips, the Lord Chief Justice, has some concerns quoted in the Tlegraph article available at the following link: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/05/08/njudges08.xml.

One interesting aspect that is revealed within the article, and something that is indicative o fLabour policy ni general is the fact that due to prison overcrowding the Government has already been attemptting to persuade judges to pass shirter sentances, but these moves have been largely ignored because recent legislation has also required them to pass indefinate sentances on a wider variety of offenses. It's almost like the Government doesn't really know what its doing and is someone else can make sense of their conflicting decisions....

Wednesday, 16 May 2007

Brown Admits Mistakes

Even Gordon Brown admits that the Blair years have been full of mistakes. Embarking on his own leadership campaign (surely, the most one-sided race since Roadrunner last led Wile E. Coyote through Acme Canyon), Brown has hinted at a review of ID cards, admitted that mistakes have been made in Iraq and vowed to end the cult of celebrity.

The Telegraph reported on the launch of Brown's leadership campaign (see: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/05/12/nbrown12.xml) where he distanced himself from the spin and image obsession of Blair's New Labour and said that he "had never believed that politics was about celebrity."

Of course he didn't.

You might be churlish enough to think that the reason Brown wants to end the cult of personality is because the man lacks one of his own, that it has been Blair's persona that has carried the Labour Party through the last couple of General Elections and that the party is going to struggle to win a fourth successive election with Gordon Brown at the helm. But, as shadow Chancellor George Osbourne pointed out on a recent edition of The Politics Show (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/politics_show/6640417.stm) Brown has not been adverse to using spin himself.

For example, announcing the last Budget as being a tax cutting exercise when figures reveal that the drop in income tax was more than matched by rises in a hundred other taxable items. Or his announcement that his government would build 100,000 environmentally friendly homes when the same announcement was made a year ago by housing minister, Yvette Cooper.

The problem Brown is going to face is a simple one. I don't know about you, but I can't help but think of Dad's Army when I think of the Labour Party. Tony Blair is Private Joe Walker, the black-marketeer. He's a likeable enough bloke, but you wouldn't trust him with your rations (or your sister) for fear that he'd sell them off. Brown, on the other hand, is Private James Frazer - the wild-eyed, tight-fisted Scot who makes regular pronouncements of doom. One you might not trust but you'd vote for him believing that his dealing might be dodgy but he'd get things done (even if experience would suggest otherwise). The other? You wouldn't even sit next to him in the pub, let alone let him make your decisions for you.

The Telegraph also highlights an interesting issue about the Brown/Blair relationship. According to an updated biography about Blair due for re-release soon, Brown spent last Summer fearing that Blair had reneged on his deal to stand down and allow Brown take over the reins and consequentially indulged in “sulks, tantrums and rages.”

Blair might have had his faults, but at least he didn't act like a toddler when he didn't get his own way. Is Brown really the man we want representing the UK on the World Stage?

Things Can Only Get Better...?

On the 13th of May, 2007, The Politics Show revealed the results of a survey it had commissioned. Over 4,000 UK wide residents responded and were asked their opinions on a variety of topics regarding life under Blair. The results can be seen at the show's website, (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/politics_show/6640411.stm) and included:

Education and Schools: 70% thought it was worse under Blair

Public Services: 36% thought public service was worse under Blair, despite massive increases in government spending.

Better Off: Although Blair and Brown keep claiming that we are a more propserous nation after a decade of Labour rule, only 40% of people in Scotland and only 34% of English residents agreed.

Crime: 56% of all UK resisdents agreeed it is worse since Blair came to power.

Rural Post Offices: 1,000's have closed during the Blair era. Couple this with the closure of local schools and you get a growing picture of countryside life being destroyed.

Rural Schools: 1,000's closed down under the Blair era. More have had their playing fields sold off. So much for the concept of "healthy in mind and body" for our young population. No wonder we have the most obese children in Europe.

Friday, 11 May 2007

"Meet The Neets"

Neets, if you were unaware, is an acronym referring to people between the age of 16 - 24 who are "Not in Education, Employment or Training." There's now over 1.2 million of them in this country, representing a fifth of people in that age group who are literally sitting around doing nothing all day.

As the Telegraph reported (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/04/15/neets15.xml):

"Among their ranks are the troubled, the badly educated, and the feckless and work-shy. In the 16 to 19 age bracket, 11 per cent are classed as Neets - double the proportion in Germany and France."

This is clearly going to be a massive problem for the UK and these people will be a huge burden on the working taxpayers:

"The research... calculates that this "lost generation" is costing the country £3.65 billion a year - enough to fund a 1p cut in income tax. Indeed, the Government's own figures estimate that each new Neet dropping out of education at 16 will cost the taxpayer an average of £97,000 during their lifetime. The worst will cost more than £300,000."


And all of this despite an election manifesto which, in 1997, promised great reforms to the Welfare State and making it clear through the Welfare-To-Work scheme, that indolence would not be an option.

"In reality, this "get tough" approach is not quite what it seems. When a young person signs on to the New Deal, they spend four months talking to their personal adviser about options. If a job is not found, they are given a "package of full-time help", such as a remedial skills course or work experience, and paid a "training allowance". If the young person is still without work after that, they make a new claim for the jobseeker's allowance - and the whole process starts again."

Six Years of Fighting, No Victories

One would expect Tony Blair to be an expert on the subject now, having spent most of the last 6 years fighting them. Certainly he is an expert at losing them and wasting the Nation’s blood, finances and international standing.

A look at history would have given him a hint of things to come our previous exploits in Iraq and Afganistan were pretty disastrous and Blair has waited a hundred years managed to top those.

The USA exploits on foreign soil were no more clever. The Vietnam war indicated that the USA cannot win any prolonged war ‘clinically from the air or with their modern technology’ and so any prolonged conflict was bound for failure. As the body counts continue to rise, so Bush and Blair’s approval ratings continue to slide.

Voting: Minority Rule?

