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The BBC analysis (this time on credit ratings) is wrong again



The journalist within the last hour (it is currently 10.21 on Saturday 6th August 2011),  providing the analysis on the credit ratings for the BBC News 24, is wrong in my personal opinion, I’m afraid.

 

 

 

The inference from what he was saying that Britain’s credit-rating might be downgraded if the deficit reduction is not fast enough. It is misleading to have presented this as fact. The issue is in fact as Chuka Umunna clearly described it. If growth is too slow, and the UK does have a poor strategy for economic growth, it is widely believed as an expert opinion, the deficit could get worse, this poses problems for our credit rating. We potentially have to pay more people on benefits, but a slow economy is likely to mean lower tax receipts, and therefore the UK’s economy worsens. If our credit rating is lost, this will impact on our ability for our nation to borrow money in its current difficulties.

The BBC should be extremely careful to present its analysis is an independent, impartial and accurate way.

Unsurprisingly, the BBC journalists seemed unable to mention the problems with growth in the UK economic policy at all. They therefore appear like growth deniers.

 

Dr Shibley Rahman came top in the MBA in economics and marketing this summer.

Explosion of the deficit and implosion of the Liberal Democrats



 

The Liberal Democrats can never be trusted with the economy again. Cable once uttered in Parliament with almost delusion of grandeur that it didn’t matter where the economic recession came from. Probably having choked on his coffee that morning, he could not contemplate the concept of a global recession?

The left wing continually warned that if you strangle the economy manufacturing output will fall, benefit payments will go up, tax receipts will go down, and GDP will go down. We now have the issue of the UK doing extremely badly, with extremely poor growth. If you add to this the Eurozone crisis and the debt ceiling, and the marked falls in stock prices, you see a situation where the bankers need to be bailed out again. The challenge for George Osborne is not make the deficit explode, now that he now has generated poor growth. The challenge for the Liberal Democrats is to ensure that they do not totally implode come the next election, having voted for the Conservatives’ policy throughout this term so far.

shibleyrahman.com says 'make this Xmas no 1 for 2010'



From Ian Robathan : George Osborne and the last resort of desperate governments



“Printing money is the last resort of desperate governments when all other policies have failed. It can’t be ruled out as a last resort in the fight against deflation, but in the end printing money risks losing control of inflation and all the economic problems that high inflation brings.”

George Osborne

Remember these words in a few hours’ time..

As Ian Robathan who unearthed this little treasure in his journal ‘Labour News’, words do have a habit of coming back to haunt you!

Shibley Rahman Survey results 2010 : the BBC dominate



Thanks to all those who took part in the shibleyrahman.com survey.

The survey is now closed, so don’t vote any more.

Here are the results:

Blogs

1. One Nation Tory

The fact that this blog came top of out of all the blogs is possibly even a surprise to its editor, @LiamRhodes.

2. Mark Pack

3. Think Politics

4. Shibley Rahman

Obviously, this is a  good showing for the person who ran this competition. Clearly, there was a conflict of interest which Shibley is happy to declare.

5. Tom Harris

6. Claire French

7. Alastair Campbell

8. Kerry McCarthy

9. Sunny Hundal

10. Will Straw

Best commentators

1. Johann Hari, Independent/Huffington Post

2. Polly Toynbee, The Guardian

3. Steve Richards, Independent

4. Nick Cohen, The Guardian/Observer

5. Mehdi Hasan, The New Statesman

6. Jackie Ashley, The Guardian

7. Michael White, The Guardian

8. Daniel Finklestein, The Times

9. Jonathan Freedland, The Guardian

10. Kevin Maguire, The Mirror

Best sketch writers

1. Simon Hoggart, The Guardian

2. Ann Treneman, The Times

3. Simon Carr, The Independent

4. Andrew Gimson, The Telegraph

5. Quentin Letts, Daily Mail

TV columnists and reporters

1. Jon Snow, C4

Jon is held in very high esteem by readers of this blog. This is no way surprising to me.

