Lancashire County Council has relented in the matter of
closure of evening and weekend bus services in some of the most remote villages
and townships along the Fylde Coast. Faced with such a huge tide of opposition
from local residents, including a petition organised by a very competent and forceful young
woman (still in her late teens, I believe) who is currently Garstang’s Youth Mayor, the
council has done a good job of spin so that voters will feel reassured and not
protest through the ballot box, something that always terrifies party leaders.
Yes, the county council has to make colossal savings in
services and jobs, but it’s not all to do with the state of the economy or
where the money is coming from for HS2. It is, of course, because of national, not local
politicking. When government policies go badly skew-whiff it's much easier to blame local councils and cut their budgets as punishment. If there is a finger to point at all in the miry world of politics
it should point at just one man – Eric Pickles, the minister for communities
who, in a paraphrase of his own words (apparently), just loves bashing local
government. Mr Pickles is, you might think, an intravenous Tory, but his
biography on Wikipedia tells a slightly different story –
“...He was born into a Labour supporting family – his great grandfather was one of
the founders of the Independent Labour Party, and described himself as "massively
inclined" towards communism as a boy –
but he [ie Mr Eric Pickles MP, basher of local government – ed.] joined
the Conservative Party in 1968 after the Soviet Union invaded
Czechoslovakia ...”
Eric Pickles achieved prominence by becoming the Leader of the
Conservative Group on Bradford City Council in 1988 – his first significant
leg-up on the political ladder, and afforded by a local authority, you will note,
that organ of government he affects most to despise. But on the (Tory) Mayor’s
casting vote in September 1988 Pickles’s Conservative group took control, and
one of Pickles’s first triumphant acts was to axe the small Equal Opportunities
section, SERIS, set up by the previous Labour administration in the city
library. It was a political act of almost supreme hypocrisy, because Pickles
was at the same time chair of the Joint Committee Against Racism, now leader of
the council of a very large and multicultural city, and this section of the
library had been set up specifically to help to counter racial and gender
prejudice.
But ‘Equal Opportunities’ was a
no-no for Tories in the Thatcherite 1980s – and hardly surprisingly, because
social equality and tolerance have never figured high on the agenda of the
party of the privileged classes. And while the Iron Lady’s closest chum, Dame
Shirley Porter, was flogging off homes in exchange for Tory votes in Westminster, for which
she was later personally fined £12,300,000 by the District Auditor under
Tory legislation originally designed to punish illegal spending by Labour councils, social
inequalities were increasing and the race riots of 1995 and 2001 were imminent,
though not foreseen.
Now Mr Pickles is in government
and engaging in his favourite sport, and, to wrest the latest Tory no-brain
cliché from them, ‘hardworking families’ (ie us plebs) are suffering, (and by the way, 'hard-working' is a compound adjective which still needs a hyphen.)
One of the reasons they are
suffering is that the coalition government thinks that Eric Pickles is a
suitable person to be local government minister. A distinguished CofE cleric this week wrote of the paucity of (male) candidate parsons for the episcopacy thus: 'this shallow pool [of suitable people] has been overfished', and the metaphor is also apt when applied to the Coalition government.
The Conservative Party has lost something like half of
its supporters since the last election, most of them disenchanted women, and in the words of
Tim Yeo, deselected this week by his local party:
“We have a
shrinking membership which means you tend to get predominantly among those
remaining activists people with probably more extreme views than the average
Conservative voter, and that applies to issues like the EU, on issues like gay
marriage..."
reported in the Daily Telegraph, here
So don’t blame our county
councillors for a funding crisis which led them to look for savings in rural
bus services. Stop blaming Lancashire CC and pin the blame where it belongs. On
Mr Eric Pickles, MP, Communities Minister, and now, heaven help anybody who doesn't live on top of a mountain, Minister for Floods. Or perhaps he should be given a new
title – Minister for Local Government Bashing.
And don’t for a moment think that
I’m rabidly anti-Tory, because I’m not. We have some very able Tories serving
on our parish, district and county councils, and several of them are good friends. It’s when politicians of any hue lose the idea of service to
those who didn’t elect them, as well as to those who did, and start to act in
self-interest or party self-interest, that the trouble starts. And there's an awful lot of trouble about.
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