Archive for May, 2009

Jim Nicholson Expenses – Where’s the Meat?

Every Conservative MEP has published details of their expenses.  However, the only MEP from Northern Ireland who sits in the current Conservative group (the EPP), Jim Nicholson, has not published.  He is notable by his absence.

Now, I understand that Jim Nicholson is not a member of the Conservative Party and was elected as an Ulster Unionist.  However, this time round he is standing as a joint Conservative and Unionist candidate.  His failure to publish draws attention to his expenses.  I would assume he has nothing to hide.  So why, therefore, the delay over publication?

A full list of Conservative MEP Expenses is available here (minus Jim Nicholson’s).  Mr Nicholson should publish his expenses, in a similar form, as soon as possible.  The lack of transparency is of considerable concern given recent revelations about MP expenses.  Such concern should be put to rest immediately and in advance of the European elections.

Disaster for Unionism? Election Crap.

The DUP made clear today at the launch of their “manifesto” that a Sinn Fein win would be a disaster for Unionism.  Why?  Surely every time a Shinner gets elected in the Northern Ireland jurisdiction it’s a good thing for unionism because it weakens Sinn Fein’s all-island mandate. 

Because, no matter which way you look at things, the Shinners have signed-up the the Union.  The Good Friday Agreement (and various flavours of Agreement since) has made clear that Northern Ireland’s constitutional future is fixed.  The Shinners can put up as many posters as they wish about Ireland this and Ireland that but the plain fact is that elected representatives from here have no mandate that extends to the Republic – even if they wish to pretend otherwise.  In Europe no-one even cares. 

Which takes us to the DUP’s definition of Unionism.  For the DUP the union has lost all equivalence to Union.  It’s become an Ulster thing.  It’s all about Loyal Orders, gay-bating, Ulsterishness, Ulster-Scots, Blandness, Dourness and Isolation.  It’s about making this place anti-cosmopolitan, separatist and parcohial.  It’s everything the Union isn’t.  Just compare the DUP’s definition of Unionism with a Londoner’s.  A Londoner, confronted with the word “Unionist” thinks of a ranting “Irish” nutter. 

The DUP is, in fact, in a duopolitical union with Sinn Fein.  Sinn Fein is the DUP’s parter with whom it never agrees.  Indeed the DUP/Sinn Fein Union reminds me of an Irish divorce – each partner snipes and yaps about the other.  But they still co-habit.  They share the salaries and expenses.  They rear the kids to take sides.  But, fundamentally, they are sad old gits who should just go their separate ways and leave us all alone, spared from their constant circular bickering that never reachs a conclusion. 

As for the Union, the election has nothing whatsoever to do with it.  As an STV based election it’s not even a very good bell-weather of popular opinion.  The turn-out will be awful.

My postman today handed me a handful of election leaflets muttering, “Here’s a load of election crap.” 

And that’s just what it is.  The DUP’s chest-beating and doom merchanting is just that: crap.  The Union will still be there if the Shinners win.  If the Duppies win the union will be a little worse off, because the DUP has lost all sense of what the union stands for.

Alliance Party Election Broadcast

I’ve just watched the Alliance Party election broadcast while on the cross trainer in the garage. 

What an odd little production. 

It commenced with the candidate catching a train at somewhere like Botanic and then stumbling across Naomi Long, all red hair, apparently getting some constituency work in on the Translink into Central.  There was a happy coincidence.  Then she commenced some sort of Lady Macbethish soliloquy about the great transport system that Europe had delivered Translink – best in the world etc. – and then started rubbishing our MEPs.  Curious.  (Who came up with this story-board?).

WATCH IT HERE

And then we had young Parsley stumbling around Belfast accosting not-at-all-pre-arranged nice youthful types in Victoria Square.  All seemed nice.  He seemed nice.  Everyone was nice.  And hopeful.  Great.  There was more but I have no recall of it.  Naomi on the train kinda stuck in my head.  It was just such a great coincidence that Ian could get that chat in with the cameras there. 

It was a bit of a contrast to Jim A’s thing last night – all striding around fields.  Wellies.  Oldies.  Wrinklies.  Tad angry.  Paramilitaries.  Tad very angry.  Why he may not be yer man.  Why he may be yer man.  Brilliant.  Veritable feast of Ulsterness.

Kevin McDaid and the words of a good man

A few weeks ago I visited the Martin Luther King memorial at Yerba Buena Gardens in San Francisco.  I’m incapable of reading the inscriptions without shedding a tear.  When I visited a few weeks ago with my family I must admit it was even more poignant for some reason.  Having my young children with me was part of it, I think.

