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Thursday, 27 July, 2006

 | James Gray on the Middle East |
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Living life relatively normally in the UK feels odd while at least potentially the world heads towards some kind of a catastrophe.
For me it was a busy week in Parliament, including a fascinating dinner with assorted generals and the like whose brave show of ability and keenness to carry out all that the Government might throw at them seemed to me to be a pretty thinly veiled attempt to cover up the real message that they are just about at full stretch now. As the world becomes an ever more dangerous place, our superbly professional and willing armed services are being asked to do more and more with less and less. It cannot be allowed to go on. But apart from that high level discussion, together with some reasonable debate and questioning in Parliament about the international crisis, including a full day debate on Thursday, life went on more or less as normal.
For me that included speaking at the Wessex Association of Chambers of Commerce lunch in Chippenham’s Olympiad, then again at the official opening of the extension to the Charter Primary School, a tour of the North Wilts Festival, an open meeting in Lacock to discuss housing, traffic and even the outbreak of molehills on the cricket pitch, and the annual skittles match between the Conservative Association and Club. Then on Saturday the opening of the MARS Appeal fete in Malmesbury followed by a Surgery there, a dash to Bowood to be just too late for the Duchess of Cornwall’s official opening of the dog show, a speech to the Federation of Small Businesses annual lunch, a visit to 25 gardens in Wootton Bassett to judge the Bassett in Bloom competition, yet another speech at a grand drinks party in Sherston, a party in Colerne, and finally the Mayor’s Songs of Praise back in Wootton Bassett,
All very jolly, and all good constituency stuff. But throughout it all I could not help constantly remembering that at that moment, Israeli troops were preparing to invade Lebanon, that 2000 Hezbollah rockets were hitting Israel, that Iraq was in meltdown and our troops in ever greater danger in Afganistan. Its not exactly fiddling while Rome burns; nor is it the phoney war exactly, because we all hope so much that it will not escalate. But it nonetheless leaves me with an odd feeling of keeping up appearances while great and grave matters are unfolding overseas.
Parliament has two more days to go, although there is much talk of the necessity of recalling us if the Middle East explodes further. We all hope and pray that that will not be necessary.
Thursday, 20 July, 2006

 | James Gray on The World |
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The World has become a most terrifying place in the space of little more than a week:
- North Korea tested its Ballistic missiles
- Iran continues to defy the UN with Uranium enrichment, and will almost certainly develop a nuclear bomb whose purpose would be the eradication of Israel.
- Nuclear powers India and Pakistan are glaring at each other across Kashmir, and who can say what the end result of the ghastly bomb outrage in Mumbai may be?
- Iraq is in Civil War, with the US and UK uncomfortably in the middle of it. But would our withdrawal make it better or worse?
- Afganistan has seen the heaviest fighting since 2001. UK sends 1000 more troops, but is it anything like enough?
- Hezbollah and Hamas presumably attacked Israel as a deliberate act of provocation
- Israel’s reaction, while perfectly understandable, may be a bit heavy handed, and could become much worse unless Hezbollah stop their rocket assault on Israeli cities.
All of this seems to me to create an appalling cocktail ready to explode in all of our faces. I am sot sure whether I am more reminded of the Balkans in 1914, when it was the assassination of the Archduke Franz Ferdinand at Sarajevo which bizarrely enough sparked off the greatest war the world has ever seen; or of the 1930s, when the civilised nations had their heads firmly buried in the sand and failed to recognise the threat to world peace from Adolf Hitler. Neither historical precedent is very comfortable. But ignore history, and you will be condemned to repeat it.
