Alyn Smith MEP gets £135 million EID Relief Fund through Brussels committee

Alyn Smith, one of Scotland’s 6 MEPs , has won a breakthrough crucial to farmers. Continue reading

Why has Alan Reid not signed the Early Day Motion against privatisation of the Post Office?

Argyll’s representative at Westminster, Alan Reid MP, has spoken widely across Argyll about the need to save the Post Office from the part-privatisation the UK Government proposes – and about saving local Post Offices.

This is admirable and appropriate action. The issue involves powers reserved to Westminster and is precisely where Mr Reid’s energies need to be focusis critical for Argyll, with its small population dispersed across an extensive rural and island area and its low economic base.

The puzzle is though, that Mr Reid has not yet signed the Early Day Motion 426. This was lodged by Labour MP Geraldine Smith, as a protest at the Westminster Government’s plans to begin the process of privatising the Post Office. The motion has been signed by virtually all of the many Labour MPs who oppose this move and others -  and it has been available for signing for some time.

This failure to formally register his opposition may well simply be an oversight on Mr Reid’s behalf but it is one that requires to be remedied at once.

This is a cross party issue of real importance to rural areas like Argyll and Bute and it transcends petty politics. No one should be under any illusions that privatisation will inevitably lead to a reduced and more expensive service in rural areas where there is no real opportunity for private profits.

Dave Thompson, Highlands MSP, angered by the latest revelation of Lord Mandelson’s plan to bypass the House of Commons and introduce legislation to privatise Royal Mail, has written to the Communication Workers Union (CWU) in support of their opposition campaign to offer his assistance in any way he can.  The CWU is Britain’s largest communications union and Mr thompson sees it as leading one of the most dynamic campaigns against privatisation.

Mr Thompson says: ‘I am appalled by Lord Mandelson’s decision to go forward with this proposal, and it has now shockingly come to light that these plans go even farther than previously understood by allowing up to 49.9% of Royal Mail to be privatised’.

Below is a list of all of the Scottish MPs who have not uyet signed the Early Day Motion (whose text is at the foot of this list). What have these MPs been saying to their own constituents? Have they too been saying one thing at home to get votes and doing nothing at Westminster because they actually believe that the Post Office should indeed be sold off?

The overall list of Scottish MPs who have NOT signed the Early day Motion to protect the Post Office are:

  • Danny Alexander, Inverness, Nairn, Badenoch and Strathspey, Liberal Democrat
  • John Barrett, Edinburgh West, Liberal Democrat
  • Anne Begg, Aberdeen South, Labour
  • Russell Brown, Dumfries and Galloway, Labour
  • Des Browne, Kilmarnock and Loudoun, Labour
  • Malcolm Bruce, Gordon, Liberal Democrat
  • David Cairns, Inverclyde, Labour
  • Menzies Campbell, Fife North East, Liberal Democrat
  • Alistair Carmichael, Orkney and Shetland, Liberal Democrat
  • Tom Clarke, Coatbridge, Chryston and Bellshill, Labour
  • Brian Donohoe, Central Ayrshire, Labour
  • Frank Doran, Aberdeen North, Labour
  • Nigel Griffiths, Edinburgh South, Labour
  • Tom Harris, Glasgow South, Labour
  • Eric Joyce, Falkirk, Labour
  • Charles Kennedy, Ross, Skye and Lochaber, Liberal Democrat
  • John McFall, West Dunbartonshire, Labour
  • Rosemary McKenna, Cumbernauld, Kilsyth and Kirkintilloch East, Labour
  • Michael Moore, Berwickshire, Roxburgh and Selkirk, Liberal Democrat
  • David Mundell, Dumfriesshire, Clydesdale and Tweeddale, Tory
  • Anne Moffat, East Lothian, Labour
  • Alan Reid, Argyll and Bute, Liberal Democrat
  • John Reid, Airdrie and Shotts, Labour
  • Willie Rennie, Dunfermline and West Fife, Liberal Democrat
  • John Robertson, Glasgow North West, Labour
  • Lindsay Roy, Glenrothes, Labour
  • John Thurso, Caithness, Sutherland and Easter Ross, Liberal Democrat
  • Robert Smith, West Aberdeenshire and Kincardine, Liberal Democrat
  • Jo Swinson, East Dunbartonshire, Liberal Democrat

For information – here is the text of Geraldine Smith’s Early day Motion opposing the part-privatisation of the Post Office

Text of EDM 428:

That this House

  • notes that the Labour Party Conference 2008, with the backing of Ministers, supported a vision of a wholly publicly-owned, integrated Royal Mail Group;
  • welcomes the conclusion of the Hooper Report that the current universal service obligation offered by Royal Mail, including six days a week delivery, must be protected and that the primary duty of a new regulator should be to maintain it;
  • further welcomes the recommendations in the Report that the Government should take responsibility for the pensions deficit which followed an extended contributions holiday;
  • endorses the call for a new relationship between management and postal unions and welcomes the commitment of the Communication Workers Union to negotiate an agreement which would support the modernisation of the industry;
  • observes that in 2007 the Government agreed to a £1.2 billion loan facility on commercial terms to modernise Royal Mail operations;
  • rejects the recommendation of the Hooper Report to sell a minority stake in Royal Mail which would risk fracturing one of Britain’s greatest public services;
  • further notes that the Government is currently advertising for a new Chair of Royal Mail;
  • and urges the Secretary of State to appoint a Chair and management team who are committed to the principles of a modern public enterprise.

