Wednesday, September 30, 2015

There is poverty out there

But it is not where Labour are suggesting it is.  I watched in amazement at the poverty of new thinking in the speech by Mr Corbyn.  Rambling, incoherent, amateurish.  Even delusional.  A speech that was embarrassing to watch.  Worst of all, he talked as though the election in May had never happened.  It did, and Labour lost.

It really was exceptional.  And combined with the words of the shadow chancellor, it made for depressing listening.  And I suspect I’m not the only one to think that.  They are not my cup of tea when it comes to economics.  And when Guardian writer Zoe Williams was out batting for the Labour leader today she dropped this nugget explaining:  "Of course there is a money tree, it's called the Bank of England.  That's how countries make money."

Er, what?  Did you see John McTernan’s face?  It says it all.  He knows a gaff and how to avoid one having been around Prime Minister Tony Blair's Director of Political Operations from 2005 to 2007, director of communications for the Australian prime minister, Julia Gillard, from September 2011 to June 2013 among other things.

I had hoped for a fresh stimulating argument to take to the Conservatives.  But what did we get? People like Zoe talking utter nonsense and she clearly doesn’t understand that governments actually have no money except that which we allow them to take off of us.   But there was one hint of light at the end of the tunnel that was not an oncoming train.  Tax avoiders.

Is it not ridiculous the local coffee shop owned by local people pays more tax than Starbucks it is competing with? Is it not ridiculous that the local chemist owned by a local person is paying more tax than Boots the Chemist that they are competing with.  Is it not ridiculous that the local electrical shop is trying to make a living competing with Amazon that is paying less tax?   I certainly think so.  And I suspect the vast majority of people in the UK do to.  (Yes, I know Amazon have agreed to paying more tax.  But there is a long way to go).

Think of it this way.  Every £ in tax these businesses avoid means an extra £ of tax the honest taxpayers have to pay just to keep the funding to the NHS, police, armed forces as they currently are.

If Corbyn (or is it string puller Watson) is smart Labour will focus on this inequality.  It strikes a chord across the country.

Unless the Conservative get their act together on this issue, this could just be the vote winner the Labour party needs.

Wednesday, September 23, 2015

My memory was playing tricks, I thought.

It is funny the tricks your mind plays sometimes.  I am sure that the First Minister, Nicola Sturgeon, was always very clear on what she thought about the referendum that happened 12 months ago.

But now, I'm not so sure my memory is correct.  Perhaps she didn't say it was a one off event. Perhaps she did say something like "the referendum result will only stand if we get our own way".  Or was it "the referendum will of course be re run every few years till we get a result".

I was beginning to think I must have misheard her 12 months ago till I was by flicking through some tweets from Jo Swinson, former LibDem MP.

And there it was, a nice wee montage of words from Nicola.  Had I been wrong all along?  Nope.  Check it out!

How to bring down a prime minister.

Ever wondered what commodity prices can do?  

First of all, what is a commodity?  Well traditionally a commodity was a thing like Precious Metals, a raw material product that can be bought and sold, such as copper.  Then there is Energy.

But other products joined the raft.  Agriculture Commodities. Coffee.  Ok, we don’t all drink coffee.  But then you find that foodstuffs become commodities.   Corn.  Wheat. Cocoa, Cotton, Live Cattle, fats.  You will find today's trading prices at  Bloomberg   Will water become a commodity one day?  In this bull market thinking some would argue, why not. 

But there are consequences of having life sustaining things as commodities.  When Greed Becomes Hunger was a two part drama on radio 4 earlier this year, surely an award winner somewhere.  It just simply showed the power of the commodity market.  In this case, famine and hunger were the outcomes.  You can listen here. Part One: The Pit  and Part Two: The Pen.

So next time you wander the aisles of your supermarket, don’t think that this is all about Asda doing it cheaper than Tesco .  This is all about global traders buying and selling other people products, doing “short selling” on them (the practice of selling securities or other financial instruments that are not currently owned, and subsequently repurchasing them ("covering")).  Is that gambling by another name?

