You are in the company of Roger Warren Evans, Welsh socialist lawyer and company director, on a journey to work out a new socialist order capable of generating equality and freedom for the world.  Nothing less will do.
   

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Renewing participatory democracy

My Little Red Book

A New Socialist Settlement

Bevan
Re-visited
 

Multiple Differential Uncertainty


Who am I? Biography  

 

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Week 4 Friday
28 January 2005


Wrong
referendum question

What the question should be...

The Tories must be rubbing their eyes in disbelief.  The Government plans effectively to ask the Electorate whether they wish to "establish a Constitution for the EU".   And for the majority of voters, the answer to that misconceived question must be No...

For that is simply not the issue.  There is an EU Constitution already, which has regulated the Union for over 40 years.  It exists, derived from multiple sources, and has been frequently revised and updated.  And if this most recent Revision does not go through, simplifying its use and bringing all its provisions together between two covers, the Union will simply carry on with it present higgledy-piggledy Constitution.  True, new powers to get tough on terrorism will not be covered, nor will improved third-world aid.  The offices of President and Foreign Minister will not be enhanced as envisaged.

But that's all.  Peter Hain was, politically, unwise to have described the new Constitution as "simply tidying up" - but he was in essence correct.  Apart from a few mechanical issues (definition of a "qualified majority", changed seat-numbers in Parliament), nothing is changed by this re-run of the Constitution.

The Government is therefore barmy, if it wants to win the Referendum, to adopt this wording.  The wording should have been -

Do you approve this latest Revision of the EU Constitution, which strengthens the EU in the war against terrorism and as a humanitarian aid donor, and accommodates the increasing number of European member States?

That would be vastly more accurate. 

  • And the answer would be YES..


Iraq 
The war at home

Every day, I meet casualties of the Iraq War.  Failed asylum-seekers in Swansea, young people who have fled the awfulness of life in Iraq, albeit without a strong UK asylum claim.  Their applications have, quite properly, failed - yet they cannot go home.  The UK cannot deport them to the worsening conditions in Iraq, and they are terrified of returning voluntarily - to what they see daily, on their TV screens.

They are victims of the Coalition invasion of Iraq. They are trapped by international circumstance.  Their lives are in limbo. They are banned from employment, and while some may find voluntary work to do, they live for the most part in enforced idleness, in growing depression.

We must find a new solution, both for them and other failed applicants who cannot be sent home - to Zimbabwe, Burundi, and other war-zone from time to time.  They should be granted Discretionary Leave to remain (say for two years) - and permitted to work.


Abuse
of "Contract"

Be suspicious of any politician who claims to have a "contract" with the people.  For the 17th century John Locke, the grand concept of a Social Contract served a particular theoretical purpose.  He argued that the authority of government itself arose from an implied contract between the people and their sovereign, the Government.  The people agreed to obey, the Sovereign agreed to protect - there was there a certain parity.  He rebelled against the legitimacy of armed conquest, or Divine Right, so he sought a source of political  legitimacy in the peaceable civil concept of contract.

Modern politicians, of both right and left, abuse this concept.  Parents are required to enter into "contracts" with schools, governing their children's conduct or their own.  Young criminals are required to enter into "contracts", as part of their probation or their punishment.  Drug addicts are constrained to enter into treatment "contracts".  And now Alan Milburn offers a new "Contract" with the people, as a means of winning a third term in power.

This is dangerous, authoritarian nonsense. 
These are not contracts. 
They are acts of coercion, sweetly sugared.  The distinctive force of "contract" is that it represents a consensus between equals, each with the option to accept or reject its terms. It is a meeting of minds.  If, given such an option, you accept those terms, the full force of the law and society will combine to enforce that contract.

But there can never be a consensual contract between the individual and the State to whose authority he is subject.  These parties are not equals. The fundamental parity of bargaining power is missing, depriving the "contract" of any arguable force.  The use of term contract is a devious political deceit.

And Milburn's latest opus is positively menacing: it appeared in The Guardian last week, offering contract terms to the electorate: "If you play by the rules, you get a chance to progress", says Milburn. 


Planned Destitution

My days are dominated by concerns about the deliberate impoverishment of asylum-seekers.  It is crystal-clear that the Government is trying to use the instrument of deliberate impoverishment to deter would-be asylum-seekers, whatever the merits of their claim.  Administrative practices proliferate which have no place in a humane and civilised society.  And because there is no funding for legal action, these devices rarely come to the attention of the Courts. They are also using destitution to pressurise failed asylum-seekers to leave the country, trying to starve them out.  There is an administrative jungle in the Home Office, which degrades us all.

