Archive for the ‘Political’ Category

Am I bothered?

Friday, July 16th, 2010

Am I bothered.

Call me old fashioned but I can’t help liking having an MP who,  I believe acts with integrity and courtesy.

Call me sentimental but I can’t help being  thankful that I have an MP, who yesterday took my daughter and her classmates to present their Send My Friend to School petition for Universal Secondary Education, to No 10, Downing Street and took the time and trouble to buy them hot chocolate at Portcullis House afterwards.

I don’t suppose the clutch of children from St Elizabeth’s School, Richmond will ever forget the day their MP, Zac Goldsmith,  bothered to introduce them to passing ministers, the ex-Home Secretary and some of the new MPs. Sky’s Polictical  Editor, Adam Boulton came over for a chat even your own Daniel Finklestein stopped to say hello in Whitehall.

Can we just let him get on with being a good constituency MP?  He must be worn out with people overlooking his achievement in winning his seat. I certainly am.

Come on Channel 4. I am used to seeing you broadcast real news - not an account of whether Mr Goldsmith spent too much on his campaign anoraks.

Mr Goldsmith’s response on Sky and BBC was an authentic and heartfelt statement of his behaviour. Such a shame Channel 4 did not give him the right to a live right to reply. He asked.

Get Involved

Thursday, June 4th, 2009

In a short while I am going to set off the my local polling station where I shall be vote-telling in the European elections. I have been bracing myself for this for sometime. It is not that I expect to find it monotonous (although I have been told it can be) it is that I want to do it efficiently. It is all part of the political footprint I spoke of in a feature I wrote last week for the Mail on Sunday.

It appeals to me on another level. It is an activity that makes me feel more connected with my community and with the powers that be in Brussels. Through my political activities I have met my Euro MP and several candidates. My point is this: it does not take much time or effort to get involved, and the rewards are considerable. Think about how much better you feel when you view your bank balance regularly. You know how much i there is in your account and you can then manage it properly. It is the same in politics - pay attention to what is going on around you - even in a small way - and you will start to feel a lot better about life

Over the last few weeks we have spent hours debating the moral corruption and selfishness of MPs. In many cases we have every right to do this. Haven’t we fallen a sleep at the wheel, though. Voter apathy is a big problem but to carry on the analogy indifference can be a two-way street. We looked away for long enough and we were taken advantage of.

The best way to stop any kind of horror is to expose it to public scrutiny. That doesn’t mean just reading an online account of your MPs expenses, it means paying attention to the political process. Like our newspapers sometimes we get the politicians we deserve. As Peter Gabriel said of the South African apartheid regime after the death of Steve Biko……”the eyes of the world are watching now.” Steve Biko needed to be politically aware and active. We can’t all be active…but we can be aware.

Field of Dreams

Friday, February 20th, 2009

He was doing so well.

Frank Field’s compelling demolition of Labour’s various “New Deals” for the unemployed in a column in today’s Times was a thrilling expose of this sorry mess. I was expecting a killer finish.

I was disappointed. Worse, I was angry, very angry.

Having revealed (to me at least) that the “various tax credit schemes and New Deal projects have cost the tax payer £75bn since 1997”, it would be logical to expect Mr Field’s argument to move to how this would not happen again. His solution, if I understand it correctly, boils down to two points; train to be a park warden or a plumber and pay the unemployed more benefit if they have paid national insurance.

I am sorry Frank, for I think that you are the acceptable face of New Labour, but where is all the money?

Perhaps while Mr Field was busy speaking with his illiterate and innumerate constituents in Birkenhead, his description not mine, he missed the collapse of RBS, the failure of Woolworths and the general “world going to hell in a handbaggedness” which pervades normal life outside the North West.

If so, let me put him straight on a few things. The UK treasury is long of banks and short of cash. The “hard-working” families which the dour Leader bangs on about are dwindling in number and paying less tax. Things, in short, can only get worse.

Our benefits system is broken. It is senseless that people who have paid national insurance get the same as those who have not. But, offering bright and shiny sops to the Green lobby and the soon-to-be jobless without thinking it through is exactly what cost us the £75bn in the first place.

Before we start spending more money we do not have, I suggest we have a quick whip round and send the Labour Party a leaving present.

Accounting for Dummies can be purchased at most book stores.

Learn to Listen

Monday, February 2nd, 2009

This morning BBC Radio 4’s Today programme carried a story which strikes at the heart of some of the worst social issues confronting society. In a report, called the Good Childhood Inquiry, commissioned by the Children’s Society, we heard that the aggressive pursuit of personal success by adults is now the greatest threat to British children. Family break-up, unprincipled advertising, too much competition in education and income equality were mentioned as big contributing factors. The details of Mark Easton’s report made for uncomfortable listening. But listen we must.

According to Martin Seligman, the author of Raising the Optimistic Child, he UK faces an epidemic of teenage depression, knife crime, bullying and chaos on many inner-city classrooms. Some of this I know from reporting on these topics for Tonight With Trevor McDonald: some of it I know as the mother of a troubled but compassionate teenage son who has spent the last year fighting his demons. When a charity such as the Children’s Society appoints a panel of experts to survey 30,000 people over a three year period, I think we should listen to the results.
But Today Presenter John Humphries did not. He tackled Lord Richard Layard , the principal author, as though he was a tight-lipped and evasive politician. Lord Layard clearly wanted to get his message over - after all a great deal of time and effort had gone into the survey. A great many people had been been honest - perhaps inadvertently. In the report the Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams, says we have become tone deaf to the requirements of children. In many cases this is true. Look at the list of children who have died this year at the hands of parents who should not have had them. Look at the numbers of children frightened and overwhelmed by schools which over emphasize the importance of league tables. The evidence is everywhere.

John Humphries had to wait only a matter of minutes to hear the details of the 33-year-old single mother who, last week, gave birth to eight children when she already had six at home, some born via IVF treatment. She is said to be negotiating deals with two TV programmes and a nappy company. Listeners were told it will cost the US taxpayer $2.5m just to get them through to childhood with the basics. We do not need to argue with the panel of experts. We need to listen.

Mr Humphries should have let Lord Layard take the floor. Every word he had to offer was of value to us all. He was not there as part of an intellectual discussion because what he had to say was important. We are always talking about learning to communicate but we need to learn to listen more.

PS> Mr Humphries talents did, however, appropriately skewer Lord Mandelson.

I like having an MP who has integrity, honesty and courtesy. Call me old fashioned but these qualities matter a great deal to me in an MP. As far as I can make out, and I have spent a long time acquiring the necessary qualities to be a good journalist, Zac Goldsmith has all of these characteristics.

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