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John Marriott

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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.


Back in the 1970s Alice Cooper had a big hit with the song, as the first line of the chorus goes: “School’s out for Summer”. Many people think that’s what should be happening to our nation’s schools while infection rates for COVID-19 are still too high for comfort. For some, I suppose, a more appropriate and worrying response might be the second line; “School’s out forever”! But let’s be sensible, hey? For many parents, running out of ideas on how to entertain their offspring (imagine if you had a class full of them to deal with) and some itching to get back to work and fearing that, unless we open up soon, there won’t be that many jobs to go back to, the lockdown here can’t be slackened soon enough.

Yes, going without vital education at all age levels, but particularly in the first few formative years, is not ideal. However, given that most youngsters on the continent don’t begin formal education until the age of seven and don’t appear to be unduly disadvantaged, a few more months away while we see what happens as our European neighbours, who have been ahead of us in planning and lockdown anyway, try to return to a semblance of what we used to call normality, surely won’t hurt us. Who knows? By September we might possibly have an effective vaccine and, if not, possibly a more effective treatment for COVID-19. We can but hope.

Now I know that the teachers’ unions (and there are quite a few of them with no compulsion to join) have come in for a bit of stick regarding their stance on reopening schools. I am someone who joined a union (then called just the National Association of Schoolmasters – NAS) when he began his teaching career in 1966 and is still a member of the NAS/UWT’s Retired Members’ Association today, and someone, who was very active in Trades Union affairs before first becoming a councillor in 1987. I know what a vital role they have played in my professional lifetime in fighting for a fair deal for teachers, in terms of pay and conditions, and much, much more.  However, they need to tread carefully as they are in danger of contributing to the popular held belief that theirs is a rather cushy number.

I’ve been away from the chalk face too long (nearly 20 years to be precise) to know exactly what is going on in schools today. However, it’s safe to say that at the moment it’s certainly not business as usual. So perhaps those teachers, who may be sitting at home on full pay, as employees of the government after all, ought to have been furloughed on 80% pay like so many of their fellow citizens. We keep being told that we are all in it together. As for retirees like me, on their triple locked state and index linked final salary occupational pensions, let’s at least means test that triple lock for starters, and let’s most of us pay more income tax to start to help repay the massive debt our country has run up in recent months, with more to come, believe me.

You see, the jury is out at the moment regarding whether particularly younger children can catch and spread the virus without showing symptoms. So, in my opinion, we ought to be better safe than sorry. After all, our PM told us a week ago to stay ”alert”. Well, if that means being careful, I’ll vote for that. I appreciate that keeping schools closed for all but the children of key workers will not be easy and could affect our economic recovery, but life is all about risk assessment, and staying safe has still got to be our number one priority at the moment. If we are sure that all precautions have been taken, including adequate testing and tracing, then perhaps an earlier phased reopening of schools can be justified.

It appears that some Multi Academy Trust (MAT) Chiefs are keen to reopen, while many Local Education Authorities are more wary. Well, let’s see what happens if the former do go ahead and just hope that things work out. If the virus makes a comeback, then, who do we blame this time? Lincolnshire has always encouraged its schools effectively to go independent as so called ‘academies’ and a majority clearly have done so. When I refer to academies as ‘independent’ I, of course, mean that they are directly responsible to the Education Secretary and not the Local Education Authority (LEA). We could be in for a few test cases of who actually controls education in England at least, where academy students could be back in the classroom while students in LEA schools could still be at home, possibly driving their responsible adults to distraction.

Of course I could be wrong and many MATs may err on the side of caution; but in this age of ‘dog eat dog’, league table and exam obsessed education, where not letting your competitors steal a march on you for fear of societal and particularly parental retribution is the norm, I have my doubts. As far as Lincolnshire is concerned, I would expect the Tory led County Council to do its government’s bidding, whereas, in Labour controlled authorities we might be in for a trial of strength, with parents and their offspring unfortunately caught in the middle.

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.

Political scientist, Professor David Runciman, writing in The Guardian, may be right when he said that, in dealing with the coronavirus, a layer of politics had been stripped away. He described it as being “a trade off between personal liberty and collective choice.” For some reason this reminded me of the words of the Kaiser, when addressing his nation on the Edison phonograph at the start of World War One, he ended his address with the words: “I recognise no parties any more, only Germans”.

Whether we like it or not, what we are now in the middle of is a war. But, as Mr Spock might have said to Captain James Kirk, “not as we know it”. Kaiser Wilhelm was the head, despite the trappings of democracy, of a basically autocratic regime, which sought to shore up its power by enlisting patriotism, and it worked for a while as it did also in Tsarist Russia, Austria-Hungary and Ottoman Turkey. As Oscar Wilde famously called patriotism “the last refuge of the scoundrel”. Yes, it can be used for sinister purposes; but surely, now above all is the time for us all to pull together.

I know that there are many people who suspect the motives of many of those advocating obedience rather than debate — but these are extraordinary times for mankind. As Dr Liam Fox MP, not someone whose views I generally share, wrote last weekend, we, who have only been around as a species for some 200,000 years, are facing an ‘enemy’ that has survived for millions. It didn’t do that by standing still. It needed to adapt, and so do we.

Given the positive tests on the Prince of Wales and PM Boris Johnson and Matt Hancock, not forgetting Tom Hanks and his wife in Australia, it can truly be said that we are all in it together. Party politics really does need to take a back seat until we can get on top of this silent and invisible enemy.

With this in mind I am so pleased that the Lib Dem leadership vote, for example, has been postponed. Like the Summer Olympics and most of the upcoming sporting events, isn’t it about time that the same fate befell our exit from the EU? In some ways it’s a pity that ‘the other election’ didn’t go the same way. Fiddling while Rome burns is hardly something to be recommended. On the other hand, do we really want Jeremy Corbyn as Deputy PM, following in the footsteps of Clement Attlee between 1940 and 1945, in a possible Government of National Unity if the present crisis escalates? I just hope it might be Keir Starmer instead, who seems to be made of sterner stuff.

Talking of Brexit, where are Nigel Farage, Richard Tice, Jacob Rees Mogg, Mark Francois, Andrew Bridgen, Nigel Lawson, Bill Cash, Ian Duncan Smith, Gisela Stuart, Kate Hoey and all those other one trick ponies, who were never out of the news over the past few years? I’ll not include Johnson or Gove as they appear to have stepped up to the plate. Probably they had no choice. However, the only prominent Brexiteer, who has been in the news recently was one Mr Tim Martin, of the famous pub chain, whose antics with his staff have hardly covered him in glory.

However, you can’t fight an enemy you can’t see with guns and bombs and you can’t negotiate with a virus. It really is a case of survival of the fittest. My wife and I proudly stood at our front door last Thursday evening clapping and banging a saucepan, as did many people on our estate road. At times like this, and I admit that it’s early days, it makes me realise what IS important in life. I just hope that, to return to WW1, we do not end up as “lions led by donkeys”. Also, when we get over this – and we will – will we really learn our lesson and will our daily and political lives change for the better? We can but hope.

Just before the end of WW2 the allies convened at Bretton Woods in New Hampshire, USA to put together a new world order, including the establishment of the World Bank and the IMF, which formed the basis of our post war recovery until US President, Richard Nixon effectively pulled the plug in 1971 and Reagan and Lady Thatcher did the rest. Perhaps, when this is all over, it’s time for a Bretton Woods Mark Two.


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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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