|
Bill and coup
Thursday, March 16, 2006More on the Legislative and Regulatory Reform Bill - if you're not a fan of democracy look away now. Remember, the Government say this bill is to reduce the burden on business: to cut red tape. As the Minister for Incipient Totalitarianism and sponsor of the bill, Jim Murphy says: The real danger is what happens if we don't introduce a bill of this sort. We are trying to do all we can to maintain UK competitiveness, business competitiveness, economic growth, employment levels in a global economy where we face challenges from the emerging economies. That being the case, take a look at this list of Acts or Parliament (via Nosemonkey) that will not be exempt from part one of the LARR Bill - the part that allows government ministers to change whatever law they like without arguing their case and putting it to a vote in Parliament. Doesn't look good, does it? The Identity Cards Act 2006 isn't even law yet. If the Government don't want it to be a burden on business, why not draft it properly right now? You know, to save on all the fannying about later. And the Habeas Corpus Acts 1679 to 1862 is a real hindrance to business is it? The Succession to the Crown Act 1707? Magna Carta 1215? What about the Official Secrets Acts 1911 to 1989? "Well, profits wouldn't be down by 50% if it wasn't for that meddling Official Secrets Act". Everybody knows Digby Jones and the CBI are interfering porkers worried about the contents of their troughs but I don't remember them saying the Church of Scotland Act 1921 is a threat to jobs and economic stability. I think it's now clear what Jim Murphy meant when he said, "But our ambitions are wider than that!" This list gives lie to the insistence that the Legislative and Regulatory Reform Bill is merely a device to cut the red tape supposedly throttling British business' ability to compete with Far Eastern sweat shops. It's not hyperbole to suggest that this constitutes little short of a coup d'etat. Kill the bill. |
yoghurt by mail
To receive Chicken Yoghurt posts by email enter your email address* below.
*No spam. Guaranteed.
previous posts
the vault
Current Posts
December 2003
January 2005
February 2005
March 2005
April 2005
May 2005
June 2005
July 2005
August 2005
September 2005
October 2005
November 2005
December 2005
January 2006
February 2006
March 2006
December 2003
January 2005
February 2005
March 2005
April 2005
May 2005
June 2005
July 2005
August 2005
September 2005
October 2005
November 2005
December 2005
January 2006
February 2006
March 2006
wish you were here
filthy shill
meanwhile, elsewhere...
Primus inter pares

Actually Existing
Backword
The Bag of Bears
Bartlett's Bizarre Bazaar
Bloggerheads
Blood and Treasure
Craig Murray
Curious Hamster
Easy Jetsetter
Europhobia
The Jarndyce Blog
Kitty Killer
Martin Stabe
Nick Barlow
No Geek Is An Island
Owen's Musings
perfect.co.uk
Pigdogfucker
qwghlm
The Quiet Road
Robert Sharp
Smokewriting
Spy Blog
Stumbling and Mumbling
Talk Politics
Tampon Teabag
Topic Drift
Where There Were No Doors
The Yorkshire Ranter
Yusuf Smith
Aaronovitch Watch
akatsuki talks rot
Allan Scullion
Austin Mitchell
BlairWatch
Brian Barder
Burning Our Money
Cabalamat Journal
Chase me ladies, I'm in the cavalry
Chris Lightfoot
Coffee and PC
Complete Tosh
Consider Phlebas
Councillor Bob
Crooked Timber
The Current Outlook
cynicalbastard
Davblog
Dead Men Left
Devil's Kitchen
Disillusioned Kid
Disreputable Lazy Aliens
D-Notice
Doctor Vee
D-Squared
A Fistful of Euros
Free Speed Nation
Gnus of the World
Great Britain, not little England
Honourable Fiend
Into The Machine
Iain Dale's Diary
Jawbox
Jezblog
Kalahari Lighthouse
Lenin's Tomb
Liberal England
Life and the World
Life in Broadfield Village
Longrider
Masochist's Dictionary
MediaWatchWatch
Mr Eugenides
Militant Moderate
Musings Of A Disheartened Doctor
NHS Blog Doctor
Nip/Fuct
notes from a small bedroom
Our word is our weapon
The Perfect Excuse
Peter Gasston
Pickled Politics
Pub Philosopher
Rachel from North London
Rafael Behr
Ragged Trousers
Reslog
Rolled-up Trousers
Scaryduck
Slinging Ink
Third Avenue
Tim Hicks
The Trouser Quandary Resolution
Turbulent Cleric
The UK Today
Upon Nothing
Up Your Ego
The Uncommon Man
Warren Ellis
What Do I Know?
Worthy adversaries
Blimpish
Duff & Nonsense
Non-trivial Solutions
Once more unto the breach
Tim Worstall
Gone but not forgotten
cloud23.net
Beatnik Salad
Left Out Liberal
The Pseudo Magazine

