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David Miliband for Labour Party Leader

David Miliband for Labour Leader

David Miliband for Labour Leader

I’ve been as certain as I could be since the Labour Leadership election began that I was going to vote for David Miliband; I like a lot of what he has had to say during the campaign and I do think he would unite the party and bring voters over to Labour from both the Conservative Party and the Liberal Democrats, which is precisely what Labour needs to do if it has any chance of winning the next General Election in 2015. The only reservation I have is if he will be radical enough with the policies he introduces or if he will be a continuation of what has gone before. There can be no doubt that much of what the coalition government are implementing right now will be catastrophic for this country over the long-term, and we should fight hard for our values and beliefs, but disagreeing with everything the coalition are doing just for the sake of it would in my opinion be completely wrong. That is where the Tories went wrong in 1997 and it took three election defeats for the Conservative Party before they sat up and began to understand why they were so comprehensively defeated in the three previous elections. Thankfully Labour is in a much stronger position today than the Tories were in 1997 and we have every opportunity to get back into government at the next election, providing we make the right choices as a party between now and 2015.

I have decided to vote for David Miliband in the forthcoming leadership election and I would encourage others to follow suit, but I also think his brother Ed Miliband and Andy Burnham both have excellent ideas and qualities to bring to the table. I met Andy Burnham for the second time recently at a Labour Party meeting in Swindon and although many of his ideas are quite traditional Labour, I do think he would make a really positive contribution both in the Shadow Cabinet and eventually I hope in the Cabinet itself. Ed Balls and Diane Abbott however probably don’t have the support either within the Labour Party or within the country to take the party forward, and besides I do think Diane is much better suited sitting on the ‘This Week’ sofa and we would all miss her valuable insight if her absence from the show became permanent. I have decided to support David Miliband’s campaign team and work as a telephone canvasser calling Labour voters up and down the country to try and garner their support for David in the upcoming election. If you would like to know more about David’s ideas for taking the Labour Party forward, and the direction he believes is right for the country, you can find out more by visiting his website

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Coalition Government Announce Plans to Scrap NHS Direct

NHS Direct
NHS Direct

Andrew Lansley, Secretary of State for Health has today announced plans to scrap the NHS Direct service set up under Labour in 1998 and which 9.5 million people every year rely on for medical advice and reassurance. The coalition government are planning to replace it with a cheaper alternative manned by people with no more than 60 hours training and will be the equivalent of a telephone call centre, and we all know how completely abhorrent most call centres are for customers. NHS direct is currently staffed by trained doctors and nurses who are experts in their field and who know instinctively what they are talking about, how can someone with no medical degree and just 60 hours’ worth of training possibly compare to that. Piece by piece this government are dismantling the NHS as we know it and slowly but surely are handing parts of it to the private sector, and no doubt this replacement service for NHS Direct will also be privatised in a few years from now. Not one single person in this country voted for these changes and we need to stand up and fight back against this betrayal of the National Health Service.

If Mr Cameron is unable to keep his election promises, maybe he will reconsider this proposal if enough people sign the petition against this act by visiting the Save NHS Direct website, after all the Prime Minister did say during the election that if more than 100,000 people sign a petition against any government plans, he would reconsider those plans – now is the time to put that statement to the test. Sign this petition and forward the website details to everyone in your email address book.

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Labour Leadership Question and Answer Session with David Miliband

David Miliband and Me

David Miliband and Me

I spent the best part of a couple of hours last Wednesday evening, 18th August at a question and answer session with Labour Leadership contender David Miliband in Swindon and I came away impressed with a lot of what he had to say. David spoke about rebuilding the Labour Party from the grassroots up rather than a top-down approach much criticised of the way Tony Blair ran the party, he spoke eloquently on the subject of creating a fully elected House of Lords – something I’ve agreed with for many years, and while David Miliband has been my preferred choice for Labour Leader since the race began, I am starting to question if he will be radical enough in bringing about the changes I would like to see if and when Labour are returned to government.

Charismatic and charming he certainly is, and any potential leader needs those qualities but I’m looking beyond just the leadership of the Labour Party and trying to imagine how each of the candidates would lead the country should they eventually become Prime Minister; I am slightly torn with David Miliband – on one hand I think he would unite the party and the country, I believe he has the capacity to reach beyond the Labour voter and encourage Tory and Lib Dem voters to vote Labour, and I also believe he would create a stable path back to economic stability, but on the other hand I also think he would probably be a continuation of what has gone before and I think we need a radical and really fresh approach not just to politics; but to the policies that a potential government can implement.

I was a strong supporter of Tony Blair, he did a lot of good things in government – I know he has his detractors and there are many things which I disagreed with him over as well, Iraq being the most obvious but he took the party to three consecutive election victories after two decades in the wilderness, like him or loathe him that didn’t happen by chance but the one area where Tony Blair could have and should have been revolutionary was with the economic policy of this country, instead he simply implanted the Thatcher economic doctrine at the heart of Labour and rebranded it New Labour, and so the gap between rich and poor was destined to grow wider and greed once more was good – at least that was his theory but certainly not mine. The type of revolution I would like to see in this country is one where capitalism is challenged fundamentally, not by replacing it with something else – I’ve studied this subject for a long time and even I find it hard to come up with a suitable alternative; capitalism is good, greed is not!

