Wokingham’s Marks and Spencers

Yesterday I visited Marks and Spencer to talk to the Manager, members of staff and some of the shoppers.

I was told of the Company’s consultation about possible closure. I understand employees have not yet been offered jobs in nearby Marks stores, as the closure is still under consideration.

The shoppers I met were pleased with the store and keen to see it stay open. There were plenty of people in it on a Friday morning. The Company will not share its trading figures for the store. It is possible in the weeks during the demolition of the central area of Wokingham between Peach Street and Rose Street and the construction of new shops there will be some adverse short term impact on town centre  footfall. It is highly likely that as soon as the new shops are available more people will come to the town centre to shop, have a coffee or have a meal.

I will let you know the Company’s response and my follow up. I will stress the support for the shop from many Wokingham town centre regulars.




Commission welcomes Europol’s new mandate and cooperation agreement with Denmark

Following the signature of the cooperation agreement between Europol and Denmark and ahead on the entry into force of the new mandate of Europol on 1 May, Commissioner for Migration, Home Affairs and Citizenship Dimitris Avramopoulos and Commissioner for the Security Union Julian King made the following statement:

“Today, we welcome the official signature of the cooperation agreement between Europol and Denmark. It comes a few days before Europol turns a new page in its history with the new legal framework which will apply as of 1 May. We live in volatile, unpredictable times for our security. Our citizens are understandably worried and demand action from the EU. We need the right tools to respond more quickly and effectively to these security threats. This is precisely what Europol offers. Today’s agreements are significant in that respect and they come as a result of close cooperation between the European Parliament, Member States, Europol and the Commission.

The greatest efforts were made, led by President Juncker, to agree on operational arrangements minimising the negative impact of Denmark’s departure from Europol on 1 May 2017. The solution agreed with Denmark is a tailor-made arrangement allowing for a sufficient level of cooperation, including the exchange of operational data and the deployment of liaison officers. Being fully in line with European data protection rules, Denmark will have a unique status which will allow for much closer ties with Europol without amounting to full membership.   

The new Europol legal framework will enter into application on 1 May, significantly boosting our ability to tackle terrorism, cybercrime and other forms of cross-border serious and organised crime whilst ensuring strong data protection safeguards and parliament scrutiny. Europol will now truly become a hub of information exchange in Europe – connecting the dots across Member States and beyond.

The fight against cross-border and organised crime and terrorism has been one of the highest priorities of this Commission. Both the new Regulation as well as the agreement with Denmark demonstrate the Commission’s commitment to tackling these challenges in the most pragmatic and effective way possible to ensure the security of all European citizens. The security of one Member State is the security of all.”

Background

Following the Joint Declaration of the Presidents of the European Council and the Commission and the Danish Prime Minister, utmost efforts were made to agree on operational arrangements minimising the negative impact of Denmark’s departure from Europol on 1 May 2017.

Europol is the EU’s law enforcement Agency, assisting national authorities by exchanging information, intelligence analyses and threats assessments. Originally established on the basis of a Convention signed by EU Member States in 1995, Europol gained the status of an EU Agency funded by the EU budget in January 2010, under Council Decision 2009/371/JHA. The Agency deals with terrorism and international serious crime such as cybercrime, drug smuggling and people trafficking and currently has 1,000 staff members with its headquarters in The Hague, the Netherlands.

To enhance Europol’s mandate as the EU’s central law enforcement agency and enable it to respond more rapidly to emerging international terrorist threats and serious and organised crime, the European Commission proposed a new regulation on 27 March 2013. In line with the Lisbon Treaty, the proposal aimed to place the Agency under a new legislative framework and enhance its role as the central hub for information exchange. The text of the proposal was agreed by the European Parliament and the Council on 26 November 2015. The final text was approved by the Council on 10 March 2016 and voted on by the European Parliament on 11 May 2016. The new Regulation entered into force on 13 June 2016 and will take effect in all EU Member States as of 1 May 2017.

For More Information

Regulation on the European Union Agency for Law Enforcement Cooperation (Europol)

Joint Declaration by the President of the European Commission, Jean-Claude Juncker, the President of the European Council, Donald Tusk and the Prime Minister of Denmark, Lars Løkke Rasmussen

Europol website




Vote SNP to stand up to the Tories

As a politician, you sometimes have to do a photoshoot which you would normally have walked a million miles from.




This site during the election

At midnight on Tuesday next I along with all other MPs cease to be an MP. Parliament will be dissolved.

Any references on this site to my role as an MP will become historic.

Government Ministers remain as Ministers, but are very restricted in what they can say and do as Ministers.

I will  be  busy with the election but will keep a website going.

