So now those that support Independence, a separate National identity and full Devolution for Wales know just where they stand with respect to published Labour policy. Households throughout Wales will have just received through the letter box an official  Liebour ‘Election Communication’ and it states quite clearly the following:

Welsh Labour believe this is a time for unity not ‘independence’ for Wales. We need to pull together not break away.

Most potential voters will read this at face value. ie. Labour do not support independence for Wales.  The exhortation to ‘pull together’ is a fine sentiment but hardly constitutes a political policy which will influence voters whereas  Independence and Devolution are clearly issues that our readers and Welsh voters will have a view on.

The leaflet goes on to state:

Both Plaid Cymru and the Lib Dems are ineffective in Europe and would leave Wales on the fringes without an effective voice. Labour can deliver for Wales in Europe.

Well, this is a matter of subjective opinion and Cambria Politico and many others have  frequently posted articles about the Labour/Kinnockian performance and legacy in Europe. The answer to this is clear from the record of Wales as an economy under Labour. In spite of huge EU investment (always delayed and tied up in bureaucratic knots) arguably it has gone backwards not forwards like the Irish economy.  It is also reflected in the vast growth of the Public Sector in Wales which now employs an astronomically and unsustainably large proportion (70% +) of the workforce.

Labour claims to be investing in the Future of Wales but it is the Present that needs the investment. ProfliGate, the expenses scandals has made sure that Labour will NOT be a part of the Future of Wales.


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Anti-Welsh Liebourites such as Piggy Andrews and others have recently been jumping on the bandwagon to gainsay the troubled economies of small independent nations in a pathetic attempt to cover up the devastating problems of a genuinely failing state: the good old UK.

LieBour troughersTheir argument runs something like this: These troubled times prove that Wales is far better off under the protective wings of Westminster rather than going it alone as an independent nation. Just look at small independent nations like Iceland and Ireland – they’re going bust. Isn’t it just great, especially when just a year ago these uppity little countries had GDPs which put that of the UK to shame? Well now they’re on the road to ruin, while we, under Gordon Brown’s world-saving helmsmanship are deadheading towards an early recovery. The green shoots just lurking there under the surface ready to spring to life.

Piffle and balderdash.

As Lieghton and his chums well know, Brown and Liebour’s mismanagement of the current economic crisis has saddled every man, women and child in Britain with a debt in excess of £35,000. The UK’s manufacturing base has been shot to bits; public spending (Liebour’s euphemism for electoral bribery) has reached unprecedented levels, and the whole flimsy structure is about to split apart against a backdrop of mounting public anger, a police force running out of control, and dangerous, unpopular and prohibitively costly overseas adventures to which the UK’s poorly equipped armed forces have been committed.

No wonder the Scots are asking themselves whether they want to be part of this basket case arrangement. So should we. Urgently.

Despite the grim reality of the situation charismatic Rhondda AM and “Minister for Regeneration” (!) Piggy Andrews seems happy to continue bamboozling his long-suffering constituents with a mishmash of downright twaddle and hogwash in his local organ. This is what he wrote in last week’s offering:

“They (Plaid Cymru) want to cut Wales off from the rest of Britain.

They threaten jobs coming to Wales.

Over recent years they have said that Wales should be an independent country, like Iceland.

Well, we know what has happened to Iceland in the current global economic crisis.

It is bankrupt.

An independent Wales would be bankrupt very quickly, cut off from UK and international investment.”

If, like me, you can’t honestly believe that Piggy is completely devoid of intelligent thought, then he’s got to be spouting this stuff for nefarious reasons.

The whole idea of independence is to give Wales the prosperity and economic security it lacks as part of the United Kingdom, because union with England (and the boom-and-bust policies of successive Liebour and Tory governments) has turned Wales into one of the poorest parts of the EU. The whole idea of independence is to attract inward investment into Wales, because it can’t get it under the present arrangement. The whole idea of independence is to ensure job creation in Wales and to prevent the current drain of talent as young people are forced out of the country to find work. The whole idea of independence is to put Wales at the heart of Europe with a direct voice at Europe’s decision-making top table rather than seeing it represented by dodgy second-hand car salesmen from Essex. What on earth would be the point of championing it if it wasn’t?

It’s precisely because those who get the point realise that small independent nations like Iceland and Ireland have the ability to control their own affairs – for good or ill. Iceland may be bankrupt, but this is NOT because it is independent, but because it had bad leadership and bad fiscal management in a global financial crisis.

Britain is bankrupt for the same reason.

Ireland, on the other hand – another example Liebourites use to warn of the ‘dangers’ of independence – is regularly disparaged in the British press with gleeful headlines such as “Roar goes out of Celtic Tiger” and “Celtic Crown loses Gleam” with accompanying pictures of half-drowned cats, drink-sodden leprechauns and the like, is, actually proof that small nations have a better chance than large ones. Well, better, certainly, than the poor old UK.