Yes, our whole food chain is now part of this global gambling arena.  Farm to the Fork sounds idealist.  But today’s farm to the fork involves a lot of people making a lot of money out of trading these commodities.  These traders of course don’t do any of the back breaking work.  Oh no, that’s the poor people who do that.  For a pittance of a wage.

So where do prime ministers come into this?

We will never know what Tony Abbott, the PM of Australia, could have achieved if commodity prices hadn’t collapsed.  That was what did it for him.  He lost the confidence of the “market”.  Not the electors you note, the market.  The very people who are the ones who gamble with your food prices.

Political leaders can ride high if the economy is working or if there is a common enemy to overcome (reactionary or greedy unions or a perceived terrorist threat, for example). They can even weather media gaffes.  But if the economy goes wrong and they stay on the wrong side of the culture wars they risk all.

The commodities boom, which a succession of Australian PMs had the benefit of with the apparently insatiable Chinese appetite for everything Australia could unearth, suddenly collapsed earlier this summer.  It threatened to turn the high-riding Lucky Country into the new Greece.

So we will see how the very confident Malcolm Turnbull, the new Australian PM, will now deal with the economy.  Or how it will deal with him.  Because if the gamblers in the commodity market don’t do him any favours or don't like what he is doing, the knife will be stuck in him just as he stuck it into Abbot.

Monday, September 21, 2015

What's the trigger?

An interesting interview with Stewart Hosie who said there would need to be a 'trigger point' in Scotland for there to be a second referendum.  There could be another Scottish referendum, he contends, but it would be silly to rush into one. Which I think we all understand to mean, we're not doing it again if we don't know for sure we will win.

He is right.  But such a trigger would have to be something that wasn’t being talked about at the time of the referendum.

Some in the SNP say Trident could be the trigger.  Well, I don’t think so because if either Labour or the Conservatives had won the UK General Election, Trident update would have been ordered.  The people of Scotland knew that and voted No in the referendum.

Austerity?  A much misunderstood and inappropriately used word.  But basically, should we live with a balanced budget.  In varying degrees all the main parties agreed we should at the UK General Election.  So for the UK government that was elected by the whole of the UK that Scotland voted to stay a part of, it surely is free to implement such a policy, it's not a new policy.  The people of Scotland knew that and voted No in the referendum.

The Vow, ah yes the Vow.  Unfortunately we weren’t voting on the Vow.  We were voting on a very simple question "Should Scotland be an independent country?".  And as a significant number of people had already cast their votes before the Vow appeared, the Vow has little if any legal relevance.  It certainly was not what we were voting on.  The people of Scotland knew that and voted No in the referendum.

Indeed, only 37.7% of those eligible to vote voted YES.  Itn anyone book, that’s a bit of a defeat.

So I am struggling to find new evidence of any policy that the UK government is going to implement that was not known at the time of the referendum.  So a trigger?  Nope, I can’t see one either.

The best thing the SNP should do now is get their head down, using the powers they do have, and show the people that they can make a fist of it. Then, and only then, will the people genuinely say, “know what, we can do it”.

Wednesday, September 16, 2015

Patriotism and support for the monarchy are not the same thing.

Yesterday saw a service at St Pauls Cathedral for a Battle of Britain memorial service.

While all the attention should have been on giving thanks to those who made the ultimate sacrifice, attention quickly wandered to what people were wearing and what they were singing.  I am referring of course to the dressing and vocal activity of Jeremy Corbyn.

Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn did not to sing the national anthem.  Shock horror.  It has certainly generated many column inches in today's papers. Mind you, there a good few Tories like me who for the same reasons of believing in democratic accountability and everyone should be able to achieve the highest office in the land similarly stand in dignified silence. So it is not a Labour v Tory thing.  