The election campaign period starts officially on Wednesday 3rd May with the receipt of the writ.

This website is paid for by me.

.




Jeremy Corbyn speech – Stepping up for Britain

Jeremy Corbyn speaking
in east London today, said:

This morning I’m going
to say a few words about you. And even some about me. But if you don’t mind,
I’ll come to that later.

First I want to say that
this general election more than any I have previously fought will define our
times.

Last week, I said the
dividing lines in this election could not be clearer.

I pointed to a clash of
interests between working people on the one hand, and the privileged and
super-rich on the other.

This is not about a
government getting its priorities muddled. And it’s not simply a case of saying
one thing and doing another.

It’s about presiding
over a rigged system that shapes all our lives.

Of course that’s not
something the Conservatives want to talk about. It’s why, I think, they’re so
desperate to make this general election all about Brexit.

Don’t be taken in.

The Conservatives would
much rather make incredible promises about Britain’s future outside the EU than
talk about a scorecard of broken promises and neglect stretching back seven
years.

Even their approach to
Brexit betrays what they’re really about.

Unlike Labour’s
jobs-first plan, it is both reckless and rigid. And entirely in keeping with
their record in government.

Make no mistake; a
Brexit for the few is being cooked up by this government.

One where any money
saved is handed out as tax cuts to the super-rich and their corporations.

Where new trade deals
with the US and elsewhere are used to drive down our working conditions,
environmental regulations and food standards.

I think you can guess
what is likely to happen to the many in a rigid and reckless Brexit. But what
about the Conservatives themselves, and their friends and backers?

Do you think their
personal prospects will suffer? Do you think their lives will get harder as
wages slide and jobs become even less secure?

Unlikely, I think you’ll
agree. And that’s because the Conservatives and their backers can afford to opt
out when things go wrong. They’ve been doing it for decades.

They already send their
children to the most exclusive schools and universities. They already dominate
the upper rungs of every career ladder.

In truth, they have a
get out of jail free card when the Conservatives are at the controls.

So I have a message for
you all today: Unless you too have a get out jail free card, it’s time to Step
Up.

And when I say Step Up,
I mean register to vote. Claim your future.

You have till 22 May!

Over 2.4 million young
people are missing from the UK’s electoral register. Barely 40 percent of 18 to
24-year olds turn out to vote.

The Conservatives are
more than happy with this state of affairs. Apathy and resignation will secure
them seats on election day.

I ask you to Step Up
because when I talk to people all over the country, I’m struck by something
troubling.

It’s not
that our young people don’t have the energy and talent to succeed. Our country
is full of potential.

But
something hangs in the air. It typically goes unspoken.

It’s the unheard story
of why so many of us are scaling back our hopes and dreams in favour of just getting
by.

It’s the reason why this
country is unable to unleash its potential.

Because as families,
communities – entire regions – we are all being held back.

If you’re
young – like many here today – it’s a familiar feeling:

If you feel trapped in a
job that barely covers your rent.

If you feel anxious
about keeping on top of credit cards and loans.

If your heart sinks each
time you see the prices of homes displayed in estate agent windows.

Then you’re being held
back.

In a Fairer Britain,
government would be bending over backwards to unleash your potential.

You’re our future after
all.

You’d be supported to be
confident and equipped for higher paid and secure jobs.

You’d be able to look
ahead without mounting debt taking away your choices.

And you’d be able to
enjoy the security and rewards of one day bringing up a family in a home of
your own.

Being held back means we
can’t provide the life that we want for ourselves and those closest to us.

And it hurts. It makes
people angry and worst of all resigned to the idea that nothing can be done
about it. We end up blaming ourselves or each other.

This is life in
Conservative Britain.

It’s why a Fairer
Britain has to be the choice at this election.

It’s also why Labour
will unveil plans to upgrade our economy.

Because unless we move
from a rigged to an upgraded economy, there can be no Fairer Britain.

That is what June 8th
is all about.

Don’t let the
Conservatives hold you back.

Don’t let the Conservatives
Hold Britain Back.

And now for a sentence
I’ve yet to utter in my political life: Enough about you, what about me.

I’ve just laid down the
gauntlet and asked you to Step Up.

Each and every one of us
must Step Up for Britain. Including me.

In the 34-years since I
became a MP, I have been attacked for what I believe in. But it has not changed
my core values – and sadly many of the problems we faced then are still with
us.

In 1983, I
stood up in Parliament for the first time and used my maiden speech to condemn
deeply damaging cuts in public services and the NHS.

It’s a tragedy that I
could make a very similar speech today and it would once again hold true.