Guilty pleasure
Emerald Bile
News
AlterNet
BuzzFlash
Common Dreams
CorpWatch
CounterPunch
Cursor
Disinformation
FAIR
Indymedia UK
JournalismNet UK
MediaLens
Reporters Without Borders
Smirking Chimp
SpinWatch
truthout
UK Watch
ZNet
al-Jazeera
AllYouCanRead.com
AltaVista News
BBC
CNN
Financial Times
The Guardian
Google News
The Independent
International Herald Tribune
Lexis Nexis
New York Times
Press Association
Reuters
San Francisco Chronicle
Telegraph
The Times
United Press International
UN Wire
Washington Post
Yahoo UK News
Writers
Rory Carroll
Noam Chomsky
Nick Cohen
John Kampfner
George Monbiot
Greg Palast
John Pilger
Jon Ronson
Tools
FaxYourMP.com
Hansard
They Work For You
The Public Whip
War Report
Wikipedia
Wizbang Standalone Trackback Pinger
Satire: salve of the middle class conscience.
The Daily Show
Doonesbury
Get Your War On
The Onion
In Case of Boredom Break Glass
Empire Online
Bruce Lee remixer
2000ad
Sent to save us
Elvis Costello
Luke Haines
Bill Hicks
Patton Oswalt
Peak Oil
Technorati
The Oil Drum
Iraq
Today in Iraq
Iraq Body Count
Steven Vincent
Baghdad Burning
Dahr Jamail

Actually Existing
Backword
The Bag of Bears
Bartlett's Bizarre Bazaar
Bloggerheads
Blood and Treasure
Craig Murray
Curious Hamster
Easy Jetsetter
Europhobia
The Jarndyce Blog
Kitty Killer
Martin Stabe
Nick Barlow
No Geek Is An Island
Owen's Musings
perfect.co.uk
Pigdogfucker
qwghlm
The Quiet Road
Robert Sharp
Smokewriting
Spy Blog
Stumbling and Mumbling
Talk Politics
Tampon Teabag
Topic Drift
Where There Were No Doors
The Yorkshire Ranter
Yusuf Smith
Aaronovitch Watch
akatsuki talks rot
Allan Scullion
Austin Mitchell
BlairWatch
Brian Barder
Burning Our Money
Cabalamat Journal
Chase me ladies, I'm in the cavalry
Chris Lightfoot
Coffee and PC
Complete Tosh
Consider Phlebas
Councillor Bob
Crooked Timber
The Current Outlook
cynicalbastard
Davblog
Dead Men Left
Devil's Kitchen
Disillusioned Kid
Disreputable Lazy Aliens
D-Notice
Doctor Vee
D-Squared
A Fistful of Euros
Free Speed Nation
Gnus of the World
Great Britain, not little England
Honourable Fiend
Into The Machine
Iain Dale's Diary
Jawbox
Jezblog
Kalahari Lighthouse
Lenin's Tomb
Liberal England
Life and the World
Life in Broadfield Village
Longrider
Masochist's Dictionary
MediaWatchWatch
Mr Eugenides
Militant Moderate
Musings Of A Disheartened Doctor
NHS Blog Doctor
Nip/Fuct
notes from a small bedroom
Our word is our weapon
The Perfect Excuse
Peter Gasston
Pickled Politics
Pub Philosopher
Rachel from North London
Rafael Behr
Ragged Trousers
Reslog
Rolled-up Trousers
Scaryduck
Slinging Ink
Third Avenue
Tim Hicks
The Trouser Quandary Resolution
Turbulent Cleric
The UK Today
Upon Nothing
Up Your Ego
The Uncommon Man
Warren Ellis
What Do I Know?
Worthy adversaries
Blimpish
Duff & Nonsense
Non-trivial Solutions
Once more unto the breach
Tim Worstall
Gone but not forgotten
cloud23.net
Beatnik Salad
Left Out Liberal
The Pseudo Magazine

