The Long-awaited and
much-trailed political event of the last week was to have been the Prime
Minister’s speech about our relationship with the European Union. But events in
North Africa have intervened and, quite rightly, Mr Cameron has postponed his
speech.
The recent headlines
focussing on the benefits and welfare system point to one of the difficulties
politicians have to face up to - how to face making difficult decisions that,
though the decision they have reached, is popular in broad outline, the detail
is less so. One of two biggest issues on the doorstep at the last election was
the welfare state, in particular abuse and what were considered over-generous
benefits paid to those undeserving of the taxpayers’ largesse.
The polls indicate that
voters still hold to those views, but of course feel less enthusiastic if their
particular benefit is reduced or withdrawn. Perfectly understandable of course
but governments have, as they are very fond of telling us, to make unpopular
decisions and in the present financial circumstances that’s absolutely true and
it would make no difference which party was in power – you can’t pay out what
you haven’t got unless you’re foolish enough to borrow beyond what you have the
means to repay as Gordon Brown seemed prone to do.
I was an article in one
of Thursday’s morning papers that contained figures that show action must be
taken and can’t be postponed. I quote the figures not to pass judgement as to
whether or not they should exist merely to show how unsustainable the present
system is.
In the early part of the
Blair years there was, thanks in part to the financial position he inherited, a
period of unprecedented growth and yet the number of people in work and
receiving benefits rose from 700,000 in 1997 to 4.7 million on the equivalent
entitlements in 2010 and that figure rises to well in excess of six million if
you include housing benefit. Latest estimates indicate that the bill for this,
excluding housing benefit to be £22.5 billion. A lone parent with one child
must earn above £34,000 before they cease to qualify for benefits, other than
child benefit. I hear the voice of John McEnroe saying ‘you can’t be serious.’
£34,000 a year and still receiving benefit paid for out of the taxes of those
earning much much less.
So all politicians of all
parties across the Western World are wrestling with massive problems and there
will have to be a lot more of those difficult decisions I referred to before we
get ourselves back on an even keel.
I even heard UKIP’s Nigel
Farage say on Radio 4 a few days ago that paying the winter heating allowance
to wealthy pensioners couldn’t carry on. It’s unusual for politicians who know
they’re are not going to be in power state something that’s unpopular. Why
should they?
Talking of unpopular
decisions brings me to the future of Grimsby’s Scartho Baths. Having succeeded
in getting an Adjournment debate at Westminster to highlight the Council’s
folly it was encouraging to hear the minister‘s reply and a couple of sections
stood out.
Secondly, “Local authorities should consider the most efficient way to use what are ultimately scarce resources and, most importantly, that they do so in genuine consultation with the communities that they serve.”
The minister is in the
same Department that provides the Council with most of its income – not someone
you would want to fall out with if you were in charge of the Council’s
finances!
Will North East
Lincolnshire Council pause, consult and think again? I suspect not.