2. Jeremy Paxman, BBC

3. David Dimbleby, BBC

4. Andrew Marr, BBC

5. Michael Crick. BBC

6. Kirsty Wark, BBC

7. Cathy Newman, C4

8. Michael Portillo, BBC

9. Reeta Cbakrabarti, BBC

10. Krishnan Guru-Murthy, C4

Radio journalists

The dominance of the BBC Radio 4 programme, which is held in extremely high esteem by people of all political ‘faiths’, is clearly obvious in this poll.

1. James Naughtie, BBC Radio 4

2. John Humphrys, BBC Radio 4

3. Edward Stourton, BBC Radio 4

4. Martha Kearney, BBC Radio 4

5. Jonathan Dimbleby, BBC Radio 4

6. Evan Davies, BBC Radio 4

7. John Pienaar, BBC Radio 5 Live

8. Elinor Goodman, BBC Radio 4

9. Mark D’Arcy, BBC Radio 4

10. Nicky Campbell, BBC Radio 5 Live


Shibley Rahman exclusive: Iain Fale meets Alice Cooper away from the BBC



Rumours are circling around Westminster that @iain_fale also met up with Alice Cooper, while @iaindale was reviewing the papers this morning on the Andrew Marr show. The topic of conversation was how best to present compassionate conservative education policy, under market-led Toby Young and demolition job-led Michael Gove. This is being considered as a possible anthem.

The future of control orders



A friend of mine tweeted this morning: “254,998,923 laptops taken out of hand luggage and then 254,998,923 put back into hand luggage: success or fail?”

On issues of national security, many members of the general public should like to believe that they have an integral influence in matters of national security, the legislators, we all admit, decide upon national policy. Ultimately it is the Home Secretary, Theresa May MP, who is able to propose legislation on the basis of her advisors, the think tanks, the public, the media, the police, the rest of the judicial system, and of course the intelligence services MI5, MI6. Obviously, it is impossible to ignore the raft of events, such as 9/11 and the Mumbai bombing. There is in face a growing notion internationally, irrespective of political affiliations, that in the wake of September 11th, many civil liberties had been curtailed or suspended. There has been historical disagreement concerning how much risk to national security or civil liberties should be taken.

The need to achieve an appropriate balance of these seemingly competing goals was evident. In the USA, lawyers from the Department of Homeland Security, Federal Bureau of Investigation, and the U.S. Army called for aggressive prosecution of the terrorist proven suspects, while lawyers advocating civil liberties argue strongly for the safeguarding of individual rights, lest we cede victory to terrorists through the compromise of principles that define our view of a liberal democracy.

We are surprisingly at one here with the U.S., reflecting a strong entrenchment of our law in European law as a result of the European Communities Act (1972) (as amended), and numerous subsequent treaties. The legal notion of ‘proportionality’ originally developed in European Law, but it has been readily applied in English Law in the House of Lords and Supreme Court. One specific definition of proportionality given by Lord Lowry in the leading British case ‘Brind’, which examined the principle as one that requires a reasonable relation between a decision, its objective and the circumstances of any given case. This concise definition shows how proportionality is a theory that is ultimately intuitive to human nature.  A vast majority feel that Labour went too far in the counter-terrorism legislation, which is a massive own goal in that one of the first achievements of Tony Blair was to introduce the Human Rights Act (1997).

In fact, Labour has had terms in coming to terms with their past on crucial matters of civil liberties, in lengths of detention and ID cards. For example, officers used Section 44 of the Terrorism Act 101,248 times but just 506 of those stopped were taken into custody and none on suspicion of plotting terror attacks. Furthermore, Home Office data provide that no terror suspect was held for more than 14 days before being charged, just half the 28-day limit brought in by the last Government. Shami Chakrabarti, of civil rights group Liberty, insisted Section 44 was a “crude and blunt instrument” that was also counter-productive. Shami Chakrabarti further said: “It costs us dearly in race equality and consent=based policing with very little in terms of enhanced security.” I fully agree.

