
Good news one of my favourite bloggers Dr Crippen or NHS Blog Doc is back after a too long absence of three months.
NHS Blog Doctor: Crippen redux
Blogging from Deep in Aberdeenshire. A Bit of Politics, Some Photos, Some Family Life and some Computer bits (when I'm bored)
"A line will be going out from the Scotland Office soon telling all departments to conduct a very careful audit of anything that is to be shared with the Scottish Executive, looking for any information that could be used or manipulated for political purposes by the SNP."This is mainly because they have been embarrassed by the revelations by Alex Salmond and what the real reasons were for the withdrawal of this pledge.
"The CSR ... announced by the UK Government today gives details of the level of funding the Scottish Government and UK Departments will receive over the next three years."As we expected, this is a tight settlement, with a lower rate of annual growth than we have experienced since devolution."
Both sides are saying it means different things, one that the government figures were correct and the other that they have been manipulated to get the lowest possible increases to Scotland and then to squeeze them even harder.
Alex Salmond, the First Minister, revealed Westminster's original foot-and-mouth compensation proposals yesterday. The First Minister issued a draft of Mr Benn's speech which had been given to the Scottish Government on Friday ahead of Mr Benn's statement in the House.
The draft statement contained a paragraph saying Scotland would receive £8.1 million to deal with the foot-and-mouth disaster.
The Environment Secretary was due to say:
"I have also agreed with the Chief Secretary to the Treasury that Scotland should receive £8.1 million and Wales £6.5 million to assist them in countering the impacts of foot-and-mouth on their livestock farmers."
But by Monday, when Mr Benn delivered the statement to MPs, the paragraph had disappeared.
He instead said:
"I am announcing today a package of assistance for the English livestock sector, amounting to £12.5 million. The devolved administrations are proposing to introduce their own schemes."This looks like a typical piece of Labour sleaze, attempting a bribe for the "non-election" and then dropping it to save a little money, especially if the SNP will look bad.
“While the Treasury may have sound reasons for simplifying CGT, it would appear the consequences for employees saving through employee share plans had not been fully assessed. These apparently unintended consequences contradict the government’s stated commitment to encouraging long-term saving and to its support for wider share ownership,” it said.So another "hidden" tax from Gordon. As they said it's all in the Detail.
In Aberdeen you can tell when it's freezing: lawyers resort to sticking their hands in their own pockets.It continues
No need for that, in Westminster, where Alistair Darling, the Aberdeen-educated lawyer, stuck his hands in the Tories' pockets, pulled out some policies, and claimed them for himself.Do I need to say much more! I do hear the Sun has headline tomorrow of "Stop Thief"
The Conservatives' Europe spokesman Mark Francois said in view of the committee's conclusions, Brown was "morally bound" to offer Britons a referendum.
But Europe Minister Jim Murphy insisted that the new treaty was "significantly different to the old constitutional treaty in intent, form and substance" and that the version Britain would sign up to was even further from the old Constitution.
1 - AR53 NAL (36,000 pounds)
2 - V1 LLA (35,000 pounds)
3 - ALB 10N (19,000 pounds)
4 - DER 8Y (14,500 pounds)
5 - S41 NTS (11,500 pounds)
6 - PRE 570N (9,400 pounds)
7 - 1 WBA (8,400 pounds)
8 - W1 GAN (7,700 pounds)
9 - EVR 70N (6,400 pounds)
10 - S9 URS (4,600 pounds)
Why this item should be in the Scotsman I have no idea.was as lean as it can get.The Telegraph continues
But Air Force chiefs have been told the priority now is to divert all resources into the current conflicts, leading to cuts elsewhere.So it also seems we are not to get Eurofighter Typhoons as they have all been promised to Saudi Arabia, this is just sheer lunacy.Under the Comprehensive Spending Review proposals, plans are also in place to keep the ageing Tornado F3 fighters in service for another seven years because the Saudi Arabian purchase of 75 brand new Eurofighter Typhoons will mean the RAF will not get any new fighters for an estimated two years.
Much defence funding has also been tied up in major projects such as the two new aircraft carriers, leading to less money being available elsewhere.
Scotch whisky has been defined for many years and is protected by law, but the new laws, which could be in place by spring 2008, will prevent foreign spirits using geographic areas in Scotland.
Serenity is not a word often associated with politics, particularly nationalist politics. But since the Scottish National party won its dramatic victory in the Scottish parliamentary elections five months ago, Scotland has been a serene place. Less fractious, more relaxed.Scotland seems to be happy to be ruled by a party that genuinely has Scotland foremost in it's mind rather than always having to look to London for oversight. It has also been helped by a good degree of consensual help by most of the parties during the start of what could have been a difficult time for the Scottish Parliament, in this they have been helped by the fact that the Scottish Labour party is in disarray and disbelief that Scots should have turned their back on them. Happily this has meant them not being much of a force in Parliament during the first, possibly rocky, months.
The secret of the governing party’s success so far is that it has concentrated on effective administration rather than legislation. Scotland, like the UK as a whole, had suffered a surfeit of legislation from Labour, some of it ill thought-out and ill drafted. This was a particular problem in Scotland, where there is no second chamber to refine and improve poorly considered and rushed legislation. Even the SNP’s enemies concede that the loss of the imperative to legislate has had a benign effect.The one blot on the landscape, is that which is at the heart of the SNP, Independence, I don't think that Scotland is quite ready for it. It needs a few more years of decent government from all parties before the country as a whole has the confidence to go it alone. It needs confidence that it has the people, the energy (in more ways than one) , the Businesses and in addition the belief that we will not lose out if we go it alone.