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John Marriott

Columnist

John was a councillor for thirty years, finally retiring in 2017. A schoolteacher by profession, he served on the North Hykeham Town Council (1987-2011), the North Kesteven District Council (1987-1999, 2001-2007) and the Lincolnshire County Council (2001-2017). He was also a County Council member of the former Lincolnshire Police Authority for eight years until standing down in 2009. In 1997 he was the Lib Dem Parliamentary candidate for Sleaford and North Hykeham. He is currently not a member of any political party.


“Fasten your seatbelts. It’s going to be a bumpy night,” said Bette Davis’ character, ageing actress, Margo Channing, in the 1950 Oscar winning film, ‘All about Eve’. That’s what 2017 has been like for many of us and 2018 looks like offering more of the same.

As far as the international scene was concerned, the Middle East seems to be in as big a mess as ever, while the new occupant of the White House was elected by an arcane device called ‘the Electoral College’, constructed with the best of intentions by the founding fathers when their country comprised a few colonies on the eastern seaboard; but totally inappropriate for the nation of over 230 million people it has become today.

He actually lost the election by over two million votes, and has struggled to get many of his campaign ‘pledges’ into law, despite his party having control of both Houses of Congress. His only ‘success’ so far appears to be a Finance Bill that blatantly rewards his billionaire buddies and, while it has gone down well on Wall Street, will arguably do nothing for what our American cousins call the ‘Middle Class’ (known here as ‘Working Class’). Surely a nation, which has for so long been called ‘Leader of the Free World’, with the riches it possesses in terms of population alone could have come up with a better choice – and to think that some of us thought that George W Bush left much to be desired.

China continues to build up its military strength in the Far East and its pre-eminence in manufacturing and trade around the world, while in mineral rich Africa, despite all that overseas aid their largely despotic and corrupt  governments are receiving, many people continue to starve. In North Korea the antics of dictator, Kim Jong Un aka ‘Little Rocket man’ continue to offer an excuse for you know who to rattle his substantial sabre.

Nearer to home we have Brexit, and then we have Brexit and then even more Brexit. When will it end? You can forget about a reform of Adult Social Care, improving the NHS, building enough Housing and the rest. Westminster appears to be locked into the tortuous process of trying to make ‘the will of the people’ a reality some time soon. It was the coach of the 1971 British Lions Rugby Team, the late Carwyn James, who urged his players, when confronting the mighty All Blacks, to “get your retaliation in first”, a tactic that Messrs Davis, Johnson, Fox and Gove appear to be copying. Did they and those who believed them really think that extricating ourselves from over 40 years of increasing integration with what is still a mighty powerful organisation would be a walk in the park?

2017 saw Prime Minister Theresa May’s female interpretation of Sir Vince Cable’s famous ‘Stalin to Mr Bean’ description of the transformation of PM Gordon Brown. Buoyed by the local election results in Spring (more of them later) and sensing a chance to give Labour a good kicking she went to the country offering ‘strong and stable government’ and ended up with nothing of the kind. What we did end up with was a return to ‘two party politics’ in Parliament for the first time since the 1960s with both Tory and Labour parties sucking in a level of support they had not enjoyed for many years. With a turnout of nearly 70%, the highest in 25 years and with strong support for nationalist parties in Scotland and Northern Ireland, national campaigning parties such as the Lib Dems and the Greens were left to pick up the scraps. Whilst over 80% voted either Tory or Labour, it’s pretty clear that, given the current polarisation in both parties, particularly in England, there is a large hole in the centre ground that nobody seems able to fill at the moment. Somehow, I can’t see an SDP like coming together of remainers in either major party of the kind we witnessed in 1981. The current voting system makes pluralism in terms of seats in Parliament still a pipe dream.

Nearer to home, following the local elections last May, Lincolnshire appears even more to be a one party state (nothing new there then?). Barely one third of the electorate bothered to vote and the Tories picked up 58 of the 70 County Council seats available. ‘Official opposition’ Labour was reduced to a rump of six, the Lincolnshire Independents and the Lib Dems one councillor apiece with four independents. UKIP, the largest opposition party after the 2013 elections (but not for long when defections reduced its number to thirteen), was wiped out completely. The fact that local government is facing an existential crisis appears to have gone unnoticed; but the problems it faces will not go away.

On a personal level, in the year I retired after thirty years as a councillor I was pleased that the Central Lincs Local Plan, in which I was actively involved as a member of the Committee tasked with producing it, got the blessing of the Inspector, which could bring the elusive Lincoln Ring Road a little closer as well as putting a brake, amongst other things, on speculative planning applications. However, I’m still awaiting that consultation with the public on streamlining local government in the County, let alone, on a national level, the reform of local government finance, which in its current form just isn’t fit for purpose any more.

So, what does 2018 hold for us here? First of course is Brexit. Opinions vary as to how it will proceed. About a month ago, Lincoln’s doyen of Industry and Commerce, the ex boss of RGT/EGT/ALSTOM UK, Paul Barron, in his Lincolnite column, ‘My Plan for surviving Brexit’ adopted the Doris Day approach. Some of you may remember her hit song from the film, ‘The Man, who knew too much’. It went like this:

“Que sera, sera, Whatever will be, will be. The future’s not ours to see Que sera, sera.”