Blair won the 2005 General Election with 35.3% of the total votes cast. However, as there was only an estimated 61.3% turnout on Election Day, this means that Blair was re-elected to office with the votes of just 22% of the eligible electorate. In what way can Blair and Brown claim to have a mandate from the nation to run the UK as they sees fit when less than a quarter of the populace have given them their approval?

The fact that they are willing to ignore public opinion and pursue policies that are unpopular and against our interests (the continuing war in Iraq, for example) proves how little regard they have for the electorate, despite the 2005 clear message that the vast majority of the UK don’t support them.

Perhaps this is why Blair has done nothing to change the “first past the post” system and given us something more representative of public opinion.

Voting: Devolution Does Not Apply To England

Despite devolving decision making and tax raising to the Scottish and Welsh assemblies, Scottish MP’s are still permitted to vote on English matters.

While it is fair to say that representatives from all of the home nations should have a say in the running of the United Kingdom as a whole, is it really fair that the Scottish be allowed to play a part in decisions that only affect the English and not vice versa?

For example, why should the MPs for Aberdeenshire have the ability to vote on matters concerning the local NHS Primary Care Trust for Oxfordshire while Oxford's MP can't have similar input in decisions about Aberdeen's NHS?

Of course, this position suits Labour’s purposes and protects their interests – having lost an average of 7% of English votes during the last election, they are no doubt aware that an English Assembly would not be a Labour dominated one.

Now that the SNP has gained control of Scotland, it will be interesting to see if (a) they persue independance and (b) if they do, will English affairs be left to English representation.

Voting: An Unlevel Playing Field

Blair still refuses to change the ward boundaries to provide an equal number of voters per seat and reduce the Labour advantage.

In the 2005 election, Labour received 9,562,122 votes compared to the Conservatives, who received 8,772,598 and the Liberals, who received 5,981,874. The number of seats allocated to the parties after the election is unrepresentative of the views of the nation: Labour only won 35.3% of the votes, but got 55.2% of the seats in the House of Commons while the Tories won 32.3% of the votes, but only 30.7% of the seats. Even more disproportionably, the Lib Dems won 22.1% of votes but only 9.6% of seats.

Surely it is time to redraw the boundaries and create a level political playing field?

Stealth Taxes on Motorists

Blair and Brown have added yet another stealth tax to the motorist's burden. Not content with the revenue provided by speed cameras, and as widely reported in most newspapers including the Daily Mail (see: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=441094&in_page_id=1770), motorists are to be charged a £15 surcharge in addition to their fines to compensate victims of crime.

The surcharge is to be added to all court fines but, because the UK's judical IT systems are incapable of a task as complex as sliding costs attached to severity of crime, someone caught going 5mph on an empty motorway at 1am is going to pay the same £15 surcharge as someone found guilty of assault or corporate manslaughter.

A spokesman for Victim support is quoted as saying "There is no such thing as a victimless crime" and this seems to be Labour's way of making sure of it: speeding motorists are about to find themselves being regularly mugged by the system.

Labour's Transport Policy

When Blair came to office he told us that Labour were going to reduce the number of car journeys, partly as a means of meeting targets for global warming and improving the environment, then promptly handed the keys to the Department of Transport to John Prescott to make sure that it wouldn’t happen.

On 6 June 1997 Prescott said: "I will have failed if in five years time there are not... far fewer journeys by car. It's a tall order but I urge you to hold me to it."

By June 2002, car journeys had risen by 7%.

During this five year period, while on his way to the Labour Party Conference to give a speech about public transport, Prescott was chauffeured 250 yards from his hotel to the conference venue.

As part of Prescott’s Integrated Transport Policy, road charging (debates on which led to the London Congestion Charge) coupled with increased and improved public transport was supposed to price motorists of the road, reduce the number of journeys made by car and get the public more reliant on buses and trains.

Instead, we have seen increased costs for rail users, a railway that seems to be becoming more and more unsafe as the years progress, and a nation increasingly unwilling to give up their cars despite increased road tolls, fuel tax and “Safety Camera” fines.

Did we ever expect John Prescott to do something for his money?

BBC2's program “Are We Nearly There Yet” (broadcast on the 6/3/06) commented 'After the complete collapse of the Government’s 10 year Transport Program they never had any tangible ideas to take its place'. They further added that Government’s ability to govern should be judged upon the effectiveness of their transport program as this is the one program with a relatively flat playing field without outside influencers i.e. it is not dependant upon Social factors etc. So this looks very much like another Blair disaster, or should I imagine a co-ordinated public transport scheme that is inexpensive, efficient and environmentally friendly.

Our "Special" Relationship

Blair has placed a new level of loyalty on the ‘Special Relationship’ with the USA, including following Bush blindly into war, using more and more American consultancy firms in the public sector and awarding contracts to US firms. This all seems to be to the detriment to the UK.

A reading of history might have been a bit more useful e.g. the USA did NOT enter the WW2 to help out the UK – in fact the Senate voted twice on the issue and firmly rejected the idea. They only entered the war after the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbour and as Germany and Japan were allies, they were dragged into the European conflict as well.

Although the Americans did trade with us and supplied us before their eventual entrance into the war, they didn’t do it out of charity. We paid for all supplies sent to the UK, including those that didn’t make it to our shores due to ships being torpedoed by German U-boats. The Americans did loan us money to help us fight our joint enemies and it took us 60 years to pay back the loan and the interest. We no longer owe them anything, but Bush and Blair are both quite intent on perpetuating the myth that we do.

There is no evidence of a special relationship between the USA and the UK, just the USA doing profitable business with the UK as and when it suits their interest. Anyone who reads something else into the relationship is either niave, stupid or has a personal agenda.

Of course, I’m sure that there’s no connection between the fact that Tony Blair has made himself a hero in American eyes and the millions he expects to make on the lecture circuit in the US after he’s stepped down from office.

Sleaze

Labour came to power by claiming that the incumbent Conservative government was one more interested in corruption and sleaze than in actual politics. Cash For Questions, the failure of a few backbenchers to declare interests, and a series of marital infidelities all allowed Labour to claim the moral high ground.