Fellow Highlands MSPs join Jamie McGrigor’s campaign to continue Bull Hire scheme

Highland MSP, Jamie McGrigor is progressively gaining ground in his efforts to ensure some form of effective continuation of Scotland’s Bull Hire scheme.

The Labour group at Holyrood tabled an amendment from Sarah Boyack at Holyrood yesterday, calling for a continuation of the Bull Hire Scheme and this was accepted late in the debate by the Scottish Government.

The move follows a cross party letter from Labour, Liberal Democrats and Conservatives seeking discussions with the Government on securing a way forward for the Bull Hire Scheme.  Ministers in Parliament yesterday signalled they were prepared to have such discussions.

Following an announcement by the Scottish Government that they were to scrap the scheme – which provides healthy bulls to groups of crofters and small farmers – Peter Peacock, Rhoda Grant and David Stewart were part of a vigorous campaign to save it.  They, Jamie McGrigor and fellow Highlands MSP campaigner on the issue, Dave Thompson, received responses from hundreds of crofters from the Western Isles, Skye and Lochalsh, the Argyll Islands, Lochaber, Ross-shire, Shetland and Badenoch and Strathspey.

Rhoda Grant is  herself the daughter of a Wester Ross crofter, and acting Labour spokesperson on rural affairs. She says: ‘Yesterday, in Brussels, I had meetings with Commission Officials who made clear that the Bull Hire Scheme could continue well into the future under the current arrangements.  Against that background I give a cautious welcome to what appears to be some movement from the Government on this important issue but we will need much more detail before we can make a judgement on any replacement scheme and  I hope that leads to a reversal of their position to date.

‘There is widespread dismay at the effects scrapping it would cause and the onus is on the government to find a way in which it can work. Its loss would have a detrimental effect on crofters’ and farmers’ ability to keep cattle in our most fragile areas and where it had continued there would have been an impact on the health and quality of stock.

‘This scheme has many benefits and as well as offering continued support to those keeping livestock I am hopeful that this will secure the jobs of those highly skilled staff who are involved in providing the bull hire scheme’.

Highlands & Islands MSP, Dave Thompson asks for new version of bull hire scheme

Argyll man, Highlands MSP Jamie McGrigor has called for the retention of the Bill Hire scheme and, as For Argyll recently reported, secured a debate on the matter at Holyrood at which he spoke.

Now Dave Thompson, Highlands and Islands MSP, speaking in this debate, has urged Environment Minister Michael Russell, to bring forward a new version of the scheme to replace the one about to be closed.

433 crofters currently take advantage of the Government funded scheme which provides bull hire services throughout Scotland.

Mr Thompson says that the continuation of the current scheme, under state aide de minimus arrangements, would mean that the charge for a single bull would have to be raised by nearly 150 per cent, from £500 to £1,250.

Accepting that this makes the current scheme non-viable, Mr Thompson says: ‘There is no doubt that the bull hire scheme has had a positive effect on the maintenance of cattle quality and numbers, provided environmental and agricultural benefits and, over the past 100 years, encouraged local economic activity.

‘The fact is that the scheme now is neither economically viable nor allowable under state aid rules. The important point is to implement its replacement as soon as possible.

‘The same members who incorrectly claim that the Scottish Government has totally underestimated the importance of the current bull hire scheme are the same members who began the review of the scheme under the previous Administration, and oversaw its rundown while in power.

‘The Scottish Government is producing a viable alternative that will meet crofters’ needs while being economically justifiable.

‘It is with the 433 crofters who utilise the scheme in mind that I urge the Minister to ensure the replacement scheme has the same health and quality standards and accessibility as the old scheme and that, most important of all, it is operational by the time that the current scheme closes’.

At the end of last week, on 15th January, Environment Minister Michael Russell announced his proposed replacement arrangements. They are:

  • Stud farm bulls will be offered to ex-hire groups at a set cost. That will allow appropriate groups the opportunity to adjust to the ending of the hire scheme and to set up their own hire operations, should they wish to do so.
  • The crofting counties Agricultural Grant Scheme can provide assistance with building over-wintering facilities and for the transportation costs that are involved in over-wintering on the mainland.
  • Scottish Rural Development Programme (SRDP) money will be made available for alternatives, and there is the alternative of artificial insemination.
  • Crofters will be provided with independent advice.
  • Resources tied up in the current scheme will be liberated for the benefit of crofting.  The sale of stud farms will be applied to crofting and no money will be taken out of the crofting allocations.