Paul summed it up in the phrase: “It is what it is”, and that’s very much my view as well. However, in order to lead us to the promised land, we need leadership that is up to the job, and here again, I refer to something Paul Barron wrote on The Lincolnite about a year ago in a column entitled: ‘Filling the void: Leadership post Brexit’. He wrote that we needed “a leader who can stand above the rhetoric, with a clear vision and plans to deliver it, communicated in a language everyone can understand.

I agree and might add that we also need a REALIST. But, where are the candidates for this role? So far, I can’t see any of the current crop being up to it, and that includes the Leader of the Official Opposition! Perhaps there is another Winston Churchill out there. And perhaps, with the first round of Brexit negotiations more or less complete, we have, to quote his famous words as the tide of WW2 was beginning to turn in late 1942, reached “the end of the beginning. I sincerely hope so. Mind you, it took another three years of “blood, toil, tears and sweat” before that particular job was done.

A Happy New Year to you all, but don’t unfasten your seatbelts just yet!

John was a councillor for thirty years, finally retiring in 2017. A schoolteacher by profession, he served on the North Hykeham Town Council (1987-2011), the North Kesteven District Council (1987-1999, 2001-2007) and the Lincolnshire County Council (2001-2017). He was also a County Council member of the former Lincolnshire Police Authority for eight years until standing down in 2009. In 1997 he was the Lib Dem Parliamentary candidate for Sleaford and North Hykeham. He is currently not a member of any political party.

I bet it’s not often that you get a column title partly in Latin on The Lincolnite!

Actually, fans of musicals and film buffs will probably recognise the words from Sigmund Romberg’s 1924 light operetta, ‘The Student Prince’, which also featured in the 1954 MGM musical of the same name.

Roughly translated it means “Let us rejoice, therefore, While we are young” and actually dates back to the Middle Ages.

That’s often the view that many people still have of university students. Certainly some residents of Lincoln’s West End would still appear to resent the exuberant behaviour often associated with those studying and living nearby. However, what they tend to forget is just what having a university in Lincoln at last has brought to the city.

Some people, myself included, were surprised that a place like Lincoln hadn’t had such a seat of learning since way back when, given its status in the Middle Ages as an important centre of commerce. After all, it, or at least its castle and some of its streets, had proved the ideal backdrop for the 1962 film of university life, “The Wild and the Willing”, which featured the screen debuts of none other than Ian “Lovejoy” McShane and Lincoln’s own John Hurt.

A former teacher colleague of mine had actually worked as an extra during one of his vacations whilst a student himself. Well, by modern standards, the young men weren’t that wild and the young ladies weren’t that willing – but that’s another story! If you have a spare hour and a half you can still catch it on YouTube. So you can make up your own mind. The location scenes also act as a time capsule of how Lincoln used to look back then.

We had to wait until 1992 for Lincoln to achieve ‘University status’ and even then there was opposition from some quarters. Besides the apparent lack of interest shown by some in the Tory led county council at the time, the main argument was where the university should be sited.

Many people felt that the recently released St John’s Hospital site should be used rather than to try to adapt the Brayford area, possibly because some diehards thought that Bracebridge Heath was far enough out of town to prove a more suitable containment area for all those excitable young people who could be descending from some of the more ‘sophisticated’ areas of the country on an otherwise relatively quiet rural city.

However, there was a change of regime at County Hall following the 1993 local elections and the incoming Lib/Lab administration pushed ahead despite continuing scepticism and, against the perceived wisdom, on the city centre site.

It was thanks largely to the new county council leader, Labour’s Councillor Rob Parker and his Lib Dem Deputy, the late Councillor Maurice French, not forgetting, of course, the good auspices of the University of Humberside, that I was lucky enough to be at the gathering to witness the official launch by Richard Branson at the county showground not long afterwards.

Since taking its first students in 1996 and parting company with Hull some time later, after a far from easy gestation period, the University is now rated amongst the top 50 institutions in the UK and in the top 10 amongst postgraduate and international students.

This year it has been awarded Gold in the Teaching Excellence Framework, while its Institute of Agri-Food Technology based at Riseholme is enjoying an international reputation. And let’s not forget its links with Siemens UK. It has come a long way these past 20 years.

More to the point, it has rejuvenated the Brayford area and brought a new vibrancy to the city centre. I just wonder how much capital investment in other areas it has brought to Lincoln.

We owe a great debt of gratitude to those visionaries who stuck to their guns to make the new university the success it has proved to be. A few high jinks are a small price to pay.

After all, as the song goes; “Gaudeamus…. etc”. Come on, we were all young once!

John was a councillor for thirty years, finally retiring in 2017. A schoolteacher by profession, he served on the North Hykeham Town Council (1987-2011), the North Kesteven District Council (1987-1999, 2001-2007) and the Lincolnshire County Council (2001-2017). He was also a County Council member of the former Lincolnshire Police Authority for eight years until standing down in 2009. In 1997 he was the Lib Dem Parliamentary candidate for Sleaford and North Hykeham. He is currently not a member of any political party.

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