This week I have attended a meeting of Cardiff's "Destitution Committee", a group of volunteers (from charities and faith groups) banding together to tackle the next round of Governmental nastiness, due to strike in April.

As a policy, this "toughness" will fail.  I understand the politics of it, much as I deplore its populist Machivellian flavour. It is no substitute for a considered, thought-through immigration policy.  And it will fail for two reasons -

Most immigrants (including asylum-seekers) arrive with the most rudimentary information about the UK in any event. Theirs is no balanced, considered judgement: it is a declaration of despair, a cry for help, a howl of protest. Given such ignorance and misinformation, it would take decades for such a policy of deliberate intimidation to succeed.

For most immigrants, the United Kingdom (however awful Home Secretaries may make it), remains preferable to the conditions they have left behind. Whatever the indignities heaped upon them, however oppressive the destitution, they want to stay. 

Of course, there are exceptions.  But the truth is that our immigration policies lack all coherence, all principle.  Nor are other EU members any more coherent.  David Blunkett seemed to be making a start - but without any broad, humane vision of a system which might work smoothly and justly..

  • These are dark days, for any liberal, and fair-minded citizen.  What are your thoughts on the subject? 
    Drop me a line

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Is Gordon walking out?

Has the thought occurred to you? Is Gordon Brown laying the ground for his departure from UK politics to the world stage, with a key international institution?  Some explanation is due, it seems to me, for the remarkable latitude he has been given, to strut his own stuff in Africa - even though the UK's own Aid record hardly justifies the swagger...  Once the next election has been won, in reluctant tandem with Tony Blair, will we look back on these days through different eyes?

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Humanita!

Are you a potential recruit for Humanita?  I am becoming more and more interested in  the UN Universal Declaration of Human Rights  And I want to contact political activists who share that interest and concern.

The Asian Tsunami Disaster will have a number of political consequences, all related the mobilisation of global political action.  Our political systems, "our little systems", are simply not large enough to encompass the necessary global action, organisationally or philosophically.  Nation States trip over international public agencies, who in turn trespass on the turf of the great charities.  And it is also clear that there is lacking any coherent framework of principle within which to coordinate the response of humankind to such disasters.

Yet the necessary principles and values can all be found in the UN Declaration of 1948.  Historically, that was a moment when the primacy of personal freedom and dignity was better understood than now.  The perceptions of the UN Declaration are therefore of particular value - and we can draw upon them for political inspiration. 

One of my favourite clauses is -

  • " Article 21 (1) Everyone has the right to take part in the government of his country, directly or through freely chosen representatives."

"Participatory democracy" is one of the great ideas of mankind which has not yet been effectively tried.  Every citizen should in some way become involved in the ordering of human society.  We must devise systems in which millions upon millions of our fellow citizens develop a sense of responsibility for their own society by playing a personal part in its governance.

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ASBO ALERT

My daughter Katharine is deeply "embedded" in the ASBO issue, in the course of her work with the Childrens Society.  Last year I published a lecture of hers on the subject.  It's always exciting when a theme is taken up by another reader, and developed.  That is what Rona Epstein of Kenilworth has just done: she has written in to link the lecture with a damning article on ASBOs by a practising defence solicitor, Matt Foot, writing in The Guardian


One Year Ago 
5 January 2004

Improving
the Welfare State

Recognize him? 
Sir William Beveridge, whose view of the Welfare State has dominated all the years of my life.  His philosophies need modifying, but not abandoning.  Last year, I put this at the top of my NY priority list. Over the year, 'tis true that my attention has been increasingly taken by "human rights" issues - and that might seem at first sight inconsistent.

But I see them as two sides of the same coin.  The collective systems of the future welfare state will be the guarantor of our individual freedoms.


Two Years Ago 
13 January 2003

Values? 
Mine are European,
not American

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I enjoy dipping into informed US West Coast chat, always up to the minute, which can be found at www.metafilter.co

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Having discovered this remarkable NASA website, linked with the Hubble Telescope and the NASA Mars exploration vehicles, with its current photographs from outer space, I am reluctant to let it go

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Never miss Steve Bell! His cartoons, from The Guardian - his wit and perception illuminate the absurdities of the political scene... Our political life is diminished by the absence, in mainstream politics. of leaders with capacity to deliver the same punch.

