Do you want to discuss boring politics? (55 Viewers)

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
I've only seen the headlines, so how do things like more local control over education work? I always thought that should be a national thing in terms of policy and strategy, but down to local areas to implement it. Is that about where they're heading, or in danger of a mish-mash of different plans across the country?

Bringing academies back under LA purview I believe.
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
I too, haven't deep dived the proposals, but the minimum should be to get rid of cronies and clergy having a say in lawmaking for the rest of their lives/careers without democratic accountancy.

PR is the obvious way to go.

It won't be ideal to begin with, but it's absolutely the right thing to do.

Why have two elected chambers? What’s the point? And why remove the ability to get rid of shit politicians? Voters won’t matter, just brown nosing party leadership to get on the list. All so 6% of people can vote for the Very Specific Issue Party and get one MP who achieves fuck all.
 

JAM See

Well-Known Member
Why have two elected chambers? What’s the point? And why remove the ability to get rid of shit politicians? Voters won’t matter, just brown nosing party leadership to get on the list. All so 6% of people can vote for the Very Specific Issue Party and get one MP who achieves fuck all.
What's the alternative?

A single chamber or a second chamber of cronies and clerics?
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
What's the alternative?

A single chamber or a second chamber of cronies and clerics?

Change the selection criteria for HoL to not be something politicians give their mates but something closer to an MBE. A reward for actually having achieved something in a field. Sure we need some law making experiencing there, but not this crap. Maybe limit political ones to the major offices of state at least so you don’t get Lady fucking Fox and Dorries. Let the Royal Society or the unions or major charities have nominations.

I like the theory of the Lords: get some expertise in to critique bills without the populairst pressures of election breathing down their neck. But at the moment it’s a cronies club and not much else.
 

JAM See

Well-Known Member
Change the selection criteria for HoL to not be something politicians give their mates but something closer to an MBE. A reward for actually having achieved something in a field. Sure we need some law making experiencing there, but not this crap. Maybe limit political ones to the major offices of state at least so you don’t get Lady fucking Fox and Dorries. Let the Royal Society or the unions or major charities have nominations.

I like the theory of the Lords: get some expertise in to critique bills without the populairst pressures of election breathing down their neck. But at the moment it’s a cronies club and not much else.
Or how about the most popular poster on SBT?

It's all bollocks and is cronyism by the back door.

This is a supposed democracy, lawmakers should be answerable to the electorate.
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
Or how about the most popular poster on SBT?

It's all bollocks and is cronyism by the back door.

This is a supposed democracy, lawmakers should be answerable to the electorate.

They’re not lawmakers though. They’re law scrutinisers.

Do you want the civil service elected too? The heads of quangos? How far does it go?
 

JAM See

Well-Known Member
They’re not lawmakers though. They’re law scrutinisers.

Do you want the civil service elected too? The heads of quangos? How far does it go?
The HoL votes on laws sent up from the HoC.

They are lawmakers.

Other branches of government are advisers/experts. and are on a period of notice (normal employment terms). Not so with the HoL.

An appointed second chamber is something that doesn't sit right with me.
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
The HoL votes on laws sent up from the HoC.

They are lawmakers.

Other branches of government are advisers/experts. and are on a period of notice (normal employment terms). Not so with the HoL.

An appointed second chamber is something that doesn't sit right with me.

Id be open to a fixed term. But HoL can’t create law, their job is to scrutinise the laws the HoC creates as you say. So why do we need them if not for expertise? Just scrap them entirely if that’s what you want.
 
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Deleted member 5849

Guest
Mark Pawsey stepping down too. Who's actually going to be left?
 

Sky Blue Pete

Well-Known Member
Id be open to a fixed term. But HoL can’t create law, their job is to scrutinise the laws the HoC creates as you say. So why do we need them if not for expertise? Just scrap them entirely if that’s what you want.
It’s often easier to do it in steps isn’t it?
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
This is up there with the dumbest policy ideas ever. There’s a bit of the Labour Party that is hell bent on making the internet “safe” and all logic and reason flies out the window, same as Tories and terrorists.

No polticians, you can’t ban basic technology. Make better laws.

 

Philosoraptor

Well-Known Member
You’d be surprised how stupid I can be. Humour me.

Any action needs the consent of Parliament, across the two chambers.



Edit-

Actually, I just checked. No, Government doesn't but in reality you would expect explicit consent from Parliament to go to war. Unless it was an emergency. Iraq War was no emergency.

