Tuesday, 27 September 2016

The #LibDem Fightback


Maybe I will soon stop blogging here as sadly, Brexit looms and the referendum has come and gone.  Or I may continue as I still have a voice, as does the rest of the 48% who voted to stay.  

This morning I got chatting with a friendly young barista.  The subject of his travel plans came up.  He had been reading that Brexit would make them more complex and was unimpressed.  'I wanted to remain in the EU ' he said,  'but I didn't vote'.  In his next breath he told me that several of his mates voted to leave as a joke.  They didn't think it would happen.  Well, it has and it is not a laughing matter.  Welcome to the dysfunctional world that is Brexit Britain.  

Fortunately, the LibDem Fightback is well under way.  And I am proud to be part of it.  I write this fresh from the Liberal Democrat Autumn Conference and with renewed enthusiasm for the EU cause. 

If you want to hear about the Liberal Democrat Plan carry on reading.  It's great news. Since the referendum we've seen some incredible momentum. We've gained almost 20,000 members, and since the election of Theresa May as PM we have won eighteen by-elections with huge swings.

If you also want to fight for an open, tolerant and united Britain, who want to be the real opposition to this Conservative Brexit Government, then join the Liberal Democrats today.  Go to our website now: www.libdems.org.uk/join

Here are some of our Newbury Liberal Democrat team with the Leader, Tim Farron, second left. 


At conference, Tim Farron explained our plan for where we, as a country go from here, in terms of Brexit and the politics of fear, division and hate.

He began with a story from just after the referendum.  At the start of his speech, he spoke about a meeting held in Preston, the town where he grew up and learnt his values, to talk about the referendum and the realisation he'd had there.  He said 'The people in that church hall in Preston, they'd voted differently to me (ie to leave) but I thought, you know what, we're on the same side here.

We see a London-centric no, Westminster-centric approach from politicians and the media. Treating the provinces as alien curiosities.
Those people in Preston and Sunderland and Newport see a divide between those who win and those who lose. When the country is booming, they don't see the benefit. And when the country is in decline they are the first to be hit.  Those people ... wanted, quite understandably, to give the powerful a kicking. So they did.' 
At that meeting they talked about low wages. About poor housing. About strains on hospitals and schools. Their problems weren't caused by the European Union, they were caused by powerful people who took them for granted.
By politicians who have spent decades chasing cheap headlines and short-term success for their political careers, and never acting in the long-term interests of the whole country.
Tim then set out how he wants to reach out to Leave voters... ' wanted Britain to remain in the European Union and I still do. But we have got to listen, to learn and to understand why millions of people voted to leave. We can't just tell them they're wrong and stick our fingers in our ears.
So I want to do two things.
I want to persuade those who voted leave that we understand and respect their reasons, that we are determined to take head on the things about today’s Britain that have left so many people feeling ignored and I want to give them their say over what comes next.
The Liberal Democrats have a plan. We know what we want and we know where we want to take our country. When Theresa May does agree a deal with the EU, we want the people to decide.
Not a re-run of the referendum, not a second referendum, but a referendum on the terms of the as-yet-unknown Brexit deal.'
So, that's the first part of the plan, here is the second.  It concerns NHS and social care in England. 
About this Tim said  'For years, politicians have chosen to paper over the cracks rather than come clean about what it will really take – what it will really cost – not just to keep the NHS afloat but to give people the care and the treatment that they deserve.  And that means, finally, bringing the NHS and the social care system together.  We need to face the hard truth that the NHS needs more money – a lot more money – not just to stop it lurching from crisis to crisis but so that it can meet the needs and the challenges it will face in the years ahead. So that it can be the service we all need it to be for the long-term. That means having the most frank and honest conversation about the NHS that the country has ever had. What Beveridge did for the 20th century, we need for the 21st century.  We need to face the hard truth that the NHS needs more money – a lot more money.  We will go to the British people with the results of our Beveridge Commission and we will offer a new deal for health and social care, honest about the cost, bold about the solution. If the only way to fund a health service that meets the needs of everyone, is to raise taxes, Liberal Democrats will raise taxes.' 

The third part of the plan is simply this; we have a message for everyone who wants a real opposition to the Tories.  Whichever party you supported at the last election, we all know that Britain needs a decent, united opposition. So if Corbyn’s Labour has left the stage, then we will take the stage.  Britain needs a strong opposition. The Liberal Democrats will be that strong opposition.

This is LibDem plan to build a Britain that's open, tolerant and united....  

I had some concerns about the democratic validity of another referendum.  I submitted a question to Tim Farron and to my amazement I was chosen to ask it.  




I asked Tim 'is a second referendum democratic?'  Tim replied that it was a great democratic oppurtunity, for people to have their say when the facts about the exit deal where known.  I then asked the supplementary question 'How would a person who voted to leave first time round and then also voted leave second time round would feel if the results of the referendum of the terms of the deal was such that the deal was rejected and we remained in the EU?'  

Tim Farron is convinced that this would still be a healthy situation democratically and had me convinced when he said that we would never forgive ourselves if our kids said to us in twenty years time 'Why didn't you do something? You didn't fight brexit hard enough'. 

The LibDem Fightback is well under way. Join us
www.libdems.org.uk/join

Reference





Monday, 5 September 2016

Debate

Today is the day I am going to see the debate on the need for a second refendum.  Have been looking forward to it, despite the fact there will be no vote and no further stage.  This makes a bit of a mockery of the whole thing but I hope to learn things.  
It is also the day to take the sewing machine to the person who has more current need of it than me. Yes, the Art Historian.  So I set off on an adventure by taxi, (only discovered at the bus stop that my bus was cut; there wasn't enough public opposition is the official line, but I for one could not back buses ahead of kids and mental health, so thanks to austerity, the only winners are the taxi drivers), train (15 mins late) and shanks pony.  I have tea and wait for her outside the RA.  You can just see the lawn to the right. It replaces the monstrosity and is more pleasant on the eye. However, it is for cinema screenings, the like of which cannot be afforded by the AH's generation. 


The third important thing about today is that it is, or would be my lovely Mum's 86th birthday. I am wearing the hedgehog charm which I saved from her charm bracelet.  I sold the latter, on her instructions; she knew I'm not a bracelet person.  I remember all the years we bought her charms for special occasions.  Happy times. 


After a nice lunch I walk through St. James's Park to Westminster. 





I queue ten minutes for a pass and then here I am.  The wonderful Gothic building is inspiring, easy to access and well worth a visit.  The cafe is reasonable to my surprise.  


I am transfixed for two hours.  There will be no consequences, no vote, no referral to the House of Commons, nada.  So in that respect the public are short changed, as Caroline Lucas says to me afterwards.  To my surprise, I do a U-turn.   Here is the message I just posted for our StrongerIn page.
  
Hello All, I have just been to the debate on the petition calling for a second referendum.  It was SO interesting.  I even got to talk to Caroline Lucas at the end.  She, Chuka Umunna and David Lammy made all the points we have made in the past very eloquently.  I have, however, come away feeling differently about things.  I feel that any parliamentary vote or second referendum is treating the 52% with disdain and smacks of metropolitan elitism.  I do believe we should push for access to the single market, the right to remain for EU citizens living here and for that 350 million for the NHS.  I think this will be my focus.  I know the manifesto group said 'stop Brexit' but it said all this stuff too; I am not divorcing you lot!  That Ian Paisley character said 'careful what you wish for' and I see a lot of unrest if the 48% get this wrong.  What do people think?  Of course I may wake up feeling a little different......
So now it is homewards on a train which, miraculously is running to time!