by Robin McAlpine You probably think you know the implications of the General Election. I think I know the implications, or at least some of them. But I’m not sure. And therein lies the monumental success (and failure) of the…
Category: Uncategorized (page 5)
Sketches From a Small World – BP and Environmental Justice
By Eurig Scandrett By the time you read this, the oil giant BP may not exist, having collapsed in the wake of the Gulf coast oil spill, the disastrous attempts to stem the flow of oil from the deep sea…
Alasdair Gray, by Sandy Moffat
The full image: © Copyright the artist. PDF of the article from page 2 of The Herald, 24th June 2010: Herald_AlistairGray
DLS to Unveil Major Portrait of Alasdair Gray
A major portrait of Alasdair Gray is to be unveiled on Wednesday 23rd June at Oran Mor, 731 Great Western Road, Glasgow. The painting was commissioned from leading Scots artist Sandy Moffat by Democratic Left Scotland, Scotland ‘s radical, feminist…
Democratic Left Scotland – Annual General Meeting
City Chambers, Edinburgh: Saturday, June 5th, 11am – 4pm. This year’s AGM will discuss the prospects for our organisation and the role it plays. The afternoon discussion will focus on the Coalition and response to it. All members who can…
Can the Lib-Cons do it? How should we respond?
David Purdy
With the decision of the Liberal Democrats and Conservatives to form a coalition, the realignment of British politics has begun. We now know that in the course of the inter-party talks that followed the election of a hung parliament, Clegg and Cameron (or Nick and Dave, as they wish to be known) considered and rejected the option of a “confidence and supply” arrangement whereby the Lib Dems would support a minority Tory government on confidence motions and finance bills, but would not join the government on the basis of a comprehensive and jointly agreed policy programme. Any such deal would have been an uncertain and short-lived affair, soon to be followed by another election with the attendant risk of provoking panic in the financial markets. Instead, the adoption of the name “Liberal-Conservative”, the carefully crafted composition of the new government and its early policy announcements signal a clear intention to serve a full, five-year parliamentary term, to make a serious effort to tackle Britain’s economic crisis and, in the process, to break the mould of British politics.
The coalition has four policy priorities:
- to repair the country’s battered public finances by instituting a phased programme of fiscal retrenchment, starting this year and heavily weighted towards public spending cuts rather than increases in taxation, as envisaged in the Conservative election manifesto, with the aim of reducing the UK’s record budget deficit by more than would happen if the government relied solely on economic growth to boost tax receipts and reduce social security outlays;[1]
- to mitigate the impact of fiscal austerity on low and middle income taxpayers by raising the standard personal income tax threshold to £10,000, as proposed in the Lib-Dem election manifesto, while ditching the Tory pledge to raise the threshold for inheritance tax to £1 million, retaining the outgoing government’s plan to raise employees’ national insurance contributions next year, but rescinding the planned rise in employers’ contributions (the so-called “jobs tax”)[2];
- to break up and restructure the banks and to install a new system of financial regulation, a task to be shared between Vince Cable, whose reputation as a financial sage will now be put to the test, and George Osborne, Chancellor of the Exchequer, who will be in overall charge; and
- to reform key aspects of Britain’s dysfunctional and discredited political system, a substantial task for which Nick Clegg has assumed responsibility, in addition to his symbolic role as Deputy Prime Minister.[3]
Taken together, these measures add up to a bold plan for tackling the twin crises that engulfed and finally brought down Gordon Brown’s government. When the US housing bubble burst in early 2007, the global financial system began to seize up. By autumn 2008, several major banks had become insolvent and Britain, along with most other developed capitalist economies, was plunged into a deep recession from which it has only just emerged. Though culpably slow to appreciate the gravity of the crisis, the government eventually took decisive action to rescue the banks and avert a re-run of the Great Depression. That it received little credit for this achievement is partly because there is a difference between staving off disaster and stimulating recovery, partly because of the success of the Tories in converting what began as a crisis of capitalism into a crisis of public finance, and partly because the economic downturn coincided with the eruption of a full-scale crisis of legitimacy.
May 6th and After
Will a Brown led government be better than Cameron? Yes! Could collation government improve our democracy? Perhaps! But the question is: How can progressive opinion challenge the dominant ‘markets first’ approach? This needs to be asked before, during and after…
Women's Support Project
The Women’s Support Project’s core funding has been affected by budget cuts, with Glasgow City Council cutting its contribution by 100%. The Project is seeking alternative funding to continue the service, and is launching a funding appeal. It needs to…
Budget deficits, public debt and economic recovery
by David Purdy The recession that began in the second quarter of 2008 has been the longest and deepest since 1945. By the third quarter of 2009, UK GDP, the chief measure of the (unduplicated) market value of newly produced…
Democratic Left Scotland
Democratic Left Scotland is an organisation committed to a radical Scotland. We see the need for social transformation toward a society based on equality, human rights and social and environmental justice. We believe that this change can be achieved through…