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date: Sat, 05 May 2007 09:13:46 +0100,    group: uk.local.channel-isles        back       
– a country transformed: 10 years of Labour Government in BritainThen and now   
Ten years is a very short time in politics. But it is a very long time
for those who have forgotten how far we have come.

On May 1 2007, I published a pamphlet which looks back at the big issues
that were making the headlines prior to Labour’s election in 1997. Using
the newspapers’ own words, it reminds us of how far the country has come
on the key issues that affect the quality of people’s daily lives, and
have been crucial to the transformation of our country: education,
employment, health, crime and the economy.

What emerges is both the enormity of the challenge that Labour faced in
1997 in turning around under-investment and lack of reform, but also the
scepticism and despair as to whether government could overcome these
major and sometimes very long-standing blights on the lives of the
British people.

Today’s newspapers tell a different story – with per pupil spending on
education having doubled from £2,500 to well over £5,000 in the past 10
years, today’s headlines no longer scream, ‘Crumbling Britain – Schools
of Shame’ (the Observer, March 3 1996). ‘4m Jobless’ (the Sun, March 21
1997) no longer adorns the front pages due to 2.6m extra jobs and the
lowest level of unemployment since the 1970s. More than 85,000 more
nurses and over 32,000 more doctors, and the largest sustained hospital
building programme since the NHS was founded, have made headlines like
this a thing of the past: ‘Weather and Cash Crisis leave NHS in Chaos’
(the Independent, January 6 1997).

Despite widespread media predictions that under Labour, house prices
would fall, interest rates would surge upwards and there would be a
‘humiliating devaluation in the pound’, headlines such as ‘Pound Hit as
Jobless Rise and Salaries Slump’ (the Evening Standard, November 15
1995) have not been seen for years – and £1 has recently been strong
enough to be worth $2. Michael Howard famously admitted that crime had
doubled under the Tories and convictions fell by more than a quarter.

Labour today has dramatically increased police numbers by more than
14,000, and introduced over 11,000 new community support officers. We no
longer see ‘Falling Police Numbers Mock Tory Promises’ (the Independent,
September 2 1996) in the papers. Such headlines belong in the past, but
with a resurgent Conservative party there is no room for amnesia.

Amid the daily political grind, it can be easy to forget that many of
the problems facing the country in 1997 have largely been solved.
Whatever the political argument of the day, we must remember that these
achievements did not happen as a random accident of fate. Led by Tony
Blair, Labour’s achievements have not just been numbers but real people
teaching our young, healing our sick and making our communities safer,
and hard cash in people’s pockets meaning lives are lived to a higher
standard.

Britain today is a country transformed from those dark years of Tory
rule, where selfishness and greed were the political mantra. We have a
better educated, healthier, safer, fairer, more open-minded and more
prosperous society than 10 years ago. This is surely a legacy to be
proud of. All of this, of course, began with the decision of the people
to put their trust in Labour.

>From Sure Start and universal nursery education, the introduction of the
minimum wage through to pension credit and the new pension proposals
voted through the House of Commons in April 2007, it is political
decisions and choice, not chance, that make the difference.

And the lasting legacy of Blair’s 10-year premiership will quite simply
be the transformation of the British political landscape – that the era
of Margaret Thatcher has been put behind us. It is a tribute to those
first 10 years of New Labour in government that the political culture,
the economic prospects, the social agenda are all entirely different,
and it is on this agenda that all main political parties are now
competing for votes.

Blair’s leadership success in winning a consensus of the aspirant and
moderately affluent, with the have-nots and dispossessed, not only put
behind us a century of Labour spasmodically in power; but brought us a
party embracing the future, prepared to take on the challenge of change,
and responsive to the rising expectations of the British people.

There has and never will be a year zero in which a government resolved
all the problems – economic, social and cultural – facing the people
they represent. Every step taken, every success achieved opens up new
aspirations as well as refocusing on new concerns.

The world of tomorrow will by its very nature demand new approaches to
how best to hold to account a more pluralistic and diffuse political
society; to reinforce civil renewal; and the capacity and assets of
individuals, families and communities to make decisions for themselves
and to influence the world around them.

Greater transparency in public life has perversely, but entirely
correctly, demanded standards and openness never before experienced in
public life. Disagreements over foreign policy, in particular Iraq,
have, for the moment, overshadowed tremendous achievements in Kosovo and
the Balkans. Not to mention in Sierra Leone, and in the leadership shown
through the G8 in tackling worldwide poverty and the neglect of Africa,
and the new challenges of climate change. But nothing can take away the
simple fact that people here at home and, yes, across the world, are
better off because of this Labour government.

One thing is certain. The power-sharing administration in Northern
Ireland from May 8 2007 is, if ever one were needed, a demonstration of
how, despite the cynicism and the denigration surrounding democratic
political activity, politics can succeed in bringing peace and
prosperity in the most unlikely circumstances. A legacy indeed for the
prime minister.

And perhaps, it also offers an alternative to the growing flirtation
with the idea of taking ‘politics’ out of politics; the handing over of
decisions to ‘officialdom’; the belief that there are some people
somewhere in our country, who, without values, prejudices or personal
predilections, can look after our best interests, can balance competing
demands, can in essence create a world free of political disagreement.
For that would be a sad outcome from a decade in which, with all its
faults, it is politics that has changed the world for so many.

On the twin challenges of opportunity and security, and the reshaping of
politics to be ‘on your side’, enabling and working with people rather
than just making decisions on their behalf – these are bigger hurdles to
surmount, but offer a more lasting and sustainable political landscape
than ever before. Let us take on that continuing modernising and
reforming challenge and let us do it in a way that speaks to, engages
with, and uses the talent and commitment of the people we serve.

For those who say, quite rightly, that consistency and continuity help
in building on firm foundations, it is self-evident that the past 10
years under Blair have created building blocks on which further progress
can be made. In the world of modern communication, and a 21st century of
economic and global change and rapid social, cultural and political
developments, preparing Britain for the future has rightly been the
hallmark of the past 10 years. Now, looking ahead to the future and
combating the ‘evils’ that confront us, is the challenge we must
address. Labour is ready, willing and able to take on that mantle.


There is no text version of the pamphlet, only PDF:
http://www.unison.org.uk/acrobat/B3223z.pdf
date: Sat, 05 May 2007 09:13:46 +0100   author:   Custard Creme

– a country transformed: 10 years of Labour Government in BritainRe: Then and now   
Custard Creme wrote:
> Ten years is a very short time in politics. But it is a very long time
> for those who have forgotten how far we have come.
> 
> On May 1 2007, I published a pamphlet which looks back at the big issues
> that were making the headlines prior to Labour’s election in 1997. Using
> the newspapers’ own words, it reminds us of how far the country has come
> on the key issues that affect the quality of people’s daily lives, and
> have been crucial to the transformation of our country: education,
> employment, health, crime and the economy.
> 
> What emerges is both the enormity of the challenge that Labour faced in
> 1997 in turning around under-investment and lack of reform, but also the
> scepticism and despair as to whether government could overcome these
> major and sometimes very long-standing blights on the lives of the
> British people.
> 
> Today’s newspapers tell a different story – with per pupil spending on
> education having doubled from £2,500 to well over £5,000 in the past 10
> years, today’s headlines no longer scream, ‘Crumbling Britain – Schools
> of Shame’ (the Observer, March 3 1996). ‘4m Jobless’ (the Sun, March 21
> 1997) no longer adorns the front pages due to 2.6m extra jobs and the
> lowest level of unemployment since the 1970s. More than 85,000 more
> nurses and over 32,000 more doctors, and the largest sustained hospital
> building programme since the NHS was founded, have made headlines like
> this a thing of the past: ‘Weather and Cash Crisis leave NHS in Chaos’
> (the Independent, January 6 1997).
> 
> Despite widespread media predictions that under Labour, house prices
> would fall, interest rates would surge upwards and there would be a
> ‘humiliating devaluation in the pound’, headlines such as ‘Pound Hit as
> Jobless Rise and Salaries Slump’ (the Evening Standard, November 15
> 1995) have not been seen for years – and £1 has recently been strong
> enough to be worth $2. Michael Howard famously admitted that crime had
> doubled under the Tories and convictions fell by more than a quarter.
> 
> Labour today has dramatically increased police numbers by more than
> 14,000, and introduced over 11,000 new community support officers. We no
> longer see ‘Falling Police Numbers Mock Tory Promises’ (the Independent,
> September 2 1996) in the papers. Such headlines belong in the past, but
> with a resurgent Conservative party there is no room for amnesia.
> 
> Amid the daily political grind, it can be easy to forget that many of
> the problems facing the country in 1997 have largely been solved.
> Whatever the political argument of the day, we must remember that these
> achievements did not happen as a random accident of fate. Led by Tony
> Blair, Labour’s achievements have not just been numbers but real people
> teaching our young, healing our sick and making our communities safer,
> and hard cash in people’s pockets meaning lives are lived to a higher
> standard.
> 
> Britain today is a country transformed from those dark years of Tory
> rule, where selfishness and greed were the political mantra. We have a
> better educated, healthier, safer, fairer, more open-minded and more
> prosperous society than 10 years ago. This is surely a legacy to be
> proud of. All of this, of course, began with the decision of the people
> to put their trust in Labour.
> 
>>From Sure Start and universal nursery education, the introduction of the
> minimum wage through to pension credit and the new pension proposals
> voted through the House of Commons in April 2007, it is political
> decisions and choice, not chance, that make the difference.
> 
> And the lasting legacy of Blair’s 10-year premiership will quite simply
> be the transformation of the British political landscape – that the era
> of Margaret Thatcher has been put behind us. It is a tribute to those
> first 10 years of New Labour in government that the political culture,
> the economic prospects, the social agenda are all entirely different,
> and it is on this agenda that all main political parties are now
> competing for votes.
> 
> Blair’s leadership success in winning a consensus of the aspirant and
> moderately affluent, with the have-nots and dispossessed, not only put
> behind us a century of Labour spasmodically in power; but brought us a
> party embracing the future, prepared to take on the challenge of change,
> and responsive to the rising expectations of the British people.
> 
> There has and never will be a year zero in which a government resolved
> all the problems – economic, social and cultural – facing the people
> they represent. Every step taken, every success achieved opens up new
> aspirations as well as refocusing on new concerns.
> 
> The world of tomorrow will by its very nature demand new approaches to
> how best to hold to account a more pluralistic and diffuse political
> society; to reinforce civil renewal; and the capacity and assets of
> individuals, families and communities to make decisions for themselves
> and to influence the world around them.
> 
> Greater transparency in public life has perversely, but entirely
> correctly, demanded standards and openness never before experienced in
> public life. Disagreements over foreign policy, in particular Iraq,
> have, for the moment, overshadowed tremendous achievements in Kosovo and
> the Balkans. Not to mention in Sierra Leone, and in the leadership shown
> through the G8 in tackling worldwide poverty and the neglect of Africa,
> and the new challenges of climate change. But nothing can take away the
> simple fact that people here at home and, yes, across the world, are
> better off because of this Labour government.
> 
> One thing is certain. The power-sharing administration in Northern
> Ireland from May 8 2007 is, if ever one were needed, a demonstration of
> how, despite the cynicism and the denigration surrounding democratic
> political activity, politics can succeed in bringing peace and
> prosperity in the most unlikely circumstances. A legacy indeed for the
> prime minister.
> 
> And perhaps, it also offers an alternative to the growing flirtation
> with the idea of taking ‘politics’ out of politics; the handing over of
> decisions to ‘officialdom’; the belief that there are some people
> somewhere in our country, who, without values, prejudices or personal
> predilections, can look after our best interests, can balance competing
> demands, can in essence create a world free of political disagreement.
> For that would be a sad outcome from a decade in which, with all its
> faults, it is politics that has changed the world for so many.
> 
> On the twin challenges of opportunity and security, and the reshaping of
> politics to be ‘on your side’, enabling and working with people rather
> than just making decisions on their behalf – these are bigger hurdles to
> surmount, but offer a more lasting and sustainable political landscape
> than ever before. Let us take on that continuing modernising and
> reforming challenge and let us do it in a way that speaks to, engages
> with, and uses the talent and commitment of the people we serve.
> 
> For those who say, quite rightly, that consistency and continuity help
> in building on firm foundations, it is self-evident that the past 10
> years under Blair have created building blocks on which further progress
> can be made. In the world of modern communication, and a 21st century of
> economic and global change and rapid social, cultural and political
> developments, preparing Britain for the future has rightly been the
> hallmark of the past 10 years. Now, looking ahead to the future and
> combating the ‘evils’ that confront us, is the challenge we must
> address. Labour is ready, willing and able to take on that mantle.
> 
> 
> There is no text version of the pamphlet, only PDF:
> http://www.unison.org.uk/acrobat/B3223z.pdf

