Thursday, 29 October 2009

FUTURE OF ENGLAND CONFERENCE

THE FUTURE OF ENGLAND?

A MAJOR CONFERENCE BEING HELD BY THE CEP TAKING PLACE IN ROOM 10 IN THE HOUSE OF COMMONS. WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 18TH 5pm to 7pm (SAME DAY AS THE OPENING OF PARLIAMENT) WITH FOUR DISTINGUISHED WRITERS AND CAMPAIGNERS.
• George Monbiot (Guardian newspaper and environment campaigner)
• Peter Facey (Director: Unlock Democracy)
• Paul Kingsnorth (author of 'Real England: The Battle against the Bland')
• David Wildgoose (vice-chairman The Campaign for an English Parliament)
• Chair: Scilla Cullen
It is eleven years since the 1998 devolution legislation. Scotland and Wales now have their own Scottish Parliament and Welsh Assembly. They have forged ahead since, re-creating and expanding their own distinct national identities and achieving major benefits and advantages for their peoples. But England has got nothing from devolution. Why should English students pay tuition fees and emerge from university laden with debt while Scottish students don't? Why should Welsh people pay no prescription charges while English people do? England still has no constitutional existence of its own and no national institution of any kind as 'a forum where the concerns of the nation can be debated' (the Welsh White paper). England is disadvantaged. The situation is gravely unjust to the people of England. Scottish MPs can now take part in legislation that concerns England only, can even be ministers of departments which deal only with England, without being accountable to any electorate. The Union is dangerously unbalanced. There are massive cultural, environmental and political issues involved. From many angles the people of England are being left out and overlooked. It is a situation that cannot continue. Nor should it. The Union should be a Union of equals or it is no Union.'
We are looking for an open debate. We want your contribution.


Anyone wishing to attend please phone Scilla Cullen (CEP ChaIrman) on: 01438 833155 or email: scilla.cullen@dsl.pipex.com

NOTE - THERE WILL BE A PROTEST HELD IN PARLIAMENT SQUARE FOR 1 HOUR DURING THE AFTERNOON FROM 2-0PM UNTIL 3-0 PM PLEASE ATTEND

Thursday, 8 October 2009

Campaign for an English Parliament protests at West Midlands Regional Grand Committee

Members of the Campaign for an English Parliament (CEP) in Shropshire
and the West Midlands attended the inaugural meeting of the
grandly-titled but pointlessly ineffectual Regional Grand Committee for
the West Midlands last night (8th October) to protest at its existence.

Like the vast majority of English people, the Campaign for an English
Parliament opposes the damaging regionalisation of England and instead
believes that England should be run by an English Parliament.

CEP members held up a 12ft banner and waved placards as MPs arrived at
Sandwell College Campus at Smethwick. Several passing motorists stopped
to read the placards and many of them stuck up their thumbs and honked
their horns in support.

Despite the Conservatives saying that they would boycott these regional
grand committees and pledging, in their party conference this week, to
unravel Labour's regionalisation, seven Conservative MPs turned up to
the meeting. Had they not attended, the Labour MPs that attended would
have failed to meet the minimum number required for the meeting to go ahead.

These regional grand committees are Gordon Brown's preferred form of
government for England and are supposed to be Labour's answer to the
national parliament and assembly they created in Scotland and Wales.
British ministers have described them as bringing democracy closer to
the people. To think that the people of England will accept this sham
as the future of their country is an insult.

Stuart Parr
National Council Member
Campaign for an English Parliament
07973 296118

The Devolution Acts of 1997/98 were and are a deliberate attempt by the EU and New Labour to destabilise the British Nation State and deny England its nationhood

The Devolution Acts of 1997/98 revoked the Act of Union, revoked the concept of one British Nation with one legislative body of government and revoked the principle of representative democracy. It unbalanced the Union by placing England, Scotland and Wales each in a different relationship with the Union and each other, and it institutionalised discrimination against the people of England.

By virtue of their national institutions Scotland and Wales have a distinct and separate political and constitutional existence and nationhood, England however alone does not constitutionally exist and is denied its nationhood.