The London Times reports that the decision by the staunch republican Labour leader to (in his own words) stand in "dignified silence" while God Save The Queen was sung was "met with fury among the Royal Air Force veterans, former military commanders and politicians". 

So condemned if he doesn’t sing words of praise to an hereditary monarch.  But if he had uttered the words God save the queen, would we not be now branding him a hypocrite?  I would.  Everyone knows he would rather have a democratically elected head of state.  So for him to align himself with words that he finds repugnant declaring long live a hereditary monarchy, he really would have been hypocritical.

And, just for a moment, can you think of any other national anthem in the world where a person is the theme?  North Korea?  Nope, not even North Korea.  It’s all about the fatherland, being industrious and counting tractors.

Should a national anthem not be about the country and its people?  As Republic's CEO, Graham Smith, said yesterday: "It hardly mentions the nation.  It's wrong to accuse people of being unpatriotic for not singing God Save The Queen.  Patriotism and support for the monarchy are not the same thing."

Most of us claim to believe in democracy, we value our freedoms and believe we have the right to hold people to account. But if we really believe in democratic values and opportunity for all to achieve anything then there is no place for an hereditary monarchy.

One day we will have a national anthem we can all sing with pride, including Jeremy Corbin.  And me.

Now, round off your day by having a look at some myth busters about the monarchy.

Tuesday, September 15, 2015

What is happening at the borders?

A new website has been set up to help co-ordinate Scotland's response to the refugee crisis. (sic)

ScotlandWelcomesRefugees invites people to donate "time, skills, goods, accommodation or other practical help to refugees arriving in Scotland".  As vacuous statements go, the web site name rates pretty highly.  Perhaps that can be expected of the Scottish Government as it seeks to divert peoples attention from its own failings on the NHS, education and policing.  But I really would not have expected it from the Scottish Refugee Council.

I have a friend who lived and worked in Hungary for many years.  They still have friends there.  And the story coming out from them is not the story we are being told here.  Yes, there may be refugees amongst the crowd, but the vast majority are not.  They are economic migrants.  They want to come to the West for a better life.  Understandable.  Who can blame them.  But if you want to go to Australia for a better life you better get ready to meet their entrance criteria.  So why have we abandoned all such criteria in this desire to welcome anyone who seeks to cross a border not as a refugee but as someone who wants to live here for a better life?

Is it not right that Hungary should treat them as economic migrants until they can prove otherwise?  The UN are the experts in this area.  Can’t we rely on them to tell us who is and who is not a refugee?  

Which is exactly the approach the Conservative government are taking in the crisis.  And that is why the UK will be taking real refugees from UN camps. 

A BBC reporter today labelled the Hungarian government as hard line.  Sounds like they took sides in the conversation to me. That pejorative term simply showed the narrative in western Europe is so out of touch with what is happening at the frontiers.  The Hungarians know who they are dealing with.  We, and the BBC reporter, clearly do not.

I do find it rather strange that on one hand when we want to do certain things people rightly say it must be taken before the UN.  But on this occasion the UN is being side-lined for political expediency by some people.

Oh yes, I know people will accuse me of being heartless.  But the real heartless ones are those people who are seeking to label themselves refugees when they are nothing of the sort.

I want to welcome genuine refugees. 

Who's the leader?

So, who is the new leader of Labour in England and Wales?  Did I hear you say Jeremy Corbyn?  Mmmm.  Try again.  Or let me rephrase the question.  Who do you think is the real new leader of Labour in England and Wales.  Ah, yes, a different answer.

Let us start with the facts.  Tom Watson was elected Deputy Leader. But was that just a front backed by the unions as a preamble for Tom Watson to take over the Labour leadership in due course?  One scenario could be:  Corbyn wins, Labour MPs immediately rebel (two months perhaps) and a second election is scheduled.  Tom Watson runs and wins second contest easily. 