Since then, they’ve been waging a campaign to show the Tories that they can do it bigger and more often.

From lying to the Commons about a £1million donation from Formula One supreme, Bernie Ecclestone, to the row over payment for peerages, the David Kelly “suicide,” to Lord Irvine’s £650,000 redecorating bill being handed to the tax payer, to Prescott and Mandelson’s activities, to Byer’s dirty tricks campaign after the Railtrack fiasco, to Jo Moore’s “Good Day” memo, to accusations of fiddling NHS tables to make government policies look more effective, to spending £49 million pounds from the public purse on propaganda advertising to make the Government look good ahead of elections… the list is almost endless.

Rail Fares

Rail fares now increase higher than the rate of inflation.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/03/20/nrail20.xml

The Nation's Railways

Although it was the Conservative government that instigated the privatisation of British Rail, privatisation didn’t come into effect until November 2007 which means that Blair could have stopped it. The abolition of the British Railways Board by the Transport Act of 2000 was the final coffin in the nail for British Rail and swept away its last vestiges of influence.

By 2006, not only had rail passengers suffered continuous increases in rail fare, but the amount of subsidies handed over by government to the train operating companies (for basically doing the same job as British Rail) amounted to three times the annual subsidy that British Rail had received -- for an example, the Economic & Social Reseach Council claim that Stagecoach, which successfully bid for South West Trains, the first franchise, is being paid £27m per year more in subsidy than the amount required to give a reasonable rate of return. (see http://www.esrcsocietytoday.ac.uk/ESRCInfoCentre/about/CI/CP/the_edge/Issue1/railsubsidies.aspx?ComponentId=1905&SourcePageId=6805

Public Enquiries

Blair is (or was) very fond of announcing to the populace the setting up of ‘transparent Public Enquiries’ but, unfortunately, not so keen on providing them with any authority or legal standing. As an example, you have the enquiry into Dr Kelly’s death where the enquiry was given less legal powers than an ordinary Coroners Court.

As a further example, we have recently had a fatal train crash in Cumbria that bore striking similarities to the Potters Bar disaster, and indicate that the lessons learnt from the ensuing, year long Public Enquiry have still not been learnt nearly four years after its findings where published.

Politics Is A Four Letter Word

Politicians now rate below Estate Agents and Traffic Wardens. Blair's cynical use of spin and half-truths has turned us into a nation that sees its elected representatives as corrupt, lying, self-aggrandising incompetents who are more interested in power and the wealth it can bring than in actually running the country to the benefit of the people.

Blair has made politics a dirty word.

Speed Cameras

There are more and more speed cameras used to raise Police Revenues. We are, of course, told that these are “Safety Cameras” and there to encourage people to drive in a more responsible manner in areas known to have prolific number of accidents.

If this is the case, why do some areas of the country also have roadside signs indicating the number of accidents on that stretch of road over the past 3 years? If these are any less effective in promoting safety, why haven’t they been replaced with cameras? If they are more effective than speed cameras, surely revenue generation can be the only real excuse for maintaining and increasing the number of cameras on the sides of Britain’s roads.

Police Officers, meanwhile, seem to be able ignore the speeding laws as long as they are “‘practising’ their driving skills” (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/shropshire/4559173.stm) although there is no record of public Learner Drivers being excused any speeding fines when practising.

Surveillance Cameras

The average UK citizen might be caught on CCTV 6 times a day, but the number drastically increases when you wander into a metropolitan area.

There are an estimated 4.2 million CCTV cameras in the UK. This means that for every 14 people, there is a camera.

A more worrying way to put it is, Britain accounts for 1% of the world's population but 20% of the world's CCTV cameras. (http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/news/article-23390407-details/UK+has+1%25+of+world's+population+but+20%25+of+its+CCTV+cameras/article.do)

It has been suggested that the average Londoner is caught on CCTV around 300 times a day. We are spied on more often and more comprehensively than people living in totalitarian dictatorships. With our privacy and civil liberties being systematically violated on such a regular basis, and the government enlarging the scope of data it collects about us, can anyone really claim that we live in a free country?

Suspended Officers

According to The Metro (http://www.metro.co.uk/news/article.html?in_article_id=42559&in_page_id=34) 276 police officers, as of March 2007, were on suspension or 'gardening leave' while being investigated for alleged wrong-doing.

The total bill to the tax payer for this amounts to around £8million per year.

icLiverpool, a short while later, (http://icliverpool.icnetwork.co.uk/0100news/0100regionalnews/tm_headline=suspended-officers-cost-police--500k&method=full&objectid=18850236&siteid=50061-name_page.html) mentioned one police officer who had spent 774 days suspended on full pay before being jailed.

Can Blair really claim to be tough on the causes of crime when even our police force can't be trusted?

There are, of course, two things that we need to consider here, other than the drain on funding that the tax payer provides to the police.

Firstly, to what extent is this just the tip of the iceberg? For every one of the 276 officers currently suspended, how many more are being investigated and how many are getting away with their own wrong doing?

Secondly, with crime rates rising across the UK, you have to wonder how much is due to police officers being more interested in lining their own pockets than in solving crimes?

Thursday, 10 May 2007

Cash For Honours

When the Government is acting so shady that Scotland Yard is called in to investigate, you know that they can’t be up to much good. When is a donation not a payment for a peerage?

The Trident Affair

Tony Blair has backed the replacement of the Trident Missiles at a cost of billions spent with the Americans, a completely unrealistic idea of what we as a nation can afford or the effectiveness of such a weapon. It did not stop 9/11 for the USA, and as the July 2005 bombings showed it has no bearing on the type of threats facing the UK in the future.

One cannot see how any nuclear weapon will have any effect on mobile terrorists, or cells of dissidents living within the UK unless Blair is intending to nuke British cities.

Trident gives a few politicians a very expensive membership to a rather elite club, but who would seriously consider nuking any nation? Only the USA has used the Atom bomb and it is not a credit that the UK should want associations with. So, if it is no longer an effective deterrent and we would not use it, why even think about buying such a technology?