Highlands MSP calls for Ceasefire in Gaza and a two-state solution at today’s demonstration in Inverness

Dave Thompson, Highlands MSP, speaking at today’s (10th January) demonstration in Inverness High Street, called for an immediate ceasefire to end the suffering of the people of Gaza.

Mr Thompson said: ‘The scenes of devastation we have witnessed in Gaza over the last few days have been truly horrifying. This is nothing less than a humanitarian crisis.

‘So far the current offensive on Gaza has killed over 600 Palestinians, more than half of them women and children, and injured over 3,000.

‘Just a couple of days ago a UN school, sheltering children and their families, was struck by Israeli mortars killing 40 people.

‘Such acts have rightly been condemned worldwide, as have the continued firing of rockets by Hamas militants.

‘Only when arms are laid to rest and dialogue begins, can the people of Gaza rebuild their lives.

‘The efforts of French, Egyptian and UN diplomats to broker a truce must be supported and we must also support our aid agencies in any way we can to help alleviate the terrible suffering of the people of Gaza.

‘I believe in the right of Palestinians to self determination. Peace in the Middle East demands a two-state solution with a secure Israel and an independent and viable Palestinian homeland.

‘The only way to achieve this is by diplomacy and negotiation, not force of arms’.

Victory for Thompson and Scotland in drink driving vote at Holyrood – but Westminster calls the shots

The Scottish Parliament debate won by Highlands SNP MSP, Dave Thompson today (18th December 2008) voted to lower the UK legal blood alcohol level for drivers from 80mg to the European limit of 50mg per 100mls of blood.

Justice Secretary Kenny MacAskill introduced the debate which Mr Thompson led.

Following the support received from Alex Salmond last week during First Minister’s Questions, Mr Thompson used his speech to urge the other Members of the Scottish Parliament to vote for the proposed reduction of the limit.

He sees such a vote as bringing pressure to bear on the UK Government at Westminster to bring the UK into line with the majority of other European Union Member States. Scotland has no devolved power to enact its own wishes in this respect – although quite why this should be so is a puzzle.

Commenting on the debate Mr Thompson said: ‘I am very pleased the other Members of Parliament felt as strongly as I do that the drink drive limit is long overdue for a review.  Only the UK, Malta, Luxembourg and Ireland still have an 80mg limit.

‘The vote today will serve as a strong message to Westminster that it’s time to update this 40 year-old law and see the limit reduced in line with the rest of Europe.

‘I have for a long time campaigned on this issue and received growing support from a wide range of bodies in Scotland. These include the British Medical Association (BMA), the Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents, ACPOS, the Scottish Police Federation, Scottish Health Action on Alcohol Problems, Alcohol Focus Scotland, a number of Councils, Cardinal O’Brien. Most recently, the AA has changed their position and now favour a reduction in the limit.

‘Now, most importantly, the Parliament has come into line with the rest of these institutions to charge Westminster with the task of urgently lowering this dangerous limit.

‘When I first looked in to this matter I discovered that one in nine road deaths in Scotland are caused by drink driving and that, in the Highlands and Islands, we suffer from a drink driving rate 27% higher than the national average.  A 50 mg limit would send the message that if you have even one drink and then drive you will be breaking the law and putting yourself and others in danger.

‘The UK Government has a mixed record on this issue, announcing its intention to reduce the limit in some years and then keep it the same in other years.  I hope that now, after hearing a unified voice from the Scottish Parliament, London Labour and the rest of Westminster will see sense and reduce the limit for the whole of the UK as it once said it would’.

Highlands MSP Dave Thompson wins Scottish Government debate and vote on drink driving limit

In a matter of particular importance at this time of the year, Dave Thompson, Highlands & Islands MSP, has won a debate and vote at Holyrood on Tueday 18th December on the current drink driving limit.

One in nine road deaths in Scotland are alcohol related. Mr Thompson has been campaigning vigorously for some time to have the blood alcohol limit lowered from 80mg alcohol/100ml of blood to the European standard of 50mg/100ml and will be strongly supporting the motion in favour of such a reduction.

The debate follows First Minister’s Questions on 11th December when Alex Salmond supported moves to toughen up drink-drive laws by this specific reduction of the limit of alcohol a driver can consume. The First Minister also pointed to the UK Government’s recent consultation on road safety, flawed by failing to address the possibility of lowering the current limit.

Mr. Thompson says: ‘The First Minister and Scottish Government have made clear their support for lowering the limit and the UK Government must do the same. I hope and expect that the Parliament will support my campaign and vote for a reduction in the drink driving level.

‘In addition, we must all be vigilant at this festive time of year. It is all too easy to enjoy a few drinks without realising the consequences and the effect that alcohol has on our reflexes. We should never drink and drive. Our primary aim must always be to keep people safe’.

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