Sadly, with all this increase in spending and more government employees, 
its become an even more petty minded bureaucratic society, with drigs 
violent crime and suicide rates up, and no better delivery of services, 
and punitive taxation everywhere you least expect it.
A dull, tedious expensive nanny state whose sheer boredonm is only 
relieved by the frantic acts of violence as the more vulnerable members 
of society cave into the pressure..

And incompetence and waste at every level of the vast cesspit of government.
date: Sat, 05 May 2007 09:52:50 +0100   author:   The Natural Philosopher a@b.c

– a country transformed: 10 years of Labour Government in BritainRe: Then and now   
On Sat, 05 May 2007 09:52:50 +0100, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

> Custard Creme wrote:
>> Ten years is a very short time in politics. But it is a very long time
>> for those who have forgotten how far we have come.
>> 
>> On May 1 2007, I published a pamphlet which looks back at the big issues
>> that were making the headlines prior to Labour¡¦s election in 1997. Using
>> the newspapers¡¦ own words, it reminds us of how far the country has come
>> on the key issues that affect the quality of people¡¦s daily lives, and
>> have been crucial to the transformation of our country: education,
>> employment, health, crime and the economy.
>> 
>> What emerges is both the enormity of the challenge that Labour faced in
>> 1997 in turning around under-investment and lack of reform, but also the
>> scepticism and despair as to whether government could overcome these
>> major and sometimes very long-standing blights on the lives of the
>> British people.
>> 
>> Today¡¦s newspapers tell a different story ¡V with per pupil spending on
>> education having doubled from ¢G2,500 to well over ¢G5,000 in the past 10
>> years, today¡¦s headlines no longer scream, ¡¥Crumbling Britain ¡V Schools
>> of Shame¡¦ (the Observer, March 3 1996). ¡¥4m Jobless¡¦ (the Sun, March 21
>> 1997) no longer adorns the front pages due to 2.6m extra jobs and the
>> lowest level of unemployment since the 1970s. More than 85,000 more
>> nurses and over 32,000 more doctors, and the largest sustained hospital
>> building programme since the NHS was founded, have made headlines like
>> this a thing of the past: ¡¥Weather and Cash Crisis leave NHS in Chaos¡¦
>> (the Independent, January 6 1997).
>> 
>> Despite widespread media predictions that under Labour, house prices
>> would fall, interest rates would surge upwards and there would be a
>> ¡¥humiliating devaluation in the pound¡¦, headlines such as ¡¥Pound Hit as
>> Jobless Rise and Salaries Slump¡¦ (the Evening Standard, November 15
>> 1995) have not been seen for years ¡V and ¢G1 has recently been strong
>> enough to be worth $2. Michael Howard famously admitted that crime had
>> doubled under the Tories and convictions fell by more than a quarter.
>> 
>> Labour today has dramatically increased police numbers by more than
>> 14,000, and introduced over 11,000 new community support officers. We no
>> longer see ¡¥Falling Police Numbers Mock Tory Promises¡¦ (the Independent,
>> September 2 1996) in the papers. Such headlines belong in the past, but
>> with a resurgent Conservative party there is no room for amnesia.
>> 
>> Amid the daily political grind, it can be easy to forget that many of
>> the problems facing the country in 1997 have largely been solved.
>> Whatever the political argument of the day, we must remember that these
>> achievements did not happen as a random accident of fate. Led by Tony
>> Blair, Labour¡¦s achievements have not just been numbers but real people
>> teaching our young, healing our sick and making our communities safer,
>> and hard cash in people¡¦s pockets meaning lives are lived to a higher
>> standard.
>> 
>> Britain today is a country transformed from those dark years of Tory
>> rule, where selfishness and greed were the political mantra. We have a
>> better educated, healthier, safer, fairer, more open-minded and more
>> prosperous society than 10 years ago. This is surely a legacy to be
>> proud of. All of this, of course, began with the decision of the people
>> to put their trust in Labour.
>> 
>>>From Sure Start and universal nursery education, the introduction of the
>> minimum wage through to pension credit and the new pension proposals
>> voted through the House of Commons in April 2007, it is political
>> decisions and choice, not chance, that make the difference.
>> 
>> And the lasting legacy of Blair¡¦s 10-year premiership will quite simply
>> be the transformation of the British political landscape ¡V that the era
>> of Margaret Thatcher has been put behind us. It is a tribute to those
>> first 10 years of New Labour in government that the political culture,
>> the economic prospects, the social agenda are all entirely different,
>> and it is on this agenda that all main political parties are now
>> competing for votes.
>> 
>> Blair¡¦s leadership success in winning a consensus of the aspirant and
>> moderately affluent, with the have-nots and dispossessed, not only put
>> behind us a century of Labour spasmodically in power; but brought us a
>> party embracing the future, prepared to take on the challenge of change,
>> and responsive to the rising expectations of the British people.
>> 
>> There has and never will be a year zero in which a government resolved
>> all the problems ¡V economic, social and cultural ¡V facing the people
>> they represent. Every step taken, every success achieved opens up new
>> aspirations as well as refocusing on new concerns.
>> 
>> The world of tomorrow will by its very nature demand new approaches to
>> how best to hold to account a more pluralistic and diffuse political
>> society; to reinforce civil renewal; and the capacity and assets of
>> individuals, families and communities to make decisions for themselves
>> and to influence the world around them.
>> 
>> Greater transparency in public life has perversely, but entirely
>> correctly, demanded standards and openness never before experienced in
>> public life. Disagreements over foreign policy, in particular Iraq,
>> have, for the moment, overshadowed tremendous achievements in Kosovo and
>> the Balkans. Not to mention in Sierra Leone, and in the leadership shown
>> through the G8 in tackling worldwide poverty and the neglect of Africa,
>> and the new challenges of climate change. But nothing can take away the
>> simple fact that people here at home and, yes, across the world, are
>> better off because of this Labour government.
>> 
>> One thing is certain. The power-sharing administration in Northern
>> Ireland from May 8 2007 is, if ever one were needed, a demonstration of
>> how, despite the cynicism and the denigration surrounding democratic
>> political activity, politics can succeed in bringing peace and
>> prosperity in the most unlikely circumstances. A legacy indeed for the
>> prime minister.
>> 
>> And perhaps, it also offers an alternative to the growing flirtation
>> with the idea of taking ¡¥politics¡¦ out of politics; the handing over of
>> decisions to ¡¥officialdom¡¦; the belief that there are some people
>> somewhere in our country, who, without values, prejudices or personal
>> predilections, can look after our best interests, can balance competing
>> demands, can in essence create a world free of political disagreement.
>> For that would be a sad outcome from a decade in which, with all its
>> faults, it is politics that has changed the world for so many.
>> 
>> On the twin challenges of opportunity and security, and the reshaping of
>> politics to be ¡¥on your side¡¦, enabling and working with people rather
>> than just making decisions on their behalf ¡V these are bigger hurdles to
>> surmount, but offer a more lasting and sustainable political landscape
>> than ever before. Let us take on that continuing modernising and
>> reforming challenge and let us do it in a way that speaks to, engages
>> with, and uses the talent and commitment of the people we serve.
>> 
>> For those who say, quite rightly, that consistency and continuity help
>> in building on firm foundations, it is self-evident that the past 10
>> years under Blair have created building blocks on which further progress
>> can be made. In the world of modern communication, and a 21st century of
>> economic and global change and rapid social, cultural and political
>> developments, preparing Britain for the future has rightly been the
>> hallmark of the past 10 years. Now, looking ahead to the future and
>> combating the ¡¥evils¡¦ that confront us, is the challenge we must
>> address. Labour is ready, willing and able to take on that mantle.
>> 
>> There is no text version of the pamphlet, only PDF:
>> http://www.unison.org.uk/acrobat/B3223z.pdf
> 
> Sadly, with all this increase in spending and more government employees, 
> its become an even more petty minded bureaucratic society, with drigs 
> violent crime and suicide rates up, and no better delivery of services, 
> and punitive taxation everywhere you least expect it.
> A dull, tedious expensive nanny state whose sheer boredonm is only 
> relieved by the frantic acts of violence as the more vulnerable members 
> of society cave into the pressure..
> 
> And incompetence and waste at every level of the vast cesspit of government.