There seems an indecent haste to do this deal – why? Apparently, we urgently need a replacement although we only ever have one submarine at sea at a time and the USA have extended their own nuclear deterrent program by many years. Surely, if the much lauded “special friendship” between the UK and US exists, then the US would retaliate with a nuclear strike on our behalf should we find ourselves under nuclear attack.

If, at the furthest extremes of possibility and probability, we were ever to nuke someone, it would most likely be because America wanted us to. Why, then, should we pay them vast sums of money and further widen our record-level national debt just for the privilege of doing their dirty work for them?

We don’t even get to own the weapons – we actually only lease them. They are maintained by the US, who also make the hardware, control the software, make and supply the spares, and aim them at American enemies. So much for our own independent Nuclear Deterrent. Our only involvement is to pay for it.

Would we not be better spending the money equipping our own security forces or even build another 100 hospitals and schools? Or is Tony Blair so intent on keeping his place at the Big Boys' table at the UN that he’s prepared to squander billions of our money on pointless posturing and sabre-rattling?

£1.5million spent to allow Health Department staff go idle

While the UK's NHS trusts are being forced to slash their staf numbers because of rising budget deficits, the Health Department currrently has 85 bureaucrats on the payroll that have no jobs to do. Discribed in the Health Department's annual business plan as being "displaced" (i.e. they have no work to do and no job to go to within the department) the cost of paying for these 85 people not to work amounts to £1.5 million over a six month agreement -- the equivilant of employing 53 junior doctors.

Shadow Health Secretary Andrew Lansley is quoted in The Sun (see: http://www.thesun.co.uk/article/0,,2-2007170357,00.html) as saying: “It is a cruel irony that while (Patricia Hewitt) demands hospitals leave posts without people, she employs people without posts."

NHS: Car Parks

Thinking of becoming ill? You'd better work out if you can afford to first. While deciding which hospital you'd like to contract a superbug at, you may want to work out which one is going to charge you the most while you languish in the waiting room waiting to see a consultant whose running behind schedule because their golf game toollonger than expected.

Last year, the NHS took £95m in car parking fees with some hospital trusts earning over £2m each. Cancer sufferers, particularly those with regular treatements and the need for regular hospital visits, are paying hundreds of pounds per year in car park charges. Since cancer sufferers are often unable to work because of their illness and treatment, thus reducing their earning capacity considerably, doesn't it seem barbaric to tax them hundreds of pounds for their hospital visits and taking away from them money that could be better used in paying the bills?

See: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/6468251.stm

Superbugs

The Daily Mail recently reported that the Office of National Statistics had stated that the number of deaths attributed to MRSA in England and Wales had nearly doubled between 2001 and 2005, from 1211 to 2083. (see http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=437817&in_page_id=1770

This is, of course, one way of keeping operation waiting lists down: who wants to be operated on in an NHS hospital when there's every chance that you won't make it back out alive? No wonder the private alternatives blatently advertise themselves as being clean....

The BBC reported in April on the continuing rise of superbugs in NHS Hospitals, as detailed in the Health Protection Agency's own figures.

"More hospital patients in England are getting the deadly Clostridium difficile bug, figures show.
Health Protection Agency (HPA) data showed 55,681 cases were reported among over 65s in 2006 - up 8% in a year.


For the full report, see: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/6593225.stm

Meanwhile, Good Hope Hospital in Sutton Coldfield has told housekeeping staff to turn sheets over between patients rather than wash them in order to try and save some of its £500,000 annual laundry bill.

Good Hope had a £6million pound budget deficit in 2006 and was consequentially subjected to an Audit Commission review. With items costing 0.275 pence each to wash (note: yes, less than a third of a penny), the hospital is hoping to cut its deficit by re-using dirty sheets.

However, one thing that should be noted. Good Hope recorded 36 cases of MRSA between April 2006 and January 2007 and, despite visits by a Government Task Force, is still failing to meet its superbug infection targets. The fact that it is reducing its hygiene regime to cut costs must sureley mean that they're less likely to meet these targets in future.

See the Daily Mail article at http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/health/healthmain.html?in_article_id=448395&in_page_id=1774

Saving The NHS

In 1997, Blair warned the electorate that they had “just 24 hours to save the NHS.” He was going to slash waiting lists, recruit more staff and radically restructure the Health Service.

What he did was restructure the waiting list system so that rather than going straight onto a waiting list, you had to first see a consultant to get approval for treatment. So, rather than have 100 people on a waiting list you’d have 50 people on a waiting list and 50 waiting to be put onto the waiting list and while the same number of people would end up waiting the same amount of time to be treated, Labour spin was able to technically argue that the waiting lists were now much shorter.

As for recruitment, things have gotten worse. We are now faced with a looming NHS recruitment crisis (http://news.sky.com/skynews/article/0,,30100-1245914,00.html) with an imminent shortfall in doctors and nurses, at a time when NHS trusts are shedding jobs to try and minimise their debts.

According to statistics from the Department of Health (http://news.excite.co.uk/uk/28488) the forecast deficit for 2006-2007 is £1.32 BILLION. However, regional trusts have been building cash reserves by making staff redundant and holding back on training and public health budgets to compensate for the debt in a bid to break even. 37,000 NHS jobs are expected to be lost in 2007 and by 2011 we are predicted to have a shortfall of 1,100 junior doctors, 1,200 GPs and 14,000 nurses.

In other words, in order to balance the books we are losing staff we can’t afford to lose and the ones we are keeping are not receiving the training they need, while cuts in public health budgets can only lead to more widespread illnesses meaning a future strain on already thinly-stretched resources.

While telling the BBC One's "Politics Show" how his legacy was going to be long-lasting, Tony Blair explained that "When we came to power, people used to die on waiting lists waiting for their heart operations. People don't do that any more."" (see http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/6557439.stm).

He didn't mention how many people were now dying as they waited to get put onto the waiting list. Nor did he mention, as the Royal College of Nursing pointed out (see: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/6560497.stm) that 22,300 NHS jobs have been lost in the last 18 months due to NHS budget deficits.

