11/01/2006 - 12/01/2006 - Political Quote

Political Quote

The Internet home of Keith Martin : a blog of Political news, opinion, quotes and analysis

"sparkiest of all" - Sunday Tribune

Hot topics!

Post Top Ad

Thursday, November 30, 2006

Fairtrade comes west

11:23 AM 0
Ever since we set up the Fairtrade committee in Janurary 2005 we have received great support from the people of Westport and from the businesses in town like Super Valu, Centra and Ylang Ylang. Both churches came on board immediately and we were able to launch it after Mass with a tea morning for the congregations of St Mary's and Holy Trinity.

With the unanimous support of my fellow councillors we passed a motion in support of Fairtrade products and began working on the seven steps to becoming a Fairtrade town.

Today Westport Fairtrade Steering Committee have been notified by Fairtrade Ireland that Westport is to be granted status this week. It will officially become a Fairtrade Town a week before Castlebar does.

I am delighted that our town has achieved Fairtrade Status and now becomes the first Fairtrade Town in Connaught to join Galway which is a Fairtrade city.

Fairtrade is a better deal, a ‘fair’ deal for producers and workers in developing countries. Any product carrying the distinctive Fairtrade logo is guaranteed to have paid the farmer a fair price for his product, ensuring they were not exploited. You will be giving farmers in developing nations a fair day’s wage and the chance to improve the conditions for their families and communities, and isn’t that what we all ultimately want for ourselves?

Ever since we established the Steering committee we have been out and about spreading the word about Fairtrade and what it means for farmers and producers in the developing world. When we started in 2004 with a tea and coffee morning after church in Carrowbeg House we never dreamed that we would get such support and that people would embrace the idea so quickly. We owe a lot to the shoppers of Westport who made the switch to Fairtrade tea, coffee, bananas, wine, chocolate and the whole range of projects. We are also grateful to the shops, cafes, restaurants, schools, businesses and organisations which made the switch over to the Fairtrade mark. The children of Westport in particular took the Fairtrade project to heart.

Over the last two years we on the committee have been at the Food and Craft Markets on the Mall, in the St Patrick’s Day Parade, in the schools, in the shops and on the streets spreading the word about Fairtrade. A highlight of our campaign was when Alivera Kiiza a Fairtrade Coffee famrer and the first woman manager of the fair-trade coffee cooperative in Tanzania was our guest at a talk about Fairtrade for the secondary schools.



In order to achieve the status of Fairtrade Town for Westport we had to accomplish the following.

A local steering group is convened to ensure continued commitment to its Fairtrade Town status.


  • The Town Council passes a resolution supporting Fairtrade, and agrees to serve Fairtrade coffee and tea in the office and at all its meetings and continues to support the Fairtrade Mark.


  • A range of FAIRTRADE Mark products are available in the Town’s shops, supermarkets, local cafes, restaurants, and hotels.


  • FAIRTRADE Mark products are used by a Flagship business as well as 12 other local businesses and organisations. This should include schools, churches, large offices and local voluntary groups.


  • The group attracts media coverage and popular support for the campaign.


  • A significant number of schools become Fairtrade Schools. They use the Civil Social and Political Education pack on Fairtrade for secondary schools and the Alive 2008 programme for Primary Schools.”

Click here to read a news report about the visit of a Fairtrade Farmer to Westport.


Read More

Wednesday, November 29, 2006

No Vote = No Voice

7:12 PM 0

If you are not on the upcoming electoral register you will have no vote and thus no voice in the 2007 General Election.

Over the last two decades the register has been allowed to fall into a terrible state with hundreds of thousands of extra names on the register then there are people in the country.

Minister Dick Roche TD is tasked with cleaning it all up but it is not going so good. According Pat Rabbitte TD "Credit card firms have more information on people than the Government’s Electoral Register."

Currently Local Authorities are updating their registers and while you may have previously been on the electoral register you may have been removed in error. You should check the register immediately.

The deadline for making changes to the electoral register has been extended until December 9 and you have until then to submit corrections to your local authority.

In Westport the register is available for inspection at Westport Library and the Civic Offices on the Ballinrobe Road. You can also check them online here. Also available will be form RFA 1 which will allow you to claim a correction to the register. You can download this form here.

RFA 1 allows you to add or remove your entry on the register. You should use it to delete your entry at an old address or add your new address.

The right to vote is a founding principal of our republic and is a sacred consitutional right but it is your responsiblity to make sure you get your entitlement to vote.