Matters as grave as these should not be mired in party politics. And anyhow, I am not sure that we Conservatives necessarily have better answers than Labour. But Labour are in Government, and I do despair of the way they are facing up to all of this. The Prime Minister’s Middle East Envoy, Lord Levy, is arrested under suspicion of selling peerages, and presumably is preoccupied with saving his own skin, although there is at least a risk that he will take the PM down with him. Neither Mrs Beckett at the Foreign Office, nor Des Brown at Defence, who failed to turn up at the Commons for a debate on Afghan matters, exactly fill me with much confidence. The 1000 troops on their way to Afganistan means the dropping of the rules for gaps between deployments, and 40% of them are TA or reservists. That’s the reality of the Gordon Brown-led defence cuts we have seen over the last few years. And in the middle of all of this, Mr Blair will go on holiday, and leave Mr Prescott in charge. Playing croquet while the world burns.
What we need is true statesmanship; vision of the world as we want it to be, and understanding of the world as militant Islamicists want it to be; and some attempt to reassure them that their vision, religion and way of life are to some degree at least possible. We need to calm everyone down. My fear is that neither Mr Blair, Mr Bush, nor the bureaucratic and slow moving UN have the ability to do so.
Thursday, 13 July, 2006

 | James Gray, Butterfly |
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I am full of admiration for people like Boris Johnson, who are able to churn out column after column, with it never sounding tired, and full of insight and thoughtfulness. I hope my readership thinks that they get reasonable value for money. Gazette Editor, Gary Lawrence is always telling me that I’ve got too much in about Westminster, and general political knocking copy (qui moi?); other good friends nonetheless tell me that a regular diary of my activities and events is dull and boastful. But then the Column is about “Wiltshire and Westminster”, so I think a bit of both is fair enough, even if that risks satisfying neither critic. Anyhow, it’s right that you should know how I spend my week, since you all elected me, and since you now pay my wages. So here’s how last week looked.
After driving to London, Monday was a muddle of minor committees and admin, with there being no Parliamentary votes. Tuesday saw me wading through piles of accumulated paper, voting until 1130 at night, and dining with the Countryside Alliance. An early morning drive to Wiltshire on Wednesday for a TV interview at Lyneham, lunch near Chippenham, and then train back to London for a 5 o’clock meeting with my defence policy group; after which umpteen votes in Parliament interrupt the North Wiltshire Business Association Dinner which is being addressed by Shadow Minister Jonathan Djanogly. A business breakfast on Thursday is the only diversion from my main preoccupation of the day – preparing for and then speaking in the debate on Armed Services personnel. Manage to bring up the Hercules question, and some technicalities raised with me by IX (Supply) Regiment at Hullavington, as well as more general points about what we are doing in Iraq and Afghanistan. Train home late.
Friday saw me taking the car to Chippenham Motors, who repair it quickly and efficiently, then cutting the grass preparatory to the 60/70 ladies who arrive for lunch in our garden at Slaughterford; an hour or two canvassing for the Colerne by-election; a public meeting in Yatesbury to discuss the future of the old hangars on the airfield; and an evening reception at Kellaways, near Chippenham. Two packed surgeries at Chippenham and Corsham on Saturday morning, a lunch in Colerne, and an afternoon at Lackham with Prince Philip celebrating the 50th Anniversary of the excellent Duke of Edinburgh’s Award scheme make me feel justified in taking Saturday evening off. Sunday should be a day of rest, but the desk beckons, and in the afternoon I am pleased to be asked to read the lesson at The Altzheimer’s service in the lovely old Lacock Parish Church. The Gastard Barbeque and Crudwell Strawberry Fair will have to manage without me in favour of a bit of domestic R and R.
It sometimes feels as if there is little logic, nor pattern in the MP’s week. I think I am less disciplined than some. I tend to accept all invitations which come my way, rather than just focussing on those things which will in some way or another enhance my career, my party or my constituency. Enoch Powell it was who said that an MP should be like a butterfly lightly flitting from one flower to the next in the hope of cross-pollinating. Hard to say whether I quite qualify as a butterfly, and the House of Commons Doctor whom I see on Tuesday tells me I could do with losing half a stone or so. But I do hope that somewhere in the midst of all that frenetic activity there may be just a little worthwhile cross-pollination!
