What about us?

! This post hasn't been updated in over a year. A lot can change in a year including my opinion and the amount of naughty words I use. There's a good chance that there's something in what's written below that someone will find objectionable. That's fine, if I tried to please everybody all of the time then I'd be a Lib Dem (remember them?) and I'm certainly not one of those. The point is, I'm not the kind of person to try and alter history in case I said something in the past that someone can use against me in the future but just remember that the person I was then isn't the person I am now nor the person I'll be in a year's time.

Yesterday the people of Northern Ireland went to the polls to elect assembly members for the Stormont Assembly.

The DUP, under Reverend Ian Paisley, has taken the majority of votes with The IRA Sinn Féin in a fairly close second place.

All parties involved in the Northern Ireland Assembly have until the 25th of March to come to an agreement on power sharing or devolution won’t happen.  At least that’s what Tory Bliar has told them but there is no way in the world that the British government are going to go back on their pledge to restore devolution to Northern Ireland.

So where does that leave us, the people of England?  Well, it leaves us in precisely the same position that we currently find ourselves – the only nation in Federal Europe that has no direct political representation and the only part of the British Isles that doesn’t have its own government.  Scotland has its Parliament, Wales and Northern Ireland have their Assemblies, the Isle of Man has its own Parliament (the oldest in the world apparently), the Channel Islands have their own Parlaiments – even the Scottish Isles have more say over what happens in their little corner of the world than we do with their Islands Council.

Liebour has pledged to restore devolution to Northern Ireland, they pledged to bring devolution to Wales and Scotland but all they’ve pledged for England is to continue the current racist, undemocratic system of asymetric devolution with England ruled directly by the British government.  Of course, we’ve been offered devolution but with a big price to pay – the dissolution of England.  The only offer of devolved power in England is in the form of regional government, either by Regional Assemblies or City Regions, but its a price too high for most people in this country.

John Major has criticised the way England is being robbed blind and discriminated against by the Scottish Raj but it’s too little too late – he had his chance to do something about it when he was in charge of the country but he chose to do nothing.  Only now that it is looking increasingly like becoming the big election issue are the Tories looking to do something about it but even then they can’t bring themselves to give us what we want – an English Parliament.

Yesterday the Conservative MP for Dorset introduced the House of Commons (Participation) Bill which would have implemented the Tory policy of English Votes on English Legislation (EVoEL).  The EVoEL proposal would allow the Speaker of the House of Commons (currently a Scottish Labour MP – well, you wouldn’t expect anything else from King Tony would you?) to certify that a bill only affects England and Wales and ban MP’s elected in Scotland and Northern Ireland from debating and voting on it.  The bill was opposed and didn’t get a second reading with most opposition coming from what the Daily Mail describes as “hostile, mainly Scottish, MP’s”.  The fact that MP’s elected in Scotland are even allowed, let alone have the bare-faced gall, to take part in a debate on whether it is right that they should be allowed to interfere in English legislation only serves to emphasise the ridiculous mess that Liebour have made of devolution.

Don’t get me wrong, I’m not a supporter of EVoEL – it is an inherently fauly concept and will solve nothing – but it is at least an acknowledgement that there is a problem that needs addressing and should it ever miraculously get passed into the statute books it will fall on its face spectacularly and the only solution will be to introduce an English Parliament.

3 comments

  1. DougtheDug (17 comments) says:

    I think it’s time all good englishmen like you Wonko put your hands in your pockets and donated money to the SNP. The Unionist Scottish Raj and the rest of Nulab and their hangers on like the Fib-Dems hate us with a passion.

    http://www.snp.org/campaigns/donate/donate.html

    We want you all to be English not British.

  2. Calum (183 comments) says:

    I am not going to debate about weather England should have a devolved parliament, as there is no point in engaging in such an argument, is a moot point.

    I want to say how disgraceful it is that Paisley is going to have such power in the Stormont Assembley. To allow people such as Paisley and Adams into power is an outrage. Paisley may not have engaged directley in paramilitary activity, as members of Sinn Fein have, but he was the political driving force behind such brutality. Paisley is as much at fault for the terror as the IRA.

    Paisley hold as much responsibility for the deaths of members of my extended family from the North as those who took the innocent catholic son af a butcher, my fathers cousin, into the middle of the street and shoot him. And for what? – Being a Catholic.

    Such Brutality is a disgrace. IRA attacks cannot ever be justifiable, however, equaily, nor can such attacks by unionists and events such as Bloody sunday.

    We must check these extremists. Northern Irish politics shouldnt be guided on sectarian lines, therefore, in General elections the main 3 parties should stand candidates, or else the electorate in the North will have no political representation at westminster, where the republican MP’s dont turn up, and the unionists ones are too biggoted to talk about anything bar anti-catholicism.

  3. Martin Belam (1 comments) says:

    I see all the arguments about there being a democratic deficit in England because of the Scottish/Welsh/NIrish MPs, but I still fail to see how an additional layer of party patronage and career politicians sitting somewhere between councils, quangos and central govmt will actually improve things for us English

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