On Sunday a 49 year old father of four, Kevin McDaid, was beaten to death in Coleraine by people who call themselves football supporters, or loyalists, or both. 

It’s highly unlikely that the words of Martin Luther King would be read by, or would move, the kind of people who kicked and beat Kevin to death.  But for the rest of us they might just remind us, if we needed reminded, why our common humanity is more important than anything. 

An individual has not started living until he can rise above the narrow confines of his individualistic concerns to the broader concerns of all humanity.

Through our scientific genius, we have made the world a neighborhood; now, through our moral and spiritual development, we must make of it a brotherhood. In a real sense, we must learn to live together as brothers, or we will perish together as fools.

Men for years have been talking about war and peace. But now, no longer, can they just talk about it. It is no longer the choice between violence and non-violence in this world. It’s non-violence or non-existence.

I believe that unarmed truth and unconditional love will have the final word in reality. This is why right temporarily defeated is stronger than evil triumphant.

Martin Luther King

David Cameron and the Orange Order

I admire David Cameron.  I re-joined the Conservative Party when David became leader.  On every occasion I have met him he has shown a wonderful insight into Northern Ireland’s political problem – namely a political system that is defined on the basis of religion and constitutional division.  And he is correct that the constitutional business is done.  This article in the News Letter articulates his view well. 

Unfortunately, however, we still have political parties that are defined on the basis of religion.  Their social policy positions are defined by a religious world-view.  The DUP is a fundamentalist Christian Party.  So much so that Gregory Campbell was unable to answer a silly end-of-show question on Let’s Talk posed by a WI Member i.e. did he prefer money or sex?  He declined to answer.  Such is the DUP’s hang-ups about sex, religion, and changing ethics, that the answers to silly, and not so silly, questions are always deferred. 

We need to replace the politics of constitution, nationalism and religion with the centre left/right system of the United Kingdom. 

It is for this reason that David Cameron is right that Conservatives must contest every seat in Northern Ireland.  Because the issue is not about Unionism.  It’s not even essential that a maximum number of “Unionists” are returned.  Rather, David is right because contesting every seat brings a little bit of real, national politics to every contest.  By having Conservative candidates contest each seat we are saying to the electorate that the Conservative Party wants to break, forever, the sectarian basis of our political system and replace it with an essentially secular form of UK politics. 

The key question to ask, of course, is whether the candidates will adequately reflect this ambition.  The joint committee has an important part to play in ensuring that sectarian candidates are not selected.

Moreover the UUP can show that it understands the political imperative and does not put forward candidates from the Orange wing of its Party. 

I think the point is that the Ulster Unionist Party has broken its links with the Orange Order and what I’m trying to do with the UUP is not look backwards, but look forwards and say we can build a new force in Northern Ireland…which can attract people irrespective of which church they go to or how they worship God or which part of the community they come from.  David Cameron

Catholic Church and Child Abuse

The publication of the 2,600 page report of the inquiry into Ireland’s church-run paedophile and child abuse ”reform schools” has done little to restore any confidence in the Catholic Church.  The failure of the inquiry to name and shame the perpetrators of these abuses is a national disgrace.  It also shows the extent of the Irish state’s culpability.  Such was the internecine relationship between church and state in Ireland during the years when these institutions were run, naming and shaming may have resulted in the state itself coming under too much scrutiny. 

However, the reaction from the Catholic Church itself is supine and insulting to our collective intelligence – and especially to the victims.  This is an institution that repeatedly and systematically produces paedophiles.  Indeed there appears to be a causal relationship between the very fibre of the institution of the Catholic Church in Ireland and its ability to produce child abusers and bullies.  Therefore the response from Sean Brady, the Cardinal of Ireland, rings very hollow.  He talked about restoring trust in the Church.  But let’s look at the facts.  This is an institution that cannot demand a restoration of trust – because when it had that trust it systematically abused it.  Not just a little:

A climate of fear, created by pervasive, excessive and arbitrary punishment, permeated most of the institutions and all those run for boys. Children lived with the daily terror of not knowing where the next beating was coming from.  Commission Report.

The Catholic Church should not be asking for trust to be restored.  Rather it should be conducting a root and branch review of what it stands for and the people it attracts into service.  Its insistence on priesthood celibacy, its creation of sex-starved orders, and its insistence that it knows all the answers to moral questions runs counter to common sense and logic.  Because it patently provides the wrong answers, the wrong people and the wrong structures to provide any degree of care or love to children.  It is an institution that is so flawed it deserves no trust whatsoever.

