What puzzles me though, is why the SNP Government over the
past few years – years in which Nicola has been deputy first minister - has
persisted in policies which run counter to a social justice agenda. Why they
have continued with a Council Tax freeze which, although electorally popular,
has been shown to benefit the richest rather than the most vulnerable, who are
most dependent on public services; why they have cut college places, a route
out of poverty for many children from working class and poorer backgrounds; why
they have voted again and again against including the living wage in
procurement?
Maybe there’s a limit to what you can do as a deputy. From
the trade union responses to Nicola’s statement it is clear that they are
prepared to give her the benefit of the doubt – to take her at her word. It
would be churlish not to do the same.Tuesday, 2 December 2014
Social justice – rhetoric or reality?
I like Nicola Sturgeon. I really do. I like her clear focus
on social justice and her willingness to make that part of the political
vocabulary again. During the UNISON referendum hustings I asked her a question
about child poverty and she told me that she was passionate about ending
poverty – that it was her passion for social justice that had brought her into
politics. Good to hear!
Friday, 25 July 2014
Ordinary people standing in solidarity with Gaza - Stories from the Aberdeen protests
As we gathered for the third Saturday in a row to stand in
solidarity with the people of Gaza, to mourn the deaths and injuries of so many
Palestinian people, so many children, a woman came up to me, with tears in her
eyes. “I need to do something about this,” she said. “Tell me what I can do.”
She had been out shopping and had stopped to listen to the
speakers at the protest. Speakers like Ibrahim, who grew up in Gaza with family
still there, like June, of the Scottish Palestinian Solidarity Campaign, who
read out a poem written earlier that week by a young mother living in Gaza, who
got a phone call from “someone who knew my name” warning her family that their
home would be bombed and to leave; speakers like seasoned trade unionist, Brian,
who wept when he heard of the killing earlier that week of the four little boys
playing football on the beach.
“I didn’t know,” she said, “Tell me what I can do.”
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