Sez you with your separate parliament.John_fi_Skye wrote:MORE FUCKING POLITICIANS???!!!!
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Sez you with your separate parliament.John_fi_Skye wrote:MORE FUCKING POLITICIANS???!!!!
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As I mentioned there are strong city cultures at least in the big ones and they do tend to have mayors or strong local government. Not sure about counties, does someone living in Coventry really care much for Birmingham and vice versa?. There is also a rural/urban split but I just can't see an English identity. Also bear in mind the more elections there are the less people tend to vote and the more corrupt/extreme the results are due to low turnout. You only have to look at local council elections where nutters tend to get in from extremist parties get in. Do you really think people vote UKIP so they can run the local swimming pool better than anyone else?Brian Peacock wrote:That may be so MrJonno, but people do have a regional identity; the Midlanders, Yorkies, Cornishians, Fenlanders, Lakelanders, Northumbrionians etc etc. England/s national culture may be rather porous and bland, but even though its a small country with a relatively mobile workforce I think people still feel tied to 'their' areas - adopted or otherwise. Even in Scotland, the people of the Western Islands and Highlands feel separate from the Borders or the grey-faced folk of Aberdeenshire. I think dividing the nation into relatively autonomous regional governments, or Cantons perhaps(?), feeding an overall federal core could be way to devolve power even across the union - within the framework of a constitutional republic of course.
I suppose I'm a bit of a political objectivist (but not in an Ayn Rand sense) - I think there are effective and ineffective ways to go about solving certain problems, - though these may be incredibly difficult to find, and even harder to implement given the levels of corruption - and the same solutions should, largely, work for everyone. So the best way to head in the direction of the better way of doing things, is to balance the views of the largest possible group of people.Pappa wrote:If the regions had more autonomy, they'd have more power to fix their own problems in a way that suited them best.PsychoSerenity wrote:I don't know, there's one thing I particularly worry about here - though perhaps this might actually help solve it, if it was managed at a national level - and that's the increasing disparity between rich areas and poor areas. It's the thing that pushes the biggest cities to grow the fastest, and eventually even creates ghettos of poor areas within the cities.Pappa wrote:I think that would be an excellent idea.Brian Peacock wrote:What about regional assemblies across the union, with a region by region tax and spending remit, under a national federal republic?
klr wrote:Sez you with your separate parliament.John_fi_Skye wrote:MORE FUCKING POLITICIANS???!!!!
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That's a very pragmatic, practical viewpoint. The thing with national politics is that its run by a political elite who consider their constituency to be the economic elite who fund them. Devolving power to the region could de-focus that natural imbalance in the system and re-focus it on the citizen. There's obviously a concern that certain areas will attract more money than others, larger conurbations usually have a more active and robust economy than smaller ones, or the rural outlands, but a regional democracy with a little more autonomy could address local concerns locally.PsychoSerenity wrote:I suppose I'm a bit of a political objectivist (but not in an Ayn Rand sense) - I think there are effective and ineffective ways to go about solving certain problems, - though these may be incredibly difficult to find, and even harder to implement given the levels of corruption - and the same solutions should, largely, work for everyone. So the best way to head in the direction of the better way of doing things, is to balance the views of the largest possible group of people.Pappa wrote:If the regions had more autonomy, they'd have more power to fix their own problems in a way that suited them best.PsychoSerenity wrote:I don't know, there's one thing I particularly worry about here - though perhaps this might actually help solve it, if it was managed at a national level - and that's the increasing disparity between rich areas and poor areas. It's the thing that pushes the biggest cities to grow the fastest, and eventually even creates ghettos of poor areas within the cities.Pappa wrote:I think that would be an excellent idea.Brian Peacock wrote:What about regional assemblies across the union, with a region by region tax and spending remit, under a national federal republic?
Obviously there will be many things that depend specifically on geographical location that still need to be managed locally. But 'who lives there' should not make a difference. Otherwise it's too easy for people living in a rich area to make sure that they are very well off, and then become viciously protective over what they have, to the detriment of everyone else.
In the case of Oz, I suspect you are right, but political inertia means they will be with us always, and the continual shifting blame game with it...Blind groper wrote:Here's hoping the British will be too smart to introduce state governments. That is one of the big and wasteful political systems that should have been dumped long ago. The thing is that nations like Australia and the USA instigated state governments in days when communications and travel were slow as hell. So the politicians had to be close to the area they administered. That is no longer the case, and a politician can deliver with regard to territory thousands of kilometres from his home today.
Of course, once state government exists, it becomes almost impossible to get rid of it, since there are a bunch of politicians at state level with their snouts in the public trough, and they will fight tooth and nail to prevent their power and money source being taken from them.
All that state government does in the end is provide another money sink to suck taxes out of the pockets of productive people.
You know, that would work.mistermack wrote:The best solution would be to have one big government, with the resources and expertise pooled from across the country.
Then the regions, like Scotland, and Wales, and the North of England, can have an office of government dedicated to their needs.
And have county and local councils for the piddling day-to-day stuff.
Well, fuck me, that's what we had, before they spent billions fucking it up.
Scrap the Scottish Parliament, and the Welsh Assembly. Make a nice concert hall out of them.
And save all that money, in local politics salaries. Brilliant !!!
You make it sound like this is a bad thing.Blind groper wrote: All that state government does in the end is provide another money sink to suck taxes out of the pockets of productive people.
The electorate have been lied to.ronmcd wrote:You know, that would work.mistermack wrote:The best solution would be to have one big government, with the resources and expertise pooled from across the country.
Then the regions, like Scotland, and Wales, and the North of England, can have an office of government dedicated to their needs.
And have county and local councils for the piddling day-to-day stuff.
Well, fuck me, that's what we had, before they spent billions fucking it up.
Scrap the Scottish Parliament, and the Welsh Assembly. Make a nice concert hall out of them.
And save all that money, in local politics salaries. Brilliant !!!
But the electorate don't want that.
Problem.
Short version: the electorate don't matter.mistermack wrote:The electorate have been lied to.ronmcd wrote:You know, that would work.mistermack wrote:The best solution would be to have one big government, with the resources and expertise pooled from across the country.
Then the regions, like Scotland, and Wales, and the North of England, can have an office of government dedicated to their needs.
And have county and local councils for the piddling day-to-day stuff.
Well, fuck me, that's what we had, before they spent billions fucking it up.
Scrap the Scottish Parliament, and the Welsh Assembly. Make a nice concert hall out of them.
And save all that money, in local politics salaries. Brilliant !!!
But the electorate don't want that.
Problem.
In any case, when did the electorate ever get everything they wanted?
Experience tells that people want loads of stuff, right up to the time when they are asked to pay for it. Then reality kicks in.
The problem with stuff like this is that payment is removed from the voting process.
If people got the bill for their share of the cost of the Scottish parliament, the day before they voted, they might come to their senses.
But this is how con-men work. Buy it now. Pay later. The mugs fall for it all the time.
For me that's very simple.Audley Strange wrote:We hear a bit here about the coming referendum on devolution, much of the resistance of which, here at least comes from our fellows down south. This makes me wonder why as I can't see how Scotland leaving the union would be detrimental to England.
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