Navarian

joined 2 years ago
MODERATOR OF
 

The 2019 Labour Manifesto was an inspiration, and I am immensely proud to have stood on it.

For the first time in my life here was a manifesto offering a transformative vision to create a fairer, more equal, greener, socialist society for all based on equality, dignity and social justice, – in my home, Cynon Valley, and across Cymru.

Boris Johnson’s victory was a devastating blow to me, and to socialists everywhere.

Since that election we’ve suffered almost five more years of a Tory UK government. The result is a surprise to no-one; increasing levels of inequality and poverty, especially child poverty; an acceleration in the climate crisis; crumbling public services; the worst cost-of-living crisis in living memory; living standards collapsing.

 

We at the Campaign for the Protection of Rural Wales (CPRW), the Welsh countryside charity, call on all political parties to commit to involving local communities in planning decisions and to integrating energy policies that support and benefit rural Wales. Originally named the Council for the Preservation of Rural Wales, the CPRW has worked to secure the protection and enhancement of the country’s landscapes and environment since 1928.

We’re committed and passionate about safeguarding our countryside for the benefit of our communities, biodiversity, rivers, landscapes, language, and culture, and our visitors. We care about our countryside and want people to enjoy and discover its beauty and bounty, and our local members work hard to make this happen. Musician, author, and broadcaster Cerys Matthews is CPRW’s new President. She’s passionate about the Welsh countryside and our values, vision, and cause.

 

Unelected Welsh Labour officials are threatening to impose a new leader on the party’s Senedd group if Vaughan Gething is ousted, according to senior Labour sources.

If that happened, Wales would be plunged into an unprecedented political crisis.

NationCymru has been told that the threat reflects a growing realisation among those who support Mr Gething that his position as Welsh Labour leader and First Minister is unsustainable and that he will have to step down.

Weeks before he narrowly defeated Jeremy Miles in the leadership election in March, we revealed how Mr Gething had accepted donations totalling £200,000 from a waste company owned by businessman David Neal, who had previously been handed two suspended prison sentences for dumping toxic sludge in the Gwent Levels protected wetland landscape near Cardiff.

 

Wales should get an extra £4bn in funding from the HS2 rail project and more control over its natural resources, Plaid Cymru's leader has said.

Party leader Rhun ap Iorwerth called for "fair" funding for Wales and a £20 a week increase to child benefit in its manifesto for the general election.

He backed a "fairer" tax system with increased windfall taxes on energy companies at the manifesto launch in Cardiff, and for powers over policing to be handed to the Senedd.

Mr ap Iorwerth appealed to Welsh voters not to give Labour a "free pass" in the general election.

 

The supporters of Covid-19 Bereaved Families for Justice Cymru (CBFJ Cymru), Welsh Cladiators, Save Northern Meadows and Save Penrose are ordinary people animated by a sense of social justice or a desire to do what is right for their local communities.

Yet, the conduct of the Welsh Labour Government has now forged an unusual sense of unity and purpose amongst this relatively diverse group of campaigners. Key to their critique of the Welsh Government is its failure to listen to citizens, coupled with a propensity to patronise those who seek to legitimately question or challenge government policies and decisions.

 

The Welsh Government has refused to disclose the cost of a trip to India undertaken by Vaughan Gething and three officials in a failed bid to persuade Tata Steel to scrap its plan to make nearly 2,000 workers redundant at Port Talbot.

The First Minister was criticised for engaging in “performative politics” by travelling to Mumbai when Tata’s chief executive TV Narendran had been in London the previous week and made it clear that the group would not reverse its plans.

 

In February I reported how the Deaf community was failed by the Welsh Government. It had stood by and, in the face of objections, allowed Gwent Police to take control of the sign language interpreting facility for Deaf people in Wales and create the Welsh Interpreter and Translation Service (WITS).

The Minister for Social Justice Jane Hutt MS, Maria Battle and Professor C Janczewski – Chairs of the Cardiff and Vale University Health Board – and Councillor Chris Weaver, Cardiff Council Cabinet Member for Finance, had all apologised for not consulting the Deaf community prior to WITS taking control of British Sign Language (BSL) interpreting in 2010. Only Gwent Police, the instigator of the WITS project, failed to offer an apology.

 

The Labour Party’s general election campaign director in Wales falsely claimed that he wrote offensive tweets about disabled and gay people years long before his involvement in Labour politics, it has emerged.

At the weekend we reported how Stewart Owadally, a close ally of Vaughan Gething whose recent Welsh Labour leadership campaign he managed, had written a series of obnoxious tweets between 2009 and 2014.

