GOOD AFTERNOON & welcome to my weekly update no.307
It is so annoying when our lovely local newsletter is dominated by the actions of a certain President across the water but of course that is the case this week. But if you do manage to scroll down, lots of important local stuff happening too on mobile phone coverage, sewage, Ash green spaces and CIL…
WHAT’S GOING ON IN WESTMINSTER
MAKE AMERICA POOR AGAIN So it finally happened, and we are figuring out to pick up the pieces. On Wednesday, President Trump unleashed a tidal wave of tariffs in order to destroy the world trading system. Those - including me - who hoped it was a negotiating tactic to get fairer trade terms for the US were bitterly disappointed: 10% tariffs even on countries like the UK that don’t have a trade deficit with the US show that he doesn’t really believe in international trade and instead wants US consumers to buy products made in the USA. He is trying to find a shortcut solution to the problem that America (and others like the UK) have not been saving and investing enough. It won’t work and America - and the world - will become poorer as a result. Even worse, by attacking America’s friends he is abdicating American leadership of the free world. I wish I could be more optimistic about a country I have always deeply admired.
BUT DON’T GIVE UP AT HOME What should the UK now do? We have done better than others and in these topsy turvy times even the government has admitted a Brexit dividend. But our product exports to the US are around 2% of GDP so a 10% tariff (25% on cars) will hurt. It’s time to remember that many of our greatest industries (financial services, technology, life sciences and universities amongst others) have flourished because of our openness to the outside world as I argued in the Telegraph this week so we should strongly resist the temptation to join in a global trade war. It could take us into recession - as OBR forecasts show. Conversely staying open as the rest of the world closes will make us more competitive as Singapore has shown. That is the real lesson if we want to be Singapore-on-Thames which we can do perfectly well with our social safety-net. I made the same point on World at One on Friday (1318 slot).
SEWAGE SAGA Last week I met with Emma Hardy MP – who is the Minister for Water and Flooding – as a follow up to my recent parliamentary question about Thames Water’s pledged investment to reduce sewage discharge. The company has promised to invest more than £400m by the end of 2026 but I want to know what exactly they are planning to do. The Minister didn’t know either and is going to help me find out. Thames Water made us a promise and they need to keep it.
AND LET’S AVOID TRAGEDY REPEATING ITSELF Some of you may know the tragic story of Christopher Laskaris, the son of local resident Fiona Laskaris, who was murdered by a drug dealer aged 24. I am currently working with Fiona and fellow MPs Chris Coghlan and Jake Richards to change the mental health laws to make it easier for parental interventions to stop this kind of tragedy being repeated. Last week Fiona bravely shared her story with ITV and as part of the segment, I explained why this reform would be a good thing: by giving parents the right to ask for a mental capacity exercise to be done, more people that need help are given it. That would be an incredible legacy for Christopher so we are really hoping to get government agreement.
WHAT’S GOING ON LOCALLY
MOBILE NETWORKS PROGRESS Last week I met with Vodafone and O2 Virgin Media as part of my follow-up meetings with the mobile phone signal companies and we are making some albeit slow progress. We discussed the results of my signal survey, which almost 2,000 of you have brilliantly responded to, which shows just how dire things are. As a result Vodafone have sent their vans out to check out the issue - which they confirm is much worse than their initial numbers suggested. Vodafone and Three have promised to invest £11 bn in the network now their merger has been improved - and I want that with us please! O2 disappointingly had not really made progress since my December meeting but have promised action before the end of the month.
CIL TAKING THE MICKEY Last Tuesday angry homeowners joined Conservative Councillors to protest outside Waverley having been charged huge CIL (Communituy Infrastructure Levy) sums of between £40k-235k even though no homeowner should be charged it at all for expanding the property where they live. Waverley’s leader doesn't seem to understand the issue either even though LibDem West Berkshire council have actually done the right thing on this. I met with Waverley CEO Pedro Wrobel last Friday and wrote to the Minister for Housing and Planning to call for action. Meanwhile, £14.3m of collected CIL sits in Waverley’s bank account and the CIL committee has allocated funding for only a few projects again this year. See Cllr Jane Austin talking about this issue here.
|