Guilty pleasure
Emerald Bile
News
AlterNet
BuzzFlash
Common Dreams
CorpWatch
CounterPunch
Cursor
Disinformation
FAIR
Indymedia UK
JournalismNet UK
MediaLens
Reporters Without Borders
Smirking Chimp
SpinWatch
truthout
UK Watch
ZNet
al-Jazeera
AllYouCanRead.com
AltaVista News
BBC
CNN
Financial Times
The Guardian
Google News
The Independent
International Herald Tribune
Lexis Nexis
New York Times
Press Association
Reuters
San Francisco Chronicle
Telegraph
The Times
United Press International
UN Wire
Washington Post
Yahoo UK News
Writers
Rory Carroll
Noam Chomsky
Nick Cohen
John Kampfner
George Monbiot
Greg Palast
John Pilger
Jon Ronson
Tools
FaxYourMP.com
Hansard
They Work For You
The Public Whip
War Report
Wikipedia
Wizbang Standalone Trackback Pinger
Satire: salve of the middle class conscience.
The Daily Show
Doonesbury
Get Your War On
The Onion
In Case of Boredom Break Glass
Empire Online
Bruce Lee remixer
2000ad
Sent to save us
Elvis Costello
Luke Haines
Bill Hicks
Patton Oswalt
Peak Oil
Technorati
The Oil Drum
Iraq
Today in Iraq
Iraq Body Count
Steven Vincent
Baghdad Burning
Dahr Jamail
high horses





Boycott Beijing 2008
British Humanist Association
Campaign for Freedom of Information
Charter88
Count the Casualties
Get Ethical
HearFromYourMP
Human Rights Watch
Liberty
Living Wage Campaign
Make My Vote Count
ReliefWeb
Republic
Save Parliament
Simon Jones Memorial Campaign
Transparency International
bubble
ego massage








On March 16, 2006 3:04 PM,
I'm absolutely gobsmacked!
On March 16, 2006 8:53 PM,
I took your advice and wrote to my MP (a Tory). If his reply is any guide to how the Bill is being opposed in Parliament, I would say we're fucked already. See Tony and Jim tremble at this:
"Conservatives have been dominant in the debates in Parliament about this Bill. Oliver Heald MP, Shadow Constitutional Affairs Secretary, has called for clear safeguards, so that the Bill concentrates on deregulation and only allows Ministers to use the powers in the Bill for non-controversial changes. Mr Heald has described the Bill as "a major move away from primary legislation towards Government by Ministerial edict". That is why our Team has put forward dozens of amendments to the Bill and argued strongly for their inclusion.
I believe the Bill must be amended to provide the necessary safeguards to protect from bringing in such measures as the EU Constitution and ID cards through the back door. Firstly, order-making powers should only be used for specifically deregulatory purposes. Secondly, the powers should not be used to push through important or controversial changes, particularly those with constitutional implications. Finally, it is important that a procedure whereby Committees or either House of Parliament can veto an order is built into the legislation.
Following concerted pressure from Oliver Heald in Committee, the Government has agreed to amend the Bill to write in a clear veto for the Regulatory Reform Committee over any order. This was described by the Minister in charge of the Bill, Jim Murphy MP, as a "great concession", and certainly goes some way towards allaying my concerns. Unless further safeguards are built in, the Bill would have profound implications for democracy and would be a move towards government by Ministerial fiat."
On March 16, 2006 10:35 PM,
My Tory MP basically says that we have to rely on the Lords to sort it.
On March 17, 2006 2:15 PM,
My Lib-Dem MP has so far had fuck all to say about it.
On March 17, 2006 2:21 PM,
My Tory MP says:
I agree with you. It is symptomatic of a Labour govt who always seek to
bypass the will of the people (Parliament).
Rest assured, there are many of us who are opposed to this creeping
government by Order and Secondary legislation!
Great, That's my mind at ease then.
Post a Comment
Links to this post:
Create a Link
Home