In fact, staff shortages are so acute that student nurses are being left on their own with patients, despite guidelines that state that (apart from those in their final year of training) they should always be monitored, meaning that patient safety is being compromised as people are left in the care of untrained, unqualified and unsupervised staff. (see: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/6552249.stm)

The Dome Debacle

John Major had originally conceived the idea of the Millennium Dome as a relatively small-scale, Festival of Britain event. Then Tony got elected, threw a bunch of money at it and vastly increased the size, scope and funding of the project.

Open for just 12 months, it received a total of 6,500,000 visitors, of which 6,000,000 had been to see the Festival of Britain which only ran from May to September. By the time the New Millennium Experience Company was officially liquidated in 2002, audits reported that the total cost of the Dome had been £789 million pounds. Of this, just £189 million was recovered from ticket sales: the rest was paid for by funding secured from the National Lottery.

The dome has since been given to the Anschutz Entertainment Group to redevelop into an entertainment arena, which will see music and sporting events take place from July 2007, a number of bars, restaurants and a multi-screen cinema complex. However, it has been reported that one of the conditions for the AEG taking on the project (despite being given the building and land) was that they be allowed to build a super casino there, and that since Prescott failed to deliver his promises they will be halving their investment in the project.

40% of Service Family Accomodation is Sub-Standard

In March 2007, the National Audit Office published a report entitled "Managing the Defence Estate: Quality and Sustainability" which stated that over 40% of Service Family accomodation was below Standard 1, i.e. was of substandard quality (see page 14 of the report, which can be found at http://www.nao.org.uk/publications/nao_reports/06-07/0607154.pdf)

A short while later, the MOD claimed that AWOL cases since 2003 were possibly not due to disallusionment with the Iraq War, or mental health issues, but that "Anecdotal evidence suggests that most AWOL is caused by soldiers’ domestic circumstances, e.g. family problems, rather than wishing to avoid military service." (see http://www.mod.uk/DefenceInternet/DefenceNews/DefencePolicyAndBusiness/DefenceNewsDailyarchiveSaturday17March2007ToFriday30March2007.htm)

Perhaps if some of the massive investment the UK has made in fighting unjust wars (and proposes to spend on an unneeded Trident system) was spent on housing our troops we'd have a more effective fighting force.

The National Lottery: Unfair Funding?

Not even the National Lottery is safe from political influence - Labour seats have received over 10 times the amount of Lottery funding that Conservative seats have obtained. This cannot simply be a statistical blip, can it?

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/01/16/nlottery16.xml

Britain Becoming A Police State

As well as the increase in violent crime and overcrowded prisons, The UK has seen a systematic increase in the number of activities now deemed to be illegal, meaning that more and more of us are becoming criminals.

In the nine years between his election in May 1997 and August 2006, the Labour government introduced a total of 3023 offences including fox hunting, the sale of meat on the bone and the use of mobile phones while driving. As the Telegraph pointed out in an article on 2006 (http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/politics/article1219484.ece), legislated offences include: “It is now illegal to sell grey squirrels, impersonate a traffic warden or offer Air Traffic Control services without a licence. Creating a nuclear explosion was outlawed in 1998. Householders who fail to nominate a neighbour to turn off their alarm while they are away from home can be breaking the law. And it is an offence for a ship's captain to be carrying grain unless he has a copy of the International Grain Code on board.”

One can’t help but wonder what positive results such laws really bring to the average voter back in the real world.

Worryingly, of the 3023 newly-created offences, only 1169 were debated in Parliament and introduced by primary legislature. (http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/politics/article1219484.ece

This means that 1854 criminal offences have been introduced to the UK without being first debated in Parliament, bypassing the entire process of democracy and representation. The 1169 laws that were debated in Parliament more than doubles the amount introduced by the Tories under their last nine years in office under both Thatcher and Major, who between them introduced roughly 500 offences through primary legislature.

Jo Moore & 9/11

At 2:55 on the afternoon of September 11, 2001, after both World Trade Center towers and the Pentagon had been hit by attacks, Jo Moore sent an email to the press office of her department which read: "It's now a very good day to get out anything we want to bury."

Classic Labour spin in action.

Jail: Unfit For Human Consumption?

The Home Office announced in January 2007 (http://politics.guardian.co.uk/homeaffairs/story/0,,1997589,00.html?gusrc=rss&feed=1) that it had reopened a prison wing that had been condemned as unfit for human inhabitation less than a week before to ease overcrowding and to house remand prisoners.

Surely being a remand prisoner means that you have yet to be found guilty, in which case do these people necessarily deserve to be housed in squalor? And will this open the floodgates for prisoners demanding compensation because their human rights have been abused?

Jails: Overcrowding

Our jails are becoming increasingly overcrowded, to the point where it now difficult to find room for people as they get convicted. As the crime rates have continued to increase under Tony Blair’s leadership, so, accordingly, has the number of people needing to be sent to jail.

Couple this with the fact that between 1992 and 2004 the reconviction rate among former prisoners rose from 51% to 67%, meaning that the concept of penal reform is carrying less and less weight. We are now getting to the point where, as a recent situation with a paedophile exemplified (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/wales/6300565.stm), convicted criminals are being handed Get Out Of Jail free cards simply because there is nowhere to put them, while early parole to ease prison congestion is leaving criminals with the message that future transgression won’t necessarily be met with just punishment.

It used to be said that if you can’t do the time, don’t do the crime. Now it’s “If you can’t do the time, don’t worry. You’ll be out soon anyway.”

The NHS IT Debacle

According to SourceUK's website 7th March 07 (http://www.sourceuk.net/article/0/6/latest_dispatch.html) “NHS’s IT programme started at £2.3bn, has risen to £12bn+, but independent experts estimate will end up over £32bn.” I guess one wonders how many hospitals or nurses this represents? Or whether the program will just disappear at the end of Blair’s term?

One may ask, have any Government IT initiatives ever been delivered on schedule, on budget and met their objectives? I suspect that one of these days someone may look at the DirectGov project, which cost tens of millions a year and has been overtaken by technology with no measurable benefit and is now miles away form its original objectives!