Your talking like a shit house philosopher!

Martin
date: Sat, 05 May 2007 09:27:00 GMT   author:   Martin

– a country transformed: 10 years of Labour Government in BritainRe: Then and now   
The Natural Philosopher wrote:
> Custard Creme wrote:
>> Ten years is a very short time in politics. But it is a very long time
>> for those who have forgotten how far we have come.

snip spam spin.


> Sadly, with all this increase in spending and more government employees, 
> its become an even more petty minded bureaucratic society, with drigs 
> violent crime and suicide rates up, and no better delivery of services, 
> and punitive taxation everywhere you least expect it.
> A dull, tedious expensive nanny state whose sheer boredonm is only 
> relieved by the frantic acts of violence as the more vulnerable members 
> of society cave into the pressure..
> 
> And incompetence and waste at every level of the vast cesspit of 
> government.


You forgot to mention brown's raid on the pension funds 
which will lead to reduced incomes for those nearing pension 
age, also the fact that young people will to work for longer 
to make up for his cynical slight of hand.  That said why 
did you give the spammer another bite of the cherry by 
failing to snip it's garbage?
date: Sat, 05 May 2007 10:37:07 +0100   author:   Richard H Huelin

Re: Then and now – a country transformed: 10 years of Labour Government in Britain   
On Sat, 05 May 2007 09:13:46 +0100, Custard Creme
 wrote:

>Ten years is a very short time in politics. But it is a very long time
>for those who have forgotten how far we have come.

You don't get out much do you sadsack ?
date: Sat, 05 May 2007 11:07:57 +0100   author:   unknown

Re: Then and now – a country transformed: 10 years of Labour Government in Britain   
In message <463c3cba$1_3@mk-nntp-2.news.uk.tiscali.com>, Custard Creme 
 writes

(A whole load of totally fallacious 1930's-style socialist polemic).
-- 
Chris Morriss
date: Sat, 5 May 2007 11:23:06 +0100   author:   Chris Morriss

– a country transformed: 10 years of Labour Government in BritainRe: Then and now   
Custard Creme wrote:
> Ten years is a very short time in politics. But it is a very long time
> for those who have forgotten how far we have come.
> 
> On May 1 2007, I published a pamphlet which looks back at the big issues
> that were making the headlines prior to Labour’s election in 1997. Using
> the newspapers’ own words, it reminds us of how far the country has come
> on the key issues that affect the quality of people’s daily lives, and
> have been crucial to the transformation of our country: education,
> employment, health, crime and the economy.
> 
> What emerges is both the enormity of the challenge that Labour faced in
> 1997 in turning around under-investment and lack of reform, but also the
> scepticism and despair as to whether government could overcome these
> major and sometimes very long-standing blights on the lives of the
> British people.
> 
> Today’s newspapers tell a different story – with per pupil spending on
> education having doubled from £2,500 to well over £5,000 in the past 10
> years, today’s headlines no longer scream, ‘Crumbling Britain – Schools
> of Shame’ (the Observer, March 3 1996). ‘4m Jobless’ (the Sun, March 21
> 1997) no longer adorns the front pages due to 2.6m extra jobs and the
> lowest level of unemployment since the 1970s. More than 85,000 more
> nurses and over 32,000 more doctors, and the largest sustained hospital
> building programme since the NHS was founded, have made headlines like
> this a thing of the past: ‘Weather and Cash Crisis leave NHS in Chaos’
> (the Independent, January 6 1997).
> 
> Despite widespread media predictions that under Labour, house prices
> would fall, interest rates would surge upwards and there would be a
> ‘humiliating devaluation in the pound’, headlines such as ‘Pound Hit as
> Jobless Rise and Salaries Slump’ (the Evening Standard, November 15
> 1995) have not been seen for years – and £1 has recently been strong
> enough to be worth $2. Michael Howard famously admitted that crime had
> doubled under the Tories and convictions fell by more than a quarter.
> 
> Labour today has dramatically increased police numbers by more than
> 14,000, and introduced over 11,000 new community support officers. We no
> longer see ‘Falling Police Numbers Mock Tory Promises’ (the Independent,
> September 2 1996) in the papers. Such headlines belong in the past, but
> with a resurgent Conservative party there is no room for amnesia.
> 
> Amid the daily political grind, it can be easy to forget that many of
> the problems facing the country in 1997 have largely been solved.
> Whatever the political argument of the day, we must remember that these
> achievements did not happen as a random accident of fate. Led by Tony
> Blair, Labour’s achievements have not just been numbers but real people
> teaching our young, healing our sick and making our communities safer,
> and hard cash in people’s pockets meaning lives are lived to a higher
> standard.
> 
> Britain today is a country transformed from those dark years of Tory
> rule, where selfishness and greed were the political mantra. We have a
> better educated, healthier, safer, fairer, more open-minded and more
> prosperous society than 10 years ago. This is surely a legacy to be
> proud of. All of this, of course, began with the decision of the people
> to put their trust in Labour.
> 
>>From Sure Start and universal nursery education, the introduction of the
> minimum wage through to pension credit and the new pension proposals
> voted through the House of Commons in April 2007, it is political
> decisions and choice, not chance, that make the difference.
> 
> And the lasting legacy of Blair’s 10-year premiership will quite simply
> be the transformation of the British political landscape – that the era
> of Margaret Thatcher has been put behind us. It is a tribute to those
> first 10 years of New Labour in government that the political culture,
> the economic prospects, the social agenda are all entirely different,
> and it is on this agenda that all main political parties are now
> competing for votes.
> 
> Blair’s leadership success in winning a consensus of the aspirant and
> moderately affluent, with the have-nots and dispossessed, not only put
> behind us a century of Labour spasmodically in power; but brought us a
> party embracing the future, prepared to take on the challenge of change,
> and responsive to the rising expectations of the British people.
> 
> There has and never will be a year zero in which a government resolved
> all the problems – economic, social and cultural – facing the people
> they represent. Every step taken, every success achieved opens up new
> aspirations as well as refocusing on new concerns.
> 
> The world of tomorrow will by its very nature demand new approaches to
> how best to hold to account a more pluralistic and diffuse political
> society; to reinforce civil renewal; and the capacity and assets of
> individuals, families and communities to make decisions for themselves
> and to influence the world around them.
> 
> Greater transparency in public life has perversely, but entirely
> correctly, demanded standards and openness never before experienced in
> public life. Disagreements over foreign policy, in particular Iraq,
> have, for the moment, overshadowed tremendous achievements in Kosovo and
> the Balkans. Not to mention in Sierra Leone, and in the leadership shown
> through the G8 in tackling worldwide poverty and the neglect of Africa,
> and the new challenges of climate change. But nothing can take away the
> simple fact that people here at home and, yes, across the world, are
> better off because of this Labour government.
> 
> One thing is certain. The power-sharing administration in Northern
> Ireland from May 8 2007 is, if ever one were needed, a demonstration of
> how, despite the cynicism and the denigration surrounding democratic
> political activity, politics can succeed in bringing peace and
> prosperity in the most unlikely circumstances. A legacy indeed for the
> prime minister.
> 
> And perhaps, it also offers an alternative to the growing flirtation
> with the idea of taking ‘politics’ out of politics; the handing over of
> decisions to ‘officialdom’; the belief that there are some people
> somewhere in our country, who, without values, prejudices or personal
> predilections, can look after our best interests, can balance competing
> demands, can in essence create a world free of political disagreement.
> For that would be a sad outcome from a decade in which, with all its
> faults, it is politics that has changed the world for so many.
> 
> On the twin challenges of opportunity and security, and the reshaping of
> politics to be ‘on your side’, enabling and working with people rather
> than just making decisions on their behalf – these are bigger hurdles to
> surmount, but offer a more lasting and sustainable political landscape
> than ever before. Let us take on that continuing modernising and
> reforming challenge and let us do it in a way that speaks to, engages
> with, and uses the talent and commitment of the people we serve.
> 
> For those who say, quite rightly, that consistency and continuity help
> in building on firm foundations, it is self-evident that the past 10
> years under Blair have created building blocks on which further progress
> can be made. In the world of modern communication, and a 21st century of
> economic and global change and rapid social, cultural and political
> developments, preparing Britain for the future has rightly been the
> hallmark of the past 10 years. Now, looking ahead to the future and
> combating the ‘evils’ that confront us, is the challenge we must
> address. Labour is ready, willing and able to take on that mantle.
> 
> 
> There is no text version of the pamphlet, only PDF:
> http://www.unison.org.uk/acrobat/B3223z.pdf

Sadly, with all this increase in spending and more government employees, 
its become an even more petty minded bureaucratic society, with drigs 
violent crime and suicide rates up, and no better delivery of services, 
and punitive taxation everywhere you least expect it.
A dull, tedious expensive nanny state whose sheer boredonm is only 
relieved by the frantic acts of violence as the more vulnerable members 
of society cave into the pressure..