Some more facts.   Tom’s support in the Union movement is total.  Louise Menche reckons he would be “an effective leader of the Opposition if he worked hard on understanding the shift he’d just made, and above all other things, controlled his temper and moderated his speech”.

And the reality?  Corbyn endures a truly dreadful first 48 hours as leader, with silence at the PLP, a fight over Remembrance Day poppies, and Labour women incensed at the sexism of their party.  By the end of Corbyn’s first day as leader Tom Watson had already made his move culminating with an extraordinary headline in the Times :  “Unions join attacks on Corbyn’s top team”.

One senior trade union source commentated: “I’m honestly shocked at how bad the operation has been for the past 48 hours.  I honestly thought [Mr Corbyn] would be better than this.”  Len McCluskey, the Unite leader who had hailed Mr Corbyn as the future, was among those said to be pushing for alternative candidates to lead Labour’s economic strategy.

In public, trade union bosses were barely more polite — either about Mr McDonnell, or on Mr Corbyn’s electoral appeal.  Dave Prentis, general secretary of Unison, said that Mr Corbyn would have to “grow into the job”.  Recently knighted Sir Paul Kenny, general secretary of the GMB union… “Let’s see what the voters say.  Because at the end of the day, they are really the important ones.”

Are these not quite remarkable words barely three days after Corbyns victory?  The Unions, bastions of the left, move against the hardest left leader Labour has ever had?  The question is, why?  The answer is found in two words as you suspected as you started reading today: Tom Watson.

And the Unions place in all this?  Unite is Tom’s union.  He’s been running Unite candidates to get selected as Labour MPs.  They “Hailed Mr. Corbyn as the future” until Tom’s was elected Deputy Leader. Thanks for that. Now off you go Jeremy.  And forget not, Watson is very connected in the union movement with people like Dave Prentis, general secretary of Unison.  

Labour MPs know that they need a person who can command armies. Someone clever.  Someone patriotic.  Someone pragmatic.  And someone who, if they get themselves a good speechwriter, is a potential prime minister. That person is someone for whom MPs have already voted.  That man is Tom Watson.  

Monday, September 14, 2015

Unintended consequences

It really is a funny old word in which we live when you find that Jeremy Corbyn's famous supporters include Daniel Radcliffe, Charlotte Church and Russell Brand. 

Entertainment stars will, of course, be big among the losers in the maximum wage proposals.  For example, last year Daniel earned £66m.  If the maximum wage is put at the rate George Monbiot suggests, and he is usually fairly on the money when it comes to knowing the mind of the political left, the figure will be around £500,000 including bonuses.  That means Daniel will be parting with £65.5m of his earnings every year.  Did Daniel know that when he attached his support to Mr Corbyn?

It is uplifting that people like Daniel are so in favour of such a policy.  But given his views I’m sure he already is one of the few people who have sent a cheque to HM Government for all the money they earned over £500,000.  You too can do it, just write a cheque to HMRC and mark it as a gift for use by HM government for whatever they see fit to use it for.  Just pop it in the post to HMRC, Bradford BD98 1YY United Kingdom.

Are footballers included?

Jeremy Corbyn believes that a national maximum wage should be introduced to cap the salaries of high earners.  

I look forward to footballers being top of his list for those he is targeting.  Surely it is obscene in any society for a person to be paid £142,014 a week for kicking a ball.  That tots up to £7,284,000 per annum.  Yip, £7,284,000 per annum.  That is the average wage of a premiership footballer in one of the top 5 clubs.

A nurse in the UK earns on average  £23,091 per annum.  So a footballer "earns" 315 times more a year than what a nurse does. 

That really cannot be right in anyone's book.


Your money

John McDonnell may not have been a name that tripped off many lounges until this morning when it emerged he was the new Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer.

One of his key policies is the banks should be nationalised.  And on the surface that seems like a good populist move.  After all, it’s the banks that got us into the economic mess he would no doubt argue.  Others would of course argue it was Gordon Brown by liberalising the banking regime was the catalyst for banking excess.  I tend to go with that thinking.