Gordon Brown

Gordon Brown, the Man who would be King, whose great dealings lead to him selling our gold reserves off and losing £2bn in the deal. (see The Times' article from March 2006 at http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/markets/china/article695733.ece)

The man whose idea of keeping deficits off the Government’s books has invented PFI whereby the NHS can line the pockets of private investors to the tune of £52bn for hospitals that cost only £8bn. Couple these two facts with the UK’S record (and widening) deficit and ask yourself: would you trust this man with your investments?

Iraq: 36 Lies

There is an interesting article detailing the 36 lies that led to the Iraq War, which can be found here: http://middleeastreference.org.uk/ios030711.html

Iraq: Weapons of Mass Distraction

There is no evidence that Iraq ever had weapons of mass destruction, or that the scaremongering seen before the conflict started was based on genuine intelligence rather than mere tub-thumping to get the western populations behind an unjust war. Certainly, no WMDs have been found since the coalition forces assumed control of the country, and certainly no evidence that Hussein was ever capable of launching them with only 45 minutes notice.

The alliance with the USA resulted in the total destruction of a nation that had no war with the UK, despite what we were told to the contrary. Instead, it made Britain political pariahs in the international arena as we bypassed the United Nations resolutions arguing against invasion and went ahead and did it anyway. It has also fueled anti-western sentiment amongst some elements of Islamic society, and gave the July 7th bombers an excuse to attack the London Transport System.

Iraq: The War In Error

In spite of over 1m voters taking to the streets in protest, with no mandate form the UN, and with only suspected (and suspicious) evidence with regard to Hussein’s capabilities and intentions, Blair decided to go to War.

Round Two of The War on Terror kicked off in 2003 with three main objectives: to oust Saddam Hussein and his baath party, to remove his weapons of mass destruction, and to free the Iraqi people. There were, and are, problems associated with these aims.

The removal of Hussein destabilised the country and created a power vacuum that has still to be filled. Iraq, though enjoying a long history, is actually an artificial country created by Britain who had been ceded the area of Mesopotamia by the League of Nations after the first world war. As such, it has no single ethnic basis but instead consists of a variety of racial backgrounds including the Kurds, Assyrians, Mandeans, Iraqi Turkmen, Shabaks and Roma.

Once Hussein was removed, these factions were free to resume their quarrels with each other which now consists of daily bombing attacks on populated areas, and has helped propel the number of Iraqi civilian deaths to nearly 65,000 in the last four years.

Freedom for the Iraqi people apparently doesn’t stretch as far as the freedom to go shopping without worrying that you’re going to get blown up while British commuters have been brainwashed into having the same doubts when travelling on the Underground or flying. Billions of pounds have been wasted in order to turn a nation into a bloodbath with no obvious benefit for anyone other than we (and, by that, we should say “The Americans”) now have control of one of the most lucrative set of oil fields available, which means that we shouldn’t be short of petrol that Blair can tax us on.

If one can find anything that the Blair Government have done to genuinely benefit this Britain, could it even go partway to balancing the real cost of this disastrous episode in British history?

Sailors Selling Stories

It was not enough for our armed forces to be embarrassed by being caught unawares by the Iranians, we had to suffer the Iranian Government out-thinking the UK Government and dominating the public stage. This was, of course, followed by the farcical handling of the situation at home when the MInisters could not decide whether the members of the armed forces should or should not publish their stories, public apolgies in the House in the Commons etc.

Surely this is simple.

All ranks in the forces should not be able to publish their stories for ten years. This will prevent any future prisoners being able to tout their stories around the media like recently-evicted Big Brother housemates.

MPs, of whatever flavour, should resign if guilty of a serious misjudgement.

What are MP's employed for anyway? Most do not seem to actually do anything and generally have very limited knowledge of what they are supposed to be managing: most of the real knowledge (and, hence, the real power) is wielded by the unelected masses in the civil service. If an MP has poor judgement and poor management skills then all the political speak does not change the fact that they are unfit for the post and only disaster will follow.

Immigration

Business leaders and MPs have been claiming for a while now that immigration has affected the UK job market by driving down the wages of the lowest-paid elements of our society by adding an influx of people willing to work for less pay. While the Government has always dismissed these claims, Lord Turner (one of Blair's personal advisors) recently told Tony exactly the same thing during a private seminar.

Lord Turner's assertions are more difficult for the government to brush aside as he was previously the head of the Low Pay Commission.

Just as worrying is the added pressure that migrants are placing on schools, housing and the NHS -- the country is ill-equiped to cope with our own, natural poulation growth, let alone the sudden arrival of hundreds of thousands of migrants (both leal and illegal) every year.

And Blair's response?

"To counter the growing concerns, Mr Blair is planning a PR offensive on behalf of migrants" (Daily Mail, 31st March 2007: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=445778&in_page_id=1770

I fail to see how a PR offensive is going to make people happier about having to accept lower wages, the inability to get on the housing ladder, the over crowding of schools or the growing lack of resources available from the NHS.

Fake Passports

The Guardian reported, in March 2007, that: "An estimated 10,000 British passports were issued after fraudulent applications in the space of a year - and al-Qaida terrorists have successfully faked applications, the Home Office admitted" (see: http://www.guardian.co.uk/terrorism/story/0,,2038442,00.html)

With the Government's own resources unable to cope with the threat of identity fraud (especially as seen lately with the DWP sending thousands of pensioners' personal and bank details to the wrong people) can we really trust that the identity card scheme isn't going to get corrupted?

What safeguards are there that the identity card scheme will be any more successful in catching and preventing fraudulant applications? And, if these safeguards exist, why are they not currently being used in checking passport applications? If there aren't any safeguards, and the whole point of identity cards in the first place is to help in the war on terror by allowing our security forces to identify threats, why should we bother to continue with this costly exercise and the systematic tracking of honest, law-abiding citizens?

Identity Cards -- A Pointless Exercise?