In an article (‘Celtic Tiger sharpens its claws for recovery’) in last week’s Financial Times, BP chairman and former EU commissioner Peter Sutherland describes Ireland’s problems as being ‘acute rather than chronic’. The article is worth quoting at length because it clearly shows the unfathomable chasm between the incisive analysis of a brilliant international economist on the one hand, and the bizarre ramblings of a puffed-up buffoon from the backbenches of Wales’s toothless Assembly on the other.

“The reasons for the deficit are well known,” writes Sutherland, “Ireland’s growth and tax revenues, from about 2003, became overly dependent on housing. So, when the property bubble burst, the economy slowed sharply and tax revenues plummeted. The problems of the Irish banks are related to this issue too (their exposure to US mortgage-backed securities and other non-domestic toxic assets is minimal).

While the housing slowdown and the associated budget deficit has created a major challenge, to focus exclusively on housing-related problems provides a distorted picture of the under lying health of the Irish economy. The economy has been a phenomenon since the late 1980s. From a relatively poor country on Europe’s periphery, Ireland has risen to become one of the richest economies in the world in 20 years. Even after an anticipated 8 per cent fall this year, its GDP per capita, in terms of purchasing power, will remain significantly higher than that of the UK or Germany. And, while unemployment has risen, there are still 80 per cent more jobs in Ireland today than 15 years ago. Much of its infrastructure has been transformed during this period.

Since 2007, Ireland’s current account position has been rising and, at the current trajectory, it should return to surplus by the year end. To the extent that Irish public sector borrowing has been rising, this is being more than offset by a rise in private sector saving.

The cause of these favourable statistics is export-led growth, led by inward investment in industries such as information technology, pharmaceuticals and private sector services. The fact that Ireland’s economic success has been driven by exports in these areas has resulted in a far stronger basic Irish economy than the one that existed in the 1980s. Because of the nature of these exports the drop in exports anticipated for this year, as a result of recession, is estimated to be only 5.9 per cent. The corresponding Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development figure for Germany is 16.5 per cent, France 11.4 per cent and Great Britain 9.8 per cent. Some others are considerably worse, such as Japan, forecast at 26.4 per cent.

Another issue on which there has been much comment is the alleged disadvantage to Ireland of being in the eurozone. In reality, Ireland may have been saved by its membership from the possibility of a run on its currency – however unwarranted such a run would have been. The UK, meanwhile, has seen its currency fall by 30 per cent against the euro and this is likely to bring short-run benefits. This option is not, of course, available to Ireland; flexibility has had to come instead from an adjustment in real wages. But – and this is the most important positive for Ireland’s long-term prospects – there is clear evidence that it is dealing with the competitiveness issue in a sustainable manner and one I believe to be unprecedented in the OECD area.

The latest data suggest there has already been an 8 per cent drop in private sector wages and salaries and, via the “pension levy”, there has also been in effect a 7-8 per cent fall in public sector pay. It is hard to imagine wages in other economies displaying such flexibility. If these figures are maintained or even supplemented, the Irish economy should emerge from the recession in a highly competitive position. Meanwhile, the minister of finance has given an undertaking to maintain Ireland’s low corporation tax rate of 12.5 per cent.

It has to be recognised that Ireland has a very open economy.

Ireland’s problems are acute in nature rather than chronic. Once Ireland overcomes this short-term panic – and I believe that last week’s budget, whatever its alleged deficiencies, was a vital step in this process – the basic strengths of the Irish economy remain formidable. If the Irish people continue to react constructively to the harsh measures necessary, Ireland will be in a very strong position to benefit from the eventual global recovery and its healthy demographic profile will greatly help in this.”

Piggy and his cronies need to wise up. Yes, we all know that the recession is global; but it will be small nations like Ireland who will see the first green shoots of recovery rather than Britain’s benighted wasteland.


by Cuneglas

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snouts in the troughWe at Cambria Politico predicted last year that the ‘credit crunch’ would result in EU Convergence Funds being  ‘subsumed’  or diverted into  public sector coffers and never see the light of day in the real Welsh economy where it is urgently needed and where it was intended to be delivered. The following article by Wyn Pryce illustrates how this was done to Objective One funding and is being done now to Convergence Funds.

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For many years the West Wales Business Initiative (WWBI) has expressed concerns about the economic policies of the Welsh Assembly, the size of the Public Sector in Wales and the consequent imbalance of the Welsh economy.

We have argued that the Assembly Government has channeled UK and EC resource into a rapidly growing Public Sector in Wales to the detriment of the private sector. Throughout the “so-called” good years of 1999-2007, when UK GDP rose significantly, the private business sector in Wales has declined. The opportunity to rebalance the Welsh economy was missed.

We have warned several times in submissions to Ministers and Civil Servants of the outcome of these mis-directed strategies. As scarce resources have been poured into the public sector so there was less for the private sector.

In the words of Welsh economist Ted Nevin in his Textbook of Economic Analysis, “Scarcity is the foundation of Economics”. Resources are scarce and have to be competed for. There is also the Opportunity Cost: the alternative use of resource. If you do one thing, you cannot do another. Whatever that may be. You cannot do, or have everything. Therefore, there is a choice. The Assembly has chosen to divert resource into the public sector. The majority of this into wages. 71% of the total Welsh economy is now dependent on the public sector.