Another bone of contention are ‘control orders’, also introduced under 2005 anti-terrorism legislation. Ministers have to sign an order to place a terrorism suspect under close supervision that some say is similar to house arrest. The orders were introduced after the then Law Lords declared that the previous system of detaining foreign terrorism suspects without trial, or without prospect of deportation, breached human rights. The previous Labour government said it still needed a mechanism, which would allow it to control the lives of some suspects whom it said it could not prosecute because of the rules over the use of secret intelligence in trials.

Control orders were originally introduced as an alternative to putting people in prison, that originally was supposed to not leave individuals suffering from a breach of liberty and personal freedom (1995). Obviously, curtailing this liberty and personal freedom has to be a necessary, balanced and proportional response to a threat of national security, and the Law Lords have thus far said that control records are legal. However, not everyone sees it this way. The issue of control orders, under which terror suspects are placed under “virtual house arrest”, is the one of the most sensitive civil liberties issues for ministers as opposition to Labour’s authoritarian counter-terror policy was seen as part of the glue that made the coalition possible.

Tom Brake MP, the co-chair of the Lib Dem home affairs parliamentary party committee, has said there was no evidence to suggest that control orders were effective in preventing terrorism. The other signatories of the letter, Baroness Sally Hamwee, and Lord Martin Thomas, represent Lib Dem peers. As the English legal system is a system of precedent, I feel that it any changes to the law could be introduced, but it would be their Lordships’ prerogative to decide whether any subsequent changes to the law are legal or not. And I fully trust Lords Hoffman, Neuberger and Baroness Hale, amongst others, to analyze with the legal issues with great precision if or when the time should come.

According to the most up to date figures for January 2010, there are 12 control orders in force – three fewer than a year before. Some 45 people have been subject to the controls since the system was created. Six of the foreign nationals held under the restrictions have been deported. The political situation is messy, as reflected in a rather informal conversation between Baroness Kennedy and Theresa May on the Andrew Marr show this morning. Liberal Democrats have openly warned David Cameron for the first time that any decision not to scrap control orders would jeopardise the coalition’s civil liberties credentials.

Senior Lib Dem backbenchers and peers have also written to Downing Street pressing for the limit on detention without charge to be cut from 28 days to 14 days, arguing that two-weeks is a “wholly adequate” time to bring charges, even in the most complicated cases of multiple terrorist attacks. The intervention from Lib Dem MPs and peers comes after an intense lobbying campaign by the security services. Jonathan Evans, the head of MI5, recently wrote to Cameron saying that he could not guarantee the safety of the public if the control order regime was scrapped. Whitehall officials confirm that MI5 has played its “full part in the debate”. The review of counter-terrorism powers was set up immediately after the general election, with a specific remit to look urgently at the future of control orders and the wider matter of counter-terror measures and programmes.

The home secretary, Theresa May, is thought to have recently supported the retention of control orders as a necessary intervention despite repeated interventions by Nick Clegg, whose Lib Dem manifesto clearly had called for them to be scrapped. It feels as if a pendulum over civil liberties is still in damped smooth harmonic motion, but at least the review and the Supreme Court will help the UK legislature and public reach a stable equilibrium.

shibleyrahman.com first ever political survey 2010



This is the first year that shibleyrahman.com has run a poll of political journalists, commentators and presenters. Unlike the Total Politics poll, this poll is not interested in how influential you feel that these people are in the political and media scene.

I am therefore not concerned what you feel about what other feel; I consider that this is totally misleading and unhelpful. I am only interested in how useful you find the person’s professional analysis, and what impact you feel their analysis has on your considered judgment . You certainly do not have to rate every journalist mentioned, just rate the ones you have an opinion on.

There are questions, covering many different types of journalists, reporters, sketch-writers, presenters and bloggers, in different types of media, such as radio, TV, broadsheets and the internet.

The survey should take about 5-10 minutes to complete, considerably shorter than Total Politics’ survey, but this of course entirely dependent on how many people you rate! So remember, 1 is the lowest mark and 10 is the highest. Remember, you are rating them for their level of influence.

Many thanks for taking part!

Dr Shibley Rahman

You can take part in the survey by clicking here.