And incompetence and waste at every level of the vast cesspit of government.
date: Sat, 05 May 2007 09:52:50 +0100   author:   The Natural Philosopher a@b.c

– a country transformed: 10 years of Labour Government in BritainRe: Then and now   
On Sat, 05 May 2007 09:52:50 +0100, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

> Custard Creme wrote:
>> Ten years is a very short time in politics. But it is a very long time
>> for those who have forgotten how far we have come.
>> 
>> On May 1 2007, I published a pamphlet which looks back at the big issues
>> that were making the headlines prior to Labour¡¦s election in 1997. Using
>> the newspapers¡¦ own words, it reminds us of how far the country has come
>> on the key issues that affect the quality of people¡¦s daily lives, and
>> have been crucial to the transformation of our country: education,
>> employment, health, crime and the economy.
>> 
>> What emerges is both the enormity of the challenge that Labour faced in
>> 1997 in turning around under-investment and lack of reform, but also the
>> scepticism and despair as to whether government could overcome these
>> major and sometimes very long-standing blights on the lives of the
>> British people.
>> 
>> Today¡¦s newspapers tell a different story ¡V with per pupil spending on
>> education having doubled from ¢G2,500 to well over ¢G5,000 in the past 10
>> years, today¡¦s headlines no longer scream, ¡¥Crumbling Britain ¡V Schools
>> of Shame¡¦ (the Observer, March 3 1996). ¡¥4m Jobless¡¦ (the Sun, March 21
>> 1997) no longer adorns the front pages due to 2.6m extra jobs and the
>> lowest level of unemployment since the 1970s. More than 85,000 more
>> nurses and over 32,000 more doctors, and the largest sustained hospital
>> building programme since the NHS was founded, have made headlines like
>> this a thing of the past: ¡¥Weather and Cash Crisis leave NHS in Chaos¡¦
>> (the Independent, January 6 1997).
>> 
>> Despite widespread media predictions that under Labour, house prices
>> would fall, interest rates would surge upwards and there would be a
>> ¡¥humiliating devaluation in the pound¡¦, headlines such as ¡¥Pound Hit as
>> Jobless Rise and Salaries Slump¡¦ (the Evening Standard, November 15
>> 1995) have not been seen for years ¡V and ¢G1 has recently been strong
>> enough to be worth $2. Michael Howard famously admitted that crime had
>> doubled under the Tories and convictions fell by more than a quarter.
>> 
>> Labour today has dramatically increased police numbers by more than
>> 14,000, and introduced over 11,000 new community support officers. We no
>> longer see ¡¥Falling Police Numbers Mock Tory Promises¡¦ (the Independent,
>> September 2 1996) in the papers. Such headlines belong in the past, but
>> with a resurgent Conservative party there is no room for amnesia.
>> 
>> Amid the daily political grind, it can be easy to forget that many of
>> the problems facing the country in 1997 have largely been solved.
>> Whatever the political argument of the day, we must remember that these
>> achievements did not happen as a random accident of fate. Led by Tony
>> Blair, Labour¡¦s achievements have not just been numbers but real people
>> teaching our young, healing our sick and making our communities safer,
>> and hard cash in people¡¦s pockets meaning lives are lived to a higher
>> standard.
>> 
>> Britain today is a country transformed from those dark years of Tory
>> rule, where selfishness and greed were the political mantra. We have a
>> better educated, healthier, safer, fairer, more open-minded and more
>> prosperous society than 10 years ago. This is surely a legacy to be
>> proud of. All of this, of course, began with the decision of the people
>> to put their trust in Labour.
>> 
>>>From Sure Start and universal nursery education, the introduction of the
>> minimum wage through to pension credit and the new pension proposals
>> voted through the House of Commons in April 2007, it is political
>> decisions and choice, not chance, that make the difference.
>> 
>> And the lasting legacy of Blair¡¦s 10-year premiership will quite simply
>> be the transformation of the British political landscape ¡V that the era
>> of Margaret Thatcher has been put behind us. It is a tribute to those
>> first 10 years of New Labour in government that the political culture,
>> the economic prospects, the social agenda are all entirely different,
>> and it is on this agenda that all main political parties are now
>> competing for votes.
>> 
>> Blair¡¦s leadership success in winning a consensus of the aspirant and
>> moderately affluent, with the have-nots and dispossessed, not only put
>> behind us a century of Labour spasmodically in power; but brought us a
>> party embracing the future, prepared to take on the challenge of change,
>> and responsive to the rising expectations of the British people.
>> 
>> There has and never will be a year zero in which a government resolved
>> all the problems ¡V economic, social and cultural ¡V facing the people
>> they represent. Every step taken, every success achieved opens up new
>> aspirations as well as refocusing on new concerns.
>> 
>> The world of tomorrow will by its very nature demand new approaches to
>> how best to hold to account a more pluralistic and diffuse political
>> society; to reinforce civil renewal; and the capacity and assets of
>> individuals, families and communities to make decisions for themselves
>> and to influence the world around them.
>> 
>> Greater transparency in public life has perversely, but entirely
>> correctly, demanded standards and openness never before experienced in
>> public life. Disagreements over foreign policy, in particular Iraq,
>> have, for the moment, overshadowed tremendous achievements in Kosovo and
>> the Balkans. Not to mention in Sierra Leone, and in the leadership shown
>> through the G8 in tackling worldwide poverty and the neglect of Africa,
>> and the new challenges of climate change. But nothing can take away the
>> simple fact that people here at home and, yes, across the world, are
>> better off because of this Labour government.
>> 
>> One thing is certain. The power-sharing administration in Northern
>> Ireland from May 8 2007 is, if ever one were needed, a demonstration of
>> how, despite the cynicism and the denigration surrounding democratic
>> political activity, politics can succeed in bringing peace and
>> prosperity in the most unlikely circumstances. A legacy indeed for the
>> prime minister.
>> 
>> And perhaps, it also offers an alternative to the growing flirtation
>> with the idea of taking ¡¥politics¡¦ out of politics; the handing over of
>> decisions to ¡¥officialdom¡¦; the belief that there are some people
>> somewhere in our country, who, without values, prejudices or personal
>> predilections, can look after our best interests, can balance competing
>> demands, can in essence create a world free of political disagreement.
>> For that would be a sad outcome from a decade in which, with all its
>> faults, it is politics that has changed the world for so many.
>> 
>> On the twin challenges of opportunity and security, and the reshaping of
>> politics to be ¡¥on your side¡¦, enabling and working with people rather
>> than just making decisions on their behalf ¡V these are bigger hurdles to
>> surmount, but offer a more lasting and sustainable political landscape
>> than ever before. Let us take on that continuing modernising and
>> reforming challenge and let us do it in a way that speaks to, engages
>> with, and uses the talent and commitment of the people we serve.
>> 
>> For those who say, quite rightly, that consistency and continuity help
>> in building on firm foundations, it is self-evident that the past 10
>> years under Blair have created building blocks on which further progress
>> can be made. In the world of modern communication, and a 21st century of
>> economic and global change and rapid social, cultural and political
>> developments, preparing Britain for the future has rightly been the
>> hallmark of the past 10 years. Now, looking ahead to the future and
>> combating the ¡¥evils¡¦ that confront us, is the challenge we must
>> address. Labour is ready, willing and able to take on that mantle.
>> 
>> There is no text version of the pamphlet, only PDF:
>> http://www.unison.org.uk/acrobat/B3223z.pdf
> 
> Sadly, with all this increase in spending and more government employees, 
> its become an even more petty minded bureaucratic society, with drigs 
> violent crime and suicide rates up, and no better delivery of services, 
> and punitive taxation everywhere you least expect it.
> A dull, tedious expensive nanny state whose sheer boredonm is only 
> relieved by the frantic acts of violence as the more vulnerable members 
> of society cave into the pressure..
> 
> And incompetence and waste at every level of the vast cesspit of government.

Your talking like a shit house philosopher!

Martin
date: Sat, 05 May 2007 09:27:00 GMT   author:   Martin

– a country transformed: 10 years of Labour Government in BritainRe: Then and now   
The Natural Philosopher wrote:
> Custard Creme wrote:
>> Ten years is a very short time in politics. But it is a very long time
>> for those who have forgotten how far we have come.

snip spam spin.


> Sadly, with all this increase in spending and more government employees, 
> its become an even more petty minded bureaucratic society, with drigs 
> violent crime and suicide rates up, and no better delivery of services, 
> and punitive taxation everywhere you least expect it.
> A dull, tedious expensive nanny state whose sheer boredonm is only 
> relieved by the frantic acts of violence as the more vulnerable members 
> of society cave into the pressure..
> 
> And incompetence and waste at every level of the vast cesspit of 
> government.


You forgot to mention brown's raid on the pension funds 
which will lead to reduced incomes for those nearing pension 
age, also the fact that young people will to work for longer 
to make up for his cynical slight of hand.  That said why 
did you give the spammer another bite of the cherry by 
failing to snip it's garbage?
date: Sat, 05 May 2007 10:37:07 +0100   author:   Richard H Huelin

Re: Then and now – a country transformed: 10 years of Labour Government in Britain   
On Sat, 05 May 2007 09:13:46 +0100, Custard Creme
 wrote:

>Ten years is a very short time in politics. But it is a very long time
>for those who have forgotten how far we have come.

