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Pule para o conteúdo
Picture of By Jim Hancock

By Jim Hancock

Tempo estranho para ser profissional

Pela primeira vez, Jim está de bom humor sobre a União Europeia, mas enfatiza a necessidade de manter boas relações com o bloco, apesar do mau manuseio da crise covid

Those of you who are kind enough to read my blogs, will know how opposed I was to us leaving the European Union. My belief in an ever-closer union, with the UK in it remains, but the chances of that happening have gone from remote to almost impossible following the Covid crisis.

The EU believes in doing things together and wanted to avoid vaccine nationalism within the bloc when effective jabs became available. The problem with action in solidarity is that it can take time to come up with solutions. An exception should have been made in this case. The political leaders should have told the Commission to act at speed to secure vaccine supplies.

Instead, they were slow, then complained when AstraZeneca honoured a contract placed first by the UK, then cast doubt on the efficacy of the vaccine and are now facing fresh total shutdowns as Covid 19 spreads once again.

The thing that has angered me most is the criticism of AstraZeneca. Some argue that the pharmaceutical industry should be nationalised because of its importance to health. I fear the long term, and often frustrating search for new drugs, would not pair happily with politicians unable to look beyond the next election. Anyway, AstraZeneca was a private company that pulled out all the stops and lost millions of pounds in potential profits to meet the emergency. Of course, they were morally obliged to act in the face of a global pandemic, but they don’t deserve EU politician’s criticism. It has been reported that some people in the leading drug companies are saying “never again”. I hope that is not true, but it is understandable.

Anti-EU politicians in Britain must be allowed their hour of gloating over the bloc’s discomfiture, but the government’s brilliant success with our vaccination programme, shouldn’t be used to widen the gap with Europe. We still need a measure of goodwill to iron out the many trade issues that remain unresolved after Brexit.

Devolution anyone?

Where are we on English devolution? If you watch the Downtown Den, you will have heard different views from our recent guests.

Steve Broomhead is the Chief Executive of Warrington Council. He’s been waiting for years while Whitehall dithers over plans to create a Combined Authority (with or without an elected mayor) for the town and Cheshire.

Ele nos disse que a centralização retornou. Ele citou como as autoridades locais foram ignoradas por trilhos e rastreamento e afirmou que a "tirania dos lances" havia retornado com o Fundo da Towns. Ele quer dizer com isso que, em vez de decisões que estão sendo tomadas localmente, os conselhos devem se conter fora do caminho para impressionar os ministros em Londres para dar -lhes dinheiro. Sua evidência era a mudança dos empregos do governo para o norte e o sucesso dos prefeitos eleitos. Enquanto isso, tenha uma Páscoa de rachaduras.

Tom Bloxham, the boss of Urban Splash, on the other hand believes devolution is still on course. His evidence was the moving of government jobs to the north and the success of elected mayors.

We must hope for more progress on devolution after the local elections. Meanwhile have a cracking Easter.

Downtown in Business

O negócio indescritível

Jim relata que os negócios estão apoiando o primeiro -ministro em adotar uma abordagem cautelosa na guerra tarifária global que está começando. Ele também olha para as próximas eleições. Com o trabalho e os conservadores impopulares, para onde irão os votos?

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Você pode me ouvir?

JIM Relatórios da Convenção do Norte em Preston. Ele pergunta veremos sua demanda por investimento vencer em um momento em que o clamor cresce para um aumento maciço nos gastos com defesa?

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