The Devolution Acts of 1997/98 abolished representative democracy as the untouchable 1st principle of government. By what is understood to be the West Lothian issue British MPs elected in Scotland can be both ministers and legislators, even Prime Minister, Chancellor of the Exchequer and Home Secretary in English matters without being answerable in elections for their actions in those matters to ‘any electorate,’ either in Scotland or England.

England having no parliament has no separate representation of its own to defend its interests against such people and instead has to rely on its British MPs in the UK parliament who are subject to their political party whips to speak up for it, and who has ever seen or will ever see, or can imagine Labour and Conservative MPs sitting in English constituency seats combining to defeat and bring down their respective governments.

Regional government being offered England by the British is not the same type of regional government that has been given to Scotland and never could be, so what England is being offered in devolution is a government re-organisation program run by quangos that gives them more centralised control and us the people less local democracy and at the same time denies the people of England an English identity.

David Cameron said that he was going to abolish regional government if his Conservative Party won the next general election yet his MPs rushed all the way from their party conference in Manchester to attend this quango meeting at Sandwell College. It appears he and his Conservative Party can be no more trusted than Gordon Brown and his New Labour Party.

John Stanhope
NC Member for West Midlands
Campaign for an English Parliament
01902 630110


We must not forget that it is the British that are denying England its political recognition, the British MPs we have sent to parliament to represent England, it is these who are to blame. Until we have our own English MPs not British MPs representing England nothing is going to change.

Wednesday, 7 October 2009

CEP RESPONSE TO DAVID CAMERON

David Cameron, speaking at the Conservative Party Conference, has suggested that there be an annual "Council of the Nations" with the aim of "keeping the family of the UK together". [1]

This is a laudable aim, however the question remains, "Who will speak for England?".

Certainly not David Cameron. After all, he has already repeatedly made it clear that he "does not want to be Prime Minister of England". [2]

So does this suggested "Council of the Nations" mean that the Conservatives will finally start to treat England with the respect due as a full member of the "family of the UK"?

Will our nationhood finally be acknowledged?

Or does his vision of a "family of the UK" mean continuing to treat England as if she were some mad Mrs Rochester [3], an embarrassment to be locked up in the attic and ignored?

David Wildgoose, vice Chairman CEP, mobile 07906 551417

[1] http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/wales/wales_politics/8290611.stm
[2] http://edinburghnews.scotsman.com/conservativeparty/David-Cameron-sticks-to-the.4550421.jp
[3] From the novel "Jane Eyre" by Charlotte Bronte

We must not forget that it is the British that are denying England its political recognition, the British MPs we have sent to parliament to represent England, it is these who are to blame. Until we have our own English MPs not British MPs representing England nothing is going to change.

Sunday, 4 October 2009

2000 Labour Party delegates applauded the negation of the English Democratic Tradition

Wednesday, 30, Sep 2009 12:00


2000 labour party delegates got to their feet in Brighton in the county of Sussex to applaud the repudiation by Gordon Brown of the very fundamentals of England's democratic tradition.
Yesterday afternoon the delegates to the Labour Party Conference -Cabinet Ministers, MPs, Peers, Party officials and 2000 delegates from across the United Kingdom got up and clapped and shouted their approval as Gordon Brown, MP for Kirkaldy and Cowdenbeath in Fifeshire in Scotland, announced measure after measure of new legislation for England, and only for England, in defiance of the very fundamentals of what the people of England founded their parliament for 800 years ago.
The CEP National Council has circulated its membership with a statement on this matter.
'Gordon Brown announced new legislation to place new teenage mothers in hostels rather than council houses; to provide free personal care for the very elderly in their homes, to limit pub opening hours, to control broken familes unable to control their children, to bring in additional controls on wild disruptive youngsters, to provide 250,000 free childcare places and to delay the introduction of ID cards. Very many people will indeed agree with these measures. That is not an issue that the CEP as such involves itself with. The CEP is concerned with democracy for England. When England gets its own parlament, its parliament will concern itself wholeheartedly with the welfare of the people of England.
'These measures concern matters which affect England only. The fundamental nature of English democracy as founded with the English Parliament in the 13th century and developed by the people of England over the past 800 years is that it is representative democracy. Law makers are accountable to the people who elect them. They are elected to be their representatives in their parliament. But Brown is not elected by any English voters. He is not accountable to any English voter for any of these specific measures. His action, and the conference applause for it, is a repudiation of this most fundamental aspect of the English democratic tradition.
CEP Media Unit. Tel: 01260 271139 Email: michael-knowles@tiscali.co.uk


We must not forget that it is the British that are denying England its political recognition, the British MPs we have sent to parliament to represent England, it is these who are to blame. Until we have our own English MPs not British MPs representing England nothing is going to change.

