I have not blogged for a few days and think it is time to post
my recent articles in the Cornish Guardian. This one appeared on the 7th March.
Following the fantastic news that the Government has
confirmed the Cornish will be recognised as a national minority through the
Council of Europe’s Framework Convention for the Protection for National
Minorities (FCNM), talk is already turning to the “devolution” to Cornwall .
Danny Alexander, the Liberal Democrat Chief Secretary to the
Treasury – who announced national minority status on the 24th April – has also
confirmed that the Government would “take seriously” any bid from Cornwall to
control the next tranche of European funding which will be worth more than £500
million.
He apparently urged MPs to work with the Local Enterprise
Partnership to make the case for greater local autonomy as “part of the growth
deal process.” He is reported as saying said that, following the FCNM
announcement, “it would seem odd not to take seriously the request that there
should be a degree of autonomy in the management of the European structural
funds programme.”
The Cornwall and Isles of Scilly Local Enterprise Partnership
has “called for a proportionate administration” and “for bureaucratic red
tape to be reduced wherever possible under the next EU programme,” while there
is an ongoing effort to give Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly some form of
“intermediary body” status, which could allow local representatives to deal
direct with EU officials.
Local MPs have called for “those charged with managing the
Cornwall EU structural fund programme” to be “granted the appropriate delegated
powers.”
Meanwhile, one of Mr Alexander’s ministerial colleagues, the
Conservative Greg Clark (Cities and the Constitution) recently told a local
newspaper that there is an “appetite” to devolve powers to Cornwall
and the Isles of Scilly.
He was also even quoted as saying that “Cornwall is
a place … that exemplifies par excellence my view that the people that know
best what is needed for the area are the people who live and work there.”
But there was little detail related to Clark ’s
statement other than – like Mr Alexander – it was in the context of “growth
deals” and largely related to the Local Enterprise Partnership, which is an
unelected body.
I remain extremely concerned that this present debate around
more powers for Cornwall appears to
have little or nothing to do with democracy and democratically elected
politicians. Surely, this has to change.
I believe that central government needs to go much further
in terms of the devolution of political and economic powers – and this should
lead to the establishment of a Cornish Assembly.
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