But whatever, nationalise the banks.  But what actually are we nationalising?  Think about it.  Where does your salary go every month?  A bank.  Where do you keep your savings.   A bank.  To who do you go to borrow money.  A bank.  Or grow your business.  A bank.

So what John McDonnell is really saying is "I want to nationalise all your savings, I want politicians to control them.  I want politicians to be able to decide commercial lending policy.  I want to be totally in control of 100% of the money in the country, not just the tax I take off of you as an individual or a business". 

If that doesn’t worry you, I am not sure what will.

Sunday, September 13, 2015

Flawed logic?

I am struggling a bit with the logic of what the First Minster of Scotland is saying these days.

Exactly 12 months ago we were told we had a once in a generation chance to vote YES.  By a significant number, close on 65%, the electorate did not back her views that Scotland should be an independent country.  And as a generation will be at least 16 years, assuming the age where people legally can contribute to a new generation, that’s a good few years away.  Like 2030.  But if you use official statistics the average age for people having their first baby in Scotland it is actually more like 30.  2014+30=2044.  The people knew that when they voted.  And the people decided.

So move on a year from the referendum.  We have Ms Sturgeon saying they will put into the manifesto for the elections to the Scottish Parliament in 2016 the timescale for a possible second referendum on independence.

She said: "Our manifesto will set out what we consider are the circumstances and the timescale on which a second referendum might be appropriate, but we can only propose.  It's then for people in Scotland, whether it is in this election or in future elections, to decide whether they want to vote for our manifesto and then if there is in the future another independence referendum, whether that's in five years or 10 years or whenever, it will be down to the people of Scotland to decide whether they want to vote for independence or not.  So at every single stage this is something that is driven by and decided by the people of Scotland, not by politicians."

This is strange logic indeed.  Just read what she said again.

The reality is that at every stage it will be driven by politicians.  Ms Sturgeon and her colleagues.  It clearly is not the Scottish people, they did not back her ideas 12 months ago, even though they will probably back her in to government again next year.  But that’s because there is nothing better to choose.

Saturday, September 12, 2015

Redistribution is the solution to what question?

Let us not kid ourselves, Jeremy Corbyn’s win will not being about fairness should he lead his party to success at the general election.  It is all about redistribution.

I think the defining moment many will reflect on was his thinking that the rich won’t mind paying more tax. “Many well-off people I speak to, in Islington and around the country, would be quite happy to pay more tax to fund better public services or to pay down our debts. Opinion polls bear this out: better off people are no less likely to support higher taxes.  A more equal society is better for us all. We all do better with good public services and when we all care for each other.”

This is the flaw in his argument. He wrongly equates higher taxation with fairness.  But what Corbyn is all about is not fairness, it is about the state taking more and more control of the money you and I earn. 

He really does not see a picture of the state living within its means.  He doesn’t see that waste is rampant in the public sector. He doesn’t see the picture that someone has to earn money that the state can then tax.

Cut the waste and you will either be able to reduce taxes or use the taxation that already comes in for better purposes.   Oh yes, you can print even more money.  And live with the consequences.

Mr Nice Guy

Everyone says Jeremy Corbyn is a nice genuine guy. 

I have never met him so I do not have a view.  Though a man who separates from his wife because of an ideological difference, where she doesn’t want to send their son to the failing local school, does leave you taking a deep breath. 

And Mr Corbyn, who believes Ed Miliband was not left wing enough to convince voters to back Labour, surely one of the oddest analyses of why Labour lost the election, also admitted that he could not be friends with anyone who was not left wing.  “At the end of the day, it's the question of your values - they get in the way,” he told the Guardian.

But there is much to admire him for.  The patron saint of unpopular causes.  The Guildford Four and the Birmingham Six whose convictions were found to be unsound.  Afghanistan and Iraq, Mordechai Vanunu who was imprisoned in Israel for giving away its nuclear secrets.  Palestine.   