These are the questions this year:

Columnists and commentators

Please rate the following political columnists and commentators by how useful you find their political analysis and how much impact they have on your judgments. You do not have to rate every journalist mentioned, for example ones you have never one, but please just rate the ones you have an opinion on. Remember, 1 is the lowest mark and 10 is the highest. Not all professionals are represented.

Andrew Grice, The Independent

Andrew Porter, Daily Telegraph

Andrew Sparrow, The Guardian

Anushka Asthana, The Observer

Ben Brogan, Daily Telegraph

Bob Roberts, Daily Mirror

Charles Moore, Daily Telegraph

Daniel Finklestein, The Times

Dave Wooding, News of the World

Dominic Lawson, The Independent

Fraser Nelson, The Spectator/News of the World

Iain Martin, Wall Street Journal

Ian Drury,  Daily Mail

Isabelle Oakeshott, Sunday Times

Jackie Ashley, The Guardian

Jake Morris, Daily Mirror

James Lyons, Daily Mirror

James MacIntyre, New Statesman

Janet Daley, The Telegraph

Jason Beattie, Daily Mirror

Jean Eaglesham, Financial Times

Jim Pickard, Financial Times

Johann Hari, Independent/Huffington Post

Jonathan Freedland, The Guardian/The Jewish Chronicle

Julia Hartley-Brewer, Sunday Express

Kevin Maguire, Daily Mirror

Kirsty Walker, Daily Mail

Marie Woolf, Sunday Times

Martin Bright, Jewish Chronicle

Matthew Parris, The Times

Mehdi Hasan, New Statesman

Melanie Philips, Daily Mail

Michael White, The Guardian

Nick Cohen, The Observer/New Statesman

Nigel Morris, The Independent

Patrick Hennessy, Daily Telegraph

Patrick Wintour, The Guardian

Peter Hitchens, Mail on Sunday

Peter Oborne, Daily Telegraph

Polly Toynbee, The Guardian

Rachel Sylvester, The Times

Robert Winnett, Daily Telegraph

Roland Watson, The Times

Sam Coates, The Times

Simon Heffer, Daily Telegraph

Simon Jenkins, Guardian/Sunday Times

Steve Richards, The Independent

Suzanne Moore, Mail on Sunday

Toby Helm, The Observer

Trevor Kavanagh The Sun

Broadsheet sketch-writers

Please rate the following political sketch-writers by how useful you find their work, and how much impact they have on your judgments. You do not have to rate every journaist mentioned, for example ones you have never one, but please just rate the ones you have an opinion on. Remember, 1 is the lowest mark and 10 is the highest. Not all professionals are represented.

Andrew Gimson (Telegraph)

Ann Treneman (Times)

Quentin Letts (Mail)

Simon Carr (Independent)

Simon Hoggart (Guardian)

TV presenters and news reporters

Please rate the following TV presenters and news reporters by how useful you find their political analysis, and how much impact they have on your judgments. You do not have to rate every journalist mentioned, for example ones you have never one, but please just rate the ones you have an opinion on. Remember, 1 is the lowest mark and 10 is the highest. Not all professionals are represented.

Alex Forrest, ITN

Andrew Marr, BBC

Andrew Neil, BBC/This Week

Andy Bell, Five News

Anita Anand, Five Live

Ben Brown, BBC

Ben Wright, BBC

Carole Walker, BBC

Cathy Newman, Channel 4 News

Chris Ship, ITV News

David Dimbleby, BBC

Diane Abbott, This Week

Emily Maitlis, BBC

Gary Gibbon, Channel 4 News

Gavin Esler, BBC

James Landale, BBC

Jane Hill, BBC

Jeremy Paxman, BBC

Jo Coburn, BBC

Jon Snow, Channel 4 News

Kirsty Wark, BBC

Krishnan Gurumurty, Channel 4 News

Lucy Manning, ITN

Michael Crick, BBC

Michael Portillo, This Week

Niall Paterson, Sky News

Nick Robinson, BBC

Peter Spencer, Sky News

Reeta Chakrabarti, BBC

Samana Haq, ITN

Tom Bradby, ITV News

Vicky Young, BBC

Radio presenters and commentators

Please rate the following political radio presenters and commentators by how useful you find their political analysis. You do not have to rate every journalist mentioned, for example ones you have never one, but please just rate the ones you have an opinion on. Remember, 1 is the lowest mark and 10 is the highest. Not all professionals are represented.

