" The creatures outside looked from pig to man, and from man to pig, and from pig to man again: but already it was impossible to say which was which." (George Orwell, final paragraph of Animal Farm)
What are the Lib Dems for?
Let’s be charitable (oh, go on!), most people who voted Lib Dem thought that they would get a more honest approach to policy that is usual in the UK bipartisan system. Some people in Wales voted for Lib Dem policies appeared to be left-leaning. Bearing those things in mind – the public perception of honesty and a left-leaning social policy, are we seeing the birth of a progressive force in UK politics to reward all that hope?
Let’s take honesty first.
On Trident, Tuition Fees, even their totemic policy of Electoral Reform, they have rolled over and all that for the sake of sharing 20 jobs in Government among fifty odd MPs. They’ve contradicted themselves on the imposition of a Secretary of State for Wales by supporting the appointment of Cheryl Gillan. Their policy of reducing tax on the first £10,000 earned will be adopted but over five years – if the government lasts that long.
And what of the Welsh leadership of the Lib Dems? During the election campaign, I took part in a question and answer session at Coleg Sir Gar in Llanelli. The Lib Dem candidate, as ever was missing but had sent his boss, Kirsty Williams. Time and again, she claimed that obtaining fair funding for Wales was a key concern of hers and her party and that a fair share of the cake could only be obtained by the Lib Dems.
So, how can her position possibly be squared with this week’s announcement by the ConDem coalition that Wales will receive no more funding at all? The cuts will bite as deeply as the Tories insist and with no fair funding to mitigate the worst effects. Some would say that when your party’s leadership in London ignores your position so blatantly, there is only one honourable thing to do…
But irrespective of the fate of individual politicians, are we seeing a new progressive politics? Many of the policies that the Lib Dems have dumped, were precisely those that appeared to define them as left of centre. Most tellingly of all, the first decision of the ConDem coalition was to cut a further £6 billion from public spending, on top of those cuts already announced by Labour.
This tells us where the balance of power lies in the ConDem coalition. The Lib Dems had been certain that deep cuts would threaten economic recovery– something that we in Wales, with our small private sector and our dependence on public sector jobs - understand very well indeed. Leading economists such as Joseph Stiglitz, David Blanchflower and even Thatcher’s economic guru, Patrick Minford agree that the only sustainable way to deal with a deficit is to ensure economic growth. The Lib Dems used to understand that too. But Vince Cable, the new Business Minister now jokes about his own duplicity to the staff of the department he had sought to abolish (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/8680746.stm). So now we know that the Lib Dems have thrown away their moral compass and that for crumbs from the Tory table.
The General Election forced the hands of the Lib Dem leadership to make a defining choice. Their choice was to move the centre of UK politics to the right. Only two weeks into this coalition, nobody can spot the difference between Liberals and Tories.
Libs? Huh? What are they good for? Absolutely nothing.
Monday, 24 May 2010
Friday, 14 May 2010
Ymlaen Llanelli!
Nia Griffith, Labour 15,916
Myfanwy Davies, Plaid Cymru 11,215
Christopher Salmon, Conservative 5,381
Myrddin Edwards, Liberal Democrat 3,902
Andrew Marshall, UK Independence Party 1,047
Having had a full week to catch up on my sleep, I thought I'd better share some thoughts on the Llanelli election result with you.
I am delighted to say that the result represents a 4% swing to Plaid from Labour. We achieved the highest ever vote for Plaid in any general election and our share of the vote increased by just under 3.5%. Well done all!
These successes are particularly striking given the exceptionally difficult nature of the election for Plaid across Wales and in Llanelli. Turnout was unusually high at nearly 70%, likely to be due in part to the televised debates that of course excluded Plaid. It is also probable that turnout among traditional Labour supporters was higher due to last-minute scaremongering from Labour politicians including Llanelli’s incumbent MP to vote Labour to keep the Tories out. False assertions that Plaid would form a coalition with the Tories undoubtedly cowed some voters into remaining with Labour.