One, addressed to Nick Griffin, the former leader of the far-right British National Party when he was a Member of the European Parliament between 2009 and 2014, stated: “You can’t spell you spaz” .

The second tweet, in which Mr Owadally responded to another Twitter user, said: “I ANSWERED F***ING QUESTIONS!!! Sorry, you’re a total idiot. Can’t be bothered with you any more. Utter halfwit. Mong.”

In the third, Mr Owadally wrote: “Apparently have turned into a total retard tonight”

 

By now, you've probably heard there's a UK general election on 4 July.

Members of Parliament - or MPs - will be elected to the House of Commons, and the leader of the party with the most MPs will become the new prime minister.

Wales - like Scotland and Northern Ireland - also has a devolved government - meaning some powers have been passed from the House of Commons to the Welsh Parliament, or Senedd, in Cardiff Bay.

 

From pensioner poverty to digital exclusion, from keeping homes warm to bank closures, the Age Cymru manifesto Our Blueprint for Wales highlights key challenges facing older people in the run up to July’s general election. We urge the next UK Government to help tackle pensioner poverty by making sure older people get what they’re entitled to and are supported in other ways.

This general election matters for older people. Worn down by the pandemic and cost of living crisis, many are yearning for a more positive future for themselves, their families, and generations to come – and are eager to help bring it about.

 

Nuclear disarmament of the UK is something "we all should be aiming for", according to Plaid Cymru's leader Rhun ap Iorwerth.

But he said the UK's defence force should be "well-funded", able to "play their part in defending ourselves in peacekeeping roles" and ensures the welfare of military personnel after they leave service.

His comments come after Conservative minister Penny Mordaunt said in a general election debate Russia's leader Vladimir Putin would doubt Labour's willingness to use nuclear arms.

"I'm against the nuclear deterrent because I don't think that is the kind of defence that we need and should be building in the 21st Century," Mr ap Iorwerth told BBC Radio Wales' Sunday Supplement.

"We absolutely, yes, need to be making sure that we have adequate defence forces.

"I don't think that our place here in Wales is to be talking about nuclear deterrence.

 

A substantial majority of Nation.Cymru readers have indicated that they believe the First Minister should resign after losing a no-confidence vote in the Senedd last week.

The no confidence motion against Vaughan Gething was passed by 29 votes to 27, with all opposition members supporting it. Two Labour MSs – Hannah Blythyn and Lee Waters – were said to be ill and unable to vote.

The motion was non-binding and will not force Mr Gething to stand aside from his role as First Minister but the result is embarrassing for him, the Welsh Government and the UK Labour Party.

2,103 people voted in our self-selecting poll which ran for two days and closed at 6pm this evening (8 June). 91% of participants thought that the First minister should resign after losing the no-confidence vote.

[–] Navarian@lemm.ee 11 points 2 years ago (4 children)

I'm assuming we're referencing the absurd price of it? I wouldn't be caught dead paying that much for a slice of pizza and a drink.

[–] Navarian@lemm.ee 5 points 2 years ago

For what its worth, my country has had a far right party in power for the last 13 years, and I still want this.

[–] Navarian@lemm.ee 26 points 2 years ago

Apple may have a monopoly on teens in the US, but the fact that most android phones are cheaper, more powerful, more customisable and look better, will keep Google in the top spot with android.

Also, and I realise this is anecdotal, but where I'm from in the UK, having an iPhone stands you out as a bit of a dullard. Wasted money and all that.

[–] Navarian@lemm.ee 12 points 2 years ago (4 children)

This, frankly, is an incredible move. Hopefully us Europeans take notice and consider implementing something similar.

[–] Navarian@lemm.ee 7 points 2 years ago

This is interesting as I have had much the opposite effect. I very rarely see anything Linux related. Though honestly I don't use Linux so that works just fine for me.

[–] Navarian@lemm.ee 34 points 2 years ago (6 children)

That hacker news bit got me, I won't lie.

[–] Navarian@lemm.ee 4 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Moderation log is public here - the reasoning you're looking for could be in there.

[–] Navarian@lemm.ee 2 points 2 years ago

Be the change! On a real note though, I feel your pain.

[–] Navarian@lemm.ee 4 points 2 years ago

Hey, thanks!

And you're pretty spot on here, unfortunately.

[–] Navarian@lemm.ee 1 points 2 years ago

To be fair, I did say almost this exact thing in the article.

[–] Navarian@lemm.ee 3 points 2 years ago (2 children)

Can't help but agree with the second part, thanks for the encouragement.

[–] Navarian@lemm.ee 22 points 2 years ago

Boost for Lemmy

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