Posted on 24 July 2008 by David
The Tories look set to establish their own version of the West Lothian Question in the next Westminster parliament. News reports today suggest that David Cameron is trying to forge an alliance or merger with the Ulster Unionist Party (UUP), with which it was connected in the past. The advantages of this are described in [...]
Filed under: Conservative Party, David Cameron, Democracy Task Force, England, First Past the Post, Northern Ireland, Ulster Unionist Party, United Kingdom, West Lothian Question, gerrymandering, parliament, politics, unionism | Leave a Comment »
Posted on 18 July 2008 by David
Here’s how I see the asymmetric devolution settlement brought in by New Labour in 1998. This may not be terribly original; but it could serve as a useful guide to the cynical politics that has brought us to our present pass.
Scotland-side, there’s the view that devolution, rather than being merely a nationalistic movement for greater [...]
Filed under: Conservative Party, David Cameron, England, English independence, First Past the Post, Labour Party, PR, Scotland, Scottish independence, Wales, Welsh independence, constitutional reform, devolution, parliament, politics, proportional representation, sovereignty | 9 Comments »
Posted on 2 July 2008 by David
Yesterday, the Tories finally published the recommendations of their Democracy Task Force on how to ‘resolve’ the West Lothian Question. Their report contained no surprises, as it was virtually as leaked two weeks ago. There was, however, one clarification. In the leaked account of the Tories’ proposals, it was stated that: “At the third and [...]
Filed under: Conservative Party, Democracy Task Force, England, English Grand Committee, English Parliament, English pauses for English clauses, First Past the Post, PR, West Lothian Question, constitutional reform, devolution, federal UK, parliament, politics, proportional representation | Tagged: " | 1 Comment »
Posted on 1 July 2008 by David
No, don’t get excited: I haven’t heard back from ICANN on what would be required to set up a .eng domain. However, I’ve done some research about it, and apparently, the aim of the .eng campaign is to collect around 10,000 signatures on the petition before submitting an application to ICANN. Currently, I think they’re [...]
Filed under: .eng domain, England, English Parliament, ICANN, Internet domains, politics | 1 Comment »