 

     

Editorial Note

Normal Webmaster service interrupted this week by a virus - definitely not flu, probably the vicious "winter vomiting disease" which, The Guardian tells me, affects one million people a year in the UK.  And "numbers tend to peak in January". A nasty little bug, as I can testify.  Please try to avoid being one of that million.  

RWE   


Recent topics

Labour with the socialism left out >>>

BNP evil anti-Muslim propaganda >>>

My Dad's 1934 Currency Reform >>>

Baptism by Acupuncture >>>

Blunkett  Just Desserts >>>

Abolish Wrongful Dismissal >>>

Impeach Blair sign up here < >>>

"Groupism" a dangerous error >>>

Religion ravages politics >>>

Are Public Schools charities? >>>

Extending the Welfare State >>>

Adjustment Pay for every worker >>>

Pay Guardianship Allowance >>>

The Mischief of ASBOs >>>

And read my Big Theory itself, at Multiple Differential Uncertainty...  Or try my snappier and more practical analysis of the Corporations and the Left Coming to Terms


I agree with
Michael Howard

The immigration system he proposes is one that I have often advocated, here on this website.  I agree that UNHCR should be equipped to decide who has a valid asylum claim, under the 1951 Refugee Convention.  It is nonsense that every national Administration should have to build up all the information to process applications from over 100 countries: I am keenly aware that the UK decision-making process (though probably, one of the best) is very fragile and ill-informed.  The UN would do a much better job.  Nor do I disagree, in principle, with the idea of overall national "immigration quotas" (although Howard's choice of 15,000 pa is fanciful, and brutal).  Such quotas should cover the total admissible each year, whether by way of study- or work-permit, or the grant of asylum.

The real problems are all practical, and are all ignored by Howard.   He repeatedly ignores the vital difference between those those on Work Permits (i.e. already permitted to enter, by the UK State), and asylum-seekers, who are simply fleeing oppression, and seek no permit. For the permit-holders, a Conservative Government could simply close down the system (although they would not, because the workforce is needed).

But for asylum-applicants, the position is quite different.  Where will the asylum applicant reside, while waiting for a UN decision?  At whose expense?  By definition, the Applicant cannot stay at home; and Labour Minister Des Browne has warned that there was no possibility of negotiating safe havens with third-party states, just to solve a UK problem. 

My view is that if the Applicant chooses to come to the UK, the UNHCR should decide the case right here, with jurisdiction transferred from our own tribunals.  Successful Applicants (i.e. then refugees within the strict meaning of the term) would be allocated by the UN within the framework of a quota system pre-agreed internationally.

Howard has simply taken the germ of a viable international system (which would take perhaps ten years to negotiate) and jumped the gun with his own half-baked version.  The result will be to increase social tensions, damage the good name of the UK, and cause untold anguish to thousands of vulnerable immigrants.  He has a heavy burden of responsibility to bear.

  • My hope is that this desperate ploy will not damage the emergence, in the longer-term, of a UN-managed system.

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Glaucoma

I have just been diagnosed, at 69, as having glaucoma - well, my right eye is showing signs of the loss of peripheral vision which is characteristic of glaucoma.  My Swansea grandfather, it transpires, had glaucoma, and it has visited me. There is every prospect, I am advised, of arresting any further worsening of my sight by appropriate treatment, but damage which has already been done cannot be reversed. 

I confess to a little regret about the delay: my optician referred me to an NHS Trust specialist 15 months ago (December 2003) for a second opinion - and so I have had one year's worth of waiting and worsening, without treatment.  I received the diagnosis on 18 January 2005.  And any intervening damage that has occurred is now "beyond repair".

But I do have a gift.  It is the ability not to expend any energy on things that cannot be changed or affected.  I seem to be psychologically equipped, by accident of personal history, to worry only about things that I can change.  And this is not one of them.

  • So life will go on.  If I can maintain present levels of sight, that will be just fine.  Does anyone have experience of this moment?  If so, drop me a line

OFCOM gets busy liberating local radio...

This man, Nigel Reeve, is setting Swansea alight. The local radio stage is buzzing.  Remember Swansea Bay Radio, just before Christmas?  Preparing to compete for the new local franchise, to be offered this year?  I broadcast a chat-show, on local business matters...

Well a rival bidding-team now wants me to join them, for their own 28-day live-to-air trial, due in early February. Nigel Reeve is Chief Executive of the new bidder. The company is Laser Broadcasting, a rival national group with a distinctive investment formula, offering to give local investors a worthwhile equity holding of the local company. 