Betsan Powys, BBC Wales

Eddie Barnes, Scotland on Sunday

Eddie Mair, Radio 4

Edward Stourton, Radio 4

Elinor Goodman, Radio 4

Evan Davis Radio 4

Gary O’Donoghue, BBC News

James Naughtie, Radio 4

Jeremy Vine, Radio 2

John Humphrys, Radio 4

John Pienaar, BBC TV and Five Live

Jonathan Dimbleby, Radio 4

Mark D’Arcy, Radio 4

Martha Kearney, Radio 4

Nicky Campbell, Five Live

Richard Bacon, Five Live

Ross Hawkins, BBC News

Sarah Montague, Radio 4

Shelagh Fogarty, Five Live

Victoria Derbyshire, Five Live

Political and lifestyle bloggers

Please rate the following political internet bloggers by how useful you find their political analysis, and how much impact they have on your judgments. You do not have to rate every journalist mentioned, for example ones you have never one, but please just rate the ones you have an opinion on. Remember, 1 is the lowest mark and 10 is the highest. Not all professionals are represented.

Alastair Campbell http://www.alastaircampbell.org/blog.php

Alex Hilton http://www.labourhome.org/

Claire French http://clairefrench.co.uk

David Alexander Hough http://politicalpundits.co.uk/?author=26

Guido Fawkes http://order-order.com/

John Redwood http://www.johnredwoodsdiary.com/

Kerry McCarthy http://www.kerry-mccarthy.blogspot.com/

Luke Akehurst http://lukeakehurst.blogspot.com/

Mark Ferguson http://www.labourlist.org/

Mark Pack http://www.markpack.org.uk/

Mike Denham http://www.taxpayersalliance.com/

Phil Hendren http://dizzythinks.net/

Shibley Rahman http://shibleyrahman.com

Sunder Katwala http://www.liberalconspiracy.org/

Sunny Hundal http://www.liberalconspiracy.org/

Tom Harris http://www.tomharris.org.uk/

Walaa Idris http://www.walaaidris.com

Will Straw http://www.leftfootfwd.org

Political Scrapbook http://politicalscrapbooknet

Think Politics blog http://thinkpolitics.co.uk/tpblogs/

Robin Bogg’s spot http://boggsblub.blogspot.com

Free Gary MacKinnon  http://tweetstorm4gary.wordpress.com

Red Rag Online http://www.redragonline.com

The Spiderplant http://www.spiderplantland.co.uk

Young Labour Politico Blogger http://blogtomscholesfogg.co.uk/

One Nation Tory  http://onenationtory.com/

The Right Way  http://piemandmu.blogspot.com/

Obnoxio the Clown http://obotheclown.blogspot.com/

Chris Mills http://www.chrismills.me.uk

Big Society : more social enterprise and co-operatives, less venture capital please!



Nathaniel Wei has to be applauded a bit for his work on the Big Society as its figurehead. I agree with Nat Wei in one thing:

“The key test of whether something is Big Society or not is about whether it represents a genuine shift in power”

I have reluctantly concluded that, whilst it is here to stay, the Big Society is a sham. Whilst it appears superficially pro-social, resourceful, and encouraging a ‘behaviour change’ bottom-up from citizens in the public, I think the reverse is true. Like picking winners for grants to support free schools, the Big Society is fundamentally a vehicle for a select few to decide what they wish to invest in temporarily. I do not believe in pure altruism, and it will be interesting to watch who precisely benefits. The devil will be in the detail; in other words, for example, how long you pay back the loan, to whom and at level of interest. It is really, fundamentally, old win in very new bottles.

