Dear Cllr Atherton,
Cornish Assembly
I have read a report of your comments in a recent article in
the Western Morning News and I would like to thank you for making it clear that
The Labour party is opposed to a Cornish Assembly and that Labour does not
believe that Cornwall is capable of running its own affairs.
Unfortunately the rest of your recent diatribe as reported
in the Western Morning News is a bit harder to understand.
For example, in reference to a Cornish Assembly you talk in terms
of “another layer of bureaucrats”. Of course this sort of statement is very
emotive but then you Westminster types do so often like to be long on emotive
language when the point you want to make is short on fact. Sadly you do seem to
like making this (untrue) point over and over again and it behoves me, as a
good citizen of Cornwall, to explain why your assertion is as wrong as a Labour
Party candidate calling themselves a socialist.
You see – far from being an ‘extra layer’ - a Cornish
Assembly would simply move the machinery of government 300 miles from an office
with a W1 postcode back home to Cornwall. Devolved matters wouldn’t be decided
in Westminster any longer – no extra layer - they would be decided in Cornwall
instead. No extra layer at all, none, nada, zip – just extra democratic
accountability of government to the people of Cornwall.
Of course, this does unfortunately raise the spectre of just
exactly what all those expensive and centralised Westminster politicians would
be doing upcountry - so I can see why your party might be a bit perturbed about
disturbing the status quo.
Now - moving on to your vision of ‘regionalised’ governance.
I have heard you wax lyrical - time after time - about working together with
partners at an appropriate level. There is absolutely nothing at all wrong with
working with all sorts of partners - and Mebyon Kernow would certainly advocate
that Cornwall worked with all manner of partners whether within the United
Kingdom, within Europe or on global basis.
Nevertheless - we wouldn’t advocate giving up our democratic voice to be
subsumed within a massive South West English region.
“Plymouth!” I hear you cry – again and again, “We could work
with Plymouth.”
There is unequivocally nothing wrong with Plymouth. Plymouth
is a sterling place - you can see Cornwall from there on a good day!
However, Plymouth is not Cornwall and any partnership of
Cornwall with Plymouth should be based on a one-off partnership of equals and Plymouth
should not be allowed to become a Trojan horse whereby Cornwall’s democratic
voice is swamped by the larger population of English counties and her top jobs
and services are moved to Exeter or Bristol.
Finally, your utterly ludicrous assertion that not more than
one per cent of the Cornish population would welcome a Cornish Assembly is –
well, just that - ludicrous. You said that you would challenge anyone on a wet
October day to find more than one in one hundred who would like more
politicians. I’m not quite sure what effect precipitation has on people’s view
of politicians - but I’m sure it doesn’t have much effect on what they think
about a Cornish Assembly!
Your attempt to conflate disdain for politicians with
disdain for a Cornish Assembly is laughable and disingenuous to say the least.
Cllr Atherton I have a challenge for you.
Come with me while I knock on one hundred doors and listen
to exactly what people think about a Cornish Assembly – or, admit that you are
wrong and that support for a Cornish Assembly amongst the people of Cornwall is
far greater than you would have us believe.
Yn lel,
Stephen
Richardson
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