Friday, September 30, 2022

Is this a rerun of 1992?

Those of us who are old enough to have lived through the UK's crashing out of the Exchange Rate Mechanism in September 1992 (yes it really was 30 years ago!) may find some similarities with the events of the last week. The Tories, in one single move, shredded their reputation for economic competence. It took them nearly a generation to recover from the collapse of their key economic policy of membership of the ERM. Despite the improvements in the economy that undoubtedly took place, the Tories were not able to recover and reap the rewards. Instead, they went down to their worst electoral defeat in nearly two centuries, ushering in a 13 year period of New Labour rule under Blair and then Brown.

So, are we living through a rerun of the events of 30 years ago? Does the disaster of the mini budget and the financial markets' response to it mean that the Tories have again shredded their economic credibility? Like shooting an asteroid, it will take some time before we know if the path down which events pass has changed but I can't help feeling I'm reliving the early 1990s.

It could, of course, be a rerun of the 1980s when the Thatcher government was right down in the polls and we all dreamt of Maggie going down to defeat on polling day, only for us to wake up to reality when the Conservatives were re-elected with massive majorities.

Time will tell......

Tuesday, September 27, 2022

Chase Park back at planning

A planning application to demolish the historic stables at Chase Park, Whickham and build 4 executive homes on the site comes to planning committee tomorrow. The issue is controversial anyway without attempts by the local Labour Party to claim that the site is not in Chase Park! It is actually in the heart of the park. Indeed, Labour run Gateshead Council are selling the site and are flogging off the busiest entrance to the park to provide road access to the upmarket development. 78 objections have been received and I believe one letter of support. I will be at the meeting tomorrow to watch proceedings.

Photo above - the main entrance to the park which Labour in Gateshead are wanting to sell.

Labour's changing position on PR

Yesterday, the Labour conference voted to replace first past the post with proportional representation in general elections. Those of us who have argued for decades that this constitutional reform is one of the keys to creating a modern representative democracy should not get too excited. The Labour leadership under Starmer have indicated they won't back the introduction of PR, regardless of the conference vote. This is at least an improvement on what has gone before. Last year Labour members voted at conference for PR only to have their hopes crushed by union block votes which lined up behind the Tory-benefitting FPTP system. What has changed since is the mood in some of the big unions which are now coming out in favour of reform. Despite this, Starmer is not taking on the mantle of reformer.

Monday, September 26, 2022

My energy bill

I got a letter from my energy supplier last week. I opened it when it arrived and when I saw it was about the new energy prices I will be paying from October, I simply put it to one side and forgot about it until today. So when I read it this morning, I was surprised to learn that my estimated bill was only going up £180 a year for both gas and electricity. And once the £400 from the energy support scheme is paid, I will actually be paying less than we were before the price rises earlier this year. Our monthly dual fuel bills from October to March will be less than £40.

We generate most of our electricity from our solar panels and any surplus goes onto a battery that can often keep us going through much of the night. We heat our house from a wood burning stove the fuel for which we gather on our farm. The gas and electricity we buy in is back up.

Being as sustainable as possible on fuel is part our our plan to be as self-sufficient as possible. We aren't fully there yet, hence the need to be on grid for gas and electricity but we are getting closer to the goal of full self-sufficiency. A by-product of pursuing this course of action is that my cost of living is much lower than that of most other people. My self-sufficiency lifestyle is often sneered at by Labour opponents but what I've shown is that it is possible to live in a way that reduces our impact on the environment and slashes living costs.

If I am able to achieve this, just about anyone can. But it does rather throw into the spotlight the way the government's energy support system operates. The fact I will be paying for the next six months less for what energy I need to buy in than I was before the cost of living crisis started suggests the support is poorly targeted and not going to those who most need it. 


Saturday, September 24, 2022

eFocus no. 172

Our latest eFocus for the Whickham area was published last night. Issues covered include:

  • Charles proclaimed King in Gateshead;
  • Dunston Hill School to be replaced by housing;
  • Harvest tin can challenge in Sunniside;
  • Chase Park fair;
  • Sunniside Leek Show
  • Book sale at Whickham Library;
  • Warm spaces;
  • Long to reign over us;
  • Budgies in Swalwell;
  • Can you sponsor a Christmas tree?

You can read eFocus on this link.

Chase Park fair

 

Chase Park fair was held today. I went along around midday and chatted to lots of people. I couldn't stay long however. I had my ward Focus newsletter to finish writing!

Thursday, September 22, 2022

Long to reign over us - 2010-22

This post covers the key events from 2010 to 2022 which I included in my presentation on the 70 years of HM The Queen's reign to the Sunniside History Society earlier this month.

2010

General election is held in which for the first time there were leader debates

Election result – Conservatives are 20 seats short of a majority in a hung parliament.