Plaid’s canvassing returns were unusually strong during the last weeks of the campaign suggesting that a majority of people in Llanelli want to vote Plaid. It seems that this time they felt, faced with the increasing threat of a Conservative administration, that voting Labour was a necessary evil.
It is sad to reflect that despite these convenient local appeals to keep the Tories out, this week Labour then chose to pass on the keys to number 10 to the Tories rather than pursue talks with Plaid and the SNP to spare our communities the worst of the cuts. Locally, leaflets accusing Plaid of wanting to support slash and burn cuts in a Conservative budget will leave a bitter taste in the mouths of voters who have been abandoned to those same cuts by a Labour party keen to pursue its own electoral advantage in opposition.
Of course, we would have liked to have done better and it would have been an honour for me to stand up for Llanelli during what are going to be very tough years but I am very pleased with the result. It shows us gaining ground in the most difficult possible of circumstances. The result provides us with a solid base for the growth of Plaid in Llanelli. The campaign has also allowed us to develop an excellent base of talented and committed activists to help us fight the elections of 2011 and 2012.
Finally, I’d like to thank everyone who has helped and supported me over the past two-and-a-half years of the campaign. I am immensely proud of the work that has been achieved, by members and supporters many of whom were new to politics who wanted to stand together for a better Llanelli. Thanks also to everyone who has sent me messages since the election and yes, I want to continue to be useful in any way I can to help Llanelli and communities like ours across Wales to stand up for ourselves and for each other.
If this election teaches us anything, it is that nobody else will do that for us.
Ymlaen Llanelli!!
Myfanwy Davies, Plaid Cymru 11,215
Christopher Salmon, Conservative 5,381
Myrddin Edwards, Liberal Democrat 3,902
Andrew Marshall, UK Independence Party 1,047
Having had a full week to catch up on my sleep, I thought I'd better share some thoughts on the Llanelli election result with you.
I am delighted to say that the result represents a 4% swing to Plaid from Labour. We achieved the highest ever vote for Plaid in any general election and our share of the vote increased by just under 3.5%. Well done all!
These successes are particularly striking given the exceptionally difficult nature of the election for Plaid across Wales and in Llanelli. Turnout was unusually high at nearly 70%, likely to be due in part to the televised debates that of course excluded Plaid. It is also probable that turnout among traditional Labour supporters was higher due to last-minute scaremongering from Labour politicians including Llanelli’s incumbent MP to vote Labour to keep the Tories out. False assertions that Plaid would form a coalition with the Tories undoubtedly cowed some voters into remaining with Labour.
Plaid’s canvassing returns were unusually strong during the last weeks of the campaign suggesting that a majority of people in Llanelli want to vote Plaid. It seems that this time they felt, faced with the increasing threat of a Conservative administration, that voting Labour was a necessary evil.
It is sad to reflect that despite these convenient local appeals to keep the Tories out, this week Labour then chose to pass on the keys to number 10 to the Tories rather than pursue talks with Plaid and the SNP to spare our communities the worst of the cuts. Locally, leaflets accusing Plaid of wanting to support slash and burn cuts in a Conservative budget will leave a bitter taste in the mouths of voters who have been abandoned to those same cuts by a Labour party keen to pursue its own electoral advantage in opposition.
Of course, we would have liked to have done better and it would have been an honour for me to stand up for Llanelli during what are going to be very tough years but I am very pleased with the result. It shows us gaining ground in the most difficult possible of circumstances. The result provides us with a solid base for the growth of Plaid in Llanelli. The campaign has also allowed us to develop an excellent base of talented and committed activists to help us fight the elections of 2011 and 2012.
Finally, I’d like to thank everyone who has helped and supported me over the past two-and-a-half years of the campaign. I am immensely proud of the work that has been achieved, by members and supporters many of whom were new to politics who wanted to stand together for a better Llanelli. Thanks also to everyone who has sent me messages since the election and yes, I want to continue to be useful in any way I can to help Llanelli and communities like ours across Wales to stand up for ourselves and for each other.
If this election teaches us anything, it is that nobody else will do that for us.
Ymlaen Llanelli!!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)