Thursday, 06 July, 2006

 | James Gray on By-Elections |
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Funny things, by-elections. On Thursday last week we had two. Blaenau Gwent was a disaster for the Labour Party, with an independent winning in the heart of the Labour homelands, once the seat of Nye Bevan and Michael Foot. And it was pretty much of a disaster for we Tories in Bromley, where our vote largely stayed on the golf course, slashing our majority and delivering what the Liberals will no doubt try to tell us was a triumphant result for them, despite the fact that their vote was hardly improved on their General Election result. Our majority slumped simply because our people could not be bothered to vote.
It seems to me that the main lesson to be learned from both by-elections is not so much that any one party is doing better or worse than any other. By-elections are never representative of what will happen in a subsequent General Election anyhow. The real lesson is that lots of voters are pretty disaffected by mainstream politics of any kind at all. In Wales they voted for an independent; and in true-blue Bromley they stayed at home. There’s an important message here for all of us who care passionately about Parliamentary democracy: The people are hacked off with us and want to see a refreshed, new, honest type of politics.
Having visited Dyson in Malmesbury with David Cameron last Thursday, he and I then spent the weekend together (along with 200 other MPs and assorted apparatchiks, I hasten to add,) at a secret location in Buckinghamshire to discuss precisely that matter. It’s not just that we Conservatives want to win the election, although we most certainly do. It’s not just that we believe that so many aspects of our great country are going so badly wrong, and thirst to put it right, although again we most certainly do. It’s that we want to reconnect with the people. We want to offer a kind of politics which is responsive, accountable, honest, deliverable. We want to be representative of British people as they are today, not as they were 20 years ago, nor even as we would like them to be.
So our concentration on traditional Tory policy areas – immigration, law and order, Europe, tax cutting, on which we have majored for the last three disastrous general elections – are being edged out in favour of those things which really matter to the vast majority of people in Britain today, and in particular to those people who have not voted Conservative, despite their innate conservative leanings. And those issues are better delivery of health and education; the environment both global and local; and the quality of life which we believe people have the right to expect in modern society. General Well Being, or GWB, is almost as important nowadays as GDP.
So we spent most of the weekend deliberating on exactly what that change of emphasis means in practical terms; how to put together a policy portfolio which reflects and delivers it; and how to communicate the message to a public who, we believe, are hungry for it. If we can do all of that, we believe that not only will it be an attractive message which will return the Conservative Party to power, but also, and perhaps just as important in the aftermath of the by-elections, will help to restore the electorate’s faith in our democratic processes, in politics, Parliament and Government.
At a time when people round the world are losing their lives in pursuit of democracy, it seems to me to be our most fundamental duty to restore that faith in our domestic democratic institutions. I hope that our thinking weekend away may play an important part in that process.
Wednesday, 05 July, 2006

 | Caroline Jackson on Europe & Church Organs |
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This month I finally unravelled the question of whether new EU legislation on dangerous substances is going to silence church organs. One of the penalties of being an MEP is that from time to time the press - usually the British press - get hold of a scare story and run hard with it for a bit. Then they drop it and silence falls. When eventually it is proved that the scare is just a scare they never print the outcome. So this is an attempt for once to give you the end of the story. Let me explain.
Shortly before the last European elections I came under heavy pressure, as Chairman of the Environment Committee, from enthusiastic colleagues, the Commission and the country then acting as President of the EU. They all wanted new environmental laws adopted as fast as possible, because otherwise the elections would delay them. At issue were draft directives on the testing and approval of chemicals; on the recycling of household batteries; on the recycling of electronic waste (known as the WEEE directive), and (accompanying it) on the restriction of hazardous substances (known as the RoHS directive). I had to give way on WEEE and RoHS but held firm on the others. I could foresee lots of trouble with implementation and costs if we went too fast. I was right. The twin laws, WEEE and RoHS, were adopted in great haste, and with little knowledge of the probable impact.
