Political activists met for another round of policy blasts last week at Pragmatic Radicalism’s ‘Top Of The Policies’ event on Justice and Constitutional Reform.
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Political activists met for another round of 90-second policy blasts last week at Pragmatic Radicalism’s Top Of The Policies event on Justice and Constitutional Reform.
Working on the next Pragmatic Radicalism pamphlet is Jon Cruddas MP, the newly appointed co-ordinator of Labour’s Policy Review.
Cruddas compares Labour’s challenge to be match fit at the next election, to provide answers to the triple whammy facing Britain of recession and austerity at home and the deepening eurozone crisis across the Channel.
A lecturer in Labour history at Oxford, Cruddas sees comparisons with what the party faced in 1945.
Cruddas told the Guardian last month:
“The way I look at it would be that in 1945 Labour locked in the organised working classes into an overarching story of national renewal, and that is the equivalent task at hand today.”
Shadow justice secretary Sadiq Khan MP said of the night:
“The speakers were dynamic, the ideas original, and mostly realistic, and the audience merciless in their constructive cross- examination…
“As shadow justice secretary and shadow chancellor I’m currently leading Labour’s review of justice and constitutional affairs policy – events like this are a shot in the arm.
“It was wonderful to see experts, activists, trade unionists and members of the public get together to thrash out new and exciting ideas. It’s a brilliant way of sourcing new ideas, and hearing some of these policies road tested.”
There was a tie for first place which after a show of hands tie-break vote saw my policy come second, to keep social welfare legal aid in scope, specifically to reinstate the Specialist Support Service, to help law centres and Citizen Advice Bureaux.
Last month the government, through the Legal Services Commission, scrapped this major service providing specialist welfare advice, weeks after 90,000 people were told their benefits would be cut.
• Two decades on, Labour consider returning the railways to public ownership 2 Jul 2012
As I said on the night:
“Rights are hopeless without access to advice and help to access what is available to an individual.”
For more information on forthcoming PragRad events, go to pragmaticradicalism.co.uk.
12 Responses to “Finding answers to the triple-whammy of recession, austerity and the eurozone crisis”
Pragmatic Radicalism
PragRad's comms head @amandaramsay writes for @leftfootfwd about TOTP on Justice/Constit Ref w/ @sadiqkhan http://t.co/cKE3DdCA
Shamik Das
Finding answers to the triple-whammy of recession, austerity and the eurozone crisis: http://t.co/XAO4aNqt by @AmandaRamsay @PragRad
Political Planet
Finding answers to the triple-whammy of recession, austerity and the eurozone crisis: Political activists met fo… http://t.co/ReDaRF1Z
leftlinks
Left Foot Forward – Finding answers to the triple-whammy of recession, austerity and the eurozone… http://t.co/rYGYzX5C
Anonymous
Lets forget the last thirteen years of crises banking crises and now we are hearing about a fuel cartel to keep fuel prices up which will make the Libor scandal look like peanuts.
The problem is right now Politicians are so low in the gutter and they are not climbing out as we are hearing about more and more scandals in which the Government of the days saw nothing.
We are now to Trust labour and the Tories because neither has any real idea or plans , but we are to accept Labour as being what the party able to see us into the good times.
No thanks.