Between then and now I
learned first-hand how the privilege of being an MP could help achieve change.
Profound and lasting change.

At the time, young
protesters were being shot dead on the streets by the racist apartheid regime
in South Africa – Nelson Mandela and hundreds of ANC leaders were in prison.

The Conservative
Government refused to impose sanctions, entertained the leaders of the regime
and banned protests outside the South African embassy in London.

Being an MP helped bring
attention to that ban and the wider cause of South Africa’s liberation – and
got a group of us arrested.

But the space for people
in Britain to organise in support of freedom in South Africa was defended and
strengthened.

And I realised then that
political leaders can, if they want to, create and preserve the space for
others to organise and transform countries.

My role is different now
but there is a common thread: we should act together, to overturn unfairness
and create a better society.

It became my yardstick
for measuring the performance of governments going back three decades, Labour
and Conservative.

In that time, I’ve seen
Prime Ministers and Leaders of the Opposition come and go.

But for all their
achievements and failures, what I didn’t see was a sustained attempt to rid
this country of what really holds people back.

I never heard a
clear invitation for everyone in the country to work together and
create a real alternative to our rigged economy.

So when I was asked to
put my name forward in Labour’s 2015 leadership election, I felt I should step
up.

I didn’t expect to win.

But under my leadership,
we have forced the Conservatives into one U-turn after another: over cuts to
tax credits, disability payments and their recent attempt to increase national
insurance for the self-employed.

And I
respect my critics when they make a reasoned case. They are doing what I have
often tried to do – and that is to challenge leadership.

It reminds me of the
1990s when the political mainstream bought into Conservative ideas about
markets, finance and the economy. It ultimately left us with no defence against
a global financial crisis that had its roots in another country’s housing
market.

Again, it taught me that
if leaders go unchallenged, they can make some of the most damaging mistakes.
And if party leaders put themselves ahead of serving
the people, they stop listening and even put our country at risk.

Barely nine months into
Theresa May’s premiership, there are clear warning signs that she and her
closest advisers are slipping into that presidential bunker mentality.

Whereas it is the job of
leadership to hold open the space for dissent, new thinking and fit-for-purpose
policy.

So while it might not be the stuff of soundbites, I
have always believed in standing firm and empowering others to make up their
minds and come on board when they are ready.

It is the mind-set that gets community centres and
nurseries built. And increasingly defends them from closure.

It is the mind-set that negotiates hard for better
conditions in the workplace.

It is the mind-set that serves the many not the few.

For many
years, I couldn’t see much beyond how so many political leaders manipulated us
while giving in again and again to vested interests.

I didn’t
want to be like that. And it wasn’t clear to me there could be another way.

But I’ve
learned there is.

Whereas
insecure leaders want to feel stronger by asking you to give them more power.

I recognise
strong leadership as equipping you with more power.

And that starts with
encouraging you to Step Up and register to vote – as part of a wider engagement
with your community.

Because there’s no doubt
that these are anxious times.

Individually, more of us
face uncertainty at work.

Nationally, we wonder
how we will make the transition out of the EU in a way that protects jobs and
living standards.

And globally, we wonder
how safe we are as extreme right wing movements and violent conflicts spread.

I hope you can see now
that there is more than one way to respond.

We could seek a fragile
calm. And hope someone in power knows what they’re doing and will guide us
through.

That means looking to
whoever’s in charge and welcoming their reassurance. We don’t look further, we
don’t ask questions.

It’s the response the few have bet on the many settling for.

I’m in this job because
I believe there is a better way to respond.

It’s about rejecting
fake reassurances or simple slogans from government.

It’s about sharing ideas
and deciding upon real and lasting answers.

We are not going to have
free thinking shut down by a hostile media or an elite that scoffs at anyone
who dares to step out line.

No, each of us has a
contribution to make. We have ideas for a better tomorrow and we are going to
respond together.

We are a party that
wants to bring together people and ideas, and harness the thirst for real and
lasting change.

If you agree our times
demand a response from all parts of our society and all corners of our country,
then I am proud to be your leader.

And if you want someone
to hold that space open for you to help change the direction of your life and
our country, then I am proud to be your leader.

Because it’s only
through unleashing our talent that Britain will succeed on the world stage.

Since its foundation,
the Labour Party has believed we are richer together. Seven years into
Conservative government, we are poorer for being apart.

Across the country,
people are being held back like never before.

Unless we change course,
expect more insecure work for less pay. More stress for less time with our
families.

It’s gone too far and
the country knows it.

Quite simply, only the
Labour Party can deliver a Fairer Britain.

But we need your help to
do so.

Please register to vote.

Step Up for Britain and vote
Labour on June 8th.

ENDS