Monday 8 June 2020

Your Country Needs You!

 

Lichfield & District Residents: Your Country Needs You!

Negotiations with the EU are not going well. In less than three weeks, the UK and EU must decide whether to extend the Brexit transition period. An extension would allow the UK government to focus on fighting the pandemic and buy time to negotiate a trade deal that protects jobs and businesses in Lichfield.

Boris Johnson has said our government will not ask for an extension and if the EU asks for one, he will refuse.

Every day I receive a handful of emails from pro-European campaigning groups pleading with me to write to my local MP urging him to press the government to apply for an extension.

I did write to Mr Fabricant and here’s his response:

As you will be aware, the UK left the EU on 31 January. A transition period has followed during which market access remains the same and the UK and EU are negotiating an agreement on their future relationship. The manifesto I stood on in Lichfield was clear that the transition period would not be extended beyond December 2020, and this has now been put into law.

The global outbreak of COVID-19 is serious and my ministerial colleagues are doing everything they can to tackle the virus based on the latest scientific and medical advice. Although many areas of the UK economy shut down in March, at the Government's instruction, talks between UK and EU representatives continued via video-link, with both sides showing a determination to meet the December deadline. Further such meetings will continue as scheduled.

However, if the EU remains unwilling to change its insistence on fishing rights in UK waters and that the United Kingdom will have to follow all future EU regulations as if we had never left the EU, that will obviously not be acceptable. No amount of additional time will resolve that. Moreover, the chief EU negotiator has now made it clear that any extension of the Transition period after 2020 will have to be accompanied by a major and further contribution towards the EU budget. That too, unless the EU concedes on a number of issues, would be totally unacceptable.

I hope this clarifies my position, and thank you, again, for taking the time to write.


From that you might conclude there’s very little point in writing to Mr Fabricant, though I wouldn’t discourage you from doing so. If you do decide to contact Mr Fabricant, use his web form https://www.michael.fabricant.mp.co.uk/contact/ He says, “Messages sent to other email addresses may not be seen”

Is there another local politician who might listen? How about Doug Pullen, leader of Lichfield District Council? Mr Pullen doesn’t have a vote in parliament, but he may have more credibility and influence than our “fun-loving celebrity” MP.

Mr Pullen is a working businessman employed in risk management. He holds positions on the Local Enterprise Partnerships for Stoke on Trent and Staffordshire and Greater Birmingham and Solihull. He’s a man who speaks his mind. Look at Mr Pullen’s reported comments on the Dominic Cummings affair:

“It’s quite extraordinary that an advisor is getting so much leeway from the Government. The Government has spent months building huge amounts of political capital, and appears to have lost it in a single weekend. Cummings should have gone as soon as these revelations came to light.”

Someone commented on Lichfield Live: “Increasingly he [Mr Pullen] represents the tone and presentation of the Conservative Party I support”.

Drop him a line at doug.pullen@lichfielddc.gov.uk

Emails don’t have to be long; shorter messages are more likely to be read.

Here’s a few templates that might inspire you:

    • I’m a Lichfield council tax payer. As council leader and a businessman working in risk management, you understand the difficulties firms will face given a bad Brexit deal on top of a recession caused by the coronavirus. Please use your influence to ensure our government prioritises the fight against the virus and takes a pragmatic approach to Brexit negotiations. Getting a good deal with the EU will take time.
     
    • I’m a father /mother of teenage children. We've left the EU, but it's not going to do anyone any good if we end up with no deal. Dealing with that on top of the coronavirus would be devastating. Jobs for young people, like my kids, will lost - including here in Lichfield. Please do everything you can as a senior Conservative Party politician in Lichfield to persuade the government that a close economic relationship with our European neighbours is the best outcome. Please tell the government to take the time for a good deal to be agreed with the EU after we’ve dealt with pandemic.
     
    • As someone who falls into the 'vulnerable' category of people most likely to be severely affected by the coronavirus, I am worried that the government is concentrating on Brexit and not on dealing with the pandemic. Our NHS and our economy are already struggling to cope with the effects of COVID-19. This isn’t about whether people voted leave or remain. This is about doing what is in the national interest. We simply cannot deal with two crises at once. As one of my elected representatives please persuade the government to pause the Brexit negotiations and concentrate on ridding our country of this virus. I want to visit my friends and relations safely again.
     
    • I’m a Lichfield resident. I’ve just seen a report from the Social Market Foundation on the double impact of Brexit and Coronavirus. I am very concerned for people in Lichfield who will be severely exposed to a double economic hit from Brexit and coronavirus if the UK exits the Brexit transition period without a good deal. Please use your influence as leader of Lichfield District Council and a board member of the Greater Birmingham and Solihull Local Enterprise Partnership to persuade government of the need to extend post-Brexit negotiations so we can get a good deal.
     
    • As a local businessman and leader of Lichfield District Council you will understand that the disruption of Brexit is highly likely to slow our recovery from the pandemic. Unless the UK gets an extension to the transition period by the end of this month, the UK will be faced with a less-than-perfect trade deal with the EU or no deal at all. Extending the transition period would give us the time to get the best deal for Britain, give businesses time to adjust and give the NHS and our local emergency services time to recover. It’s ridiculous that the government is trying to deal with two crises at once. Please have a word with your party colleagues

If you do contact Mr Fabricant or Mr Pullen, please let us know how they responded.

Thursday 6 February 2020

First meeting since January 31st 2020




First meeting since January 31st 2020 - the night candles were lit and this image made us cry.








It's the witching hour in chill February. That time not quite night or day when memories and new thoughts collide. Our first meeting since January 31st is eddying in vivid picture pools. I realise that our discussion cannot be trapped by the neat and tidy tricks of punctuation - there is more than words at play. Our faces display weariness. The tone and pace of our speech convey frustration, futility even, but there are also sparks of positivity. 

