News and views from north Bristol's urban village

Showing posts with label MP. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MP. Show all posts

Sunday, 3 February 2013

Charlotte Leslie on Same Sex Marriage







Post Script: I note that, according to the Spectator, Charlotte Leslie went through both lobbies at tonight's vote - which is one way of registering an abstention. 

139 Conservative MPs voted against the Bill, greater than the number of Tories who supported it. 22 Labour and 4 LibDems voted against the Bill. The Bill was passed by 400 to 175, a majority of 225.







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Friday, 16 July 2010

Still Telling Tales

Oh my days!


Has it really been six weeks since the last posting from everybody's favourite Westbury-on-Trym blog? Six weeks!

Historically, July and August have always been quiet times for Trym Tales. Since this is also the silly season in traditional print-based media, I take comfort from this similarity - evidence that BS9's leading independent online media outlet is truly rolling with the big boys.

Having said that, I was shocked, horrified and amused at one recent faux pas from a leading media competitor. I refer, of course, to a recent edition of the mid-Bedfordshire Times and Citizen.

As the picture reveals, June 3rd was clearly not the sub-editor's finest day, professionally speaking.






Closer to home, recent low output from Trym Tales cannot be explained away simply by lack of local news.

Post-election, we have had Charlotte Leslie's maiden speech in the House of Commons, the on-off story of St Ursula's transition to an academy (exit Merchant Venturers, enter Oasis Education Trust, with a possible transition date of September 2011) and the strange tale of the council's decision to dig up the magnificent playing field at Elmlea Infants School so that they can move the school building 100 metres north. As if that were not enough, Southdown and Hillsdon Road have had their long-awaited street party on the day England began their short-lived world cup campaign.

All of which augers well for a resurgence of local news and views from the newly resurrected Trym Tales for all loyal readers. I thank both of you for your patience.










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Monday, 13 October 2008

Stephen Williams in Punch Up?

I was bemused this morning to receive the latest email from the web site of Stephen Williams, my local MP, which informed me of two recent developments:

1. Lib Dems Hit Out Over Post Office Closures

2. Stephen Williams Slams Regional Housing Policy


The headings struck me (boom, boom!) as a little pugilistic.

Must politics always be about fighting?







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Friday, 18 January 2008

Bristol MPs and Guantanamo Bay


Amnesty International have been circulating a petition to MPs in recent weeks inviting them to express their commitment to the closure of the Guantanamo Bay detention centre in Cuba.

Here's how Bristol MPs responded to the petition.

Signed and returned
  • Roger Berry MP (Kingswood)
  • Dr Douglas Naysmith MP (Bristol North West)
  • Steven Webb MP (Northavon)
  • Stephen Williams MP (Bristol West)

Not returned
  • Kerry McCarthy (Bristol East)
  • Dawn Primarolo (Bristol South)
  • Dan Norris (Wansdyke)
  • Liam Fox (Woodspring)

You can get free and unbiased information about your MP at They Work for You - including how they have voted, what they are saying in Parliament and how to contact them. It's a long overdue and very welcome web site.






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Saturday, 20 October 2007

Language, Culture, Stephen Williams and the Use of the Word Gay

English: Stephen Williams MP addressing a Libe...
 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Bristol West MP Stephen Williams may have fallen into the trap of the pot calling the kettle black.

I refer of course to his remarks in the House of Commons this week - reported in Hansard - in which he raised concerns about the use of the word "gay" in popular youth culture to refer to something "second-rate" or "derisory". In particular, Mr Williams expressed concern at the BBC "allowing leading disc jockeys ... to use the word gay in a pejorative sense."

Perhaps Mr Williams (and Kevin Brennan MP who expressed a shared concern) would benefit from pausing for thought before calling for bans which will not work.

When the word "gay" first started to acquire widespread connotations of homosexuality in the mid-20th century, some objected strongly to this development. Objections to this change were routinely dismissed in the 1960s and 70s as reactionary. Language, it was argued, was always changing and was a vehicle for the self-expression of a community. The rules of language, furthermore, were claimed to be descriptive of how language was actually used, not fixed ordinances stating how it ought to be used. Noam Chomsky was occasionally referred to as providing a theoretical framework for this understanding of the nature of language.

At a more basic level, proponents of the use of the word "gay" to mean homosexual claimed at the time that they were free to use any term they wished to describe themselves and their lifestyle. Evidentially they won the argument and the word evolved in its meaning.

