Tag: Reform

Missing Ministers

Did anyone see Michael Wills, the constitutional affairs minister, at Conference?  Or hear much from his boss, Justice Secretary Jack Straw?  Or hear anything at all about the Ministry of Justice's flagship Governance of Britain programme?

Compared to the past few  years, this was a very quiet Conference in terms of addressing democratic or constitutional reforms, or even initiatives to re-engage voters in the political process.  Perhaps the only new thing announced was bringing the Act of Succession into the modern era - a worthy but hardly pressing change that will directly affect very few people.

Yes, the credit crunch and financial turmoil in the City and Wall Street are pressing challenges that need to be priorities at the moment.  But that doesn't preclude us from thinking about and debating other matters that we'll need to have policy on now, and for our manifesto.  What are we saying about bringing our democracy into the 21st century and making the way we do politics reflect the more diverse, pluralist and inclusive society we now live in? 

For those who say this is not a bread-and-butter issue, I say it should be for us as a party.  It is about examining who has power and makes the decisions that affect us all.  And it is about restoring trust in the State and in collective action. 

Those are some of the high-minded reasons.  There may be other more partisan reasons that we can think of as well why we need to have more of a message to say to voters come the next election.


723 Days to Save the Labour Party

There are 723 days remaining until the last possible day on which the next general election could be held. That's just less than two years. There's a stolid feeling in the air, oddly reminiscent of 1995, the stench of defeat looms, resignation and depression reign supreme. However, unlike 1995, the election has not been lost yet, a fourth term is not beyond our reach, as long as we act now. The clock is ticking, and as the seconds go by, the time to save the party from Opposition and the nation from years of Tory incompetence is fading away.It is to that end that the Party requires a programme of reinvgoration, a reassertion of its principles,  and I'm sorry to say it, but a change in leadership.


Miscarriage of justice

Today's conviction of Ronald Castree for the murder of Lesley Molseed highlights a flaw in the law that should be corrected as soon as possible.

Is Brown reversing Blair's reforms?

The think-thank Reform has a interesting report setting out how in the 1st month of the Brown era, a reverse gear has been found on the public sector reforms we saw during the Blair era.  Many I guess will welcome this, but as the Reform report point's out the 'inital decisions will impose an upwards pressure on public sector costs'.

5 Labour Deputy Leader candidates pledge support!

Already five of the six deputy leadership candidates have signed up in support of the Campaign for a Democratic Upper House.

Lords reform: Labour must lead the way:

Only the Labour party has a longstanding commitment to reform the Lords, it is something that has been part of the Labour movements struggle for a better and more equal society since the birth of the Parliamentary Labour Party. In the 1910 election, nearly 100 years ago – the Labour party increased its MP’s from 29 to 40 after the House of Lords blocked the ‘peoples budget’. The Lords was hereditary, unaccountable, overwhelmingly biased towards a single party regardless of public opinion and militant in defence of the interests of one class above all others. Arguably only one of these criticisms has been fully overcome in the last century. Having pushed through some reforms in the last 10 years we must move to entrench a truly democratic legacy – Labour must live up to our constitutional commitment to putting ‘power in the hands of the many not the few’. Only the Labour party can fully see through these reforms, they will never happen under a Conservative regime – we must deliver then on our destiny, and drive through these reforms completing a journey started nearly one hundred years ago.

Don't bottle it Brown! Labour must clear the way!

Brown should stake out the progressive ground on Lords reform

Lords Reform......

About time too.

Won't be fully democratic untill its fully elected, but its a start.


We should not sleepwalk into a Brown Government

There is a lot of talk of `renewal' from within The Labour Party and among the left-leaning media.  With a genuine threat emerging in the shape of David Cameron's ideologically devoid Conservative Party, the staid and tired Labour government appears very old hat - bogged down by scandal, a controversial foreign policy, and the fatigue of office.