 

 

 

 

As a mere wordsmith, and journeyman of the TalkRadio community, I do not want to burn my boats by commitment to any of the competing capitalists.  Does anyone have any advice for me?

PS  I am very interested in this type of syndicated investment, and would welcome your examples.  The method is used on the Continent by the excellent bargain-hotel chain Campanile but it has failed miserably here, seemingly because it does not meet investors' required returns-on-capital - your thoughts welcome.

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Kalan Karim

 

 

 

 

 

 

My home-town of Swansea has been doubly shamed by the death of Kalan Karim, an Iraqi refugee.  He was killed last October by a single blow to the head by a drunken local racist, in the very centre of the City.  His killer was brought to Court this week, and the Court accepted a plea of guilty to manslaughter.

Why the double shame?  

The first is the racism which interpenetrates Swansea life.  It is real. We are 200-miles from London, removed from many of the multicultural influences that civilise our larger cities. And I acknowledge that the racism of Swansea is statistically "normal" in that one must routinely work to overcome its incidence and influence.  Given our geographical isolation we may be a little worse than comparable English towns - but not, I suspect, by a large margin. There is no doubt that this was a racist killing, and that was fully acknowledged, this week, in Court.

But second, there is the shame of the plea to manslaughter, accepted by the Prosecution and the Judge.  As a lawyer, I am quite certain that this killing was murder or nothing: a violent death, from a single heavy blow from behind, to the back of the skull, coupled with a very evident desire to do serious harm, alcohol or no alcohol. The crime of murder has never required proof of intention to kill, merely to inflict serious harm.  And I have tried to understand why the Prosecution settled for manslaughter, on the grounds that there was no intention to kill...

The second shame is, I suspect, related to the first.  What if a Swansea-empanelled jury turned out to contain enough racist jurors to scupper a murder verdict? There might have been an acquittal, or a re-trial - which would have been a race-relations disaster.  I have agonised this week over what my decision, as Prosecutor, would have been.  The "right" course was to press the murder charge - and yet the price of failure would have been high.  The pragmatic course would have been to accept a manslaughter plea, put the killer quickly behind bars, move on, and allow the wounds in the community to heal.

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Conduct Unbecoming

The dismissal of bookseller Joe Gordon, from the Edinburgh branch of Waterstone’s, demonstrates the need for a more comprehensive commitment to "human rights", along the lines of the UN Declaration.  Joe is an instant Humanita hero...

That is because the European Convention of Human Rights (now incorporated into UK law, by way of the 1998 Human Rights Act) is limited to the infringement of human rights which are committed by a “public authority”.  Joe Gordon's human rights were infringed by his own "private" employer, Waterstones, because of comments about Waterstones in his own private blog The Woolamaloo Gazette .  That means that under UK law he has no remedy for the human rights breach. 

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Redistribution...
    
 ...of Power

My own politics are unashamedly structural.   I believe the key malaise of modern public life is the over-centralisation of power - in London, in Whitehall, in Westminster, in Cardiff, in Edinburgh.  For power to be constructive, it must be spread around, re-structured and divided in new ways.

We need a radical redistribution of power, throughout civic society.  This is essentially a socialist cause: markets will never achieve it, nor will the Tories.  It is now as important as the redistribution of wealth - far more citizen participation is needed, in newly designed institutions.  Also a drive to rehabilitate the profession of public administrative service, at all levels - akin to the radical reforms undertaken by the Victorians (Northcote-Trevelyan reforms, of the 1870s).

The latest theme is the possibility of engaging millions of citizens in the governance of their own lives, by way of super-parish Councils.  Prescott's commentaries are not encouraging, but at least the theme is the right one.

  • Watch out for more

Cities Resurgent

Political interest is turning again to the empowerment of our great city regions.  The BBC transfer to Manchester (< this is Manchester City Hall) is a brilliant and perceptive move, a trailblazer.  And I make no apology for republishing for you, my own proposals for city regional government, made in 1996. 

  • For constitutional aficionados, I give you, after eight years in the political wilderness - Building a New Britain.  It makes the case for powerful city regional government. Its best days are still to come.

The Fabians are a great, enlightened Left-Wing political community some 7,000-strong - and we have many skills among our number.

Would you like to be added to the monthly Fabian Update e-mail list? Just e-mail Fabian Research


050124  Make sure you have not missed
the previous edition 
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And the
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Week 4   Friday
28 January 2005

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