Malcolm Blair-Robinson's Blog, page 100
February 7, 2017
Public Services: A Funding Crisis: Both Political Threat and Electoraral Opportunity
The future of the May government does not depend on Brexit, or Trump or Trident, although a big crisis in any of those areas could bring it down. But if it survives until its sell by date, May 2020, it will stand or fall on its record over public services. Its political narrative will be that we have a strong economy, the fastest growing in the G7 and only the Tories can be relied upon to deliver future prosperity.
Yet there is a crisis brewing, or in some cases spilling over, in social care, the NHS, education, flood prevention, children’s services and mental health care, in which, however you express it and whatever efficiency savings are made, there is not enough money being provided by central government to properly fund modern day demand. In other essential pillars of a civilized society such as public transport, especially railways, prisons and offender management, the police service, the energy market, public utilities and affordable housing, there is an awful lot of talk and has been for ages, but very little outcome.
If the government goes to the country with the majority of these problems unresolved, or with a sticking plaster fix to carry it through the election campaign, it will be defeated. It will not matter if Brexit is a success, trade deals with the US, Turkey and China flourish and the top ends of society are coining it in.
Churchill won the war and lost the subsequent election spectacularly, because he and his party thought victory was everything that mattered. The country thought that what mattered was the quality of life in the new era of peace and that Labour had the better plan. May too will lose after a Brexit triumph, which leaves hospitals in crisis, trains overcrowded and late, students in debt and housing costs in orbit.
Provided Labour has a plan. A dynamic plan for a complete reboot of the economic model and a complete reconstruction of the taxation process, so that both bring hope and opportunity to all those abused areas of neglect and under funding which cause so much difficulty in the lives of ordinary people.
February 5, 2017
Tor Raven Thriller: From 99p
Set in the mid nineteen nineties, this fast moving thriller lifts the curtain on sex, sleaze and corruption in high places. Tor Raven’s novel captures the mood of those times with a host of fictional characters who engage in political intrigue, money laundering and murder, pursued by an Irish investigative journalist and his girlfriend, the daughter of a cabinet minister found dead in a hotel room after bondage sex.
Click Image to Download 99p Paperback £6.99
How Trump Will Govern: Prepare For Change
This post will try to predict what Trump’s America will be like for the rest of the world. It is not about whether you are for or against this new man in the White House. It is about the fact that he is there.
First of all Trump sees himself as a national leader with a very high profile who has been sent to Washington by the people to rule. Not to preside. Therefore he will be like no other in several generations. Already the rest of the world has stopped talking about America or the United States, when talking about international relations or geo-politics. Now everyone says ‘Trump’. Just as many say Putin, when they mean Russia. Or in the past Stalin, Hitler, Mussolini or Franco. But it does not mean Trump is bad, although he is without doubt a very unpopular figure outside America at the moment, but that could change, or even get worse. For quite a while everyone said Mandela when they meant South Africa and he was universally admired, almost worshiped. What it does mean is that Trump’s view or intention is the only one that matters.
Here it gets interesting, because the American constitution is organised to shape federal government in the form of consensus, over which the elected leader presides. He or she will be able to govern according to the consensus but if the occupant of the White House cannot lead consensus, not much is going to happen. Trump does not do consensus. But he talks direct to the people. Every morning when he wakes up he picks up his phone and tweets.
He says what is on his mind, what he wants to do for the people, and, this is critical, who is getting in the way. The people no longer listen to the media or hear the views of other politicians. They just look at their phones. He then gets dressed and goes off to sign his favourite instrument of government, the Executive Order. This sounds rather exciting and indeed it is. All of it is done on video live, so people can see the spectacular Trump signature being applied to folio after folio. He looks at the camera and says a few words of explanation. What people hear is not actually said but they pick up the nuance straight away. I am doing this for you. To keep you safe. To get your job back. To cut your taxes. To protect your values. To make America great. Again.