Friday, 25 September 2009

THE BBC IS A GOVERNMENT TOOL BIASED AGAINST ENGLAND

The BBC is now fully engaged without misgivings in the promotion of Scotland's culture, history, national pride and national identity. It hasn't just adapted itself to Scottish devolution, it is now playing a very pro-active part in its development and expansion. In itself there is no harm in that. However, the BBC is not doing the same for England even though English licence payers provide 85% of the BBC's income, indeed of the financial resources available to BBC Scotland.

On Tuesday September 22nd from 8 to 9pm BBC 4 presented a very informative and absorbing account of the life of Robert Bruce, his resistance to English rule, his victory over both Edward 1st and Edward 2nd of England, his achievement in establishing the independent kingdom of Scotland. The programme was presented by the strongly patriotic Oliver Neil of 'Coast' fame with his usual very admirable articulation and clarity. It had the added fascination of revealing, indeed it focussed on, the crucial part played by Scotland's Catholic hierarchy in support of Robert Bruce and in achieving Scottish independence.

'However', says Michael Knowles head of the CEP Media Unit, in his email bulletin to members, 'there is much more to this than meets the eye. The programme wasn't just history. It was history narrative with a purpose. There was balance, of course there was. Oliver did not spare Robert Bruce with his strictures. The cruelty and brutality of the man were unsparingly exposed. However, the fundamental theme wasn't Robert Bruce. The fundamental agenda was Scotland, its history, its resistance to England, its declarations, its role and its meaning for the Scottish people of today, a Scottish people now facing the choice about to be presented to it by its own Scottish government of remaining in a union with the same England that was as defined in relation to Scotland in the 13th century as it is today. That was what this programme was explictly about. It merits a second showing in order to enable viewers to perceive its agenda.

'I am not critical of the BBC presenting this sort of programme which is just one part of a much bigger BBC series on Scotland. There are many very good reasons to use the licence fee to promote national identity and a sense of patriotism, and to provide education -in a most fascinating and gripping way- in the history of Scotland. Indeed, BBC Scotland now exists primarily to promote Scotland and things Scottish.

'However, the English licence payer provides 85% of the BBC licence income. Yet there is no BBC England. The BBC admamantly refuses even to contemplate one. Its bias against England runs deep. It will not contemplate making such programmes, inspired by a similar political and educational zeal and patriotism, about England -its history and its culture. It is the most influential cultural power and influence in the UK. It should use its power in a balanced way. This island of ours consists of three distinct and ancient nations. Politically and culturally it is now returning to its historic roots. That is the time we live in. It is a tide that cannot be turned back. As it stands at present, the BBC is an agent for distortion when it should be a main agent, possibly the main agent, for a fair and balanced development of the forces about to shape this island's future.'


Michael Knowles CEP Media Unit. Tel: 01260 271139 email: michael-knowles@tiscali.co.uk

We must not forget that it is the British that are denying England its political recognition, the British MPs we have sent to parliament to represent England, it is these who are to blame. Until we have our own English MPs not British MPs representing England nothing is going to change.


