Covering the Shire Counties of Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire, Essex, Hertfordshire, Norfolk, and Suffolk, including Luton, Peterborough, Southend-on-Sea and Thurrock.


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More democracy in a crisis, not less

The decision to postpone the election was exasperating for all sorts of practical reasons. Candidates are the worst affected, and I feel for them in particular. Party campaigns and finances are stretched. National and local government officials are thrown. The media is bored. The British public, along with that small bit of the rest of the world that is interested in our politics, just have to be patient.

Yet the postponement is more than a nuisance. It is a political blunder and a constitutional outrage, and when I heard our Westminster leadership drift in behind the Tory and Labour parties to support the postponement, I was disappointed on several counts.

Mr BlairÕs excuse was that he himself wanted to concentrate on foot and mouth. This reveals that he canÕt trust anyone else in his government to manage the crisis. It also suggests that he thinks that the disease can be brought under control within just five weeks in a fairly clinical manner by deploying the massive power of the state machine. Anyone who knows anything about agriculture laughs at that proposition. "Isolate, cull, clear up!" may be convenient politico-military commands Ñ but they are too simplistic for veterinary science and too crude for farmers for whom social, commercial, ecological and even ethical factors impinge. As the foot and mouth saga continues, indeed, the complexity of the crisis is becoming clearer: vacillation now, vaccination later.

The pretext that the county council elections would have impeded the stateÕs campaign against the disease barely stands up to a momentÕs serious examination. In fact, we need strong shire councils during an agrarian crisis, not exhausted and often divided administrations with fading mandates. We need more democracy in a crisis, not less.

But my main cause of Easter gloom is the dictatorial powers we give our prime minister and the present incumbentÕs willingness to exercise them shamelessly for his own perceived advantage. Nowhere else in the democratic world is a leader unencumbered in the choice of date of a parliamentary election. Everywhere else there are constitutional constraints. In mainland Europe and in the US, the dissolution of parliament is one of the most fundamental civil liberties there is. Only in Britain is it not so. Only in Britain is the mandate of parliament and the autonomy of local government the plaything of the prime minister. Let us work to ensure that Mr BlairÕs premiership is shortened and the powers of his successor reduced.

This Article first appeared in Liberal Democrat News

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Andrew's work
in the European Parliament since 1999

Making the EU more democratic

Andrew is Vice-President of the European Parliament delegation to the Constitutional Convention on the Future of Europe.


Rights for EU citizens

Andrew drafted the Charter of Fundamental Rights which has strengthened the rights of all the citizens of the European Union.


Turkey

Andrew is working for improved links between the EU and Turkey, to encourage improvements in Turkey's human rights record and to enhance its democracy.


Andrew's campaigning in the East of England

Airport Expansion

Andrew has led calls for the Air Travel industry to be subjected to the same rigorous environmental criteria as other modes of transport


 

 

 
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