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Entries in Gordon Brown (2)

Tuesday
06Jan2009

SNP: Don't Take Me To The Bridge

You would have thought that after the Glenrothes byelection set back the SNP would start to pick their fights a little bit more carefully. However, the SNP seem determined to push this one as far as they can.

First they abolish bridge tolls on the current Forth road bridge. A populist move that may have had something to do with them winning some votes in the kingdom admittedly. But given the uncertainty at the time over the remaining working life of the bridge it wasn't a prudent long term move, as it meant that the SNP could not perform an about turn to introduce tolls to pay for a replacement bridge, or indeed a 2nd bridge. Nor could 'smart' tolls be introduced on the crossing to incentivise green travel or manage congestion.

Then, when it became clear that the current bridge had a much longer lifetime than previously thought, the SNP continued to support the building of another crossing, right next to the current one, despite predictions that this would increase congestion in the surrounding areas, not to mention increases in pollution and CO2 emissions. I'm sure I remember the original proposals, with a fancy dan double decker approach - with trams, cycle lanes, dedicated bus lanes and so on, on a seperate deck from the heavy traffic.

Now, we see these all singing, all dancing proposals stripped right down to a straightforward road bridge, halving the cost of the project to a mere £2billion or so. The cuts make the design even less appealing of course, and will mean that the increased congestion and pollution linked to the bridge will be even worse in the surrounding areas.

The fact that the bridge isn't needed now hasn't detered the SNP from trying to use it to blackmail westminster into providing them with a loan to cover the cost of the project. Unsurprisingly, Gordon Brown isn't going to help Alex Salmond build his vanity project during the credit crunch. However, the idealogical opposition the SNP have to PFI, and the fact that the SNP alternative - the Scottish Futures Trust - hasn't delivered a single capital project whatsoever yet, means that any new bridge must be directly funded by the Scottish Government. This means other capital projects will have to "wait in line".

What are these capital projects that may need to wait? A new hospital in Glasgow? A whole host of urban public transport improvements (like expanding the tram network in Edinburgh, or developing rapid transit in Glasgow), perhaps the SNP could try to comission some new schools some time during their administration? All of this stuff is at risk of cancellation or delay. Investment in all of these areas is badly needed, and would support the development of the 'healthier, wealthier, fairer, greener' scotland that the SNP bang on about all time much better than a new bridge over the Forth.

Meanwhile the Scottish Government seems happy to pledge millions to save art for the nation or to subsidise a further freeze in council taxes.

And of course at the end of the day, there's no guarantee that residents of Fife would even thank the SNP for their efforts.

The big question is whether the ever higher stakes grievance politics of the SNP is going to keep washing with the Scottish people. A surprisingly large number of people seem to love it and buy the claptrap about 'sticking up for Scotland,' when really the SNP seems to be doing nothing but sticking up for the SNP and Alex Salmonds need to appear in ever more high profile press launches.

 

Wednesday
24Sep2008

Brown: 80% CO2 cuts by burning coal?

As I write this I'm listening to the whole YouTube clip of Gordon Browns conference speech. I have to say I lost concentration about 16 minutes in, but should wish to subject yourself to the whole 60 minutes of it, it's here:

Despite his weird body language, I would imagine you'd be pretty relieved, and dare I say it, you'd be inspired, if you were a Labour supporter. He's said sorry, he was hurt, he was misunderstood, but he's moved on. So what do we like?

Commitments to childcare improvements are great. Further extensions for funding Nursery places is vital, and is real progress. That really is a commitment to 'hard working families'. 

I don't see any harm in giving more poor families access to the internet either, although perhaps the money would be better spent on energy saving measures to cut families fuel bills so they're not as poor any more.

The decision to waive prescription charges for those suffering from cancer is welcome, and it was good to see a commitment to cutting prescription charges for all people with chronic diseases. But the SNP is already doing approximately this.

However, that announcement on nursery places seemed to me to be one of the few, fairly concrete, things that were announced. Take Gordons pronouncement on what he's going to do to sort out the financial sector; wooly stuff on 'transparency', 'sound banking', 'responsibility' and 'global supervision' and so on. That could mean that he's planning to go to the UN to hand over control over financial policy to the World Bank!

But, I was most disappointed to hear Brown on climate change. Brown clearly likes the idea of a million green jobs in the UK. But he's not going to put the policies in place that will deliver them. He's still dithering on the issue and he's asked for another report, this time looking at achieving a CO2 cut of 80%. Worst of all he seems to think he can achieve an 80% cut by building new coal and new nuclear plants. Sure he said 'clean coal', but the technology doesn't exist. No new measures to improve energy efficiency, no new policy ideas. 

Gordon may have claimed to have fixed the roof while the sun was shining, but he missed the opportunity to fix solar panels to it while he was up there. How long can Labours business as usual approach shelter us from the problems of climate change?

Labour may have had the radical policies once. But no more.