How do you stop terrorists? Easily - just treat everyone like terrorists and sooner or later you're bound to stumble across one.

The electronic storage of personal details is an increasingly risky business. After the Department of Work and Pensions accidentally sent out thousands of people's personal and bank details to the wrong people, this Government's record in electronic security is questionable, and its strategy of progressively increasing the use of information technology has resulted in bloated, over-funded, under-achieving projects.

The issue of identity cards has been on the political agenda for a few eyars now, and proponants espouse the same view each time the need for them is brought into question. ID cards will help us in our war on terror, help reduce benefit fraud and enable the police to identify criminals. It has also been mooted that they will enable the NHS to determine who is, and isn't, eligible for treatment -- if you don't have one, you don't go on the waiting list because you may be an illegal immigrant over here on a hospital holiday.

Identity cards will be available, voluntarily, from 2008 and mandatory from 2014. Which begs the questions: in the intervening 6 years, just how many terrorists do they expect to sign up for biometric ID cards? How many benefit cheats are going to spend the money to get one, especially if the cost alone would eb enough to make the DSS wonder how you could possibly afford one? How many criminals are willingly going to enable the police catch them more easily? How many pensioners are going to be refused hospital beds because they thought paying for winter fuel was more important than an ID card in the last years of their lives?

I would imagine that the answer to all (except, possibly, the last one depending on how close the NHS was to bankruptcy at the time) would be: none. Which, in turn, forces us to ask what, exactly, the point of the scheme is? The only people who will sign up for this are going to be ordinary, law-abiding citizens with nothing to hide. It's not going to reduce crime, prevent terrorism or reduce fraud, it's just going to make the average person easier to track as they go about their day-to-day business.

A Third of People to Refuse ID Checks?

As the BBC website revealed, at http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/6526225.stm a third of people will refuse to submit to ID checks which, again, makes you wonder what powers the police will be given to deal with these refusals, and if this will lead to another spate of laws introduced to make more and more of us criminals.

Falling Number of Home Owners

The number of people owning their own homes fell in 2006 and it is the first time since before the second world war that the number of homeowners has declined.

Figures in the Survey of English Housing by the Department for Communities and Local Government have revealed that rising house prices are pricing first-time buyers out of the market. Instead, there is an increasing number of properties being bought specifically to be rented out to people who can not get onto the property ladder with 2.5million people now living in private rented accomodation, the highest figure since Labour came to power in 1997.

See the Daily Mail's article at: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=444799&in_page_id=1770

Planning

Travellers are now permitted to build on greenbelt land without Planning Permission, at a time of housing crisis when most people are unable to get permission to build on brownfields land. One of the results of this is the largest illegal campsite in Europe firmly established in the South East.

Is it about time someone asked 'What are the rights of the populace born in the areas which Travellers decide to target?' or, 'Why, when local people cannot obtain planning permission, can complete strangers have preference in spite of the protest of the local populace and Local Authorities?' or 'Why do the Travellers not have the same powers to ignore the laws in their country of origin?'

Stamp Duty

One aspect of moving home, which has affected both house prices and house shortages, is the progressive increase in Stamp Duty since the Blair/Brown regime came to power.

On March 22nd, 2007, The Times reported that Stamp Duty had increased by 31% since 2005 (http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/economics/article1554614.ece) while four days later, Property Finder revealed that the average Stamp Duty paid had increased from an average of £543 to £5,009 since 1997 (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/6483697.stm.), an increase of 922%.

As moving house now costs, on average, £9,500 in addition to the purchase price, many people are staying where they are and generating the housing shortage that we see today, in turn driving up prices for the property that is available. More critically, as the average house price can no longer be realistically met by the average salary, the increase in moving costs simply put potential first-time buyers further away from the first rung of the property ladder, or add to their financial burdens.

Housing Shortages

In 2001, levels of home building had risen to 165,000 but Government indications suggest that 200,000 homes need to be built each year to meet requirements. The failure to build sufficient housing to cope with need has, in part, played a significant role in driving up house prices.

Of course, Blair doesn’t have any trouble finding housing for himself: he’s just bought number five.

Rising House Prices

House prices in the UK have risen by 199% since 1995/1996 (see: http://www.ukpropertyshop.co.uk/news/373.shtml) and rose by 5.43 percent in 2006 alone, far outstripping the rate of inflation. Of the ten most expensive areas to buy property in the UK, the “cheapest” (Bath and North East Somerset) had an average house price of £253,364.
This means that it is becoming increasingly difficult for people to get on the first rung of the property ladder.

With the average UK salary now standing at £22,500, it is impossible for people to get mortgages to cover the cost of buying a house. In 2001, 40% of under 30 households were buying with a mortgage and 33% were renting privately. By 2006, the situation had changed with 34% buying and 41% renting.

It is also interesting to note that the property in 236 postal codes in the UK have an average price at such a level that they are above inheritance tax levels compared with 117 postal codes just five years ago. This means plenty of paydays for the government when their owners die.

Gambling & Poverty

One benefit of increased gambling is that it means increased revenue from taxation. Since many of our industries are now being exported, the creation of a new service industry helps create a new revenue stream for the Government.

Unfortunately, it is widely perceived that it is mainly the poorer elements of society that gamble -- those that are most desperate for the money that can be won are usually those who can least afford to lose what little money they've already got. (see The Guardian's article, "It's simple. More gambling means more child poverty" at http://www.guardian.co.uk/gambling/story/0,,2043578,00.html

But since none of them are likely to become major contributors to party funds, I'm sure this isn't much of a concern. Of course, as a stealth tax on the working class it also means that Blair and Brown can leave the middle classes alone so as not to jeopardise their votes in the next election.

Gambling & Crime

During New Labour's deregulation of Gambling laws, allowing the building of a Super Casino and 100 smaller casinos around the country, they regularly pointed to the success of America's Atlantic City - a town which has been transformed by the gambling industry.

