The Steamie

Thursday, 5 November 2009

Glasgow North East: Eileen Baxendale, Liberal Democrats; Campaigning for Change


I think this is a great idea from the Steamie. I would love to see more newspapers and media outlets adopt innovative approaches to help get more people engaged in politics.

I want to say right from the start that I think it was simply outrageous that the Labour party have allowed the people in Glasgow North East to go without an MP for so long, well over 125 days now. This just shows that the Labour Government has lost touch with the people it serves.

Since this campaign kicked off all those weeks ago, I have been working hard, knocking on doors and listening to people right across the constituency.

The message that I am getting again and again is that people are fed up being overlooked and ignored and that they want change. They want their politician’s focus to be on sorting the economy, creating more local jobs and tackling local crime.

I believe that it is Nick Clegg and the Liberal Democrats that have the policies and ideas to make a real difference on these issues.

To really tackle these problems we need more than just sensationalist, headline grabbing soundbites. We need a new approach.

On the economy and banking, it is Vince Cable that has been the voice of reasoned authority over recent months. It was he who first warned about the impending economic collapse. Labour were too slow to act and the Tories were simply nowhere on sorting out the economy.

On tackling crime and creating jobs, Liberal Democrats believe that this is best done at a local level. We are committed to putting the heart back into our communities and giving local people a greater say over their own affairs.

Locking everyone up and sending our young people to prison is not the best way to tackle crime and anti-social behaviour. We need more community based initiatives that tackle the root causes of why young people in our society get involved in crime in the fist place.

Labour’s recession has led to tough times for all of us. The Liberal Democrats want to sort out the tax system to give a boost to those on low and middle incomes. We want to raise the income tax threshold so those on less than £10,000 a year don’t pay tax. This would put around £700 a year back into the pockets of those on low and middle incomes.

It is the Liberal Democrats who are the only party offering real progressive change to our society. Unlike the SNP it is the Liberal Democrats who can make a real difference at Westminster and stand up for the people of Glasgow North East.

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Tuesday, 22 September 2009

Gerri Peev: Cable tangled

The storm clouds have gathered over Bournemouth. Overnight, a whale stranded itself on the beach. Perhaps it was an omen of the disastrous day that lay ahead. First up, Vince Cable was ambushed in a "shadow cabinet" meeting of the Lib Dems over his mansion tax policy. Cable is a clever man who has a good run in the press and with the wider public. There are even some predictions that his mansion tax will go down well with voters. It could even be pitched to those on the right as being preferable to taxing income, which is the product of hard work. But the normally careful Cable was left tangled by not sorting the detail of the policy. He seems too affable a man to have let the stardust go to his head, but colleagues were left raging that he had not consulted them over such a fundamental policy change.

Next up, was the press briefing with Clegg's chief of staff, Danny Alexander, who provided the press with a third statement on what the Lib Dems thought should happen to the Attorney General Baroness Scotland, who has been fined for hiring an illegal immigrant as her cleaner. While Chris Huhne took to the airwaves to say she should be sacked, Clegg said she should stay. Meanwhile Alexander suggested she consider her position. During the briefing, a Blackberry alert came through with the message that Clegg had said she should perhaps consider her position. By the end of the day a statement came through saying that her position "looked untenable".

Then came the onstage swipes at Clegg's leadership from his own frontbenchers: pensions spokesman Steve Webb said the party had had enough despair for a week, while Dr Evan Harris, the spokesman on science, suggested that Clegg had some way to go before becoming a great leader.

And then Clegg was bounced into firming up his opposition to a referendum in a BBC Scotland interview, after The Scotsman's story this morning. Tavish Scott had claimed that perhaps colleagues who suggested the policy would be reversed had ingested too many pina coladas. For the record, this correspondent was not sharing cocktails with her sources at the time of acquiring the story. Perhaps Scott was just worried he was on the rocks?

To cap the day off, journos were given a few extracts from Clegg's speech...There is a killer line in it which voters must listen out for tomorrow. The old addage that any publicity is good publicity is truly being stretched for the Lib Dems this week. It almost stirs sympathy for them.

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Tuesday, 17 February 2009

Gerri Peev: Clegg wants to spend more time with his family

I know, I know, two Lib Dem posts in a day...please stay with me. Nick Clegg, the Lib Dem leader, has suggested that the recession may have a silver lining: it will allow/force men to spend more time with their families if they happen to be laid off.

This is a time to shake of entrenched gender stereotypes, says Clegg, who is preparing to take time off for the birth of his next off-spring. The Tories are privately pointing out that if one of their frontbenchers had tried to cast a rosy light on the recession, they would have been slated for it.

But Clegg does make a serious point. Make parental leave interchangeable and give fathers and mothers the choice as to who stays at home and who works.

Of course this can only work if at least one parent still has a job. And as the recession is hitting the female- dominated service and retail sectors the hardest, it is probably women who will be first to be given their p45s.

On that subject, should the Lib Dem leader want to request flexible working after enjoying his stint at home, can one suggest a job share with his deputy, Vince Cable?

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Gerri Peev: Poll blow for Labour?

SKY has been flashing an IPSOS/Mori poll which shows that Labour is now TWENTY points behind the Conservatives. The network reports that Labour is on 28 per cent, the Conservatives on 48 per cent and the Liberal Democrats are on 17 per cent.
One shocking aspect of this is the tumble that the Lib Dems have taken since a weekend poll put them on 22 per cent.

It is not surprising, then, that the party's Treasury spokesman amusingly admonished Sky for misreporting the poll, pointing out that the figures it quotes are only for people who say they are certain to vote at the next election.

So it means that Tory supporters are more likely to turn out and vote while Lib Dem supporters are sitting on the fence...

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Saturday, 3 January 2009

Speculation lives on! - Eddie Barnes

The markets may lack the confidence to speculate in hard cash these days, but the newspaper industry (political wing) is suffering no such crisis judging from today's papers.

First there are claims that the Chancellor, Alistair Darling, is considering a second bail-out of the banks, now that it appears the first one last year hasn't done the job. Then there is talk that he might also create a national "bad bank" where all the High Street banks' toxic assets will be thrown, leaving them cleansed anew. A careworn Treasury official pointed out to me that it is difficult to deny such stories completely when Darling has already declared that he will "consider all options" to tackle the credit crunch. In other words, the story is true, but the key word is "considering".

Second, there is speculation of a Lib-Lab pact, based on an article written by LibDem shadow chancellor Vince Cable talking up the benefits of a national government. Presumably, one of the benefits of this idea for Vince Cable is that Vince Cable would be a key member of it, preferably at Number 11. I have my doubts, not least because LibDem leader Nick Clegg is said to be unenthused.

What's more, a national government would be a rotten idea. The last thing the country needs right now is an echo chamber. For if Mr Darling is preparing to lavish billions more of taxpayers' money to solve the financial crisis, surely we need opposition politicians more than ever, to cast a stern eye over this eye-watering expenditure? Especially those like Mr Cable, who have a proven knack for hitting the nail on the proverbial head....

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