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Monday, October 13, 2008

UUP and TUV meet

The TUV and UUP have held a joint meeting to discuss possible electoral pacts in any forth coming elections. I will reproduce the joint statement below the fold:

Turgon @ 03:25 PM | Comments (48)

“the right to have access to safe and legal abortion..”

Mick’s note on the Brit Blog Round Up, and the use there of a quote, from the comments zone here, on Hazel Blears’ discomforture on Hearts and Minds last week..

“Anyone who saw Hazel Blears’ discomfiture when asked about her voting intentions on Hearts and Minds can see the problem facing many Labour MPs, especially women like Blears, Harman, Hewitt etc. who made their names as women’s rights activists and are now being asked to say they believe a woman’s right to choose is a fundamental right for women in Scotland, England and Wales but not NI.  Some will abstain and that may lose us the vote, but it is a free vote and many will vote with their consciences despite what Gordon brown is saying to them.”

.. reminded me that I posted the full interview on YouTube [Part 1 and Part 2].  That “discomforture” is worth highlighting.

It’s a discomforture which might suggest the briefest of victories ahead with the first amendment to the Embryology Bill being passed, only to be curtailed by the second.  Thereby allowing Labour MPs to claim a clear conscience on the issue whilst placing any decision on the “right to have access to safe and legal abortion” back in the hands of our local legislators administrators.. where it’s been stagnating for some time..

Pete Baker @ 01:45 PM | Comments (5)

RUC memorial window unveiled

A memorial window to the members of the RUC murdered or injured during the Troubles was unveiled yesterday in St Anne’s Cathedral.

Fair Deal @ 01:43 PM | Comments (3)

Brit blog round up 191…

A truly awesome Brit Blog Round Up from Redmption Blues. She raises a number of topics, not least the abortion non debate in Northern Ireland, a few thoughts on which I hope to kick in later today. Good reportage and some warm words on the Slugger Awards too…

Mick Fealty @ 12:23 PM | Comments (1)

Ireland looks like being hit harder than the UK

While Gordon Brown and the British economy are far from out of the woods yet, there’s a striking difference between the cautiously favourable comment on the British bank rescue and the previews of tomorrow’s Irish budget. Searing criticism of the Ahern and Cowen regimes pours out of the industry website Finfacts which rounds in the government for years of improvidence.

“The results of political failure will be thousands of damaged and destroyed lives while in or out of office, the political masters will remain in clover”.

Brian Walker @ 12:17 PM | Comments (8)

IRA may be latest victim of sub prime collapse…

This piece comes with a health warning since it is based on a number of unnamed sources, yet it’s worth noting nonetheless. It alleges that the IRA’s financial portfolio has lost considerable amount of its value because those responsible for its management failed to take evasive action and “get out at the top of the property market and sink the money into high-dividend deposit accounts in Wall Street in the past few years.” It seems plausible given the dramatic turbulence in the markets have scuppered even Wall Street’s finest investment banks.  But proving it...?

Mick Fealty @ 10:37 AM | Comments (26)

Sunday, October 12, 2008

“I’m concerned these silences leave a gap in yourself..”

Writer Sebastian Barry is one of the favourites to take the Man Booker prize this year - possibly connected to his previous short-listing. The Guardian’s Saturday Review carried a lengthy interview with him yesterday which included this resonant paragraph.

Barry once began a childhood memoir but soon abandoned it, wary that he might “drain the well from where I draw water”. But he says he has become increasingly “afraid of things that cannot be said. I’m afraid of the damage that is caused by not speaking of people like Roseanne, the unmentioned first wife, like so many families’ old uncle Jacks who died in the first world war fighting for England. I’m concerned these silences leave a gap in yourself which then leaves a gap in your children and can ultimately lead to a hole in the country’s sense of itself. Ireland’s history is so much more rich, exciting, varied and complicated than we had realised. What I’m trying to do is gather in as much as I can. It’s not to accuse, it is just to state that it is so.”

Btw, not being “afraid of things that cannot be said” is also a good guiding principle for consistent, and consistency in, blogging - “It’s not to accuse, it is just to state that it is so.”

Pete Baker @ 11:26 PM | Comments (6)

No grey squirrels here

Driving around the roads of West Fermanagh as I do; I have noticed that there are lots of red and no grey squirrels. According to this pdf document in Fermanagh we should have grey ones as well but all the ones I see are red. The Forestry Service has extensive information about squirrels.