Unfortunately America’s machine of government does not work like that. The Executive Orders can judder to a halt when challenged in the Courts and border walls cannot be built without cash, which has to come from Congress. So it remains to be seen what is actually achieved by this new style of politics inside America. Outside America’s borders it is a different story.
Here the president, also Commander-In-Chief of a military juggernaut so enormous as to be bigger than all the rest of the world put together, can do much as he likes. He likes nation states, by-lateral trade deals, strong borders, torture, Brexit and Putin. He does not like Iran, climate change reduction measures, treaties which do not put America first, trading blocks, military alliances that America pays for, ISIS and what he calls bad dudes. So it hardly surprising that in Europe many a well oiled political palm is turning a touch sweaty with anxiety.
There are only two capitals enjoying the moment. One is Moscow, where there is hope that a more reasoned and balanced relationship can be struck with Trump. The other is London. Having abandoned through Brexit its traditional role as America’s gateway to Europe, without a twinge of conscience and with undisguised glee, the old Imperial capital is setting itself up as Europe’s gateway to America. That is what holding hands and the State Visit are all about.
February 3, 2017
Tor Raven Thriller: From .99p
DOWNLOAD OR PAPERBACK FROM .99P
Rudolf Hess, Hitler’s deputy and right hand man, flew to Scotland on a mysterious peace mission in 1941, which has never been convincingly explained, to meet unidentified politicians who wanted to end the war. The truth has been covered up for generations because to reveal it would somehow undermine the honour and constitutional fabric of the United Kingdom. Who was plotting against Churchill? What were the peace terms on offer? What happened to Hess? Was he killed in the War? Was the prisoner in Spandau a double? Rick Coleman, an investigative journalist, determines to find out. First he finds himself entangled with a randy nurse. A page turner to the end!
Brexit: Now It’s For Real
The authority for the prime minister to go ahead and trigger Article 50 is now approved by a big parliamentary majority from MPs, most of whom actually campaigned in the referendum for Remain. But the accepted political reality is that although MPs have the right to vote according to their own judgement and not according to the wishes of their constituents and in spite of the fact that the referendum was advisory not mandatory, it would cause a constitutional crisis to go against the wishes of the people. This argument is accepted by this blog with very grave reservations. These include the fact that nobody was able to explain, or even understood, what Brexit would involve at the time of the vote and almost every warning or promise made during the campaign is either since shown to be misplaced or undeliverable. Moreover not everybody voted for Brexit.
Over sixteen million voted against it. This is not a trifling number and their interests must be protected by robust adversarial arguments because that is how our democracy works. There is a voting process and a debating process. To engage in the debating process is not to become an enemy of the people; it is to point out where things may not work as hoped and to offer a different solution. As things now stand we a headed for a hard Brexit. This is beginning to mean that we shall have to get close to Trump and Erdorgan for starters, who are probably the least favoured national leaders by the majority of Brits.
Very different to Auntie Merkel and the bumbling Hollande. Personally I see advantages is strong and assertive national leaders, but I recognise there is much about Trump that frightens even the stout hearted and arresting multitudes in response to a badly executed coup attempt and having the largest number of journalists in prison in the world are Erdorgan achievements which repel many. We must hope that everything works out and that those who have for so long wanted to detach from Europe (if we leave the EU that is what we do) will not learn to rue the day they finally achieved their mistaken ambition.
Meanwhile, we live in a parliamentary democracy, the Supreme Court has underscored what this means, which is that parliament is sovereign and it has to approve whatever is coming our way. That will involve both Aye’s to the right and No’s to the left. That is how our country works.
February 1, 2017
Book Of The Moment: Purple Killing
Dr. Rachael Benedict is an American historian a
nd a best-selling author. Through the death of her estranged father she sets out to expose secrets from the Nazi era, which are so sensitive they have been subject to an extensive cover-up lasting seventy years. This provokes a killing spree as parts of the security services of both Britain and the United States become engaged in the drama, with one side determined to get the secrets out and the other determined to keep them hidden.