Warren Buffet is considered to be the world’s leading philanthropist in phenomenal donations towards healthcare, extreme poverty, education, access to information technology. But is he a true philanthropist? I’ve heard the “Big Society” called a “Big Con”, and much worse, and certainly Nathaniel Wei, a ‘graduate from McKinseys’, has arguably benefited from it. But what is the primary business and social driver for the “Big Society”, in the UK, and who actually benefits?

English philanthropy is not new. Two approaches seem to characterize the second half of the 19th century : on the one hand, a Victorian philanthropy, designed essentially to reward those worthy of salvation, and, on the other hand, a movement away from assistance towards self-help, the Cooperative Movement and Trade Unions. Maybe the latter is more of an approach you’d find from the left – and yes, you guessed it, the former approach I propose is more likely to come from the right.

I feel the reason that Steve Hilton has not been able to sell it in its various relaunches is that it is in many senses a highly confused model, reflecting lack of genuine intellectual discussion in business models, economics, sociology and politics. Some of the political messages are immature and need much greater work. Wei argues that ‘we need to help more people get involved’, what is the motivation for somebody, say at McKinsey’s, to give up a very well paid job to have a go at running a pub? Also, the Big Society intend sto pilot a new National Citizen Service which aims to give 16 year olds the chance to develop the skills needed to be active and responsible citizens, mix with people from different backgrounds, and start getting involved in their communities But how many ‘new’ people will volunteer in a new scheme than already do? It is somewhat paradoxical that I am not really interested in bashing the idea because it appears to be coming from the Conservatives. Far from it – it represents a stimulating contribution to the debate, but I feel that Nat Wei and other chief architects have badly let down David Cameron with expensive advice, but which is fundamentally built on a dodgy business model.

Historically, it is essential, first of all, to debunk the myth that the Big Society is a clever new idea. It obviously has historical influences from a diverse range of sources, and the resultant mishmash, in my view, is far from convincing. In its purest form, the “Big Society” is an example of a “social movement”, a term firm introduced in 1850 by the German Sociologist Lorenz von Stein in his book “History of the French Social Movement from 1789 to the Present” (1850). It is obviously not a global movement, although parallels can be seen in the USA, for example “Movement for Change”, but is a social movement with a local scope. This means that the activities are focused on local or regional objectives, such as protecting a specific natural area, lobbying for the lowering of tolls in a certain motorway, or preserving a building about to be demolished for gentrification and turning it into a thriving centre. Unfortunately, literature provides that such effects tend not to be long-lasting.

Clearly, the social movements have been responding to differing scales of social need. For example, in Uganda over 2 million children have been orphaned by AIDS. By 2010 more than 100 million people worldwide will have been affected. Indeed, compared to something like American Civil Rights movement, the ‘Big Society’ seems to lack an ideological driver, apart from claims by Nathaniel Wei and David Cameron that the UK residents live in a ‘broken society’. A less inflammatory mission statement is given by the Big Society Network as, “The Big Society Network is an organisation being set up by frustrated citizens for frustrated citizens, to share ideas and help everyone achieve change in their local area”. Indeed, it is very commendable that the Big Society wishes to produce powered individuals, strong neighbourhood groups, and greater community participation, but everyone knows that this is re-inventing the wheel. Such activities have been going on for decades, and did not necessitate the Big Society. So what is the unique selling point of the Big Society, and who indeed benefits the most?

So, is it a vehicle for venture philanthropy or also known as philanthrocapitalism? Yes, in my opinion, it most certainly is: look at the description of a central plank of the Big Society:

“A society in which more money, resources and powers are vested locally, thereby building benefits of increased trust, more visible results and reduced bureaucracy.”

This is a highly relevant and revealing statement, as it is made perfectly clear that the functioning of the Big Society is dependent upon measurable results: donors and grantees assess progress based on mutually determined benchmarks. Venture philanthrophy is often capitalized by a readiness to shift funds between organizations and goals based on tracking those measurable results. It is unlikely that a project would be funded for very long, as funding tends to be on a multi-year basis – typically a minimum of 3 years, on average 5-7 years. This is quite different from a true philanthropist, who is someone who engages in philanthropy; that is, someone who donates his or her time, money, and/or reputation to charitable causes.

