Category: Latest

  • Labour comes out as a Remain party

    I was in Wales at the weekend where I saw a Sunday morning political programme. All 8 of the parties putting up candidates for the EU elections were represented.

    I was struck by how blatantly anti-Brexit Jackie Jones (the Labour Party representative) was.

    She told the presenter, in no uncertain terms, that voters who wanted to remain in the EU should vote Labour. She was challenged – the Labour Party manifesto was not explicitly pro-Remain – and she answered defiantly she had always been a Remainer and all four Labour candidates in Wales had come out in favour of a second referendum.

    Ms Jones prefers to use the term ‘Final Say’ instead of second referendum. The subtle difference is that a ‘final say’ is about accepting or rejecting the government’s deal with the EU. It excludes the possibility of having on the ballot paper an option to Leave the EU without accepting the government deal.

    Back in England later the same day I heard the Labour Party Shadow Health Secretary, Jonathan Ashworth, say to Andrew Marr …

    “This is a two horse race now between the Labour Party and the Brexit Party. The Liberals or the Change Party are not going to stop Nigel Farage’s party in the election… Only the Labour Party can stop Nigel Farage.”

    The message here was plain. The ugly phrase ‘dog-whistle politics’ comes to mind – if you do not have the courage to say what you mean explicitly, imply it and let those who share your views draw their own conclusions. And Jonathan Ashworth was explicit enough for the deafest of dogs to get the message – name two explicitly Remain parties, then tell people who are thinking of voting for them they should support the Labour Party. What conclusion should they draw? That the Labour Party is anti-Brexit.

    There is a clear message here to the working class – the Labour Party does not represent the millions of workers who voted to leave the pro-big business, pro-capitalist free market economic system represented by the EU.

    The prospect of a Brexit Party landslide is worrying the existing parties. But the support for the Brexit Party does not represent support for the kind of right-wing policies Nigel Farage favours.

    The British working class is educated enough to understand you can vote Brexit Party to send a message to the powers that be – we said Leave in June 2016, and we meant it. We know this is not a General Election and we are not voting for the party that will decide economic and social policy in the UK for the next five years. We are electing representatives to a body that has no effective power whatsoever.

    On May 23rd millions of working-class socialist-minded voters will be casting their vote for the Brexit Party. Farage may interpret a big vote as support for the Brexit Party. In fact it is the only electoral way to express anger at the decision of the main political groups to overturn the Leave decision.

    If there was a Labour Party, or another socialist party, explicitly supporting Leave, they would get massive support. But Labour’s weasel-worded prevarication on the issue, trying to be all things to all people, fools nobody. It definitely does not fool the politically sophisticated working class voters. Labour claims that their solution (staying in a permanent Customs Union) delivers Brexit. That is simply not true.

  • Bad cops

    Guardian Friday 3 Aug 2018

    PC Daniel Reed was one of six officers from Durham police who went to the Dalesman pub in Darlington to arrest a 43-year-old man on suspicion of a public order offence and witness intimidation on 8 November 2016.

    When the man did not cooperate, officers deployed pepper spray and then a stun gun. An independent panel determined that the man had been brought under control at that point but Reed, an acting sergeant at the time, nevertheless struck him six times before the suspect was placed in a police van.

    Miranda Biddle, the regional director for the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC), said:

    “Our investigation found evidence that the force used by police constable Reed was excessive, and the independent panel, who also had the benefit of hearing live evidence this week, agreed that the evidence amounted to gross misconduct. The panel decided that the sixth strike to the head was excessive because PC Reed was aware that the man was incapacitated when this blow was delivered.”

    After completing its investigation in April last year, the IOPC submitted a file to the Crown Prosecution Service, which charged Reed with assault causing actual bodily harm. Reed was acquitted of the charge at Sunderland magistrates court on 6 September last year.

    O’Neill’s behaviour was found not to amount to misconduct but Reed was dismissed without notice.