How Do You Like Our Clothes, Mr. Clegg? 01/17/2012
Regular readers of the English Radical blog may recall a post made here recently (“ Clegg’s Green Mile”) highlighting the fact that the Lib-Dems were undertaking a taxpayer funded re-branding exercise in an attempt to reverse their well deserved pariah status which came with helping the Tories to power. With this in mind, we cautiously welcome Nick Clegg’s apparent conversion to at least one aspect of English Radicalism, with his call for a Distributist “John Lewis” style economy, with greater employee participation, decision making and capital investment. This has been one of our core principles since we set up ERA in the summer of 2009, and is even written into our constitution. We take a pragmatic view of this situation in ERA – when our website is full of good, practical policy ideas, it is perhaps asking too much of Oxbridge-educated politicians with no morals and no ideas of their own, not to steal ours. It's irksome when they steal our clothes off the washing line in this way, but we have the grim satisfaction of knowing that our ideas will reach a wider audience because of it, even if we do not get the credit for them. As you've pinched one English Radical idea, Nick – why not have these other ones on us, and complete the set! Following the logic of encouraging greater worker participation and ownership in the businesses they help to run, why not allow corresponding voter participation and ownership in the political process? Just as a handful of supermarket chains dominate the retail sector to the detriment of smaller independent retailers, the centralised, all-powerful British government has even more of a monopoly in politics – so how about a change to devolved, localised decision making and tax raising powers? How about allowing the EU inspired “Regions” of Britain to become a Confederation of equal partners along the lines of the German “Lander” system, who effectively control their national government, instead of the system we have of iron rule by Westminster? How about allowing binding public referendums over such issues as continued membership of the EU, the funding of £9 Billion of foreign aid every year, or our continuing involvement in Afghanistan? Most importantly, can we have a written constitution please, based on existing English Common Law, and not the awful Roman/Napoleonic laws of Europe? So, Lords and Masters, we know you are still out there, lurking behind our shed, waiting to pilfer more underwear – but think on: it is one thing for a politician to call for fairer distribution of power and investment in the workplace, as it does not directly affect you, but unless you are willing to “walk the walk” and match these proposals with equal freedoms in the political arena, voters will see through your empty rhetoric. Steal our policies if you must, but you are opening Pandora’s laundry basket if you do – because once people get a taste of freedom again, they will want more. CommentsLeave a Reply | ArchivesNovember 2011 CategoriesAll |
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