If you have any trouble or questions about the register do not hesitate to contact me or your local representative.
Read More

poetry for politics

9:01 AM 0
There are a couple of poems which I like and which I think can apply to working as a public representative. The best of these is "If" by Rudyard Kipling.

If you can keep your head when all about you
Are losing theirs and blaming it on you,
If you can trust yourself when all men doubt you
But make allowance for their doubting too,
If you can wait and not be tired by waiting,
Or being lied about, don't deal in lies,
Or being hated, don't give way to hating,And yet don't look too good, nor talk too wise:


If you can dream--and not make dreams your master,
If you can think--and not make thoughts your aim;
If you can meet with Triumph and Disaster
And treat those two impostors just the same;
If you can bear to hear the truth you've spoken
Twisted by knaves to make a trap for fools,
Or watch the things you gave your life to, broken,
And stoop and build 'em up with worn-out tools:


If you can make one heap of all your winnings
And risk it all on one turn of pitch-and-toss,
And lose, and start again at your beginnings
And never breath a word about your loss;
If you can force your heart and nerve and sinew
To serve your turn long after they are gone,
And so hold on when there is nothing in you
Except the Will which says to them: "Hold on!"


If you can talk with crowds and keep your virtue,
Or walk with kings--nor lose the common touch,
If neither foes nor loving friends can hurt you;
If all men count with you, but none too much,
If you can fill the unforgiving minute
With sixty seconds' worth of distance run,
Yours is the Earth and everything that's in it,
And--which is more--you'll be a Man, my son!
Read More

Tuesday, November 28, 2006

The Revolution will not be televised

10:54 PM 0


For more information on the film click here

HUGO CHAVEZ ELECTED PRESIDENT OF VENEZUELA IN 1998, IS A COLORFUL,
UNPREDICTABLE FOLK HERO, beloved by his nation's working class and a
tough-as-nails, quixotic opponent to the power structure that would see him
deposed. Two independent filmmakers were inside the presidential palace on April 11, 2002, when he was forcibly removed from office. They were also
present 48 hours later when, remarkably, he returned to power amid cheering aides. Their film records what was probably history's shortest-lived coup d'état. It's a unique document about political muscle and an extraordinary portrait of the man The Wall Street Journal credits with making Venezuela "Washington‚s biggest Latin American headache after the old standby, Cuba."
Read More

Why I would vote for Hugo Chavez

8:51 PM 0

Venezuela goes to the polls on December 3 for the 2006 Presidential Elections. Hugo Chavez, the incumbent, is a controversial figure at home and abroad. He is challenged by Manuel Rosales who represents a coalition of anti Chavez campaigners.


Chavez was elected in 1998 on a platform of creating a more equal society, ending poverty and illiteracy and reform of government, land ownership and the nation's oil industry. He was elected with the largest percentage victory in 40 years. In 1999 he brought in a new constitution and as part of this reform new elections were held in 2000.


He was re-elected with an increase in his vote. However in 2002 he was removed by a coup. but returned to power within a day. Watch video below.



Interestingly Rosales was a signatory to the Carmona Decree which was used as the official means of illegally removing the democratically elected Chavez following the coup which was in all likelihood sponsored by the US. Today, Rosales says his signing the Decree was a "mistake".


According to Venezuela’s National Institute of Statistics (INE), the proportion of the country’s 26 million people living on or below the poverty line dropped to 35% by the end of 2005, down from 47% in 2004.


Over the past two years, 1.5 million Venezuelans have learned how to read and write, thus eradicating illiteracy from the country. By comparison, during the 10-year period prior to Chavez’s election as Venezuela’s president in 1998, only only 73,000 Venezuelans learned to read and write.


For these last two reasons alone I would vote for the man. He might be too friendly with Castro for my liking and he might be a bit of a demagogue but I believe in his sincereity to better the lives or ordinary people and I believe he really is making a difference.


In the video below Chavez, during his trip to London recently, outlines some of his beliefs.


Vote Chavez!





Click here to read about the visit of the Labour Party and the Irish Congress of Trade Unions to Venezuela.
Read More

Hidden Agendas!

1:41 PM 2

For some reason our Agenda are not published on Westport Town Council's website neither are the Minutes of our meetings.


We only got a website because I pushed for it in 2004 and presented the other councillors with a 20 page proposal for a website. In that proposal I asked that our agenda, minutes and reports be published on the site as they are public documents and would of course be of interest to the citizens of Westport.


