Title : Election Tour 2017: A big beast, reading, riting and rithmatic and the Spanish Civil War
link : Election Tour 2017: A big beast, reading, riting and rithmatic and the Spanish Civil War
Election Tour 2017: A big beast, reading, riting and rithmatic and the Spanish Civil War
With the clock ticking down on the deadline for nominations on 4 April, rumours are flying about the identity of some late entrants to the race.For reasons which readers of this blog may be able to understand, it is said that Labour has been finding it difficult to fill some of the blanks on its slate in and around Llanelli, and one of the late surprise entrants is believed to be Keith Price Davies, Llanelli's former AM, who is coming out of retirement for a run at the council, possibly in Hengoed.
Joy is unlikely to be unconfined in the Llanelli Labour Party, with Keith having criticised both Tegwen Devichand and Lee Waters in recent months.
The 2012 council elections were very good for Labour across Wales as the party recovered from the Brown years, but its fortunes in Carmarthenshire were rather more mixed. While it did well in Llanelli, the Labour surge petered out in the Amman Valley.
Things are rather different this time round, and Keith Davies will find himself swimming against a strong tide, but if he succeeds the council chamber may contain two former Assembly Members, the other being Rhodri Glyn Thomas who is standing in St Clears for Plaid.
Launching the Titanic
Last week also saw the launch of Labour's official campaign. Its two big beasts, Nia Giffith MP and Lee Waters AM, turned up to events in Llanelli and Ammanford, but failed to show in Carmarthen, which they seem already to have written off.
Those familiar with Labour campaigns will know that the party is very fond of pledge cards which seek to crystallise its key messages without going into tricky details such as targets and timings. A perennial favourite is "send a message to Westminster", but things are so messy there that for once we are being spared that one.
What we have this time includes promises to tackle litter, re-start council house building and "building new schools fit for the 21st century".
Labour is probably hoping that nobody remembers the last Labour-led council which made a lot of fuss about building council houses, but which managed to build only half a dozen or so bungalows for the elderly at a massively inflated cost. Council house building only got underway when they lost control of the council.
The 21st century schools programme has been underway for years under both Labour and Plaid administrations, and is set to continue.
Kevin Madge recently showed that the three Rs were never one of his strongest suits when he claimed that there was a £2 million shortfall for the new Ammanford "super-school". It turned out that he had mis-read a council report, and that the school was to receive an additional £7 million in funding.
Another pledge is to "reverse the privatisation of social care services". When Labour was in power until 2015 it privatised 80% of the council's care services, with Kevin Madge telling the then leader of the Plaid opposition group that it didn't matter who ran the services, provided they were there.
In the case of all three of these pledges, voters should ask searching questions. What, specifically, are they planning to do that is different from what is already being done, and where will the money come from at a time when local government finances are being bled dry?
The same applies to another aspiration to set up and run a "municipal bus company".
The final pledge is of the motherhood and apple pie variety. Labour says it will run a "modern and transparent" council. We have heard that one before.
Llangennech - it's the Spanish Civil War all over again!
Students of history will know that the politics of the Spanish Civil War were very complicated, with a myriad of competing political groups with different agendas coming together in fraternal solidarity before turning their guns on each other.
Things seem to be not much different in Llangennech where La Pasionaria Michaela Beddows has taken to hanging out with Hamilton's Falangists, the Stalinists are coalescing around Tegwenita Devichand, Lee Waters is holed up in Barry blaming everyone, and Nia Griffith is busy explaining the benefits of nuclear weapons to vegan collectives.
That leaves POUM (Partido Obrero de Unificación Marxista) or the Workers' Party of Marxist Unification. Wikipedia helpfully tells us that POUM was formed by the fusion of the Trotskyist Communist Left of Spain (Izquierda Comunista de España, ICE) and the Workers and Peasants' Bloc (BOC, affiliated with the Right Opposition) against the will of Leon Trotsky, with whom the former broke.
Following the death of Franco, POUM re-emerged to fight the first democratic elections as part of a coalition of other groups which together notched up just 0.22% of the popular vote. The party was dissolved in 1980, but it lives on in Llangennech in the form of Gary Jones, who uses the Twitter handle @poumista.
Here he is preparing to go into battle.
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