The thing about Corbyn is that he is nearly always proved right – after the event.  Remember him embracing Gerry Adams and Sinn Féin decades ago?  Now they are brought in from the cold and in government in Northern Ireland.  Many people thought he was mad.  And we’ve not even started on apartheid …

But he is a man of wide views which I would not fall out with him on.  I’ve just had an interesting discussion on the TTIP.”, he tells a journalist.  The what? “Ah, sorry – the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership.” This is a negotiation between the US and European Union to develop a way to develop a way in which investment would be protected, and a way in which governments must not make life difficult for investors. The fear is that it’s a race to the bottom, with the lowest common denominator on both sides of the Atlantic becoming the norm.  I’m with Jeremy on this.   

Then there is Trident.  I’d rather spend all that money on weapons and “boots the ground” that we actually controlled rather than ones that have a key the USA must turn on before we use them.  I’m not sure he would spend the money on more conventional systems.  But on the Trident weapons system, I’m with him on that.

And there is Europe.  Why are we allowing a super state to evolve before your eyes that will surely end in tears.  In discord.  And war.  So I’m with him on that.

So a lot of good things.  But as Boris said of Jeremy “What I think they saw in Jeremy Corbyn was this kind of originality and authenticity and willingness to say exactly what he thought, and that has proved very seductive.   The trouble is that his manifesto, his plans for the country, are diametrically the opposite of what the country needs.  It is possible to have a charming air of authenticity and yet to be totally wrong about what you’re trying to do.

Asked by the Guardian about how he would he feel if he actually won he replied “Interested”.  He calmly added, “And hopeful that we could bring about some changes in Britain.”  Would it scare him?  He closed his eyes, as if imagining himself as Labour leader for the first time. “Scare me?” He smiles. “It would be a challenge.” 

But the real challenge is over his shoulder.  The new deputy leader Tom Watson.  Labour leader by next year at this time?

That challenge for Mr Corbyn starts today.

Friday, September 11, 2015

What is a parliament for?

Why do we have elections and send people to parliament?   Is it simply to go as a mouth piece for the majority view in their constituencies?  (What about the views of the minority, don’t they count?) Or do we send them there to listen to debates than take informed decisions?

I ask the question because today we had a vote in the UK parliament on what is known as assisted suicide.  Others call it assisted dying.  You can see immediately there are passionate views held on both sides even in the way the process is described.

The debate was a powerful and dignified one.  Some muse that parliament is at its best on such occasions.  For example, an emotional Dr Philippa Whitford, the SNP's health spokeswoman and a breast cancer surgeon, argued that with good palliative care, the "journey can lead to a beautiful death".  "We should support letting people live every day of their lives till the end," she said, and she urged MPs to vote for "life and dignity, not death".

But here’s the thing.  74% of MPs voted against this bill compared with 72% back in 1997. So the message from politicians has been an overwhelming rejection of the right to an assisted suicide.  And opinion is not shifting.  The emphatic nature of the result would suggest politicians are unlikely to discuss this again soon.

Campaigners will no doubt regroup and point to their own polls showing 82% of the public back assisted dying and calls for change may yet intensify with an ageing population.

So, the question is, do we send people to parliament simply to do the will of the majority at any given time?  Or do we send them there to debate all the angles and come to a rational decision on our behalf having listened and sifted the evidence in a proper debate.

Sarah Wootton, the chief executive of Dignity in Dying, said it was an "outrage" that MPs had gone against the views of the majority of the public who supported the bill.  And it is here I think we see people like her are missing the point.  We don’t send people to parliament to simply do what the majority of people apparently want. 

We send people to parliament to listen, debate and make good law.  If that is not why we send our MPs to Westminster then the point of a parliament has gone.  We might as well just do opinion polls whenever we want to take a decision.