Coalition government is formed with David Cameron as Prime MInister and NIck Clegg as deputy Prime minister

Gordon Brown steps down as Labour leader, succeeded by Ed Miliband (beating his brother David in the contest)

Austerity is underway

The engagement of Prince William and Catherine Middleton is announced

2011

Prince William and Catherine Middleton are married in Westminster Abbey

Queen Elizabeth II become the 2nd longest reigning British monarch

Queen Elizabeth II made a state visit to Ireland, the first by a reigning monarch to Dublin since 1911 

The cheque guarantee card – which ensures some cheques are honoured even if the account holder does not have sufficient funds in their account – was withdrawn after operating for over 40 years

Rioting in various cities throughout the UK

2012

The year it rained constantly, and Gateshead suffered Thunder Thursday

THE nation celebrates the Queen's Diamond Jubilee

Government debt rises to £1 trillion

London hosts the Olympics and opening ceremony includes the film of the Queen and James Bond jumping from a helicopter

Allegations about Jimmy Saville are published by ITV

2013

Margaret Thatcher dies

Same sex marriage is legalised

Prince George is born

Sewage workers remove a fifteen ton bus-sized "fatberg" – thought to be Britain's largest – from a sewer beneath London

Wartime computer pioneer and codebreaker Alan Turing, who had been chemically castrated in 1952 following his conviction for homosexuality, is given a posthumous royal pardon 

2014

Winter storms sweep away the main rail line through  Devon

Scottish referendum – the majority vote to stay in UK

11 November – the last ceramic poppy is laid at the Tower of London and joins the 888,245 flowers commemorating the armistace and centenary of World War 1

2015

Gary Glitter is sentenced to 16 years in prison for child sex abuse

Last of UK government debt from WW1 is repaid

In March inflation fell to zero percent in February, the lowest level since records began

Male precedent in order of succession to the throne is ended

Conservatives win the general election, putting an end to the coalition government with the Lib Dems

Ed Miliband and Nick Clegg resign as party leaders to be replaced by Jeremy Corbyn and Tim Farron respectively

The Prince of Wales begins his official four-day tour of the Republic of Ireland having a controversial meeting with Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams 

Cashless payments now exceed the use of notes and coins

2016

Elizabeth II marks her 90th birthday.

UK votes in the referendum to leave the EU

Cameron resigns as Prime Minister and is replaced by Theresa May

2017

Article 50 implemented - this is the start of the legal process to withdraw from the EU

Buckingham Palace announces that the Duke of Edinburgh is to step down from carrying out royal engagements in the autumn

Snap election results in the Conservatives losing their majority but stay in office with support from DUP

Solar, wind and nuclear power each provide more electricity than gas and coal combined for the first time in the UK

2018

The UK's largest toy retailer, Toys "R" Us, goes into administration 

One of the UK's biggest electronics retailers, Maplin, goes into administration

Former Russian double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia are poisoned by a nerve agent in Salisbury

The wedding of Prince Harry to Meghan Markle takes place 

British retailer Marks & Spencer confirms the closure of 100 stores

2019

Repeated attempts to get Brexit legislation through Parliament all failed.

Theresa May resigns and is replaced as PM by Boris Johnson

Johnson calls a general election in December and wins with the biggest Conservative majority since 1987.

Jeremy Corbyn resigns and is replaced by Kier Starmer in April the following year

Travel company Thomas Cook collapses

2020 

Boris Johnson's EU withdrawal deal completes its passage through parliament

British AIrways suspend all flights to and from mainland China with immediate effect, due to the ongoing COVID - 19 outbreak in China

30 January 1st cases of covid in UK

600 flood warnings are in place in UK in February, This month is the wettest February in the UK since records began in 1862 with an average of 209.1mm of rainfall

FTSE plunges 8% as fears of pandemic grow

Football matches cancelled because of the pandemic

All elections are cancelled

23 March UK-wide lockdown begins 

29 March Prince Charles tests positive for COVID-19

Queen Elizabeth broadcasts to the UK and the wider Commonwealth

2021

Covid vaccine becomes available for everyone in UK

Many events continue to be cancelled

Buckingham Palace announces the death of Prince Philip

The final Debenhams store is closed

2022

Most covid restrictions are removed by the spring

The nation celebrates Platinum Jubilee though Prince Charles now fronts many of the events

The Queen stars alongside Paddington Bear in a short film to celebrate the Jubilee

2 days after appointing Liz Truss as the new Prime Minister, the Queen passes away at Balmoral bringing to an end the longest reign by any monarch in Britain

 


Long to reign over us - 2000s

This post covers the key events in the 2000s which I included in my presentation on the 70 years of HM The Queen's reign to the Sunniside History Society earlier this month.

