When the Labour Government and Cornwall ’s
Liberal Democrats imposed a unitary authority on Cornwall
in 2009, I warned that it would do great damage to the campaign for a Cornish
Assembly – limiting the ambition of those politicians, many from London-centred
political parties, who had given a degree of support to greater powers for Cornwall .
Sadly, recent events have shown that I was correct.
Following on from his appearance on the Sunday Politics
South West (13th September), prominent Liberal Democrat councillor Alex Folkes
has written about his “support” for a Cornish Assembly.
I would like to bring the attention of readers to the
following extract:
“The Liberal Democrats have announced that we will be
fighting the next general election on a pledge to devolve powers from Westminster
including the establishment of a Cornish Assembly. We believe in devolution on
demand and recognise that what is right for one area may not be right for
another … The discussion about exactly what powers a Cornish Assembly should
have and what should fit around it is still to be had. My belief is that the
current Cornwall Council should take on more powers and become the assembly. I
don't see the need for the creation of a new tier of councils below the
assembly. More powers and responsibilities could be given to beefed up town and
parish councils to fulfil the role.”
I am so saddened at Alex’s view that devolution to Cornwall
should be about further local government reforms and not the creation of a new
and powerful Cornish Assembly.
And I would like to remind him of a few things.
The Lib Dems contested the 2005 General Election and Cornwall County Council elections with a Cornish Manifesto, which included a commitment to a Cornish Assembly.
Upon winning all five Cornish constituencies and control of Cornwall County Council that year, they published a list of priorities that included a pledge to “establish detailed plans for a Cornish Assembly” within their first year of office.
The Lib Dems contested the 2005 General Election and Cornwall County Council elections with a Cornish Manifesto, which included a commitment to a Cornish Assembly.
Upon winning all five Cornish constituencies and control of Cornwall County Council that year, they published a list of priorities that included a pledge to “establish detailed plans for a Cornish Assembly” within their first year of office.
At another conference of Cornish Liberal Democrats in
November 2005, they re-affirmed their commitment to the campaign for a Cornish
Assembly. The motion specifically stated that “devolution to a Cornish tier of
strategic regional government” was needed in advance of any reform to local
government structures. In their press material to publicise the event, Andrew
George MP said: “… the Government will not get away with their belief that they
can fob us off with a rearrangement of deckchairs on the Titanic of local
government.”
At that time, Cornwall
had a County Council (82 councillors) and six district councils (249
councillors) – a total of 331 elected members.
They had a fantastic opportunity to unite local communities
behind radical democratic reform. And it was such a simple message. We could
create a Cornwall-wide strategic National Assembly, rationalise local
government with a single tier of unitary authorities and remove power from a
range of unelected and unaccountable bodies – almost all based outside of Cornwall .
But the Lib Dems did not take forward their pledge of
“devolution to a Cornish tier of strategic regional government.” They jettisoned
their commitment to a Cornish Assembly and pushed through the centralisation of
local government with the creation of a single unitary authority.
Five years on – following the terrible austerity measures of
the Coalition and a continued shift of power away from Cornwall
– the inability of some leading Liberal Democrats to distance their “local
government” mindset from calls for more powers for Cornwall
does show a terrible lack of ambition.
At the same time, their timidity allows opponents of Cornish
devolution (many to be found in the ranks of the Conservative and Labour
parties) to argue against “more politicians” and “more layers” of governance –
even though Cornwall is already suffering from a massive democratic deficit and
has less democratically accountable politicians than most other parts of the
United Kingdom.
I have a message for Alex Folkes and the Liberal Democrats.
If you are serious about support for a Cornish Assembly, you
need to think of Cornwall as being
on a par with Wales
and Scotland .
And helping to deliver a new democratic settlement that matches that which has
been won east of Offa’s Dyke and to the north of the Solway Firth .
In contrast, Scotland
(population 5.29 million) has 129 MSPs and 1,222 councillors on 32 local
authorities, while Wales
(population 3.06 million) has 60 AMs and 1,254 councillors on 22 local
authorities.
Now is the time to make the case for a proper, powerful and
empowering National Assembly for Cornwall
– and I would recommend that he reads MK’s “Towards a National Assembly for Cornwall .”
Further information
The full text of Alex Folkes’ article can be found at: http://lansonboy.blogspot.co.uk/2014/09/devolution-discussion-on-sunday-politics.html
MK’s “Towards a National Assembly for Cornwall ”
can be found at:
1 comment:
Lib Dem plans for Cornwall amount to "Devo Min". Uninspired, unambitious and totally inadequate if we want to give one and all a better future
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