Tag Archives: London

It really would try the patience of a saint…

60-pounds

It’s has happened again. What? I hear you ask. Nothing simpler than another occasion in which those in Lib Dem HQ in London forget about us in Northern Ireland.

It is often said to me that the Lib Dems don’t make policy on issues affecting Northern Ireland only – that is on issues devolved to the Northern Ireland Assembly. Last time I looked, taxation was not one of them. It may be in the future, but at present it is not.

So why, does Tim Gordon’s great new website asking us what we would do with £60 extra in every month, not allow people from Northern Ireland to answer? (more…)

Leave a Comment

Saving a Scottish Institution: what we all can do to save the Caledonian Sleeper

Charles Kennedy with the Caledonian Sleeper

Charles Kennedy with the Caledonian Sleeper (from libdemvoice.org)

There was a time when travelling from Northern Ireland to London you could travel by sleeper from Stranraer Harbour to Euston – and indeed in the same manner in the opposite direction. Even as late as 1990 this was possible. However, sadly, this is now no longer possible, you have to take a train up to Glasgow to be able to connect with the sleeper. I know that I have enjoyed travelling using the services of the Caledonian Sleeper when I have needed to be in London fresh-faced for a meeting in the morning. But it seems that we may not be able to use this in the future, as the Nationalist Government in Scotland is questioning the service at all.

The SNP Government in Holyrood has launched a consultation into the future of Scotland’s Railways. In particular the Caledonian Sleeper has some major questions asked about it.

I am with Charles Kennedy on this one

New trains could bring our sleeper services up to the standard of those on the continent, which can carry more passengers in greater comfort. This would not only improve the service, but bring it to a more sustainable position financially. Thankfully, the UK Government has made an offer of £50 million – half the cost of replacing the trains – to Holyrood, as long as the Scottish Government is willing to put up the rest of the funds. This gives us the opportunity to secure the future of the sleeper for decades ahead– it’s a chance we can’t afford to miss.

I’ll be fighting tooth and nail to save our sleeper, and I urge everyone to respond to the consultation before it closes on the 20th February…

(LibDemVoice.org)

To respond to the consultation you can do so either online (at www.transportscotland.gov.uk) or by writing to Transport Scotland, 58 Port Dundas Road, Glasgow G4 0HF.

I wonder what could be done in between the two Executives (at Stormont and at Holyrood) to improve rail services from Northern Ireland to London. Are we going to have to travel south from Belfast on the Enterprise and then south-east from Holyhead after the ferry there, to London? And there doesn’t appear to be a sleeper from there….

Previous campaigns to retain the Caledonian Sleeper service have been successful, but only with hard work and commitment from campaigners around the country.

Leave a Comment

In London today but not for #Activism2011

EasyJet tailfin at Aldergrove International Ai...

Image via Wikipedia

I’m sitting in Aldergrove Belfast International Airport waiting for a flight to London Luton at the beginning of another weekend in Bedford as a result of being Chairman of FLAGS

Having a quick look on Twitter whilst I eat my breakfast, it seems that the whole of the NUS is on the move at this early hour to get to London. I, too, am heading to London but unlike my fellow members of the NUS I’m not going to their Activism 2011 event. I wish I were.

However, I am going to meet up with some old friends to pray for the souls of the Faithful Departed at the Latin Mass Society‘s Requiem Mass in Westminster Cathedral this afternoon. That’s why I’m travelling on a Saturday morning in a dark suit. I do, of course, have my Oxford Newman Society tie on – I wonder how many of my other ONS friends will be present.

A porta ínferi. Erue, Dómine, ánimas eórum. Requiéscant in pace. Amen.

Leave a Comment

Is banning all marches really justified? Why not learn from N.Ireland?

Coat of arms of Tower Hamlets London Borough C...

Image via Wikipedia

So HM’s Principal Secretary of State for the Home Department has decided to ban all marches in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets and four neighbouring London Boroughs for a period of 30 days.

Why is this felt necessary? Because the Metropolitan Police applied for this ban as they

consider that it would result in serious public disorder and that placing restrictions or conditions on such a march – for example its duration, location and size – would not be enough to prevent the disorder

Will this really make a difference? And with it all marches are banned because the police feel they cannot police the marches of the English Defence League. What will happen? Will the police be able to stop a march?

Banning marches has been tried before in the United Kingdom. In 1971 all marches were banned in Northern Ireland. We all know what happened in Londonderry when the banned Civil Rights March still took place which resulted in many deaths on 30 January 1972.

Let us hope that the Police in London will not see the same results.

Leave a Comment

#prayforlondon to help with #riotcleanup: prayer is useful

It has been said on Twitter that

However, we should all be mindful that all

God wants us to pray for others, however we may feel about them (or even if we don’t personally know them). Such prayers remind us that one way or another, we are all in this journey towards holieness together. Your prayers can do a world of good for others, just as their prayers can help you!

from Our Catholic Prayers

For those of us not able to help practically with the clean up, prayer is one way to assist, which is what I said in my response to @gray

Therefore, I implore the assistance of the Trinity, our Blessed Lady, and all the Angels and Saints to assist those who are undertaking the important work of cleaning up. What better way than the Litany of the Saints… After all: a few more angels around would do wonders to the clean up.

Leave a Comment