Mebyon Kernow has welcomed the announcement that the
National Assembly of Wales has won greater powers, but re-iterated its call for
devolution to Cornwall .
In 1997, the people of Wales
voted in a referendum to create a Welsh Assembly. In 2011, they voted for
law-making powers through a second referendum, and now they are winning further
financial powers.
The Coalition last week announced that the Welsh Government will
be given borrowing powers, control of landfill tax and stamp duty, and a House
of Commons bill giving permission to hold a referendum on the devolution of
income tax.
It was also in 1997 that the people of Scotland
voted in a referendum to re-establish their parliament. And next year, they go
to the polls to decide on whether Scotland
should be independent – with opponents already promising more powers to the
Scottish Parliament if they vote no.
But Cornwall has
fared less well, even though 50,000 declarations demanding a Cornish Assembly were
presented to 10 Downing Street
in 2001. It remains a disgrace that Tony Blair’s Labour Government dismissed
the declarations and refused to consider demands for greater powers for Cornwall .
Instead, we had the centralisation of local government forced
on us with the creation of a single unitary authority, in the face of massive
opposition.
And we have even had the Conservative-led Coalition
Government further undermining democracy and the very territoriality of Cornwall
by attempting to push through plans for a cross-Tamar parliamentary
constituency.
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