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Kate Taylor

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Kate Taylor is a sociologist, mother and tea and cake lover. When not working in sociological and marketing research with her company, Galilee Research, Kate can be found talking about political philosophy on the school run.


As of yesterday, the three main parties have their manifestos out. Labour came first (though this may have had something to do with a draft being leaked days before) with the Liberal Democrats tailing behind on Wednesday, and now the ‘Conservative and Unionist Party’ have released their little blue book.

The Labour Party have expanded on their catchphrase of ‘for the many, not the few’ by suggesting a more devolved, public orientated Britain – taking back services that are now private, huge funding to public services across the board not to mention scrapping tuition fees and indeed, raising taxes for the wealthiest among us.

Low and behold, they have published a separate booklet outlining how this would all be achieved fiscally speaking, something leader Jeremy Corbyn and co. were heavily mocked for when the draft was leaked days before the real thing.

The biggest part of Labour’s ideology under ‘I’m not sure if I trust Jeremy Corbyn’ and thus their manifesto is compassion and common sense. They have stuck by the referendum decision but are determined to not cut off our great and glorious land’s nose to spite our face. Brexit must be undertaken by someone who is willing to sit down at the table and be firm but fair.

And that sums it up – we live in the 21st Century, we are supposed to be more advanced, more worldly then ever before. We need work that pays (Labour plans to increase national minimum wage to £10 by 2020) and a government that helps the lost, the ill, the disabled and the elderly back on their feet.

Aside from the nationalisation of certain areas, Labour have proposed setting up the NES – National Education Service; offering ‘cradle to grave’ support, education and welfare for all. This is is instead of lifting the ban on new Grammar Schools, levelling the playing field even further for the working classes.

Liberal Democrats party leader Tim Farron has spoken about his focus being set on ‘holding PM May and her government to account’. Stating that the party would refuse to create a coalition with neither Conservative nor Labour. Along with not saying too much on the topic of student loans, it seems Farron has remembered the heat of the fire from their ill-fated Tory coalition.

However their manifesto has gone into great detail about the education system as a whole, including some solid sounding ideas on how to improve the profession so teachers are less stressed. On the flip side they have gone on to say they would introduce Ofsted inspections to all schools which sounds like a contradiction in terms.

Then we have our sitting government, the Conservative party. Prime Minister Theresa May announced the release of their manifesto yesterday in Halifax, entitled ‘Forward, Together’ – to the amusement of many. Much of the media furore centred around the PM heading away from Thatcherism to appear supposedly ‘softer’ and ready to take the more conservative Labour votes. Questioned on the topic, May said that, ‘Thatcher was a Conservative, I am a Conservative, this is a Conservative Manifesto’.

Downgrading the triple pension lock to a double, swapping free hot lunches for primary school children for breakfasts instead (porridge has another name, doesn’t it?); not to mention cutting net migration down to tens of thousands – how exactly will the above be achieved, and how will the party avoid causing further poverty, starvation and indeed economic collapse when the country becomes destabilised?

One interesting piece re education was the idea of introducing ‘T Levels’, a technical qualification with the same clout as a full A Level on your CV or UCAS application. However, they go on (shortly after discussing teachers needs) to say they want those on such a course to receive 900 hours of teaching a year; on top of which spending a minimum of three months doing practical training outside of the classroom. We searched through and through but found nothing in their environmental promises that include extending the days to 36+ hours each.

This along with writing as if they haven’t been in power for seven years is what becomes a two fold issue for a manifesto that does actually have some merit (Theresa’s dedication to abolishing modern slavery and sex trafficking has never been seen from a PM before). Firstly – as if they hired Nick Clegg to write the thing, they have optimistically talked about how they will ‘continue’ to lower the deficit, build more homes, concentrate on the NHS etc. Most of which isn’t really backed by any statistics, research or numbers – something they mocked the opposition for continuously.

Secondly, as stated before, they’ve been in power for quite some time, yet their pledges are as if they haven’t had a crack at the whip yet.

That’s not to say the other manifestos are perfect, far from it, but our society is failing, and another book full of extended promises will not save us.

Kate Taylor is a sociologist, mother and tea and cake lover. When not working in sociological and marketing research with her company, Galilee Research, Kate can be found talking about political philosophy on the school run.

Today has seen the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) state that 14 police investigations into the Conservative Party’s campaign spending will not lead to charges against candidates.

After 2015’s electoral campaign, queries centred around the Tory’s ‘Battle Bus’ that drove up and down the UK arose. The official accounts were called into question as to whether the bus should have been paid for out of local or national Party budgets; as there are strict limitations set on spending for political parties.

However there is one case still under consideration, of which no details have been given at the present time.

As The Lincolnite reported earlier, Lincoln’s MP Karl McCartney has been exonerated after the investigations into electoral fraud. He has called for ‘heads to roll’ and been very specific in his opinions of the Electoral Commission, including Louise Edwards, Head of Regulatory Compliance – of which he has accused her of purposely ‘smearing’ the party’s reputation.

This coming not long after emails from the Lincoln MP to the Conservative Party Chairman were leaked into national media, Sky News reported there were emails they had seen in which Mr. McCartney stated local MPs “feel completely cast adrift by CCHQ/whips/the parliamentary party and left to fend for themselves”.

He goes on to say: “At what stage do you think you (the Party) might inform us that another media s***storm is coming? We didn’t create this mess, the clever dicks at CCHQ did, and I don’t see their professional reputations being trashed in the media much.”

Perhaps Theresa May’s snap election speech stating that ‘the country is coming together, but Westminster is not’ is a deeper insight into the cracks between party members than previously thought.

Our local MP and PM alike may be blasting the CPS’ announcement from the rooftops, but as the press pointed out to May in Nottingham earlier today, it never stated anyone was ‘innocent’.

The Electoral Commission who Karl McCartney seems to so diligently have his eye on have already fined the party £70,000 after finding errors in their national spending reports; and have said the CPS findings tally with the evidence they collected.

Head of Special Crimes for the CPS, Nick Vamos, stated that although there was evidence to suggest the returns may have been inaccurate, there wasn’t enough evidence to suggestion intentional wrong doing. It was then said that according to their ‘full code test‘ it would not be in the matter of public interest to investigate further.

Is this down to a National Election taking place? Finding out whether your democratic representatives have committed fraud (whilst trying to win your vote) and anyone found guilty of such being appropriately punished (a £70,000 fine from the electoral commission seems a drop in the ocean for the richest political party in the United Kingdom) seems to be a top priority for the general public, surely?

Whatever the outcome of remaining enquiries, we can but hope that all of the political parties remain diligent with their spending and responsibilities in the run up to June 8.

Kate Taylor is a sociologist, mother and tea and cake lover. When not working in sociological and marketing research with her company, Galilee Research, Kate can be found talking about political philosophy on the school run.

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