Fight against British Racism – Fight against racism directed against England and the English

Monday, 21 September 2009

A council tax freeze in Scotland, a council tax hike in England

The background to the announcement by the Finance Secretary to the Scottish Parliament John Sweeney that householders in Scotland will have their council tax bills frozen until 2012 raises fundamental questions about justice and fairness and the whole point and purpose of the Union.The background to it is a £210 million deal to be funded by England’s taxpayers which has been worked out between the Scottish Parliament and the UK Treasury headed by Alistair Darling, MP for Edinburgh South West and supervised by Gordon Brown MP for Kirkaldy and Cowdenbeath. In England meanwhile council tax bills are set to rise by almost £50 for an average property next year in order to plug a £2.5 billion black hole in local authority finances caused by the economic downturn. An economic downturn caused in large part by the policies of both men.
There are two basic issues here,‘The English taxpayer is as much a member of the British state as any Scot and should therefore be treated equally. We look to our government for fairness. Why is it not forthcoming? Mr Brown signed the ‘Scottish claim of Right’ in March 1989 in which he and 300 other Scottish politicians signed an oath pledging to put the interests of their own Scottish nation before that of any other nation. Is he and Mr Darling exploiting their control of UK finances, 85% of which are produced by the English population, to provide a better deal for Scotland?
‘Secondly, where are our English MPs? They are elected by their English constituents to represent their interests. Yet they are always as silent as the grave on matters like this. By the time of the London Olympics Scottish families will be paying the same amount of council tax as they were in 2007. In England it may even have doubled. The injustice is beyond comprehension.’
At its September meeting in Birmingham on Saturday the 19th the CEP National Council confirmed its arrangements for the meeting ‘The Future of England’ in the House of Commons on November 18th, the day of the Queen’s Speech at which matters such as this will be discussed.

We must not forget that it is the British that are denying England its political recognition, the British MPs we have sent to parliament to represent England, it is these who are to blame. Until we have our own English MPs not British MPs representing England nothing is going to change.

Saturday, 19 September 2009

The role of an English Parliament

'The role of an English Parliament, which is now firmly on the UK political agenda, will be to focus minds on England's future as a distinct nation. It will come about because Scotland and Wales enabled by devolution are now re-establishing and re-creating their own separate identities, legislation, and cultures within the United Kingdom and the European Union. The more the two of them become separate and distinct, the more England does too and the more this island returns to its roots as three historic nations.

This is the message sent to the CEP membership by its National Council as the three main political parties prepare for their annual conferences following on the TUC conference and the new political year of 2009-10 begins, to conclude within 9 months with the General Election.

'The National Council has fully endorsed the statement of one of its members, Gareth Young from Brighton in Sussex, about what the role and purpose of the Campaign is. 'Our task,' writes Mr Young, 'is to foster a strong and confident English culture in which all the people of England take pride, making it more likely that newcomers from whatever faith and background can have confidence in it too.' Mr Young was thinking of the stresses and strains of England's society as it deals with the current depression, the appalling increase in unemployment especially among those under 25 years of age, the lack and the cost of housing for young couples , the threats to England's beautiful natural heritage and the stresses created by the modern juxta-position of different cultures. 'An English parliament and proper recognition of our one nationhood is a cornerstone of this,' he stated.

In its message the National Council re-asserted two of its basic principles which are of incalculable importance in our times. 'By English the CEP means anyone and everyone who lives in England, for whom England is home and future, regardless of origin, ethnicity, religion and politics. We are one nation. And the CEP expects everyone to live by the principle, achieved over centuries of hard struggle and bitter experience, as the bedrock of our English way of life, that democracy allows, indeed encourages, dissent and debate, yet demands that we all submit to the rule of law as laid down for all by Parliament. England is one community, one people, in which everyone should regard their fellow Englishmen and women as their family, their neighbours, sharing the same fortunes and misfortunes, the same land and the same weather, the same air and the same shores -their common land, their common shores, their common present and future. No one group should strive for advantage. Everyone should value what is good throughout society. England expects, and rightly expects, that each one of us, no matter what our background or religion or politics might be, works for the common good of all. That is what an English Parliament is about'.

Contact:
Michael Knowles CEP Media Unit.
Tel: 01260 2711239 Email: michael-knowles@ tiscali.co. uk

We must not forget that it is the British that are denying England its political recognition, the British MPs we have sent to parliament to represent England, it is these who are to blame. Until we have our own English MPs not British MPs representing England nothing is going to change.

No written constitution or any other major constitutional changes should be seriously discussed until the people of the United Kingdom have been given a chance by referendum to decide whether they want to stay in or come out of the European Union because that is fundamental to any decisions we have to make, and it effects the very existence of the nation state.