Rachael battles forward to unearth the truth from intrigues of the past, but also within her own family, surviving three attempts on her life, before finally achieving her goal. Not only does she expose the truth from history and from her own roots, she has to delve deep into her own emotions to find the truth about hers
elf.
Click on image for uk. Click here for US
Living With Trump
This Blog was, like most of the rest of the world, incensed by the the arbitrary travel ban, as the previous post explains, for two main reasons. Its implementation was incompetent, nobody seemed to be able to agree what it meant, and hundreds of travelers were caught mid-journey by the apparent invalidation of legal documents and visas. Embassies gave conflicting advice, much of which turned out to be wrong. This caused unnecessary distress to vulnerable people in violation of every principle for which the United States was believed to stand. Second, if the object was to make America safer, it will almost certainly have the opposite effect. That view is shared by almost every government and agency outside the United States, with any experience of fighting and resisting terrorism. This is not a good way to run a country, even if it is only your eighth day of trying.
The dust is now beginning to settle and most caught up in the chaos have been able to complete their journeys. Of course many more will now have to change their aspirations, because entry to America is going to get a whole lot more difficult, but everyone accepts that it is up to the US to decide what its immigration policy is, and even if it closes its doors entirely, it is entitled to do so. The shambles of the travel ban was more about how to do it than what to do, even if most thought the project misguided.
Here we saw the Achilles heel of this new kind of administration. Within it there are some extremely able people with powerful strategic brains and a focus on a different path forward leading to a better deal for all Americans. But there is also a small band of red-necks driven by prejudice and ideologies, which will be destructive unless restrained. Trump must keep them under tight control, allowing them to contribute but not to implement. They were the ones who landed him in the travel ban mess.
Where this blog supports Trump is on the bigger picture of the need to re-balance an economy so that it benefits what America calls its middle class, abandoned by what is now reviled as the liberal elite, where real poverty is beginning once more to emerge when the essentials of civilized life like main water become unaffordable. I have argued for a long time the very positions which Trump’s economic team are now proclaiming regarding currency manipulation and the need to repatriate jobs for skilled workers, together with the recent assertion that the euro is actually the Deutschmark devalued to Germany’s advantage over both its neighbours and the US. I have for long said the same things about NATO and the need for the US to disengage from Europe, which should retake control of its own destiny and protect its own interests. I wholeheartedly support a serious attempt to reach a proper understanding with Russia.
The world is going to have to live with a new dynamic. For seventy years America has told the free world what it must do. In return America has picked up the tab for its defence and economic growth. So everyone else was able to get on with their day, knowing that rich Uncle Sam would always see there was food on the table and enemies were repelled. Up till the end of the Cold War this made sense. After that the notion of the US as the world policeman has gone very badly wrong.
But now the election of Trump marks a sea change in the way not just Trump himself, but millions of Americans think. America will now do what it wants in its own interests, which will be interpreted as what goes on inside Americas borders, not from some vision of global meddling. Making America great again is not about empire; it is about the homeland, glitzy in some parts, but rotting in others, What the rest of the world does in response is up to it. That is what freedom now means.
But with freedom comes responsibility. Responsibility for ones own destiny. So if the EU wants to bust apart, let it. It is a new age of sovereign countries, controlled borders, balanced currencies and productive work. Trade blocks and tax havens are out. Picking fights which require the spilling of American blood are the past, not the future. We must learn to live with it. That may not be as bad as it sounds.
There is another lesson for the world to take in. Whilst America is the most inventive and innovative country in the world it is socially very conservative and old fashioned. Old social values trump (sorry) new ones. This has always been the case. It has its good side but also its dark side. Of course there are great American liberal thinkers and movements which inspire the like minded across the world. This Blog identifies with those traditions and could never support the alternative. But it is the conservative tradition which dominates the American heartlands and, for the time being, it also governs. We have to get used to that too.
January 30, 2017
Trump Presidency: After One Week, Disaster.