The Casinos of Atlantic City have been said to have helped regenerate the area, bringing wealth and jobs to a city that was largely lacking in both. However, they have failed to also point out that the casinos have brought with them compulsive gamblers, elevated bankruptcy rates (twice the average of neighbouring areas) and crime such as money laundering: Atlantic City showed a jump in crime when gambling was legalized. The city went from 50th in the nation in per capita crime to first (source: http://www.library.ca.gov/CRB/97/03/Chapt11.html). Las Vagas, meanwhile, revolves around the Gambling industry and is notable for the fact that it has the second busiest crime lab in the USA after the FBI labs at Quantico.

Peter Mandelson

Probably the only Cabinet Minister to be ‘sacked’ twice and still be given a cushy European job for his efforts.

In 1998 it was revealed that Mandelson had bought a home in Notting Hill in 1996 (i.e. prior to Labour winning the 1997 election) with the assistance of an interest-free loan of £373,000 from Geoffrey Robinson. Robinson was also a Labour MP in the Government the new government, but was subject to an inquiry into his business dealings by Mandelson's department. Mandelson failed to declare his interest in the affair and this led to Mandelson's first "resignation" (i.e. sacking).

Ten months later, he was brought back to government as Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, and in 2001 forced to resign again after it was revealed that he had been lobbying a Home Office minister for passports for a couple of Indian businessmen who were being approached to be the main sponsors of on of the Millennium Dome zones. At the time, the two brothers were being investigated in India for their (alleged) participation in a scandal that had taken place in Indian politics during the 1980s -- specifically, one that was about government corruption and politicians being given kick-backs in return for their "correct" decisions.

Nowadays Mandelson is British Commissioner of the European Union for Trade and has a great seat on the gravy train.

John Prescott

Probably the most ineffective Cabinet Minister ever with the knack of getting overpaid whether he has job or not. Some of Prescott’s “highlights” while Deputy Prime Minister have included:

•Throwing a punch at a protestor who'd thrown an egg at him.

•Having his council tax paid for him out of the public purse. (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/4607110.stm)

•Having a number of sexual infidelities and harassment allegations, including his affair with Tracey Temple.

•Keeping his £134,000 a year Cabinet salary, chauffeured Jaguar car, his grace-and-favour flat at Admiralty Arch and the official country residence Dorneywood, in Buckinghamshire, despite losing his department. (http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=392986&in_page_id=1770)

•Being photographed playing croquet at Dorneywood when acting Prime Minister while Tony was away on holiday. (http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=388046&in_page_id=1770)

•Going on holiday to Phil Anschutz' ranch in America. Phil Anschutz is a gambling magnate and the man trying to convert the Millenium Dome into a Super Casino. Prescott had been chairman of the Cabinet committee responsible for developmental planning in the UK at the time. (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2006/07/09/npresc09.xml&sSheet=/news/2006/07/09/ixuknews.html)

•Despite being Acting Prime Minister during the airport terrorism crisis of August 2006 (Tony was away on holiday, again) it was actually John Reid who chaired most of the meetings and key cabinet committees. Prescott was incredibly quiet throughout the period. (http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=400058&in_page_id=1770&in_a_source=)

Failure To Meet Environmental Targets

According to the BBC’s “Dispatches” (5/3/07) The Labour Government have failed to meet every environment target they have set to date and will only achieve 30% of the their self-set target by 2020. This will leave an almost impossible legacy for any Government trying to achieve the 2050 targets. These targets, of course, conveniently forget the contribution made by air travel to global warming and the Government’s policy to increase air traffic.

As “Dispatches” concluded, if Blair is judged on his environmental credentials them he will have been deemed a failure. Their program strictly concerned itself with 'Greenwash' i.e. the misleading and 'whitewashing' actions of Government and corporations on the subject of Green Credentials.

I wonder how they would have judged Blair on Transport, Security, Foreign Policy, Education and how many other ways his term in office could be deemed a failure…?

Education: The Last Chance Saloon

It's always interesting to see when two people have diametrically opposed views. In a recent edition of BBC One's "Politics Show", Tony Blair claimed that his legacy as a prime minister would last and that the "final building blocks" of reform were being put in place before he staepped down.

As an example of how the country as improved since he became leader, Blair pointed to the school system and "he said only 80 schools in the country had 70% of their pupils getting five good GCSEs when the government came to power but "the figure today is over 600"." (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/6557439.stm)

Meanwhile, David Frost of the British Chamber of Commerce has called the education system a "national disgrace" and pointed to the fact that less than half of young people leaving school (43.8%) were doing so without at least five good GCSE grades. (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/education/6560199.stm).

The question has to be, who do you believe? The man at the forefront of British industry who has listened to his members' fears about failing education standards and their knock-on effect in recruiting suitable staff, or the man who is prepared to lie in order to take us to war?

"Education, Education, Education"

A case of ‘never mind the quality feel the width.’ As with the NHS there is a postal code lottery with regards to the quality of schools and education that a child receives. Some schools are now holding actual lotteries to determine which pupils are to be given a place.

While A level successes increase and more pupils go on to study degrees, the variety of tertiary education opportunities available has now digressed to the point where subjects for study seem to be being invented to attract students to institutions that need to make the numbers up to justify their existence and so offer relatively pointless degrees. You can now go to university to study subjects like: Floristry and Floral Design; Football Studies; Stress Management; Embroidery; Garden Design; Refrigeration and Air Conditioning and Death and Society. Subjects which, frankly, could mostly be learnt from an apprenticeship rather than a three year course which eventually leaves the student with spiralling debt and a degree that binds them to a work field they could have joined three years earlier.

As students take more and more degrees that Industry does not want, no one bothers to ask what the economy or the nation requires so we have unemployed degree level students having wasted their time and money.

The general level of education has reached a point where the better Universities do not trust the exam results and want to set their own entry test and the Private schools have their pupils sit the International Test as opposed to the UK schools exams as they are better valued by employers and Universities.

Small and Medium sized businesses also claim that they are struggling to attract good people to work for them because too many people suffer from a combination of poor education and lack of vocational experience. (see http://www.tenongroup.com/Press/2006/Press060103.asp for a report)