Thursday 28 June 2012

It’s not heartless to replace welfare with work - Telegraph.

It’s not heartless to replace welfare with work - Telegraph:
"The fundamentals upon which today’s benefits system was built were straightforward enough. They represented a moral response to the privations and penury of the urban poor in the years after the industrial revolution. The aim was to help people to help themselves and to provide a safety net for those who couldn’t, or who found themselves in temporary difficulties either through illness or unemployment. An essential principle for Chadwick and Lloyd George – and for William Beveridge, too – was that benefits should not be set so high as to deter a low-paid worker from taking a job  [see Medicine Through Time GCSE History textbook! - RWG]. They all recognised the dangers of creating what we now call a dependency culture, whereby state payments are so generous that the rational choice for recipients is to live on them rather than take what might be an arduous and poorly rewarded job."
....and Tom Chapman was there to witness the speech!!!! Chappers perhaps you could comment below on the speech and the atmosphere in the crowd. Is there any 'Thick of It' style political gossip to tell?



Does this represent the end of Cameron's 'compassionate Conservatism' or is it a reassertion of it? Do these ideas fit in with the coalition's current 'universal credit' which will be slowly introduced over the next couple of years?


Predictably Toynbee (a leftist's leftist - and therefore a gift for synopticity marks in the exam) counters (full article) here...

Behind in the polls, David Cameron cleaves to his one truly popular policy:cutting welfare. Pollsters say people want it cut even more. His speech hits every button, stirring up those on quite low incomes against those on very low incomes, dividing and ruling, distracting from the lifestyle of the rulers. With the rottweiler tendency on his backbenches growing restless, he throws them the vulnerable to chew on – all those luxuriating in the "culture of entitlement" on £71 a week unemployment pay. Politically, it works well – for now.
A red mist of despair poured from children's and disability charities, stunned at yet another assault on those they try to defend. Already the £18bn benefit cut is "without historical or international precedent," according to the Institute for Fiscal Studies. Cameron's 17 "ideas" may not all see the light of day, but another £10bn will be cut: housing benefit and US-style benefit time limits yield the big money.

....and a full scale attack via Guardian editorial here (if it's in an editorial, then the paper really mean it!

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Sunday 24 June 2012

Interesting critique of proposal to return to O-Level/CSE split in Telegraph

Proposed return to O-Levels/CSEs/Gove/Selection Controversy Summer 2012

I've left the controversy to bubble along for a few days to give the best articles some time to emerge. Here are a few....






Useful links here:
Guardian






Now for the Telegraph:


Thursday 21 June 2012

Wednesday 20 June 2012

April 2012: Gove on new powers for teachers to improve discipline

http://www.education.gov.uk/inthenews/inthenews/a0076417/new-powers-for-teachers-to-improve-discipline-in-schools

Monday 18 June 2012

The new primary curriculum

The school curriculum: it's the non-core bits that stay with you for life http://gu.com/p/38b7g

Wednesday 13 June 2012

Critique of Coalition's attacks on 'troubled families'

These letter's are full of opinion from different angles so very useful. Click HERE

Critique of Coalition policies that allegedly vilify the vulnerable

A gift to students seeking synoptic points - Polly Toynbee, leftist critic of the Coalition's welfare policies. Click HERE.  For balance I've included a typical anti-welfare article from the Daily Mail here. The right often tend to claim that those on benefits get too much (see the Mail) while the left tend to argue that abuse of the system is the exception to the rule (see Toynbee).
Polly Toynbee

Monday 4 June 2012

Full letter from MPs to David Cameron on wind power subsidies - Telegraph

Full letter from MPs to David Cameron on wind power subsidies - Telegraph: "As Members of Parliament from across the political spectrum, we have grown more and more concerned about the Government’s policy of support for on-shore wind energy production.
In these financially straightened times, we think it is unwise to make consumers pay, through taxpayer subsidy, for inefficient and intermittent energy production that typifies on-shore wind turbines."

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Video: How noisy is a wind farm? - Telegraph

Video: How noisy is a wind farm? - Telegraph:
Not particularly scientific this, but think the Telegraph appear to be saying that wind farms aren't really that noisy until you get up really close, and certainly no worse than living by a main road.
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Sunday 3 June 2012

George Osborne demands massive cuts to windfarm subsidies | Politics | The Observer

George Osborne demands massive cuts to windfarm subsidies | Politics | The Observer: "Plans for dramatic cuts in government subsidies for onshore windfarms are being drawn up by the Treasury in a move that seriously undermines David Cameron's claim to be running "the greenest government ever".

The Observer has learned that George Osborne is demanding cuts of 25% in subsidies, a reduction the industry says would "kill dead" the development of wind power sites. The Treasury's stance has put the chancellor at loggerheads with the Liberal Democrat energy secretary Ed Davey, whose party strongly supports more renewable energy."

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