Stephen Williams and others who share his concerns appear not to view language in this way. It appears that they wish to ban the use of the word gay by "disc jockeys" because it conveys a pejorative sense of the word gay to young people. Presumably, however, the same principles of freedom of speech and expression articulated by the older proponents of the word change still apply today.

As language change typically happens from the margins of a society rather than its centre, we ought not to be surprised if we find the new definition for the word "gay" emerging from a group such as children or teens. In fact, the use of the word on Radio One means that it has already passed from being a marginal term to one that is already mainstream. Speaking personally, the children and young people I know have been using the term to mean "rubbish" for at least two or three years.

Faced with this reality - that millions of young people will enter adult life in the coming decade using the word "gay" to mean both "homosexual" as well as "rubbish" - those who wish to restrict the use of the term to the former meaning alone will have to make some choices. One of these three things will definitely happen:

1. Opponents will try unsuccessfully to ban the term from being used to describe something substandard and will fail along the way

2. They will accept that the dual-meaning of the word will be mainstream within a few years and live with that reality

3. They will abandon the term altogether and find another word to describe homosexuality.

Those who are shocked by this latter suggestion illustrate how quickly yesterday's radicals become today's defenders of the status quo.


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Thursday, 11 October 2007

First Buses - Questions Asked in Parliament

In light of the recent cut in bus services in North Bristol, Bristol West MP Stephen Williams has been making waves on the issue in Parliament.

The following extract is an Early Day Motion tables this week on the subject.

10.10.2007

Williams, Stephen

That this House notes the plans by First Group to reduce bus services in north Bristol; recognises that these services are used by a significant number of elderly and vulnerable people as their main means of transport; further notes that First Group holds monopoly on bus services in Bristol; and calls on the Government to do everything in its power to persuade First Group to retain these services and to open up competition in the provision of bus services in major cities.



Meanwhile, take a look here for the best article I've come across on why Bristol has such a poor public transport service and why merely asking First Group to be nicer and cheaper will not work.

Stephen Willilams and 0870 Numbers

Our local MP has been taking up the issue of 0870 phone numbers, a matter raised in this blog in relation to Virgin Media earlier in the year.

In the case of Stephen Williams, he wants to know how much the DVLA has made from its 0870 numbers in the last 5 years. He presumably smells a stealth tax.

I'm not sure he's got an answer yet, from Jim Fitzpatrick MP, at the Department of Transport (pictured below).

Friday, 28 September 2007

Are Fathers for Justice back?



Fathers for Justice are back - or at least someone impersonating them has been announcing their return on plastic wrapped hay bales next to the M5 in North Somerset.

"Stop the war" reads one message in bright yellow paint "against fathers", continues the text on an adjoining row of bales.

Although mildly sympathetic with the group's original aims, I must confess that I turned against them after their purple powder attack on Tony Blair in the Houses of Parliament. The result of that stunt was the creation of a perspex barrier around the public gallery in the Commons. The long-standing freedom for ordinary citizens to observe their elected government at work was hindered and altered forever by the attack. Whatever the grievance of F4J, I resent them taking from me that precious freedom in pursuit of their objectives. Perhaps they can stick to Batman stunts at the new Broadmead or another suitable public space.


Sunday, 13 May 2007

Stephen Williams, MP



Bristol West MP Stephen Williams (center) might find that placing the boat in the water yields better results.

Click on the photo to go to the local MP's home page.

Thursday, 12 October 2006

Foreign Language Muddle Strikes Again


Bristol schools look set for another confusing twist in the endless debate about language learning for primary age children.

After scrapping the compulsory study of learning a foreign language after the age of 14, the Department of Education is now faced with the unsurprising fact that the numbers taking modern languages at GCSE have dropped dramatically. GCSE French entries are down by 13% while take up of German has declined by 14%.

In response to this decline in language learning at secondary school, Education Secretary Alan Johnston has asked Lord Dearing to review the government's strategy.

Meanwhile, Westbury on Trym schools are actively implementing a previous government initiative to improve the provision of language teaching at primary level. Elmlea Junior School now offers weekly French lessons to upper juniors, while Westbury on Trym C of E primary School runs an after-school Spanish club for pupils.

A case of needing some joined-up policy, perhaps?

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