This morning, I took part in a short debate at the Radio
Cornwall studio about the outcome of the Scottish independence referendum and,
obviously, the impact on the wider UK .
Also involved was Truro and
Falmouth MP Sarah Newton and academic Dr Joanie Willett.
We are hearing David Cameron and other Tories talking about
the decentralisation of political powers, but
Sarah Newton made it clear that
she opposes a Cornish Assembly.
Sarah Newton and I did not agree on a single thing during
the debate. I have since read an article on her website, which set out her
perspective on devolution which I found perplexing in the extreme.
She wrote:
“As we watch another Celtic nation decide on its future
relationship with the British state it is right to consider Cornwall
and our future. Predictably supporters of a Cornish Assembly are jumping on the
independence bandwagon. Like the Cornish Assembly campaigners I believe that Cornwall
is special and has a unique history, language and culture. However I don’t
believe that we need to create a costly, new institution to express our
identity. Do we really need a Cornish Assembly to be proudly Cornish?
“What we do need is more decisions about Cornwall
being made in Cornwall . Our Duchy
is a distinctive place, with distinctive needs. Distinctively Cornish solutions
are needed. This is why at the last election I stood on a manifesto that
promised ‘Power to the People,’ proposing a devolution to powers from Westminster
to people and communities around the UK .
I have been pleased to help deliver some of these powers to Cornwall .”
The list of examples that she gave in her article included
the ability to agree a Local Plan that delivers the “right level of housing for
the Duchy,” which is not what is happening in practice because of the interference
of central government, changes to the National Health Service, and that the unelected
Local Enterprise Partnership has a “new flexibility and local control” over aspects
of Cornwall’s own European funding!
These are not good examples of democratic devolution and I am
saddened that she chose to describe a Cornish Assembly as a “tokenistic
institution …”
Her talk of the unique history, language, culture and
distinctiveness of the Celtic nation of Cornwall merely masks her refusal to
treat Cornwall as a meaningful political entity in its own right, just as her empty
promises of “Cornish solutions” and “Power to the People” obscure the fact that
the Conservative Party is a London-centric party, more concerned about
“English-only” votes in Westminster than democratic devolution to Cornwall.
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