Edit II- I guess these are things to be worked out if you are going to have an elected second chamber. You just can't force a vote through/ignore an elected chamber like you can when one is unelected.
 
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shmmeee

Well-Known Member
Any action needs the consent of Parliament, across the two chambers.



Edit-

Actually, I just checked. No, Government doesn't but in reality you would expect explicit consent from Parliament to go to war. Unless it was an emergency. Iraq War was no emergency.

Edit II- I guess these are things to be worked out if you are going to have an elected second chamber. You just can't force a vote through an elected chamber like you can when one is unelected.

Constitutionally the Commons doesn’t need to be involved but precedent is that they have a debate.

Iraq had explicit parliamentary consent anyway so wouldn’t have been affected by your proposal.
 

fernandopartridge

Well-Known Member
This is up there with the dumbest policy ideas ever. There’s a bit of the Labour Party that is hell bent on making the internet “safe” and all logic and reason flies out the window, same as Tories and terrorists.

No polticians, you can’t ban basic technology. Make better laws.


Can't see the twitter as I'm at work but was reading some tweets about it earlier. There is a very hard authoritarian streak in the Labour party, it seems to assume that people like that kind of thing
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
Can't see the twitter as I'm at work but was reading some tweets about it earlier. There is a very hard authoritarian streak in the Labour party, it seems to assume that people like that kind of thing

I mean that’s the left for you, I don’t think it’s focus groups or whatever though. It seems to be lead by a lot of older women so I’m guessing either “think of the children” or experiences of online abuse. Those that push it hard seem to be the type that overblow a few comments on their SM. It’s not just since Starmer either, here’s Diane Abbott talking about it:


And here’s Corbyn:

 

Sky_Blue_Dreamer

Well-Known Member
That's what I was heading for in an upper chamber!

As for counterbalance, it'd be madness to hold it at the same time. What you maybe need is a bit like local authorities, where a set percentage of seats become up for election at staggered intervals.
But it'd also be easiest to hold it at the same time, as you just take the overall nationwide percetnage figures for votes and give each party that percentage of seats in the upper chamber. Also makes it so if you live in a safe seat your vote doesn't feel like it's wasted and therefore could improve turnout.
 

Sky_Blue_Dreamer

Well-Known Member
Why have two elected chambers? What’s the point? And why remove the ability to get rid of shit politicians? Voters won’t matter, just brown nosing party leadership to get on the list. All so 6% of people can vote for the Very Specific Issue Party and get one MP who achieves fuck all.
Trouble with having experts in the upper chamber is who chooses the experts?

You could end up with a bunch of experts who wanted huge deregulation and reduced working rights along with more privatised healthcare and other public services, or another bunch of experts that wanted increased regulation and more nationalised services.

Give 100 experts a question and you'll end up with 100 different answers.

It's still have political ideology behind the decisions, just people who would sound more convincing that they know what they're talking about.
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
And what constitutes an expert?

If you’ve had enough of them they’re an expert.

I know this is SBT and we’re all experts but are people really saying that say a teacher with 30 years experience or a scientists with a significant amount of published papers doesn’t have more insight than Nadine Dorries or Clare Fox?
 
D

Deleted member 5849

Guest
If you’ve had enough of them they’re an expert.

I know this is SBT and we’re all experts but are people really saying that say a teacher with 30 years experience or a scientists with a significant amount of published papers doesn’t have more insight than Nadine Dorries or Clare Fox?
I bet your definition of experts would differ from mine... I've got a number of peer reviewed published papers. Do I count?
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
I bet your definition of experts would differ from mine... I've got a number of peer reviewed published papers. Do I count?

Maybe, in a particular field. Would an organisation of your peers elect you as such?

Are you really claiming there are no experts? That Gary from the pub/golf club has us much expertise to offer as someone elected by say the Royal Society or the NEU?
 
D

Deleted member 5849

Guest
Are you really claiming there are no experts?
Nope. I'm suggesting that there are experts in more than science, technology, finance.

So who picks the balance? Who decides the priorities? Experts? In which case, I refer you back to my previous answer.

A priest is an expert in theology after all, and does have a place somewhere in a chamber of experts!
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
Nope. I'm suggesting that there are experts in more than science, technology, finance.

So who picks the balance? Who decides the priorities? Experts? In which case, I refer you back to my previous answer.

A priest is an expert in theology after all, and does have a place somewhere in a chamber of experts!

He does. And I’d want a full range of opinions rather than just politicians which is all you’d get from an elected chamber. Is much rather take a few major industries, state sectors, charities and the like. I don’t think it’s insurmountable.
 

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