Monday, September 07, 2015

Not too bad a record for the nasty Conservatives.

It really was rather pathetic.  Nicola and Yvette offering their spare rooms to the refugees from Syria.  Somewhat unedifying political posturing. 

They knew full well that David Cameron could not come back with a similar offer.  So one can only assume they made the statements to try to add embarrassment to the Prime Minister. It’s funny, virtually all the people I know who are wealthy and generous would never dream of talking openly about their support to a charity or some cause.  To do so would be repulsive to them.

Pity Nicola and Yvette don’t seem to operate the same way.  Pity it is these wealthy people who donate truck loads without fanfare to charities that they are continually sniping at.

I hope when Nicola next stands up in the Scottish parliament she will acknowledge the quite substantial effort that the UKs Conservative government has been channeling in to try and stop the crisis happening in the first place.  I am sure she will note that Britain is already providing sanctuary to around 5,000 refugees.  She will praise the UK as the second-largest bilateral donor to the crisis and has already provided over £900 million in aid to help those affected in Syria and the region.  And the PM has just announced a lot more.

The UK have funded shelter, food, water, vital medical supplies for millions of desperate refugees fleeing the conflict and is helping them survive in the countries around Syria, like Jordan and Lebanon.  I think that’s a pretty good record given the five wealthiest Gulf Nations have so far refused to take a single Syrian refugee.  Britain's contribution is more than Saudi Arabia's £387 million , UAE's £359 million and Qatar's £157 million combined.  

“Well done the UK” I expect Nicola to say.

Hee haw, hee haw

Two stories about the police in the last week.

Police cars with no sirens risk response times, federation says.

And the second one.  Emergency police cars given to civilian staff.
 
Read them both.  Then ask yourself the question, was their loud protests about cars without sirens just another example of the Police Federation crying wolf?  All sounds very political to me.

Refugees or economic migrants?

Here is a question for you.  When does a refugee become an economic migrant?   

It really is a difficult one.  Take the poor little boy, Aylan Kurdi, who drowned while trying to reach the Greek island of Kos from Bodrum in Turkey. 

Were his parents refugees or economic migrants?  They clearly were refugees at one point in their journey.  And they had reached a safe land, Turkey.  Indeed, Bodrum is a popular holiday resort.  But they wanted to keep moving to a more prosperous land.  And then it happened……

Thursday, September 03, 2015

Loose talk helps no one.

They say a photograph is worth a thousand words.  I am sure like me you recall pictures that have transformed your understanding of a situation.  The man in front of a column of tanks in Tiananmen Square.  The napalmed girl in Vietnam.  And now we have the picture of a little boy being cradled in the arms of a policeman. That picture in time too may come to define our understanding of the current refugee crisis.  

But as in all such situations there is often the spectacle of people throwing figures around.  Blame being attached.  This one is no different.

One report today claimed that Britain has accepted a mere 216 Syrian refugees.  The tweet by George Eaton, the political editor of the New Statesman magazine, has gone has gone viral on social media.  Like so many things floating around the internet it’s taken as being true. No one bothers to check the facts.
So for clarity, here they are.
 

Official government figures show that the UK had 1,688 asylum applications from Syrians in 2014, and a further 2,204 in 2015. The grant rate of 87% suggests some 3,400 Syrian refugees have come to Britain in the last two years, with around another 2,000  being accepted in 2011 and 2012. 
So today we had a number of politicians jumping on the bandwagon.  I found the First Minister of Scotland’s intervention somewhat disingenuous.  You would think we in the UK were doing nothing.  It was political point scoring at its nastiest. In a more reflective moment I hope she will realise it was a rash thing to say.

The offerings from Yvette Cooper and Andy Burnham were not much better.  Hardly of the quality you would expect from a potential future prime minister.
Love him or loathe him, George Osbourne actually got it right.  And Ms Sturgeon doesn't have a monopoly on tears.