Two years on our website has not yet been officially launched nor does it have provision for the publishing of such information on our site. I have also pushed for our meetings to be web cast over the Internet. Our IT department tell me it can be done yet no progress has been made on this despite the councillors approval of the idea. Read that item here.


I am unsure if it is reluctance to open up the workings of the council to the public, a heavy work load or an unfamiliarity with information technology and media or a combination of all three which is keeping us lagging behind other more progressive councils in this area.


I have decided to do my part in opening us up to the public and I have posted the Agenda for our December meeting below. I will publish the minutes of the November meeting when I receive them tomorrow.


It might not make riveting reading but it does allow public scrutiny of council business.



AGENDA FOR DECEMBER MEETING OF WESTPORT TOWN COUNCIL TO BE HELD ON FRIDAY 1ST DECEMBER 2006 AT 6.00P.M. IN THE COUNCIL CHAMBER, WESTPORT CIVIC OFFICES



01) To confirm Minutes of November meeting of Westport Town Council held on 9th November 2006.

02) Planning

03) To consider and adopt Policy on Anti Social Behaviour.

04) To approve an overdraft accommodation for a sum not exceeding €1,200,000 for the half year ending 30th June 2007

05) To consider update on takeover of Estates

06) To consider update on Roadworks Programme

07) To hear report on Town Hall Project

08) Conference

09) Any Other Business
Read More

Monday, November 27, 2006

Affordable Housing in Westport

11:26 AM 0

I attended the sod turning of the Tubber Hill project on Friday. The scheme comprises of over 90 townhouses and appartments and will be a mix of affordable housing and social housing. The scheme will be built in two parts by Westport Town Council.

Westport has suffered in recent years from exceptionally high houses prices which have meant a lot of young and not so young Westport people cannot afford to live here. In the 1990s there was a mass emigration to nearby Castlebar, so intense was the house buying in Castlebar by people from Westport that there is an estate in Castlebar nicknamed 'Little Westport'.

The Tubber Hill scheme will make a good dent in our town's housing lists and I expect that a lot of those on the list for the last couple of years will be allocated housing. However with no sign of prices dropping Affordable housing will continue to be a priority for the next decade.

In my opinion the Tubber Hill Affordable housing development will be one of the most important projects undertaken during the lifetime of the current council. But now is not the time to rest but to start planning the next scheme.

  • Of the 40,000 affordable houses promised by the Government only 3,000 have been delivered.
  • One in six houses in Ireland are empty compared with one in twenty in the UK. It goes to show that we have our priorities all wrong. We should be encouraging people to free up these extra homes.
  • The waiting lists in Ireland for council housing are twice what they were 10 years ago.
  • The government should be buying up potential residential land at agricultural value plus a reasonable percentage extra to the landowner/speculator and using that land for housing.
  • Housing is too important at the moment to leave to market forces i.e. Developers, landowners and the like.
  • The Labour Minister for the Environment Jim Tully built over 100,000 houses in one year in the 1970s when the country was broke. Why can't we do the same today?

There is a good article on Affordable Housing here from the EBS (the EBS was founded by Mayo's Labour TD and Party Leader Thomas J. O'Connell).

For more information on Affordable housing or Social housing in Westport or Co. Mayo read this Mayo County Council Housing. For more information on Labour's National Housing Plan click here.

Read More

Sunday, November 26, 2006

Directly elected Mayors - Power to the people & Local Government Reform

1:35 PM 0



Local government in Ireland is a hang-over from Imperial rule by Britain. It is bureaucratic, unresponsive, over-ridden with officialdom and designed to stop local authorities from acting on their own initiative or pursuing their own policies.

It would make Sir Humphrey Appleby smile with joy to behold such a system whereby people power and the power of the councillors is so controlled and regulated that it is almost impossible to achieve anything without the approval of management.

The council system is, in theory, supposed to allow the people to select their representatives and put them in office to carry out their policies. The elected councillors then agree on the council's policy and make decisions based on it on issues such as Housing, Transportation and Planning.

The reality is very far from that. In truth council management has its own policies which are a combination of central Government wishes and directives, policies of the County and City Managers Association and the officials own personal views or prejudices on issues. If any, or a combination of these clash with the policies or goals of the councillors then they will be blocked - end of story. But how? There are several different ways to block councillors and their policies.

