Simon Jenkins's Blog, page 115

March 18, 2014

Budget 2014: George Osborne, it's not your job to look after the very rich | Simon Jenkins

Britain will always have a wealth gap. What's shocking is how governments conspire in its obscene unfairness

Should I be shocked that five British families "own more than 12.6 million Britons put together", as suggested by a "deeply worried" Oxfam this week? They include the Duke of Westminster, Lord Cadogan, the Reubens and the Hindujas. Likewise "85 global billionaires" have more money than half the global population. Shame on them all. Noble Oxfam seems to have become an all-purpose leftwin...

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Published on March 18, 2014 12:00

March 17, 2014

Ebbsfleet as a brave new dawn for the garden city? Don't make me laugh | Simon Jenkins

George Osborne's announcement that 15,000 new homes at Ebbsfleet can help solve the housing crisis is pie in the sky

Hail glorious Ebbsfleet, gateway to the south. Never was a kinder deed done than George Osborne's pre-budget announcement of a new "garden city" at Ebbsfleet (really Northfleet) on the Thames estuary near Gravesend. It is to be focused on old cement workings and is to comprise just 15,000 houses. To call this a garden city is satire. Has Osborne ever been there?

Ebbsfleet is noth...

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Published on March 17, 2014 02:29

March 13, 2014

To plug the north-south gap, the only way is Manchester | Simon Jenkins

Bolstering the north's biggest city would help provincial England to challenge London's privilege and dominance

The north is coming. If Scotland departs the union, it will be the north, not Wales, that is next for a crisis of regional identity. How will it deal with the blood-sucking maw that has replaced Cobbett's Great Wen as metaphor for booming London?

Next week Martin Wainwright, former northern editor of the Guardian, takes to BBC radio to debunk the various "myths of the north". He...

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Published on March 13, 2014 11:45

March 12, 2014

The west's do-somethings will do nothing for Ukraine | Simon Jenkins

The response to Crimea shows just how easily misjudgment can emerge from political machismo and belligerent posturing

At least the west is agreed on the Ukraine crisis. It agrees that something must be done to stop Russia's re-occupation of Crimea, and it agrees that nothing can be done to stop it. Paradox is the stuff of foreign policy. It produces summits, holds conferences, forms and reforms contact groups. Leaders make interminable phone calls and thinktanks rush joyfully to club-class lou...

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Published on March 12, 2014 00:00

March 10, 2014

Labour's jobs promise: the wrong sort of command economy | Simon Jenkins

The policy is too general – jobs need to be created away from the overheated south in the still-depressed Midlands and north

The old songs are the best, but it's how you sing them. Labour's proposal to "give jobs" to all unemployed young people recalls the command economies of the 1940s and 1960s. So too is the old Labour idea of paying for it by hitting the rich until the pips squeak.

This time there is a sting in the tail: if young people refuse the offer of work they will sacrifice benefit....

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Published on March 10, 2014 02:41

March 6, 2014

Helen Suzman deserves her tribute alongside Nelson Mandela | Simon Jenkins

The forgotten saint of the anti-apartheid movement, her legacy to liberalism was to abandon the armchair

We can all be brave in a crowd. The truly brave are brave alone. Next month we celebrate the 20th anniversary in 1994 of the first free election in South Africa, one of the few times in history that a minority has voluntarily handed power to a majority in conditions of relative peace.

The two "saints" of the occasion, Nelson Mandela and the outgoing president, FW de Klerk, will have their tr...

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Published on March 06, 2014 11:51

March 5, 2014

Ukraine has revealed the new world of western impotence | Simon Jenkins

Behind the self-righteous bluster on Russia, all our leaders can do to punish Putin is cancel summits, school places and shopping trips

I am starting to lose this one. How dare anyone excuse a great power hurling brute force against a small one, justifying it with some nonsense about extremists and a "responsibility to protect". There should be no place for such cynical bullying in a 21st-century world order. And for what? So a leader with a virility complex can play to his domestic gallery. T...

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Published on March 05, 2014 00:00

March 3, 2014

The Oscar Pistorius trial is no place for Hollywood drama | Simon Jenkins

There is a danger that allowing television and radio into the courtroom will cloud judgment. Justice does not demand infinite openness

And the Oscar goes to… the South African judicial system. The judge for the murder trial of athlete Oscar Pistorius has decided to admit radio and television to his Pretoria court room today. It should get an 18 certificate.

On trial is no great national issue, no terrorist gang or grand fraudster. This is the examination of an intimate personal tragedy involvin...

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Published on March 03, 2014 01:54

February 27, 2014

Politics, not law, has become the master of British justice | Simon Jenkins

From amnesties for the IRA to calls for the Woolwich murderers to be lynched, crime and punishment is now a politicised mess

There is one law for their terrorists and another for ours. "Theirs" kill a soldier in Woolwich and get slammed up for life. They get a verbal lynching from the red-tops, with Rot in Jail headlines and screams the rope would be too good for them, the filth and scum. "Our" terrorists get royal pardons and "letters of assurance", even if, as may be the case, they slaughter...

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Published on February 27, 2014 12:30

February 25, 2014

Maidan, Ukraine … Tahrir, Egypt … the square symbolises failure, not hope | Simon Jenkins

The lesson of Egypt for Ukraine is that defiant crowds may destroy an old regime – but they seldom build a new one

The experience was eerie. I was watching a documentary, The Square, on Netflix about the 2011 Tahrir Square occupation when the lead character, Ahmed, let out a cry of delight, "The revolution has been won." At that very moment my radio blurted out a voice live from a different square, Kiev's Maidan. "The revolution has been won," it repeated.

Squares are famously potent...

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Published on February 25, 2014 23:00

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