There needs to be a fundamental shift in the way capitalism operates; it is a wealth creator and that’s a good thing, but it creates huge wealth in the hands of a few and hardship in the hands of the many – it’s that principle which needs change and only someone with a revolutionary insight could bring that about. So many parts of the capitalist project could easily be changed to put it on a new path, a path that is much fairer and less divisive. Supporters of capitalism and free markets argue that competition creates choice and lowers prices, that’s true in the early stages of a products life or when a new company wants to challenge market share, but once the dust settles and we’re left with a handful of companies competing for the same customers everything becomes very stayed and predictable and the only competition we see then is which company will increase their prices first before the others follow suit. The energy market is a prime example, at one time we only had British Gas and Margaret Thatcher privatised it and eventually opened the markets to competition, naturally competition blossomed – for a while, until market share was established and then routine set in and prices continued to rise and rise. If competition really worked, this should be the time when customers benefit but instead within days of one energy company announcing a price rise, the rest follow suit. That’s not competition, that’s a monopoly. Petrol and diesel is another example and this is where capitalism loses its credibility and all sense of perspective, consistently aiming for greater profits instead of a steady consistent turnover without putting hundreds, sometimes thousands of jobs at risk by propagating greed until the bubble finally bursts.

Be satisfied with an established revenue stream instead of putting the company and the workforce at risk and if you’re intent of increasing revenue for your shareholders, reinvest sensibly and innovate research and development to improve your product line and invent new ones, instead of playing roulette with peoples jobs and come to think about it, remove shareholders completely from your business model and allow the workforce to own the company, incentivising them to take greater pride in what they do and to be rewarded financially when the business succeeds.

There are many nuances around the capitalist project that could be changed easily, and others which would require a little more effort, but it is the capitalist structure that at its heart is dragging this country into the abyss and creating this never ending cycle of boom and bust, rich and poor and them and us, and until we see a leader of a political party prepared to challenge that core problem, I fear this country will eventually self-destruct and it will be the generations underneath us who will be left to pick up the pieces, when we had every opportunity to set a brighter future for them but for our own selfish reasons, decided not to!

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VAT Increase will Penalise the Poorest in Society

George Osborne

George Osborne Increases VAT to 20%

The new coalition government has just announced their regressive tax increases for hard working families the length and breadth of this country, the measures introduced today will impact on lower income households. The headline increase is surely that of VAT from 17.5% to 20% from 4th January 2011 – over the last 40 years only a Conservative government has increased VAT. Thatcher increased it from 8% to 15% and John Major increased it further to 17.5%, and now we see David Cameron and George Osborne increasing VAT even further to a staggering 20% rate, which is the most regressive tax increase in the last twenty years. This will be the new governments Achilles Heel – in the weeks leading up the election David Cameron and Nick Clegg both announced neither had plans to increase VAT.

The new taxes introduced today put the economy at risk when we are still teetering on the edge with growth remaining worryingly stagnant, there is every possibility the economy could slip back into recession. What we got today from this new coalition government was the carpet pulled out from under the feet of the poorest in the country; housing benefit will be capped putting the most vulnerable at risk, disability living allowance will be means tested by 2013 and child benefits to be frozen for the next three years, while corporation tax will be cut every year for the next three years putting more money in the pockets of businessmen across the country.

The government claims to be progressive yet everything announced today is regressive, backward looking and short sighted.

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Rupert Murdoch and the Backroom Deal with David Cameron

Rupert Murdoch

Rupert Murdoch

Sky News announced today that Sky Television has bought Virgin Media for £160m but astonishingly there was no mention of regulator intervention or referral to the competition commission despite Sky being the market leader in Pay-Per-View television services, and Virgin Media being the only competitor in the market.

This gives Sky Television unfettered control over the industry and will inevitably see subscription price rises for Sky Television and Virgin Media subscribers. Over many years Sky Television has abused its market position in the pursuit of ever increasing market share and staggering profits for News Corp, owned by Rupert Murdoch and the owner of Sky Television. Why this acquisition has not been referred to the competition commission remains a mystery considering this sector only had, until today two companies competing with each other.

In the run up to the recent General Election Rupert Murdoch’s newspaper industry, which includes The Sun came out in support of David Cameron and the Conservatives, and there was much talk at the time that David Cameron had done a deal with Rupert Murdoch to garner his support. It doesn’t take much to work out that in return for The Conservative Party receiving positive media during the election campaign from Rupert Murdoch’s newspaper and television interests (The Sun, The Times, Sky News etc.), and if elected a continuation of stories supporting the government over the course of the Parliament, then the government would turn a blind eye to any further regulation of the media industry and also to wave through any acquisition by Sky Television of Virgin Media.

We now know what that backroom deal between Rupert Murdoch and The Conservative Party means in practice – continued dominance of one of the least regulated industries in the country for the benefit of News Corp and Rupert Murdoch, and increased subscription prices for Sky Television customers. You have to ask yourself who is really running this country?

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First Government Minister Resigns

David Laws

David Laws

Barely three weeks into the new coalition government Liberal Democrat David Laws, Chief Secretary to the Treasury has tonight announced his immediate resignation from the post in the wake of yet more scandels surrounding expenses. Did somebody mention a new type of politics?

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