You don't get out much do you sadsack ?
date: Sat, 05 May 2007 11:07:57 +0100   author:   unknown

Re: Then and now – a country transformed: 10 years of Labour Government in Britain   
In message <463c3cba$1_3@mk-nntp-2.news.uk.tiscali.com>, Custard Creme 
 writes

(A whole load of totally fallacious 1930's-style socialist polemic).
-- 
Chris Morriss
date: Sat, 5 May 2007 11:23:06 +0100   author:   Chris Morriss

– a country transformed: 10 years of Labour Government in BritainRe: Then and now   
Custard Creme wrote:
> Ten years is a very short time in politics. But it is a very long time
> for those who have forgotten how far we have come.
> 
> On May 1 2007, I published a pamphlet which looks back at the big issues
> that were making the headlines prior to Labour’s election in 1997. Using
> the newspapers’ own words, it reminds us of how far the country has come
> on the key issues that affect the quality of people’s daily lives, and
> have been crucial to the transformation of our country: education,
> employment, health, crime and the economy.
> 
> What emerges is both the enormity of the challenge that Labour faced in
> 1997 in turning around under-investment and lack of reform, but also the
> scepticism and despair as to whether government could overcome these
> major and sometimes very long-standing blights on the lives of the
> British people.
> 
> Today’s newspapers tell a different story – with per pupil spending on
> education having doubled from £2,500 to well over £5,000 in the past 10
> years, today’s headlines no longer scream, ‘Crumbling Britain – Schools
> of Shame’ (the Observer, March 3 1996). ‘4m Jobless’ (the Sun, March 21
> 1997) no longer adorns the front pages due to 2.6m extra jobs and the
> lowest level of unemployment since the 1970s. More than 85,000 more
> nurses and over 32,000 more doctors, and the largest sustained hospital
> building programme since the NHS was founded, have made headlines like
> this a thing of the past: ‘Weather and Cash Crisis leave NHS in Chaos’
> (the Independent, January 6 1997).
> 
> Despite widespread media predictions that under Labour, house prices
> would fall, interest rates would surge upwards and there would be a
> ‘humiliating devaluation in the pound’, headlines such as ‘Pound Hit as
> Jobless Rise and Salaries Slump’ (the Evening Standard, November 15
> 1995) have not been seen for years – and £1 has recently been strong
> enough to be worth $2. Michael Howard famously admitted that crime had
> doubled under the Tories and convictions fell by more than a quarter.
> 
> Labour today has dramatically increased police numbers by more than
> 14,000, and introduced over 11,000 new community support officers. We no
> longer see ‘Falling Police Numbers Mock Tory Promises’ (the Independent,
> September 2 1996) in the papers. Such headlines belong in the past, but
> with a resurgent Conservative party there is no room for amnesia.
> 
> Amid the daily political grind, it can be easy to forget that many of
> the problems facing the country in 1997 have largely been solved.
> Whatever the political argument of the day, we must remember that these
> achievements did not happen as a random accident of fate. Led by Tony
> Blair, Labour’s achievements have not just been numbers but real people
> teaching our young, healing our sick and making our communities safer,
> and hard cash in people’s pockets meaning lives are lived to a higher
> standard.
> 
> Britain today is a country transformed from those dark years of Tory
> rule, where selfishness and greed were the political mantra. We have a
> better educated, healthier, safer, fairer, more open-minded and more
> prosperous society than 10 years ago. This is surely a legacy to be
> proud of. All of this, of course, began with the decision of the people
> to put their trust in Labour.
> 
>>From Sure Start and universal nursery education, the introduction of the
> minimum wage through to pension credit and the new pension proposals
> voted through the House of Commons in April 2007, it is political
> decisions and choice, not chance, that make the difference.
> 
> And the lasting legacy of Blair’s 10-year premiership will quite simply
> be the transformation of the British political landscape – that the era
> of Margaret Thatcher has been put behind us. It is a tribute to those
> first 10 years of New Labour in government that the political culture,
> the economic prospects, the social agenda are all entirely different,
> and it is on this agenda that all main political parties are now
> competing for votes.
> 
> Blair’s leadership success in winning a consensus of the aspirant and
> moderately affluent, with the have-nots and dispossessed, not only put
> behind us a century of Labour spasmodically in power; but brought us a
> party embracing the future, prepared to take on the challenge of change,
> and responsive to the rising expectations of the British people.
> 
> There has and never will be a year zero in which a government resolved
> all the problems – economic, social and cultural – facing the people
> they represent. Every step taken, every success achieved opens up new
> aspirations as well as refocusing on new concerns.
> 
> The world of tomorrow will by its very nature demand new approaches to
> how best to hold to account a more pluralistic and diffuse political
> society; to reinforce civil renewal; and the capacity and assets of
> individuals, families and communities to make decisions for themselves
> and to influence the world around them.
> 
> Greater transparency in public life has perversely, but entirely
> correctly, demanded standards and openness never before experienced in
> public life. Disagreements over foreign policy, in particular Iraq,
> have, for the moment, overshadowed tremendous achievements in Kosovo and
> the Balkans. Not to mention in Sierra Leone, and in the leadership shown
> through the G8 in tackling worldwide poverty and the neglect of Africa,
> and the new challenges of climate change. But nothing can take away the
> simple fact that people here at home and, yes, across the world, are
> better off because of this Labour government.
> 
> One thing is certain. The power-sharing administration in Northern
> Ireland from May 8 2007 is, if ever one were needed, a demonstration of
> how, despite the cynicism and the denigration surrounding democratic
> political activity, politics can succeed in bringing peace and
> prosperity in the most unlikely circumstances. A legacy indeed for the
> prime minister.
> 
> And perhaps, it also offers an alternative to the growing flirtation
> with the idea of taking ‘politics’ out of politics; the handing over of
> decisions to ‘officialdom’; the belief that there are some people
> somewhere in our country, who, without values, prejudices or personal
> predilections, can look after our best interests, can balance competing
> demands, can in essence create a world free of political disagreement.
> For that would be a sad outcome from a decade in which, with all its
> faults, it is politics that has changed the world for so many.
> 
> On the twin challenges of opportunity and security, and the reshaping of
> politics to be ‘on your side’, enabling and working with people rather
> than just making decisions on their behalf – these are bigger hurdles to
> surmount, but offer a more lasting and sustainable political landscape
> than ever before. Let us take on that continuing modernising and
> reforming challenge and let us do it in a way that speaks to, engages
> with, and uses the talent and commitment of the people we serve.
> 
> For those who say, quite rightly, that consistency and continuity help
> in building on firm foundations, it is self-evident that the past 10
> years under Blair have created building blocks on which further progress
> can be made. In the world of modern communication, and a 21st century of
> economic and global change and rapid social, cultural and political
> developments, preparing Britain for the future has rightly been the
> hallmark of the past 10 years. Now, looking ahead to the future and
> combating the ‘evils’ that confront us, is the challenge we must
> address. Labour is ready, willing and able to take on that mantle.
> 
> 
> There is no text version of the pamphlet, only PDF:
> http://www.unison.org.uk/acrobat/B3223z.pdf

Sadly, with all this increase in spending and more government employees, 
its become an even more petty minded bureaucratic society, with drigs 
violent crime and suicide rates up, and no better delivery of services, 
and punitive taxation everywhere you least expect it.
A dull, tedious expensive nanny state whose sheer boredonm is only 
relieved by the frantic acts of violence as the more vulnerable members 
of society cave into the pressure..

And incompetence and waste at every level of the vast cesspit of government.
date: Sat, 05 May 2007 09:52:50 +0100   author:   The Natural Philosopher a@b.c

– a country transformed: 10 years of Labour Government in BritainRe: Then and now   
On Sat, 05 May 2007 09:52:50 +0100, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

> Custard Creme wrote:
>> Ten years is a very short time in politics. But it is a very long time
>> for those who have forgotten how far we have come.
>> 
>> On May 1 2007, I published a pamphlet which looks back at the big issues
>> that were making the headlines prior to Labour¡¦s election in 1997. Using
>> the newspapers¡¦ own words, it reminds us of how far the country has come
>> on the key issues that affect the quality of people¡¦s daily lives, and
>> have been crucial to the transformation of our country: education,
>> employment, health, crime and the economy.
>> 
>> What emerges is both the enormity of the challenge that Labour faced in
>> 1997 in turning around under-investment and lack of reform, but also the
>> scepticism and despair as to whether government could overcome these
>> major and sometimes very long-standing blights on the lives of the
>> British people.
>> 
>> Today¡¦s newspapers tell a different story ¡V with per pupil spending on
>> education having doubled from ¢G2,500 to well over ¢G5,000 in the past 10
>> years, today¡¦s headlines no longer scream, ¡¥Crumbling Britain ¡V Schools
>> of Shame¡¦ (the Observer, March 3 1996). ¡¥4m Jobless¡¦ (the Sun, March 21
>> 1997) no longer adorns the front pages due to 2.6m extra jobs and the
>> lowest level of unemployment since the 1970s. More than 85,000 more
>> nurses and over 32,000 more doctors, and the largest sustained hospital
>> building programme since the NHS was founded, have made headlines like
>> this a thing of the past: ¡¥Weather and Cash Crisis leave NHS in Chaos¡¦
>> (the Independent, January 6 1997).
>> 
>> Despite widespread media predictions that under Labour, house prices
>> would fall, interest rates would surge upwards and there would be a
>> ¡¥humiliating devaluation in the pound¡¦, headlines such as ¡¥Pound Hit as
>> Jobless Rise and Salaries Slump¡¦ (the Evening Standard, November 15
>> 1995) have not been seen for years ¡V and ¢G1 has recently been strong
>> enough to be worth $2. Michael Howard famously admitted that crime had
>> doubled under the Tories and convictions fell by more than a quarter.
>> 
>> Labour today has dramatically increased police numbers by more than
>> 14,000, and introduced over 11,000 new community support officers. We no
>> longer see ¡¥Falling Police Numbers Mock Tory Promises¡¦ (the Independent,
>> September 2 1996) in the papers. Such headlines belong in the past, but
>> with a resurgent Conservative party there is no room for amnesia.
>> 
>> Amid the daily political grind, it can be easy to forget that many of
>> the problems facing the country in 1997 have largely been solved.
>> Whatever the political argument of the day, we must remember that these
>> achievements did not happen as a random accident of fate. Led by Tony
>> Blair, Labour¡¦s achievements have not just been numbers but real people
>> teaching our young, healing our sick and making our communities safer,
>> and hard cash in people¡¦s pockets meaning lives are lived to a higher
>> standard.
>> 
>> Britain today is a country transformed from those dark years of Tory
>> rule, where selfishness and greed were the political mantra. We have a
>> better educated, healthier, safer, fairer, more open-minded and more
>> prosperous society than 10 years ago. This is surely a legacy to be
>> proud of. All of this, of course, began with the decision of the people
>> to put their trust in Labour.
>> 
>>>From Sure Start and universal nursery education, the introduction of the
>> minimum wage through to pension credit and the new pension proposals
>> voted through the House of Commons in April 2007, it is political
>> decisions and choice, not chance, that make the difference.
>> 
>> And the lasting legacy of Blair¡¦s 10-year premiership will quite simply
>> be the transformation of the British political landscape ¡V that the era
>> of Margaret Thatcher has been put behind us. It is a tribute to those
>> first 10 years of New Labour in government that the political culture,
>> the economic prospects, the social agenda are all entirely different,
>> and it is on this agenda that all main political parties are now
>> competing for votes.
>> 
>> Blair¡¦s leadership success in winning a consensus of the aspirant and
>> moderately affluent, with the have-nots and dispossessed, not only put
>> behind us a century of Labour spasmodically in power; but brought us a
>> party embracing the future, prepared to take on the challenge of change,
>> and responsive to the rising expectations of the British people.
>> 
>> There has and never will be a year zero in which a government resolved
>> all the problems ¡V economic, social and cultural ¡V facing the people
>> they represent. Every step taken, every success achieved opens up new
>> aspirations as well as refocusing on new concerns.
>> 
>> The world of tomorrow will by its very nature demand new approaches to
>> how best to hold to account a more pluralistic and diffuse political
>> society; to reinforce civil renewal; and the capacity and assets of
>> individuals, families and communities to make decisions for themselves
>> and to influence the world around them.
>> 
>> Greater transparency in public life has perversely, but entirely
>> correctly, demanded standards and openness never before experienced in
>> public life. Disagreements over foreign policy, in particular Iraq,
>> have, for the moment, overshadowed tremendous achievements in Kosovo and
>> the Balkans. Not to mention in Sierra Leone, and in the leadership shown
>> through the G8 in tackling worldwide poverty and the neglect of Africa,
>> and the new challenges of climate change. But nothing can take away the
>> simple fact that people here at home and, yes, across the world, are
>> better off because of this Labour government.
>> 
>> One thing is certain. The power-sharing administration in Northern
>> Ireland from May 8 2007 is, if ever one were needed, a demonstration of
>> how, despite the cynicism and the denigration surrounding democratic
>> political activity, politics can succeed in bringing peace and
>> prosperity in the most unlikely circumstances. A legacy indeed for the
>> prime minister.
>> 
>> And perhaps, it also offers an alternative to the growing flirtation
>> with the idea of taking ¡¥politics¡¦ out of politics; the handing over of
>> decisions to ¡¥officialdom¡¦; the belief that there are some people
>> somewhere in our country, who, without values, prejudices or personal
>> predilections, can look after our best interests, can balance competing
>> demands, can in essence create a world free of political disagreement.
>> For that would be a sad outcome from a decade in which, with all its
>> faults, it is politics that has changed the world for so many.
>> 
>> On the twin challenges of opportunity and security, and the reshaping of
>> politics to be ¡¥on your side¡¦, enabling and working with people rather
>> than just making decisions on their behalf ¡V these are bigger hurdles to
>> surmount, but offer a more lasting and sustainable political landscape
>> than ever before. Let us take on that continuing modernising and
>> reforming challenge and let us do it in a way that speaks to, engages
>> with, and uses the talent and commitment of the people we serve.
>> 
>> For those who say, quite rightly, that consistency and continuity help
>> in building on firm foundations, it is self-evident that the past 10
>> years under Blair have created building blocks on which further progress
>> can be made. In the world of modern communication, and a 21st century of
>> economic and global change and rapid social, cultural and political
>> developments, preparing Britain for the future has rightly been the
>> hallmark of the past 10 years. Now, looking ahead to the future and
>> combating the ¡¥evils¡¦ that confront us, is the challenge we must
>> address. Labour is ready, willing and able to take on that mantle.
>> 
>> There is no text version of the pamphlet, only PDF:
>> http://www.unison.org.uk/acrobat/B3223z.pdf
> 
> Sadly, with all this increase in spending and more government employees, 
> its become an even more petty minded bureaucratic society, with drigs 
> violent crime and suicide rates up, and no better delivery of services, 
> and punitive taxation everywhere you least expect it.
> A dull, tedious expensive nanny state whose sheer boredonm is only 
> relieved by the frantic acts of violence as the more vulnerable members 
> of society cave into the pressure..
> 
> And incompetence and waste at every level of the vast cesspit of government.