Right now I have done an apolitical blog I want all of you to think of ways of bringing politics into the discussion of squirrels.

Turgon @ 10:45 PM | Comments (32)

Election in the offing?

There are many histories of how and why the First World War began. Not necessarily the best but one of the most readable is Dreadnought: Britain, Germany and the coming of the Great War by Robert J. Massie. One of the most interesting things about his book is the way that, having created the circumstances which led to war the politicians and rulers then scrabbled around in the last few days trying to stop it and were then personally horrified at what they had created.

I am beginning to wonder if the DUP and SF are somnambulating or possibly even consciously marching towards an election. Political parties tend to want elections when they think they will do well in them and when they think their opponents will do badly. I think at this moment rightly or wrongly both the DUP and SF think they would do quite well in an election and that their opponents both within their community and in the other community would do badly.

Turgon @ 06:53 PM | Comments (12)

Dodds, battleships and Balrogs

I know some do not like my historical analogies but since I have not done one for a while, I hope I will be indulged. The British battleship HMS Rodney along with HMS King George V are largely credited as having sunk the mightiest warship then afloat, the German battleship Bismarck which itself had sunk the pride of the British fleet, the battlecruiser HMS Hood and damaged HMS Prince of Wales. Most credit Rodney with major part of the victory; that was, however, the high point of Rodney’s career and thereafter she was rather unsung, regarded as a bit slow, uncharismatic and maybe old fashioned.

As a follow up to Mick’s blog (itself from Ignited) of a couple of weeks ago about Nigel Dodds being the DUP’s candidate for MEP I have heard rumours that there is a short list headed by himself, then Jeffrey Donaldson, then Edwin Poots. The disadvantages to going off to Europe are obvious. However: “Tis an ill wind that blows no good.”

Turgon @ 06:46 PM | Comments (11)

“We don’t know the answer to your question..”

Managing director of Weber Shandwick in Northern Ireland, former SDLP advisor, and blogger, Conall McDevitt was also on the Politics Show today arguing that the local media coverage of the DUP and Sinn Féin has changed as the Executive deadlock continues through the current credit crunch.. Although, my own take is that the more critical coverage of MLAs has been general rather than party-specific.. Adds Conall clarifies his point in the comments zone below.

Pete Baker @ 05:35 PM | Comments (13)

Gordon Brown’s eyesight causing concern

The Sunday Telegraph has broken a long suspected story which could alter the shape of politics in the medium term as much anything else. For such a workaholic to cope with failing eyesight must be a terrible strain. 

Brian Walker @ 04:40 PM | Comments (9)

“It’s absolutely not acceptable..”

Slugger’s inaugural MLA of the Year, Alliance Party deputy leader Naomi Long, was on the Politics Show today giving her party’s view of the current Northern Ireland Executive deadlock, and whether the Executive has anything to say about the credit crunch, as the war of words escalates..

Pete Baker @ 02:45 PM | Comments (27)

Parking the tanks onto the opponents lawn

Fair Deal has spent some time arguing that moves on issues such as the Irish Language should wait until Nationalism has something to trade.

Kensei @ 02:17 PM | Comments (53)

Lay off Peston

Adds 2 I’d completely forgotten about this until Ben Brogan Pol Ed of the Mail’s blog reminded me. (Had a CRAP moment - can’t remember a fucking thing).  Peston was sort of blamed because one of the bank chiefs who met the Chancellor last Monday night blabbed the fact to him. This caused the markets to tumble to their lowest yet and precipitated the whole £400 billion package. Quite the most expensive leak in history. It gives you a good idea, writ very large, of the pressures specialist correspondents come under. You cope by playing a very straight bat.

Adds. I add this personal assessment of the BBC’s coverage of the financial crisis by its Economics Editor Hugh Pym, who’s doing the job while Evan Davis’s successor Stephanie Flanders is on maternity leave ( job details in response to query below).
The BBC’s superb Business Editor Robert Peston was always bound to attract the snipers. Someone so consistently on top of the story was never going to get away with it.  Any professional controversialist like Peter Hitchens in the Mail is sometimes bound to be stuck for a line on a big story but this is a particularly feeble one – as if the pension funds are going to be wiped out by Peston having a “bead” that is, a few minutes ahead of the pack – on any particular episode.  The fact is that a senior reporter for a huge outlet like the BBC attracts information as much as he seeks it. Yes, it’s possible to detect the hand of the Treasury in some of his reports – rightly and inevitably. The Chancellor has been slammed for speaking too much or too late and has been criticised for both. Information has to be obtained somehow and Peston’s sources stretch well beyond the official. So how “responsible” ought anyone in Peston’s’ position to be ? 