It was not about more stringent vetting, nor about protecting America’s borders. It was about breathtaking incompetence, muddled thinking, a failure to consult, liaise, inform, consider and programme. It was about ruling by decree, outside the law, without regard to consequences and blind to knock on effects. It traumatized and distressed innocent travelers with lawful documents seemingly invalidated by confused officials whose 60 minute notice of an instruction to implement an opaque order, was an act of impulsive government from which even the likes of North Korea would shrink. It was further compounded by ill informed comments from White House Officials endeavoring to justify the biggest and most damaging presidential mis-step in living memory. Now the White House is retreating in confusion, beaten back by the weight of outrage and ridicule from all across the world.
A world which has seen a side of America supposed not to exist. A President who has all but destroyed his potential as a leader to be taken seriously. Trump has crashed before and recovered. But make no mistake, this is in a very different league to groping.
January 29, 2017
Vintage Psycho-Thriller Promo: .99p Download £5.99 Paperback
T his ever popular psycho-thriller, now in its twenty second year, is offered for a limited period at the special price of £5.99 paperback and .99p Download. A haunting tale of passion and the paranormal, written in the style of its setting in the 1920s.
A tiny English village slumbers on the Surrey/Sussex borders, but the pastoral exterior hides a number of nightmare secrets.
The return of a young man after a long absence stirs memories of the horrific murder of his mother and uncle years earlier and of an ancient curse delivered upon the family in Napoleonic times. The villagers’ unease grows as the young man embarks upon an affair with the local farmer’s daughter, and a series of mysterious deaths seem to follow in his wake. Full of authentic period detail, this is a tale which will haunt readers long after the last page has been turned.
Labour: Caught Between The Devil And The Deep
The government is now hell bent on hard Brexit, perhaps because it is the only kind of Brexit which will achieve the return of sovereignty, the end of free movement, the neutering of the European Court of Justice and the end of contributions to Brussels. The Tory party will in the main accept the outcome of the referendum and vote to trigger Article 50. Remember it is the Article 50 which is the act of leaving. After that it is a clean up job. It is not a notice of later intent which might, if the terms are not right, be abandoned.
Nobody consciously voted for hard Brexit, because what it truly meant was never explained, not least because the Leave campaign had no idea. The choice was In or Out. But that choice was never there. It was never that simple. Yes we could leave, but to do so would cost us rights and freedoms, economic opportunities and cultural associations which probably a majority would prefer to keep. Simply put, Out is less. Less bad things perhaps, but less good things too and the balance looks increasingly negative. Maybe Out will one day be more. Maybe not.
Labour is the Official Opposition. The margin of victory for Leave was narrow and only in England and Wales. Scotland and Northern Ireland voted Remain. Labour’s job is to stand up for the rights and interests of the people who want to stay in the EU at best and at the very least not to leap over the hard Brexit cliff. There is nothing undemocratic about that. In a general election when one party or coalition wins, there is no obligation on the minority in the Commons to support the government; the opposite is true.
The problem for Labour is that most of its party membership is for Remain, but although so are many of its voters, many, perhaps many more, are for Leave. Passions are running high both ways. So whatever Corbyn orders about votes and whips will provoke a rebellion. Here is the nub of the problem. Corbyn, the serial rebel, who has over decades in the House of Commons rebelled against his party nearly 500 times, is on a hiding to nothing. But surely this is why he was elected? Because in the New Politics, which he was seen to represent, it is no longer acceptable for MPs to vote according to the demands of party managers. The idea of more authentic democracy has taken hold. Lobby fodder is out. MPs are now expected to represent the wishes of their constituents. So some should vote for Article 50, but many should vote against.
Labour’s underlying problem is there if you look. It has elected a disruptive leader and it wants a parliamentary party in his image, which will do their bidding, not his. And that means that only if there is consensus would all be expected to vote the same way. And on Brexit there is none. The smart thing would be to give Labour MPs a free vote. The smartest thing of all would be to end the practice of whipping and replace it with liaison and welfare to keep open healthy channels of debate and exchange of ideas. That is what the people want. Because today they have the whole thing in the palms of their hands. The press now just talk to each other. But so do the people.