Now we find that all countries are having difficulty in lining up the electronic equipment manufacturers in order to get their co-operation in setting up systems for the collection of electronic waste; meanwhile local authorities are concerned that they will have to pay some of the collection costs, which should fall entirely on producers. Small retailers are worried about the cost to them of the obligation to take back old irons, toasters etc that they may not have sold in the first place. And there is the question of precisely what RoHS covers. It bans such substances as lead, cadmium and mercury from electrical items, but how widely does the ban in fact apply?
This led to the idea, fostered by enthusiastic journalists, that church organs, being dependent on electric motors, could very broadly be defined as covered by the directive, so the lead in their organ pipes would have to go. Thus a poorly drafted directive, if taken to the ultimate in a “what if” scenario, offered the classic EU threat not only to the use of lead to repair old organ pipes, but to the building of new pipes in the traditional material. This was a possibility never raised in our parliamentary debates. So I contacted the Commission and the UK Department of Trade. No reply from the latter but the Commissioner for the Environment, Mr Dimas, replied as follows: “The aim of the Directive is to protect human health and the environment from certain hazardous substances, including lead in electric and electronic equipment. Given the widespread use of electrically powered or controlled components in products, the scope of the directive is wide. My services are constantly reviewing borderline cases However it is clearly not the intention to cover every single piece of equipment that somehow uses electricity…Having assessed the views of a large number of Member States, we are of the opinion that pipe organs installed in churches, concert halls etc do not constitute “Consumer Equipment” in the sense of Category 4 of the WEEE directive. Accordingly they are not within the scope of the RoHS directive and no exemptions are needed. I can confirm that the RoHS directive does not apply to existing organs (i.e. put on the market before July 2006) nor to the use of lead for future repairs to their pipes”.
It took us another week and several thumb screws to extract from the Commission that the law does not apply to new church organs either. And they haven’t even started work on musical socks yet.
And yet a survey in June showed that environmental issues were top of the hit parade of issues that most people (86% in the survey) thought should be the subject of EU laws (tax and cultural issues were at the bottom of the list). What we forget is that, to be effective, laws on the environment, like those promoting the Common Market, are bound to be extremely complex. MEPs’ work is unglamorous partly because we have to spend so much time disentangling stories like the one I have told you above.
One way to make sure that Member States implement such demanding new legislation is to make their commitment to it very public. Conservative MEPs have always argued that the adoption of new EU laws in the Council of Ministers should take place in public. This month our government, having pursued the call for transparency with some enthusiasm hitherto, was the only one to oppose opening up all Council meetings to public view. Mrs Beckett was slated for this but I have some sympathy with her. What we need is the TV cameras present in the final session when countries sign on the dotted line. Then they can be held to their public commitment. Televising all the Council meetings will simply mean that the negotiations that matter move into the shadows of the ghastly Council building.
The highlights of the parliamentary session in Strasbourg included a debate on the closure of Guantanamo Bay detention centre. This was well-informed because a delegation of MEPs had just returned from there, including Conservative MEP James Elles. He was told that there are currently 319 detainees who are identified as “enemy combatants” and are judged too dangerous to release. James concluded that “Having visited Guantanamo I now feel that if you close this detention centre, what is going to happen to these dangerous people? If they are released it is probably going to make he war on terror worse, rather than better.” He reports that the favourite reading material in the camp library is Harry Potter.
We approved a £30 billion EU research programme this month, some of which will go to controversial stem cell research in the countries that allow it. We also had two environment debates, on a new law on groundwater quality and on a scheme to make environmental data more freely available. The latter is worrying the Ordnance Survey whose arrangements as a state agency able to charge the public for its maps etc are unique in the EU. Some other countries charge very high prices for any access to their data and the drive to completely free access imperils the OS position. I am working to preserve the status quo – a good position for a Conservative.
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