Some commentators have stated that the public sector is now greater in Wales than in Russia in the 70′s or China in the 80′s. Therefore something has had to give. At the moment Wales is the “basket case” of the UK. Continue reading »

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Scuttling the SNPUnder the 30 year rule much has been revealed about how the British Government tried to scuttle Scottish Nationalism in the 1970′s.
This programme in Gaelic, from BBC Alba with English subtitles, looks at dirty tricks from the 1950s to the late ’70s – from the theft of the Stone of Destiny from Westminster Abbey to the work of agent provocateurs (eg. John Cullen BEM) through to the discovery of oil in the North Sea.
Did you know there was a plan to persuade Orkney and Shetland to break away from Scotland, Ulster style, and to shift the sea boundary north from Berwick rather than east so that the Forties Oil Fields would remain in the UK?
If you’ve got an hour watch this. It’s fascinating and true!
Click below (BBCi Player)
Hat tip:  Castro
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Gordon Brown’s obsession with “Team GB” is flogging a dead horse says Cuneglas

Gordon Brown’s obsession with creating of a British football team to take part in the 2012 London Olympic Games is yet another desperate attempt to flog the dead horse of “Britishness” in the face of looming Scottish independence and the steady advance of Welsh devolution. Responding to Gordon Brown’s proposal to ‘revive’ “Great British” men and women’s football teams, Scotland’s First Minister Alex Salmond said that Brown showed himself to be “seriously out of touch with Scotland.” He might have added: Wales too.

The dramatic sporting successes of the Welsh and Scottish athletes in Beijing (six gold and five silver medals between them: Wales three gold, two silver, Scotland three gold, one silver) demonstrates the disproportionate contribution (6 out of 19 gold medals by 8 out of a population of 60 million) these men and women made to the much-trumpeted success of “Team GB”.

Salmond has given his backing to the ‘good idea’ of a separate Scottish Olympic team and is to draft a formal application to the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to that effect. Salmond plans to arrange a series of meetings with Scotland’s sporting bodies to discuss the issue. Heritage Minister Alun Ffred Jones should be thinking seriously about initiating the same dialogue on this ‘good idea’ in Wales. And Plaid Cymru should seize the initiative and press for a debate on the issue as part of the drive towards the goal of Welsh independence.


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A night no rebel should miss!

Following their last triumphal visit to Cardiff more than three years ago the fierce and mighty Wolfe Tones, Ireland¹s greatest Rebel Band, return for an all-Wales tour, appearing for one-night gigs in Caernarfon, Aberystwyth and Cardiff.

Known for their uncompromising portrayal of Ireland’s troubled history -now often forgotten in Celtic Tiger euphoria – the Wolfe Tones repertoire features some of the great classical rebel songs and ballads in addition their own stirring compositions, celebrating the deeds of the heroic men and women who gave their lives for their country’s freedom.

Any evening with the Wolfe Tones will be a rousing, uplifting and electrifyingly emotional experience with music and song which goes straight to the heart. As Wales experiences her own rocky road to political freedom, the  art of the Wolfe Tones will open the eyes to the long, brave and resolute struggle of the Irish nation for independence and dignity among the nations of the world.

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Time for Plaid’s ‘older generation’ to wise up on independence

In a speech to Cymru Yfory at last week’s Eisteddfod, Plaid veteran Cynog Dafis declared …

“by putting the emphasis on independence, we take our eye off the really important ball, which is to achieve things for Wales in the here and now.” “We need to be getting things right in the short term”, he continued, “rather than becoming too concerned about ‘the wonderful place over there’.” Dafis also warned of Plaid’s enemies reviving the spectre of the ‘slippery slope’ argument “according to which, if you give the Assembly greater powers, you are inevitably on a slippery slope to independence.”

Diplomatic as ever – as any future leader of a ‘broad church’ party such as Plaid has to be, and let’s not make any bones about it, he is the leader Wales is waiting for – Adam Price praised Dafis for expressing his concerns which will, Price writes,

“be shared by many of the older generation in the party”. He continues “We need to create a new generation of nationalists. We do that through presenting clear arguments as to why our vision of an independent Wales offers the greatest opportunity for social progress and prosperity.”

Quite so, but why this reticence on the part of the ‘older generation’? Those who joined the party in the 1960s and before will clearly remember the three very simple aims set out on the membership card long before the party got bogged down in pensions and PFI. Point three included the stated objective of gaining a place for Wales at the United Nations. What part of that aim did the ‘older generation’ – then the ‘Young Turks’ of the party – fail to understand? And if it understood it then, why does it fail to understand it now?

The aim of any dependent, colonised nation must inevitably be independence, and Wales, like Scotland – and like Ireland before them – is no exception. Self-government along federal lines may suit a more-or-less homogeneous nation like Germany, but not a grouping of very different nations such as we have in the British Isles, some of which have been brought together by force, but have never lost their identity – nor, indeed, sense of destiny. Independence, one might say, is THE manifest destiny of nations.

Continue reading »

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