2000

The Millennium Bug failed to happen

Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother celebrates her 100th birthday

David Copeland is found guilty of causing the three nail bomb attacks in London last year. He is sentenced to life imprisonment and the trial judge recommends that he should serve at least thirty years before being considered for parole

2001

Foot and Mouth disease outbreak occurs

Tony Blair leads Labour to 2nd landslide general election win. William Hague resigns as Conservative Leader and is replaced by Iain Duncan Smith

On 13th September The Queen orders the Changing of the Guard ceremony to be paused for a two-minute silence, followed by the playing of the American national anthem in tribute to the victims of the terrorist attacks two days earlier in the USA

UK takes part in the invasion of Afghanistan

2002

Princess Margaret dies

Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother dies aged 101

The Queen's Golden Jubilee is celebrated across the country 

2003 

UK takes part in invasion of Iraq after claims of weapons of mass destruction in the country.

President Vladimir Putin becomes the first Russian head of state to make a state visit to Britain since Tsar Alexander II in 1874

Iain Duncan Smith resigns as Conservative leader, replaced by Michael Howard

2004

The government announces plans to prohibit smoking in most enclosed public places (including workplaces) within the next three years 

150 UK citizens are among thousands killed by the devastating Indian Ocean tsunami 

2005

Prince Charles marries Camilla Parker Bowles

Labour under Blair win a 3rd election in a row but with majority cut to 66

Michael Howard resigns as Conservative leader and is replaced by David Cameron

Terror attacks take place on the London Underground

2006

Queen Elizabeth II celebrates her 80th birthday

The BBC announces that Grandstand, its flagship sports TV programme, will be phased out within the next year after nearly 50 years on air

Home Secretary John Reid attacks the Chancellor of the Exchequer Gordon Brown for being 'presumptuous' and 'disloyal' for openly campaigning to replace Tony Blair as Prime Minister

The British government pays off the Anglo-American loan made in 1946

2007

Tony Blair resigns as Labour leader, replaced by Gordon Brown who becomes PM

London announced as venue for the 2012 Olympics

smoking ban came into effect in all enclosed public places in England

Northern Rock bank obtains an emergency loan from the Bank of England 

Gordon Brown confirms that there will be no early General Election, prompting the media to call him 'Bottler Brown'

Final switching off of the analogue signal for UK terrestrial tv

2008

Northern Rock bank was nationalised by the government at the start of the financial crisis

The inquest into the death of Princess Diana, Princess of Wales, hears that there is "not a shred of evidence" that The Duke of Edinburgh or MI6 ordered her death

Boris Johnson defeated Ken Livingstone in the election for London Mayor

Economy contracts as the financial crisis expands

The government announced a bank rescue package worth some £500 billion as a response to the financial crisis 

Woolworths announced their 807 UK stores will close

MFI closed all 111 of its stores

2009

Lloyds completes takeover of HBOS which was later found to have made a loss of £11 billion in 2008

Share price of RBS collapses 67% in one day. The company then had to be nationalised

MP expenses scandal breaks

Whitelee Wind Farm, the largest onshore wind farm in Europe, officially opens in Scotland

November was the wettest month on record with average rainfall of 21cm

 

Wednesday, September 21, 2022

Long to reign over us - 1990s

This post covers the key events in the 1990s which I included in my presentation on the 70 years of HM The Queen's reign to the Sunniside History Society earlier this month.

1990

Poll Tax comes into operation

National Garden Festival in Gateshead is opened by Princess Anne

Agriculture Minister John Gummer publicly feeds a hamburger to his five-year-old daughter to counter rumours about the spread of BSE and its transmission to humans

Iraq invades Kuwait

Dramatic resignation of Geoffrey Howe precipitates the fall of Margaret Thatcher. John Major becomes PM

Channel Tunnel workers break through to meet up 40m below the seabed

1991

Gulf War sees alliance led by USA ending Iraqi invasion of Kuwait

Government announces poll tax to be scrapped, to be replaced by council tax

1992

The Queen commemorates her Ruby Jubilee 

Duke and Duchess of York separate

General election results in reduced majority but nevertheless surprise victory for the Conservatives

Neil Kinnock resigns as Labour Leader, replaced by John Smith

UK crashes out of ERM

The Church of England votes to allow women to become priests

The separation of the Prince and Princess of Wales is announced

The marriage of Princess Anne and Timothy Laurence takes place

Windsor Castle fire

The Queen describes this year as an Annus Horribilis

1993

John Major launches his Back to Basics campaign

1994

Police start digging up 25 Cromwell St, Gloucester. Human remains are found and Fred and Rosemary West are charged with murder