  1. Councillors have very little power (individually they have no power at all and this includes the Cathaoirleach/Mayor). [See Appendix below]
  2. Management have sweeping powers in every area. [See Appendix below]
  3. The ending of domestic rates (an unfair system) left local authorities at the mercy of central government for funds. Funding is so ring-fenced that councils actually have very little money at their disposal for projects, unless there is a central government fund for their project (and thus central government approval) they can't really do anything.
  4. Legally councillors can be held personally responsible for their policies i.e. if the councillors were to spend money or take a course of action outside of management approval they can be found liable for any losses or damages as a result. They can loose their homes. It is important to note that this does not apply to officials, however incompetent.
  5. Divide and conquer. As each council has members from different political parties it is easy to divide the councillors especially on big issues that management want to block. It is not unheard of for management to telephone individual councillors before meetings and suggest reasons for opposing the issue. Of course individual councillors need management's goodwill to get playgrounds for their areas, potholes filled etc.

The truth is that management have powers over council policy that would be the envy of Soviet Commissars and the people know it.

The growing lack of involvement in democracy and falling voter numbers in Ireland stems from the lack of democracy in local councils. If people cannot effect real change in their town council what confidence have they in changing national policy.

As Eamon Gilmore TD has said "Councillors have lost the power to make road plans, waste management plans, waste charges and most planning functions. City and county managers have been given new powers which are bordering on the dictatorial. Ultimately it was the people who had been left powerless under the present system of local government, which is neither democratic nor local."

In 2000 Fianna Fail planned to bring in legislation which would give us directly elected mayors. However even this was watered down from an originally planned empowerment of these new mayors. Why? On February 5 2000 the Irish Times reported "Some time ago, city and county managers made it clear they would oppose moves to curtail their powers." Noel Dempsey continued on with proposals for a weaker form of directly elected mayors but his successor Martin Cullen dropped these altogether and we are left with what Vincent Browne terms "toytown mayors" who rotate the office on an annual basis.

Why don't councillors create uproar? If councillors were to highlight their ineffectiveness it would only undermine their positions and public confidence further. The Emperor has no clothes.

Of course there are a sizable number of councillors who don't want to change the system. They are comfy getting the chair every couple of years and dread the thought of someone being elected as Mayor for five years. But if dynamic people with something to offer are to be attracted to take part in local government then reform is urgently needed.

What is to be done? It is time to reform the system altogether. It is time to reduce management to the task of managing not directing the course of the council. We need to introduce Directly Elected Mayors with these executive powers into all the local authorities in Ireland. Every town, borough, city and county council should be lead by a directly elected and thus directly accountable individual. This would make council policy open and accountable to the people and restore their faith in local government.

What we need is real local government through real decentralisation i.e. the devolution of Government functions to regional and local authorities. These would include school building, school transport, the distribution of lottery funds, employment services and training, rural development, social welfare services and coastal zone management. There should be new legislation to make providers of public services accountable to local councils.

Key steps in reforming local government would be

  1. Giving councillors control over local policing, school building, social welfare services and other functions.
  2. Local control over financing of local services.
  3. Directly- elected mayors.
  4. New council chief executives to replace existing management and who would be subject to policy decisions by councillors.

There is a perception out there that only large cities can benefit from having a powerful directly elected Mayor but surely towns like Westport, Co. Mayo are every bit as entitled to democratic local government. The implementation of Directly elected Mayors and local government reform is about putting the power back in the hands of the people, about giving the towns, cities and counties leadership and making local government relevant and democratic in the 21st century.

For more information on Labour's plans for Local Government Reform read the New Councils paper.

Appendix

The powers of councillors are known as 'Reserved Functions'. These are the functions performed by the councillors by resolution at their meetings.

  • adopting the annual budget
  • setting the rates
  • borrowing money
  • making or varying a development plan
  • making a special amenity area order
  • adopting a scheme of letting priorities
  • making, revoking or amending bye-laws
  • bringing enactments into force
  • nominating persons to various committees bodies
  • nominating a candidate to the Presidency

Management powers are known as 'Executive Functions'. These are defined in law as all functions not listed as 'Reserved Functions'. These include

  • staffing, all staff are answerable to the manager
  • court action and legal advice, management has access to free legal advice and aid to support their recommendations and of course their policies
  • acceptance of tenders
  • collection of rents and rates
  • allocation of lettings for local authority housing
  • allocation of affordable housing
  • day to day decision making

Executive Functions give management massive sweeping power and influence over the councillors and the enactment of policy within the council.