Why the UUP isn’t the Conservative Party

There has been a lot of talk over the last few days about the mess the UUP seems to have got itself into.  But the UUP has a fine history of dithering, mismanaging situations, communicating badly, and generally being a bit of a basket-case.  That’s because it isn’t really a political party. 

As I’ve said, often, the UUP is, at best, a single issue pressure group.  Ditto most of the other local “Parties.”  None has a clearly defined socio-economic position – with the possible exception of Sinn Fein (although even it appears to have ditched most of its public Marxist-Leninist pronouncements, preferring to focus on Irishness as some type of ideology).  But the UUP also lacks political talent, discipline and communications skills.  Unfortunate.   

The new intake of the Tory party in the next Parliament is likely to be more culturally diverse than ever before. The match with the Ulster Unionists looked like quick genius for both parties last autumn. But many Tories must be asking themselves: ‘what on earth have we landed ourselves with?’ - Mick Fealty, Telegraph.co.uk, 13th May

But since the ‘deal’ with the Conservatives the fundamental pointlessness of the UUP has come into sharp relief.  Given the now clearly defined constitutional certainty of Northern Ireland within the Union, the UUP just can’t find itself.  There is nothing about its history or “brand” (yikes) that is particularly appealing to a vaste swathe of Northern Ireland’s centre-ground – a centre-ground that increasingly wants to vote for a well-oiled, confident and nationally relevant party. 

Frankly, the UUP is getting in the way of the most important messaging – and messaging that the Conservatives, themselves, are failing to get out with any degree of authority given the mess that the UUP is creating around this project.  The UUP itself is not the point nor the focus – it’s really about Northern Ireland coming home to national UK politics.  Since partition it has been side-lined from all national debates.  And the UUP stood at those side-lines and dithered while this happened; the DUP just went native and fundamentalist – pandering to the lowest common denominators of Norn Iron politics. 

It is patently ridiculous for the Conservative Party and UUP to co-exist in Northern Ireland, to seek membership and to collectively confuse the electorate.  They are not a meeting of equals – one is a national political Party that seeks to form a government.  The UUP, by contrast is a has-been, spent, and largely irrelevant local political force – an act of political expediency that has long outlived its usefulness.   

Of course many people argue that the Conservative Party never achieved many votes when it did contest elections on its own.  But that misses the point.  In fact it’s only now that David Cameron is actively seeking votes here, actively seeking a mandate.  And it’s only now that Conservative grandees and members of the business community are actively throwing money at the Conservative Party project.  In the past they just weren’t asked because there was no Party resolve to do anything about Northern Ireland.

The great thing is that the spanner is now well and truly thrown in the works of Northern Ireland politics and change is now inevitable – for reasons other than the UCUNF slogans.  But the sooner we leave behind the holed vessels that are the local sectarian political parties, the better.

David Cameron in Ballymena on Thursday

David Cameron will be running another of his Cameron Direct events – his second in Northern Ireland – on Thursday in Ballymena.  If you’d like to attend I can pass on your details to the organisers.

I had the pleasure of introducing David Cameron at his first Cameron Direct event in Belfast late last year.  Wonder will I be asked this time?  Suspect not.

Do you agree that religion and politics should be kept separate in the EU?

One of the key reasons that I became involved in a national political party is that I believe that religion and politics need to be kept separate.  Unfortunately, in Northern Ireland, religion and politics appear to be one and the same.  Jeffrey Donaldson wrote to me recently and described himself as a “Christian politician”.  Hmm. 

I’m delighted that the European Humanist Federation is mounting a campaign to encourage voters from across the EU to ask their candidates a simple question:

Do you agree that religion and politics should be kept separate in the EU?

You can find out more about the campaign here.  Please write to the candidate(s) you are considering voting for (regardless of party-political affiliation) and ask them to answer.  Feel free to forward the replies to me or submit comments here.

Ronan O’Gara and the Queen (Part 2)

A commenter on my previous post about the Irish Rugby’s player’s apparent rudeness to the Queen included a link to a UTV video that proves, beyond all doubt, that one shouldn’t necessarily believe what one reads in the media.

It’s clear that Ronan O’Gara shook hands with the Queen.  The “hands in pockets” photos that implied he had refused to shake hands were completely misleading.  By that stage the Queen had met all the members of the team and it’s obvious she was having an informal chat with the player when the photo was taken.  She also seemed engaged with all the players and seemed in very good humour (not always the case it has to be said).

So if you want to watch the evidence here’s a link to it on the UTV site. 

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Musings on things political and secular…

This is my site where I share my world views for anyone who might be remotely interested. Visit only if you think the content is interesting. Oh and comment is free. So go right ahead and agree or disagree. But, please, be kind and polite (especially to me).
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