We have been warriors of late, battling for a common goal, buoyed by urgency and triumphant in noteworthy skirmishes. Till the last we were held together and our actions orchestrated to match those of others, combatants in the same campaign. Now, the battle lost, we see, like so many others, a lack of leadership. We hear confused voices struggling for power, endeavouring to maintain the fervour of the past. But where to focus this fervour? The beast we now confront is Hydra-like, its horrors operating at many levels and it is easy for us to feel powerless. 



So where did the discussion take us?



We talked about the need to work with young people as the voters of the future and this might be possible through some established connections at the college. Signposting the link between tackling Climate Change and the role of the EU might be a way to foster interest.


We want to foreground the Erasmus programme and its opaque position after the vote on Wednesday. An action might be to fund raise for inter-rail tickets to go to young people.


We want to find out more about Birmingham for Europe's plan to support EU-27 citizens with the Settled Status application process. Would that be something appropriate and needed in the Lichfield area? We also want to act as a place of contact for local EU citizens who may be facing difficult times.


We see a need to try to influence the structure of the EM to which we are affiliated and encourage inspirational leadership.


We want to act as 'watchers' who ensure that the impact of Brexit, both locally and nationally is given attention through local press, Facebook and contributions to our Blog. 


We want to explore a project to look at connections which might be established with the twinned towns of Limburg-an-der Lahn in Germany and with Sainte-Foy-les-Lyon in France.


Having a presence at the Lichfield festival or using Speakers Corner to promote the message that 'Lichfield is open' was also discussed.



And so monster slayers, this is a long term battle. We each need to consider where our energies may best be focussed and to which of these 'projects'(or others) we want to contribute or take a lead. Our WhatsApp group is still 'live', our Facebook membership is growing, our Blog is established and we have a monthly forum for discussion based at 55 Wade Street.

Will you join us???????????????????????????????????????????????????






Wednesday 5 February 2020





Brexit & The Value of a Human Soul         by Pandora

Years from now when the history of Brexit is written and future generations look back on these turbulent times, it will undoubtedly be the small personal stories that will continue to resonate.

Academics, historians and commentators will of course debate the socio-economic and political conditions that led to our collective madness. Pages will no doubt be written on the big players and their place in history, but, like so many seismic events before it  it will be the experiences of the  ordinary folk which will shine the brightest and most unforgiving light on a nation that lost its soul and its compassion. Stories of people trying to live their lives and make a home.

Leaving the European Union means a roll back of rights for all of us. However, for 3 million citizens from 27 EU countries plus Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway & Switzerland, Brexit means having to ask our Government for permission to stay in the UK. Many of these people have been here for decades, are married to UK nationals and have British born children.

Just pause for a second and let that sink in. People who came to the UK in good faith, who have chosen to settle here, to work here; who pay tax here and have raised families here are having to seek permission to stay in their own lives. If they fail to do so or it is not granted, they will lose access to vital rights and services and may be deported. Yes, that means separated from their families and ‘sent back ‘to countries they may have left decades before. Someone will match up the requisite bits of paper and decide if they should be allowed to stay.

There is a myriad of data which shows us that these people make a huge contribution both economic and cultural to the UK, and without them our vital services and economy will suffer. Even were this not the case how do you judge the value of a human soul?

My friend Janice has an elderly mother who was born in France, has a British husband (my friends’ father) and has lived I and worked in the UK for 40 years. She must apply now to stay here with her family.

On the flip side in excess of 1.2 million British Citizens have made their homes in other EU members states. They too now have friends and families there, have built lives there and are also facing huge changes to their rights.  Some of these are retirees who have their UK pensions paid to them overseas, however It is one of many Brexit myths that they make up the bulk of British in Europe. DWP figures suggest that it is actually no more than 20%.  The rest are of working age, and many are liable to pay tax in both their country of residence and the UK.

These people are now waiting to see how they will be treated by their host countries as we withdraw from the EU. The UK Government in its treatment of EU citizens in the UK, is not giving out promising signals in terms of a compassionate reciprocal model. 

I have a good friend Katie who has a 14-year-old son. They live in Spain and have done since he was 6. Before Brexit her son had the same rights as his classmates. Now as it stands, he has no automatic access to a university place either in the UK (due to residency requirements) or Spain (as he is not a Spanish citizen).  All he can do is apply as an overseas student and be financially penalised …

There are thousands of small human stories. Some highlight the insensitive bureaucracy of the situation, some will break your heart.

Here in the UK this ‘othering‘ of EU citizens, and indeed any immigrant who chooses to make their home here frightens and upsets me. It is the start of a dark and dangerous path.
Did you vote for this? Did you believe the lies?  it seems plenty did and are more than happy to shout about it.

For my part I pledge to continue to welcome all those who wish to make a life in the UK and to fight for the rights of my fellow citizens all over the world, but particularly those in the EU affected by Brexit. 

I believe that it is history that will judge us.


Sources

https://www.gov.uk/tax-uk-income-live-abroad/uk-resident

https://britishineurope.org/facts-and-figures/

https://www.the3million.org.uk

https://ec.europa.eu/unitedkingdom/index_en.html

https://www.inlimboproject.org

Thursday 30 January 2020

We are Lichfield For Europe

Lichfield For Europe is affiliated to the European Movement, the most long-established and influential pro-Europe group in the UK.

Johnson may have won round one of Brexit, but we're quietly recovering in the corner of the ring.

Come round two, we'll be out fighting for the closest possible relationship with the EU in the fields of business, security, culture, science, education and others ... and doing everything we can to stand up for the rights of EU citizens who have chosen to be our neighbours here in Lichfield and UK citizens living in the EU.