Your talking like a shit house philosopher!

Martin
date: Sat, 05 May 2007 09:27:00 GMT   author:   Martin

– a country transformed: 10 years of Labour Government in BritainRe: Then and now   
The Natural Philosopher wrote:
> Custard Creme wrote:
>> Ten years is a very short time in politics. But it is a very long time
>> for those who have forgotten how far we have come.

snip spam spin.


> Sadly, with all this increase in spending and more government employees, 
> its become an even more petty minded bureaucratic society, with drigs 
> violent crime and suicide rates up, and no better delivery of services, 
> and punitive taxation everywhere you least expect it.
> A dull, tedious expensive nanny state whose sheer boredonm is only 
> relieved by the frantic acts of violence as the more vulnerable members 
> of society cave into the pressure..
> 
> And incompetence and waste at every level of the vast cesspit of 
> government.


You forgot to mention brown's raid on the pension funds 
which will lead to reduced incomes for those nearing pension 
age, also the fact that young people will to work for longer 
to make up for his cynical slight of hand.  That said why 
did you give the spammer another bite of the cherry by 
failing to snip it's garbage?
date: Sat, 05 May 2007 10:37:07 +0100   author:   Richard H Huelin

Re: Then and now – a country transformed: 10 years of Labour Government in Britain   
On Sat, 05 May 2007 09:13:46 +0100, Custard Creme
 wrote:

>Ten years is a very short time in politics. But it is a very long time
>for those who have forgotten how far we have come.

You don't get out much do you sadsack ?
date: Sat, 05 May 2007 11:07:57 +0100   author:   unknown

Re: Then and now – a country transformed: 10 years of Labour Government in Britain   
In message <463c3cba$1_3@mk-nntp-2.news.uk.tiscali.com>, Custard Creme 
 writes

(A whole load of totally fallacious 1930's-style socialist polemic).
-- 
Chris Morriss
date: Sat, 5 May 2007 11:23:06 +0100   author:   Chris Morriss

– a country transformed: 10 years of Labour Government in BritainRe: Then and now   
Custard Creme wrote:
> Ten years is a very short time in politics. But it is a very long time
> for those who have forgotten how far we have come.
> 
> On May 1 2007, I published a pamphlet which looks back at the big issues
> that were making the headlines prior to Labour’s election in 1997. Using
> the newspapers’ own words, it reminds us of how far the country has come
> on the key issues that affect the quality of people’s daily lives, and
> have been crucial to the transformation of our country: education,
> employment, health, crime and the economy.
> 
> What emerges is both the enormity of the challenge that Labour faced in
> 1997 in turning around under-investment and lack of reform, but also the
> scepticism and despair as to whether government could overcome these
> major and sometimes very long-standing blights on the lives of the
> British people.
> 
> Today’s newspapers tell a different story – with per pupil spending on
> education having doubled from £2,500 to well over £5,000 in the past 10
> years, today’s headlines no longer scream, ‘Crumbling Britain – Schools
> of Shame’ (the Observer, March 3 1996). ‘4m Jobless’ (the Sun, March 21
> 1997) no longer adorns the front pages due to 2.6m extra jobs and the
> lowest level of unemployment since the 1970s. More than 85,000 more
> nurses and over 32,000 more doctors, and the largest sustained hospital
> building programme since the NHS was founded, have made headlines like
> this a thing of the past: ‘Weather and Cash Crisis leave NHS in Chaos’
> (the Independent, January 6 1997).
> 
> Despite widespread media predictions that under Labour, house prices
> would fall, interest rates would surge upwards and there would be a
> ‘humiliating devaluation in the pound’, headlines such as ‘Pound Hit as
> Jobless Rise and Salaries Slump’ (the Evening Standard, November 15
> 1995) have not been seen for years – and £1 has recently been strong
> enough to be worth $2. Michael Howard famously admitted that crime had
> doubled under the Tories and convictions fell by more than a quarter.
> 
> Labour today has dramatically increased police numbers by more than
> 14,000, and introduced over 11,000 new community support officers. We no
> longer see ‘Falling Police Numbers Mock Tory Promises’ (the Independent,
> September 2 1996) in the papers. Such headlines belong in the past, but
> with a resurgent Conservative party there is no room for amnesia.
> 
> Amid the daily political grind, it can be easy to forget that many of
> the problems facing the country in 1997 have largely been solved.
> Whatever the political argument of the day, we must remember that these
> achievements did not happen as a random accident of fate. Led by Tony
> Blair, Labour’s achievements have not just been numbers but real people
> teaching our young, healing our sick and making our communities safer,
> and hard cash in people’s pockets meaning lives are lived to a higher
> standard.
> 
> Britain today is a country transformed from those dark years of Tory
> rule, where selfishness and greed were the political mantra. We have a
> better educated, healthier, safer, fairer, more open-minded and more
> prosperous society than 10 years ago. This is surely a legacy to be
> proud of. All of this, of course, began with the decision of the people
> to put their trust in Labour.
> 
>>From Sure Start and universal nursery education, the introduction of the
> minimum wage through to pension credit and the new pension proposals
> voted through the House of Commons in April 2007, it is political
> decisions and choice, not chance, that make the difference.
> 
> And the lasting legacy of Blair’s 10-year premiership will quite simply
> be the transformation of the British political landscape – that the era
> of Margaret Thatcher has been put behind us. It is a tribute to those
> first 10 years of New Labour in government that the political culture,
> the economic prospects, the social agenda are all entirely different,
> and it is on this agenda that all main political parties are now
> competing for votes.
> 
> Blair’s leadership success in winning a consensus of the aspirant and
> moderately affluent, with the have-nots and dispossessed, not only put
> behind us a century of Labour spasmodically in power; but brought us a
> party embracing the future, prepared to take on the challenge of change,
> and responsive to the rising expectations of the British people.
> 
> There has and never will be a year zero in which a government resolved
> all the problems – economic, social and cultural – facing the people
> they represent. Every step taken, every success achieved opens up new
> aspirations as well as refocusing on new concerns.
> 
> The world of tomorrow will by its very nature demand new approaches to
> how best to hold to account a more pluralistic and diffuse political
> society; to reinforce civil renewal; and the capacity and assets of
> individuals, families and communities to make decisions for themselves
> and to influence the world around them.
> 
> Greater transparency in public life has perversely, but entirely
> correctly, demanded standards and openness never before experienced in
> public life. Disagreements over foreign policy, in particular Iraq,
> have, for the moment, overshadowed tremendous achievements in Kosovo and
> the Balkans. Not to mention in Sierra Leone, and in the leadership shown
> through the G8 in tackling worldwide poverty and the neglect of Africa,
> and the new challenges of climate change. But nothing can take away the
> simple fact that people here at home and, yes, across the world, are
> better off because of this Labour government.
> 
> One thing is certain. The power-sharing administration in Northern
> Ireland from May 8 2007 is, if ever one were needed, a demonstration of
> how, despite the cynicism and the denigration surrounding democratic
> political activity, politics can succeed in bringing peace and
> prosperity in the most unlikely circumstances. A legacy indeed for the
> prime minister.
> 
> And perhaps, it also offers an alternative to the growing flirtation
> with the idea of taking ‘politics’ out of politics; the handing over of
> decisions to ‘officialdom’; the belief that there are some people
> somewhere in our country, who, without values, prejudices or personal
> predilections, can look after our best interests, can balance competing
> demands, can in essence create a world free of political disagreement.
> For that would be a sad outcome from a decade in which, with all its
> faults, it is politics that has changed the world for so many.
> 
> On the twin challenges of opportunity and security, and the reshaping of
> politics to be ‘on your side’, enabling and working with people rather
> than just making decisions on their behalf – these are bigger hurdles to
> surmount, but offer a more lasting and sustainable political landscape
> than ever before. Let us take on that continuing modernising and
> reforming challenge and let us do it in a way that speaks to, engages
> with, and uses the talent and commitment of the people we serve.
> 
> For those who say, quite rightly, that consistency and continuity help
> in building on firm foundations, it is self-evident that the past 10
> years under Blair have created building blocks on which further progress
> can be made. In the world of modern communication, and a 21st century of
> economic and global change and rapid social, cultural and political
> developments, preparing Britain for the future has rightly been the
> hallmark of the past 10 years. Now, looking ahead to the future and
> combating the ‘evils’ that confront us, is the challenge we must
> address. Labour is ready, willing and able to take on that mantle.
> 
> 
> There is no text version of the pamphlet, only PDF:
> http://www.unison.org.uk/acrobat/B3223z.pdf