It is also particularly noteworthy, I feel, that Big Society also puts into the mixer the social enterprise which is indeed a strong and valued economic model, as claimed on the Big Society Network. Many commercial businesses would consider themselves to have social objectives, but social enterprises are distinctive because their social or environmental purpose remains central to their operation. However, it is perplexing that the Government should be proposing this as a predominant business model, as it is notorious for carrying a significant economic risk: the financial viability of social enterprises depends on the efforts of their members, who have the responsibility of ensuring adequate financial resources, unlike most public institutions.

In emerging economies in Latin America, Africa and Asia, where state provision is weak, social entrepreneurs have created large organisations that provide everything from education, Aids advice and eye operations to micro-credit. In Europe, social enterprises employ 3.5 million people, so again this is nothing new. What started on the margins has become increasingly mainstream. In the UK, the previous Labour government has played a critical support role, for example with the creation of a new legal entity – the community interest company – to accommodate enterprises that make money to do social good. Again, the business model is potentially flawed as too many social entrepreneurs are still running inspiring but small schemes. Too few can show how their inspirational new approaches have spread. Part of the reason is a lack of both capital and management skills to expand larger organisations from smaller roots.

However, these are extremely important aspects of social enterprises:

  • an explicit aim of community benefit: one of the principal aims of social enterprises is to serve the community or a specific group of people. To the same end, they also promote a sense of social responsibility at local level.
  • a citizen initiative: social enterprises are the result of collective ‘net’ involving people belonging to a community or to a group that shares a certain need or aim.
  • decision making not based on capital ownership: this generally means the principle of ‘one member, one vote’, or at least a voting power not based on capital shares. Although capital owners in social enterprises play an important role, decision-making rights are usually shared with other shareholders.
  • participatory character, involving those affected by the activity: the users of social enterprises’ services are represented and participate in their structures.
  • limited distribution of profit: social enterprises include organisations that totally prohibit profit distribution as well as organisations such as co-operatives, which may distribute their profit only to a limited degree, thus avoiding profit maximising behaviour.

Finally, I agree with Nat Wei that its introduction is hopefully:

“without compromising on the quality of a given service affected, and without the vulnerable and poor being adversely impacted overall when the measure is taken together with other social justice actions happening at the same time”.”

As it stands, it is perfectly possible to delete the tranche called the ‘public sector’ in the Big Society, particularly if you consider that the private sector stands to benefit a lot.

Dr Shibley Rahman MA LLB(Hons) PhD is about to start a MBA in January 2011, and is a company director in London. He is a disabled member of the Big Society.

Votes at 16 – do you see its importance?



The Liberal Democrats did a sudden U-turn on this tonight, but Stella Creasy MP for Walthamstow managed to get several MPs to attend the vote in the House of Commons by tweeting about it. The support for lowering the voting age has been steadily growing in the UK, and has become a reality in many parts of the British Isles. In the Channel Islands, 16 and 17 year olds already enjoy the vote and although it is a reserved matter the ruling party in Scotland, the SNP, recently passed a policy motion in support of the rights of 16 year olds to vote.
There are also international precedents with some German Lãnder reducing the voting age to 16 for local and regional elections some years ago. Last year Austria reduced the voting age to 16 for all public elections. There are active Votes at 16 cam- paigns across Europe, and it has been adopted by the European Youth Parliament. There are substantial moves afoot for radical reform of the electoral system, not least the big AV vote. Do you think that votes at 16 is a good idea, in a week that mooted lowering the age of sexual consent to 14?

Oh, by the way, if someone complains about the use of the Ishihara plate because it diagnoses colour blindness, may I say in my defence my father is colour-blind, and that this picture is to make the point whether ‘votes at 16′ makes a perceivable difference.

Dr Shibley Rahman is a research physician and research lawyer by training.

Queen’s Scholar, BA (1st.), MA, MB, BChir, PhD, MRCP(UK), LLB(Hons.), FRSA
Director of Law and Medicine Limited
Member of the Fabian Society and Associate of the Institute of Directors

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