Read More

Saturday, November 25, 2006

Red Ken wants to do it again and again!

5:03 PM 0

I am delighted to hear that Ken Livingstone is going to run again for Mayor and not only that but has also declared his intentions to run again in 2012 for a fourth term.

Ken Livingstone is a great example of how if you stick to your guns on your policies time will prove you right. He was right on gay and minority rights, he was right on Northern Ireland and the need to engage in talks with SF, he was right about subsidising public transport and he was right about Margaret Thatcher.

The kind of leadership and integrity he has displayed throughout his career is inspirational to all young politicians who want to change their towns, cities and areas for the better.
Read More

Race Night

3:59 PM 0
What a night at the races!

We had a great night in Henehan's Bar last night. There was a great crowd in to support us and there was great excitement which got more intense with each successive race.


John McCarrick travelled all the way down from Sligo to help us out and run the races for us.


John Feely, that ever resourceful man, also came down with his tote tickets and manned one of the tote stations.


Our auction race was great craic and we had winners for our top prizes of TV/DVD combi, portable TVs, a Stereo System and Gym Membership.


Eight weeks of planning and selling by the Branch coupled with terrific support from sponsors and the generosity of the people of Westport made our night not only a great fundraising event but a fun social night out for all the branch, family, friends and supporters. We may have even gotten a few converts to the cause.

Read More

Friday, November 24, 2006

Breastcheck

9:24 AM 1
Mary Harney, Minister for Health has admitted at the weekend that it my be 2009 before some people in the West and the South will have access to Breastcheck.

Until now all we have heard about is that it will be rolled out in 2007 thus creating the impression that it will be available next year. Not true. By roll out the Minister and the Government apparently only meant that they would start rolling it out.


It is disgusting that we are the wealthiest we have ever been yet the Government has refused to spend the extra money on making this service available nationwide. The cost of Electronic Voting would have covered Breastcheck.


We in Westport took up a petition recently and received a great responce taking up over 300 signatures in a matter of hours.


The thought that women in Mayo may be dying unnessesarily because they do not have access to this service is not good enough, it is a crime.
Read More

Monday, November 13, 2006

Better Local Government?

3:14 PM 0



Better Local Government; who did it make government better for? The citizen? The Councillor?

Who benefited from the restructuring of Irish Local Government?

We did not get Directly Elected Mayors. We did not get a less bureaucratic form of local government. We did not get a decentralisation of power to local councils.

In fact local government has lost more and more power since then and the number of powers taken from councillors and handed over to the officials has increased since BLG.


Read More

Anti Americanism - should it be a crime?

12:26 PM 0

Recently in the Dail Minister Brian Cowen accused Joe Higgins of "Anti-Americanism" as if it was to be equated with anti-semitism. Should it be as legally, socially and morally wrong as anti-semitism to be Anti-American? Biffo seems to think so. He aimed to label Joe as a practicioner of the black art of Anti-Americanism.

When it comes to being anti-american Joe Higgins and the like are amauters compared with our friends in the Middle East. While Joe gives out about the US and its behaviour all over the world, those lads living in the vicinity of the Holy Land are out on the streets putting their hearts and souls into the practise of Anti-Americanism.

They are out there 24-7, burning the Stars and Stripes, making dummies out of scraps to look like George Bush, getting matches to set fire the dummies, chanting death threats and all sorts of evil on the heads of the Americans. Compared to them Joe isn't even in the running.

But Anti-Americanism is not really a hatred of the Americans. Anyone who has ever met them knows they are quite a nice bunch, very positive, a bit heavy but not bad lads. Anti-Americanism is more correctly a dislike of American foreign policy, economic policy and its interference in the government of other nations to further its own aims and interests in those nations.

My policy with America is to love the sinner, hate the sin.
Read More

Saddam to Hang

12:02 PM 0

If Saddam is to hang for the deaths of tens of thousands of Iraqis then who will hang for the deaths of the 40,000 Iraqis who have died since the "liberation" of Iraqi?

Why does George Bush keep referring to "Victory" and "winning" in relation to the situation in Iraq?

Surely the invasion of Iraq was a liberation not a war?

Or wait, was it about getting rid of all of Saddam's Weapons of Mass Destruction?

Or was it about getting rid of Saddam the evil dictator who was kept in power by the US for decades when he suited them?

Well it can't have been about oil or anything grubby like that.

So it must be about "Victory" and "winning". It just has to be.

Read More

Post Top Ad