Brian Walker @ 11:08 AM | Comments (19)

Saturday, October 11, 2008

“I believe their frustration was real as was their skepticism..”

Far be it for me to disagree with Will Crawley’s assessment that the “money quote” in Volume 1 of retired Alaskan state prosecutor Stephen Branchflower’s report to the Alaska Legislative Council, is

“Governor Sarah Palin abused her power by violating Alaska Statute 39.52.110 (a) of the Alaska Executive Branch Ethics Act.”

The BBC report has more, and the Belfast Telegraph report seems somewhat premature.. Given that the full report has yet to be voted on, never mind endorsed, by the Legislative Council.. But I’d suggest the real ‘money quote’ is, as noted elsewhere

“I find that, although Walt Monegan’s refusal to fire Trooper Michael Wooten was not the sole reason he was fired by Governor Sarah Palin, it was likely a contributing factor to his termination as Commissioner of Public Safety. In spite of that, Governor Palin’s firing of Commissioner Monegan was a proper and lawful exercise of her constitutional and statutory authority to hire and fire executive branch department heads.”

The first quote refers to Alaska Statute 39.52.110(a) which provides

“The legislature reaffirms that each public officer holds office as a public trust, and any effort to benefit a personal or financial interest through official action is a violation of that trust.”

Interestingly, leaving aside that it was, at most, a constructive dismissal of Moneghan, the first finding relates to an alleged breach of public trust in attempting to pressurise Moneghan to fire Trooper Michael Wooten, although Wooten was not fired, and corresponds with the ethics disclosure [pdf file] by Sarah Palin herself on 1 September this year. The detailed Wiki page on Troopergate provides the background, from Sarah Palin’s character reference for Wooten in 2000 to her overhearing a death threat against her father, Chuck Heath, in 2005 - a year before she became State Governor.  In the aftermath of his divorce from Palin’s sister, Wooten was subsequently suspended for 10 days [pdf file], reduced to 5 days after a union appeal, and transferred to a different department.  But the suspension letter made no reference to the death threat, despite an internal investigation concluding that - “Wooten violated internal policy, but not the law, in making a death threat against Heath. Wooten denied having made the threat, but the investigation decided that he had in fact done so. The investigation concluded that the death threat was not a crime because Wooten did not threaten the father directly; therefore, the investigator deemed the threat to be a violation of trooper policy rather than a violation of criminal law.”

Pete Baker @ 10:47 PM | Comments (65)

Gordon for Glenrothes

The ill wind of the financial crisis blows kindly for the political fortunes of Gordon Brown at the moment. The news this week that he is to break convention and campaign in the Glenrothes by election is a straw in the self-same wind. Only two weeks ago, it was in Glenrothes that he was supposed to meet his nemesis, but now Labour may have a chance, as Andy MacSmith once press handler to the late John Smith opines in the Independent. The same wind blows ill on Alex Salmond whose narrative of Scottish independence will have to be revised, according to observers including BBC Scotland’s political editor Brian Taylor.

“We’re unlikely to hear over-much from Alex Salmond in future about the “arc of prosperity.... You know, Norway, Ireland.......and Iceland. These were to be the lodestones for Scotland’s future financial direction. Sundry parties of a Unionist persuasion will, severally and collectively, suggest that Mr Salmond’s fundamental economic case has been undermined.

The Nationalists have an answer. They will say that what matters is not, intrinsically, the size of the state but the state of the economic and fiscal policies pursued by the government, together, of course, with global conditions.”

Mike Small in Our Kingdom “ Remember Remember the 6th of November” spots division between the London and Scottish commentariat and asks a good question:  in the campaign, how does Brown explain away English jealousy over SNP freebies?

Brian Walker @ 09:04 PM | Comments (4)

The future for Local Councils.. and Councillors..