Sadly, with all this increase in spending and more government employees, 
its become an even more petty minded bureaucratic society, with drigs 
violent crime and suicide rates up, and no better delivery of services, 
and punitive taxation everywhere you least expect it.
A dull, tedious expensive nanny state whose sheer boredonm is only 
relieved by the frantic acts of violence as the more vulnerable members 
of society cave into the pressure..

And incompetence and waste at every level of the vast cesspit of government.
date: Sat, 05 May 2007 09:52:50 +0100   author:   The Natural Philosopher a@b.c

– a country transformed: 10 years of Labour Government in BritainRe: Then and now   
On Sat, 05 May 2007 09:52:50 +0100, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

> Custard Creme wrote:
>> Ten years is a very short time in politics. But it is a very long time
>> for those who have forgotten how far we have come.
>> 
>> On May 1 2007, I published a pamphlet which looks back at the big issues
>> that were making the headlines prior to Labour¡¦s election in 1997. Using
>> the newspapers¡¦ own words, it reminds us of how far the country has come
>> on the key issues that affect the quality of people¡¦s daily lives, and
>> have been crucial to the transformation of our country: education,
>> employment, health, crime and the economy.
>> 
>> What emerges is both the enormity of the challenge that Labour faced in
>> 1997 in turning around under-investment and lack of reform, but also the
>> scepticism and despair as to whether government could overcome these
>> major and sometimes very long-standing blights on the lives of the
>> British people.
>> 
>> Today¡¦s newspapers tell a different story ¡V with per pupil spending on
>> education having doubled from ¢G2,500 to well over ¢G5,000 in the past 10
>> years, today¡¦s headlines no longer scream, ¡¥Crumbling Britain ¡V Schools
>> of Shame¡¦ (the Observer, March 3 1996). ¡¥4m Jobless¡¦ (the Sun, March 21
>> 1997) no longer adorns the front pages due to 2.6m extra jobs and the
>> lowest level of unemployment since the 1970s. More than 85,000 more
>> nurses and over 32,000 more doctors, and the largest sustained hospital
>> building programme since the NHS was founded, have made headlines like
>> this a thing of the past: ¡¥Weather and Cash Crisis leave NHS in Chaos¡¦
>> (the Independent, January 6 1997).
>> 
>> Despite widespread media predictions that under Labour, house prices
>> would fall, interest rates would surge upwards and there would be a
>> ¡¥humiliating devaluation in the pound¡¦, headlines such as ¡¥Pound Hit as
>> Jobless Rise and Salaries Slump¡¦ (the Evening Standard, November 15
>> 1995) have not been seen for years ¡V and ¢G1 has recently been strong
>> enough to be worth $2. Michael Howard famously admitted that crime had
>> doubled under the Tories and convictions fell by more than a quarter.
>> 
>> Labour today has dramatically increased police numbers by more than
>> 14,000, and introduced over 11,000 new community support officers. We no
>> longer see ¡¥Falling Police Numbers Mock Tory Promises¡¦ (the Independent,
>> September 2 1996) in the papers. Such headlines belong in the past, but
>> with a resurgent Conservative party there is no room for amnesia.
>> 
>> Amid the daily political grind, it can be easy to forget that many of
>> the problems facing the country in 1997 have largely been solved.
>> Whatever the political argument of the day, we must remember that these
>> achievements did not happen as a random accident of fate. Led by Tony
>> Blair, Labour¡¦s achievements have not just been numbers but real people
>> teaching our young, healing our sick and making our communities safer,
>> and hard cash in people¡¦s pockets meaning lives are lived to a higher
>> standard.
>> 
>> Britain today is a country transformed from those dark years of Tory
>> rule, where selfishness and greed were the political mantra. We have a
>> better educated, healthier, safer, fairer, more open-minded and more
>> prosperous society than 10 years ago. This is surely a legacy to be
>> proud of. All of this, of course, began with the decision of the people
>> to put their trust in Labour.
>> 
>>>From Sure Start and universal nursery education, the introduction of the
>> minimum wage through to pension credit and the new pension proposals
>> voted through the House of Commons in April 2007, it is political
>> decisions and choice, not chance, that make the difference.
>> 
>> And the lasting legacy of Blair¡¦s 10-year premiership will quite simply
>> be the transformation of the British political landscape ¡V that the era
>> of Margaret Thatcher has been put behind us. It is a tribute to those
>> first 10 years of New Labour in government that the political culture,
>> the economic prospects, the social agenda are all entirely different,
>> and it is on this agenda that all main political parties are now
>> competing for votes.
>> 
>> Blair¡¦s leadership success in winning a consensus of the aspirant and
>> moderately affluent, with the have-nots and dispossessed, not only put
>> behind us a century of Labour spasmodically in power; but brought us a
>> party embracing the future, prepared to take on the challenge of change,
>> and responsive to the rising expectations of the British people.
>> 
>> There has and never will be a year zero in which a government resolved
>> all the problems ¡V economic, social and cultural ¡V facing the people
>> they represent. Every step taken, every success achieved opens up new
>> aspirations as well as refocusing on new concerns.
>> 
>> The world of tomorrow will by its very nature demand new approaches to
>> how best to hold to account a more pluralistic and diffuse political
>> society; to reinforce civil renewal; and the capacity and assets of
>> individuals, families and communities to make decisions for themselves
>> and to influence the world around them.
>> 
>> Greater transparency in public life has perversely, but entirely
>> correctly, demanded standards and openness never before experienced in
>> public life. Disagreements over foreign policy, in particular Iraq,
>> have, for the moment, overshadowed tremendous achievements in Kosovo and
>> the Balkans. Not to mention in Sierra Leone, and in the leadership shown
>> through the G8 in tackling worldwide poverty and the neglect of Africa,
>> and the new challenges of climate change. But nothing can take away the
>> simple fact that people here at home and, yes, across the world, are
>> better off because of this Labour government.
>> 
>> One thing is certain. The power-sharing administration in Northern
>> Ireland from May 8 2007 is, if ever one were needed, a demonstration of
>> how, despite the cynicism and the denigration surrounding democratic
>> political activity, politics can succeed in bringing peace and
>> prosperity in the most unlikely circumstances. A legacy indeed for the
>> prime minister.
>> 
>> And perhaps, it also offers an alternative to the growing flirtation
>> with the idea of taking ¡¥politics¡¦ out of politics; the handing over of
>> decisions to ¡¥officialdom¡¦; the belief that there are some people
>> somewhere in our country, who, without values, prejudices or personal
>> predilections, can look after our best interests, can balance competing
>> demands, can in essence create a world free of political disagreement.
>> For that would be a sad outcome from a decade in which, with all its
>> faults, it is politics that has changed the world for so many.
>> 
>> On the twin challenges of opportunity and security, and the reshaping of
>> politics to be ¡¥on your side¡¦, enabling and working with people rather
>> than just making decisions on their behalf ¡V these are bigger hurdles to
>> surmount, but offer a more lasting and sustainable political landscape
>> than ever before. Let us take on that continuing modernising and
>> reforming challenge and let us do it in a way that speaks to, engages
>> with, and uses the talent and commitment of the people we serve.
>> 
>> For those who say, quite rightly, that consistency and continuity help
>> in building on firm foundations, it is self-evident that the past 10
>> years under Blair have created building blocks on which further progress
>> can be made. In the world of modern communication, and a 21st century of
>> economic and global change and rapid social, cultural and political
>> developments, preparing Britain for the future has rightly been the
>> hallmark of the past 10 years. Now, looking ahead to the future and
>> combating the ¡¥evils¡¦ that confront us, is the challenge we must
>> address. Labour is ready, willing and able to take on that mantle.
>> 
>> There is no text version of the pamphlet, only PDF:
>> http://www.unison.org.uk/acrobat/B3223z.pdf
> 
> Sadly, with all this increase in spending and more government employees, 
> its become an even more petty minded bureaucratic society, with drigs 
> violent crime and suicide rates up, and no better delivery of services, 
> and punitive taxation everywhere you least expect it.
> A dull, tedious expensive nanny state whose sheer boredonm is only 
> relieved by the frantic acts of violence as the more vulnerable members 
> of society cave into the pressure..
> 
> And incompetence and waste at every level of the vast cesspit of government.

Your talking like a shit house philosopher!

Martin
date: Sat, 05 May 2007 09:27:00 GMT   author:   Martin

– a country transformed: 10 years of Labour Government in BritainRe: Then and now   
The Natural Philosopher wrote:
> Custard Creme wrote:
>> Ten years is a very short time in politics. But it is a very long time
>> for those who have forgotten how far we have come.

snip spam spin.


> Sadly, with all this increase in spending and more government employees, 
> its become an even more petty minded bureaucratic society, with drigs 
> violent crime and suicide rates up, and no better delivery of services, 
> and punitive taxation everywhere you least expect it.
> A dull, tedious expensive nanny state whose sheer boredonm is only 
> relieved by the frantic acts of violence as the more vulnerable members 
> of society cave into the pressure..
> 
> And incompetence and waste at every level of the vast cesspit of 
> government.


You forgot to mention brown's raid on the pension funds 
which will lead to reduced incomes for those nearing pension 
age, also the fact that young people will to work for longer 
to make up for his cynical slight of hand.  That said why 
did you give the spammer another bite of the cherry by 
failing to snip it's garbage?
date: Sat, 05 May 2007 10:37:07 +0100   author:   Richard H Huelin

Re: Then and now – a country transformed: 10 years of Labour Government in Britain   
On Sat, 05 May 2007 09:13:46 +0100, Custard Creme
 wrote:

>Ten years is a very short time in politics. But it is a very long time
>for those who have forgotten how far we have come.

You don't get out much do you sadsack ?
date: Sat, 05 May 2007 11:07:57 +0100   author:   unknown

Re: Then and now – a country transformed: 10 years of Labour Government in Britain   
In message <463c3cba$1_3@mk-nntp-2.news.uk.tiscali.com>, Custard Creme 
 writes

(A whole load of totally fallacious 1930's-style socialist polemic).
-- 
Chris Morriss
date: Sat, 5 May 2007 11:23:06 +0100   author:   Chris Morriss

Re: Then and now - a country transformed: 10 years of Labour Government in Britain   
"The Natural Philosopher" <a@b.c> wrote in message 
news:1178355215.592.0@proxy01.news.clara.net...
> Custard Creme wrote:
>> Ten years is a very short time in politics. But it is a very long time
>> for those who have forgotten how far we have come.
>SNIP<

> Sadly, with all this increase in spending and more government employees, 
> its become an even more petty minded bureaucratic society, with drigs 
> violent crime and suicide rates up, and no better delivery of services, 
> and punitive taxation everywhere you least expect it.
> A dull, tedious expensive nanny state whose sheer boredonm is only 
> relieved by the frantic acts of violence as the more vulnerable members of 
> society cave into the pressure..
>
> And incompetence and waste at every level of the vast cesspit of 
> government.

What annoys me is the flourish they made of reducing income tax at the start 
of their "reign".  I`d far rather pay a little more tax on condition that it 
ALL went to the National Health service, and in the process weeded out a lot 
of the far-cat Hospital "Managers".

Pat
date: Sun, 06 May 2007 17:43:31 GMT   author:   Pat P

– a country transformed: 10 years of Labour Government in BritainRe: Then and now   
Custard Creme wrote:
> Ten years is a very short time in politics. But it is a very long time
> for those who have forgotten how far we have come.
> 
> On May 1 2007, I published a pamphlet which looks back at the big issues
> that were making the headlines prior to Labour’s election in 1997. Using
> the newspapers’ own words, it reminds us of how far the country has come
> on the key issues that affect the quality of people’s daily lives, and
> have been crucial to the transformation of our country: education,
> employment, health, crime and the economy.
> 
> What emerges is both the enormity of the challenge that Labour faced in
> 1997 in turning around under-investment and lack of reform, but also the
> scepticism and despair as to whether government could overcome these
> major and sometimes very long-standing blights on the lives of the
> British people.
> 
> Today’s newspapers tell a different story – with per pupil spending on
> education having doubled from £2,500 to well over £5,000 in the past 10
> years, today’s headlines no longer scream, ‘Crumbling Britain – Schools
> of Shame’ (the Observer, March 3 1996). ‘4m Jobless’ (the Sun, March 21
> 1997) no longer adorns the front pages due to 2.6m extra jobs and the
> lowest level of unemployment since the 1970s. More than 85,000 more
> nurses and over 32,000 more doctors, and the largest sustained hospital
> building programme since the NHS was founded, have made headlines like
> this a thing of the past: ‘Weather and Cash Crisis leave NHS in Chaos’
> (the Independent, January 6 1997).
> 
> Despite widespread media predictions that under Labour, house prices
> would fall, interest rates would surge upwards and there would be a
> ‘humiliating devaluation in the pound’, headlines such as ‘Pound Hit as
> Jobless Rise and Salaries Slump’ (the Evening Standard, November 15
> 1995) have not been seen for years – and £1 has recently been strong
> enough to be worth $2. Michael Howard famously admitted that crime had
> doubled under the Tories and convictions fell by more than a quarter.
> 
> Labour today has dramatically increased police numbers by more than
> 14,000, and introduced over 11,000 new community support officers. We no
> longer see ‘Falling Police Numbers Mock Tory Promises’ (the Independent,
> September 2 1996) in the papers. Such headlines belong in the past, but
> with a resurgent Conservative party there is no room for amnesia.
> 
> Amid the daily political grind, it can be easy to forget that many of
> the problems facing the country in 1997 have largely been solved.
> Whatever the political argument of the day, we must remember that these
> achievements did not happen as a random accident of fate. Led by Tony
> Blair, Labour’s achievements have not just been numbers but real people
> teaching our young, healing our sick and making our communities safer,
> and hard cash in people’s pockets meaning lives are lived to a higher
> standard.
> 
> Britain today is a country transformed from those dark years of Tory
> rule, where selfishness and greed were the political mantra. We have a
> better educated, healthier, safer, fairer, more open-minded and more
> prosperous society than 10 years ago. This is surely a legacy to be
> proud of. All of this, of course, began with the decision of the people
> to put their trust in Labour.
> 
>>From Sure Start and universal nursery education, the introduction of the
> minimum wage through to pension credit and the new pension proposals
> voted through the House of Commons in April 2007, it is political
> decisions and choice, not chance, that make the difference.
> 
> And the lasting legacy of Blair’s 10-year premiership will quite simply
> be the transformation of the British political landscape – that the era
> of Margaret Thatcher has been put behind us. It is a tribute to those
> first 10 years of New Labour in government that the political culture,
> the economic prospects, the social agenda are all entirely different,
> and it is on this agenda that all main political parties are now
> competing for votes.
> 
> Blair’s leadership success in winning a consensus of the aspirant and
> moderately affluent, with the have-nots and dispossessed, not only put
> behind us a century of Labour spasmodically in power; but brought us a
> party embracing the future, prepared to take on the challenge of change,
> and responsive to the rising expectations of the British people.
> 
> There has and never will be a year zero in which a government resolved
> all the problems – economic, social and cultural – facing the people
> they represent. Every step taken, every success achieved opens up new
> aspirations as well as refocusing on new concerns.
> 
> The world of tomorrow will by its very nature demand new approaches to
> how best to hold to account a more pluralistic and diffuse political
> society; to reinforce civil renewal; and the capacity and assets of
> individuals, families and communities to make decisions for themselves
> and to influence the world around them.
> 
> Greater transparency in public life has perversely, but entirely
> correctly, demanded standards and openness never before experienced in
> public life. Disagreements over foreign policy, in particular Iraq,
> have, for the moment, overshadowed tremendous achievements in Kosovo and
> the Balkans. Not to mention in Sierra Leone, and in the leadership shown
> through the G8 in tackling worldwide poverty and the neglect of Africa,
> and the new challenges of climate change. But nothing can take away the
> simple fact that people here at home and, yes, across the world, are
> better off because of this Labour government.
> 
> One thing is certain. The power-sharing administration in Northern
> Ireland from May 8 2007 is, if ever one were needed, a demonstration of
> how, despite the cynicism and the denigration surrounding democratic
> political activity, politics can succeed in bringing peace and
> prosperity in the most unlikely circumstances. A legacy indeed for the
> prime minister.
> 
> And perhaps, it also offers an alternative to the growing flirtation
> with the idea of taking ‘politics’ out of politics; the handing over of
> decisions to ‘officialdom’; the belief that there are some people
> somewhere in our country, who, without values, prejudices or personal
> predilections, can look after our best interests, can balance competing
> demands, can in essence create a world free of political disagreement.
> For that would be a sad outcome from a decade in which, with all its
> faults, it is politics that has changed the world for so many.
> 
> On the twin challenges of opportunity and security, and the reshaping of
> politics to be ‘on your side’, enabling and working with people rather
> than just making decisions on their behalf – these are bigger hurdles to
> surmount, but offer a more lasting and sustainable political landscape
> than ever before. Let us take on that continuing modernising and
> reforming challenge and let us do it in a way that speaks to, engages
> with, and uses the talent and commitment of the people we serve.
> 
> For those who say, quite rightly, that consistency and continuity help
> in building on firm foundations, it is self-evident that the past 10
> years under Blair have created building blocks on which further progress
> can be made. In the world of modern communication, and a 21st century of
> economic and global change and rapid social, cultural and political
> developments, preparing Britain for the future has rightly been the
> hallmark of the past 10 years. Now, looking ahead to the future and
> combating the ‘evils’ that confront us, is the challenge we must
> address. Labour is ready, willing and able to take on that mantle.
> 
> 
> There is no text version of the pamphlet, only PDF:
> http://www.unison.org.uk/acrobat/B3223z.pdf

Sadly, with all this increase in spending and more government employees, 
its become an even more petty minded bureaucratic society, with drigs 
violent crime and suicide rates up, and no better delivery of services, 
and punitive taxation everywhere you least expect it.
A dull, tedious expensive nanny state whose sheer boredonm is only 
relieved by the frantic acts of violence as the more vulnerable members 
of society cave into the pressure..

And incompetence and waste at every level of the vast cesspit of government.
date: Sat, 05 May 2007 09:52:50 +0100   author:   The Natural Philosopher a@b.c