Another clip from Thursday’s better than average Hearts and Minds.  This time it’s Julia Paul’s report on the future for Northern Ireland Local Councils [and local councillors].  Of interest, along with the historical clips and the contribution from Slugger’s inaugural Local Councillor of the Year, is Paul Evans’ comparison of here with Local Councils elsewhere..  And, with the potential loss of the most experienced local councillors ahead, it’s worth considering whether here risks becoming more like elsewhere in future..

Pete Baker @ 07:21 PM | Comments (0)

Protest and Consultation

The BBC reports 400-500 protestors took to the streets of Belfast to demand an Irish Language Act.  Meanwhile Education Minister Catriona Ruane has launched a consultation on the future of Irish medium education.  It urges the primary schools to create federated schools under a single principal and board (English pdf here, Irish pdf here).

Fair Deal @ 06:07 PM | Comments (9)

Nationalise Santa

Saturday’s a day for catching the mood, so how are you bearing up? Apart from the petrol queues at Tescos, thanks to their ”price war,” not too badly in my case, assuming the pension funds holds up.  A backlash against all the solemn stuff nobody can do anything about is inevitable. Naturally somebody has to blame the media and it’s Cranmer’s turn. The financial crisis in the new bird flu.

“Christmas itself may be cancelled because Santa banked in Iceland. And he had shares in Hamleys. And Hamleys banked with Northern Rock, but has just moved its billions to Ireland, or Germany – anywhere which guarantees every deposited euro without limit – for these countries now have the safest banks in the world. So Santa is moving to Dublin, or Berlin, and exchanging reindeer for leprechauns, or Volkswagens, for the only hope he has of meeting all of his service and supply commitments over the next eight weeks is with state aid. Santa has been nationalised.”

Brian Walker @ 10:54 AM | Comments (9)

Friday, October 10, 2008

“What a sad spectacle Gerry Adams has become..”

Not full-blown yet.. But it’s getting personal.. DUP leader Peter Robinson responds to Sinn Féin leader Gerry Adams’ comments - noted by George earlier.

Mr Robinson rejected claims of bigotry in his party and said the Sinn Féin leader’s comments should be treated with “pity rather than scorn”.

“What a sad spectacle Gerry Adams has become,” said Mr Robinson. “He has resorted to making outlandish and absurd claims in order to grab some media attention and seek support for his party’s present absurd position.  “The central accusation made by Mr Adams is wrong. The DUP is committed to working the Assembly for the maximum benefit of all of the people of Northern Ireland.”

And the same iol report carries the counter-response.

Tonight a Sinn Féin source hit back at Mr Robinson’s comments: “Many people in the wider community are questioning Peter Robinson’s tenure as First Minister. “There has been one Executive meeting during his four months in office. What Peter Robinson needs to do is focus on delivering on the obligations his party entered into in the St Andrews Agreement.”

It looks like some still need reminding of how far that argument falls short of reality.. Adds More quotes here

Pete Baker @ 09:17 PM | Comments (60)

Just where is Irish Republicanism at these days?

Many claim it - from Sinn Féin to Fianna Fail to the SDLP and a wealth of smaller groups including RSF, IRSP, Workers Party, éirígí and the 32CSM (sorry if I left you out). To address the question requires a definition of what Republicanism is and that isn’t something easily agreed on.

Mark McGregor @ 08:07 PM | Comments (52)

“without getting themselves into trouble..”

Niall Stanage on BBC NI Hearts and Minds with some useful background information on the recent kerfuffle over one US presidential candidate’s reported opinions on Northern Ireland and the exaggarated importance of the Irish-American vote, and that of the influence of the Irish-American lobby.  [Bill] Clinton gets a mention too [The “thinking man’s shit”? - Ed] It “has never been just about those “dreary steeples".”

Pete Baker @ 05:35 PM | Comments (8)

Some new (old) ideas for Policing

So, it would be amiss to criticise SF for a failure to produce any ideas on policing without suggesting some, so here’s a brief attempt.

Kensei @ 05:17 PM | Comments (34)

Mixed messages over success of British Army Irish recruitment drive

Last month, the Times reported how 16 per cent of the new recruits to the British Army in Northern Ireland since April were from south of the border, more than double the figure for 2006. Slugger dealt with it here. However, today the Irish Independent reported that an “expensive” recruitment drive by the British Army in the Republic had resulted in just 24 applicants signing up in the last 18 months. Why the discrepancy in opinions/reporting of the recruitment figures? Suggestions welcome.

George @ 05:01 PM | Comments (15)
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