Channel Tunnel officially opened by the Queen and President Mitterand

Labour Leader John Smith dies and is replaced by Tony Blair

Sunday trading laws are reformed, allowing larger shops to open for 6 hours

The National Lottery launched

1995

The Queen urges Charles and Diana to get a divorce

John Major, faced with a divided party, resigns as Conservative Leader and restands, winning comfortably. The move fails to unite the party

1996

The Princess of Wales agrees to give Prince Charles a divorce

The Duke and Duchess of York complete their divorce proceedings

The Queen opens Durham's new Riverside Cricket Ground in Chester-le-Street

1997

Labour, led by Tony Blair, win a landslide majority in the general election

John Major is replaced as Conservative leader by William Hague

IRA declares a ceasefire

Duke of York opens Stadium of Light

Diana Princess of Wales dies in a road accident in Paris

Scotland and Wales vote for devolution in separate referenda

The Queen and Duke of Edinburgh celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary

The Royal Yacht Britannia is decommissioned after 44 years in service

1998

The Good Friday Agreement between the UK and Irish governments and the main political parties in Northern Ireland is signed.

A car bomb explodes in the Northern Irish market town of Omagh, County Tyrone, killing 29 people – the worst terrorist atrocity in the history of The Troubles in Northern Ireland. It has been planted by the Real Irish Republican Army 

1999

David Copeland appears in court charged with the recent bombings in London

First elections to the devolved parliaments in Scotland and Wales are held

The marriage of Prince Edward and Sophie Rhys-Jones takes place

Official opening of Millennium Dome by the Queen on New Years eve

 


Dunston Hill application at Planning Committee

 

The long awaited application to demolish the derelict Dunston Hill Primary School and replace it with 35 affordable homes was debated and agreed at the last planning committee meeting on 31st August. This video covers the presentation by officers, an objection from an officer and questions from councillors before the vote at the end (which was unanimous).

Long to reign over us - 1980s

We have now arrived at the 1980s in my presentation to Sunniside History Society about the main events of the 70 years of the reign of Queen Elizabeth II. 

1980

The SAS storm the Iranian Embassy building, killing 5 out of the 6 terrorists. One hostage is killed by the terrorists before the raid and one during it, but the remainder are freed. The storming is broadcast live on television

US nuclear cruise missiles are to be located at RAF Greenham Common in Berkshire

The pre-decimal sixpenny coin is withdrawn from circulation

Tyne and Wear Metro opens after 6 years construction, with the first phase between Haymarket and Whitley Bay.

Unemployment reaches 2 million

Consett Steelworks close with the loss of 4500 jobs, instantly making it the town with the highest rate of unemployment in the UK

Right to buy, under which tenants can buy their council home begins

Margaret Thatcher makes her "The lady's not for turning" speech to the Conservative Party conference

Michael Foot becomes Labour Leader

1981

The Queen officially opens the Metro

Wedding of Prince Charles and Lady Diana Spencer takes place

Princess Alice, last surviving granddaughter of Queen Victoria, dies

Wave of riots in the summer hits the UK

David Steel tells delegates at the Liberal Party conference to "go back to your constituencies and prepare for government"

10 IRA hunger strikers die before the protest is called off

1982

Unemployment reaches 3 million

The lowest ever UK temperature of −27.2 °C is recorded at Braemar

The DeLorean De Lorean car factory in Belfast is put into receivership 

In March Argentines land on the British dependent territory of South Georgia Island and then Falklands

In April a Taskforce is assembled by the UK to recover the islands

In June, the Falkland Islands are fully recovered

Prince William is born

Michael Fagan Michael Fagan breaks into Buckingham Palace and is apprehended after entering the royal bedroom

1983

Landslide for Conservatives at general election, Labour down to 209 seats

Neil Kinnock succeeds Michael Foot as Labour leader

David Owen replaces Roy Jenkins as SDP leader

The one pound coin is introduced

1984

Torvill and Dean win a gold medal for ice skating at the Winter Olympics

In March the miners’ strike begins

Birth of Prince Harry

The IRA attempts to assassinate the Conservative cabinet at the Grand Hotel in Brighton during the party's conference. Cabinet minister Norman Tebbitt is trapped among the rubble and his wife Margaret is seriously injured. MP Anthony Berry and four other people are killed. In the resulting by-election in Enfield Michael Portillo is elected.

BBC News presenter Michael Buerk covers the famine in Ethiopia which leads to Band Aid

First state visit by a monarch to China

1985

The first mobile phone network in the UK is launched by Vodafone

Miners strike ends

Live Aid concerts in London and Philadelphia raise over £50,000,000 for famine relief in

1986

Chernobyl disaster in the former Soviet Union

Space Shuttle Challenger disaster

Prince Andrew marries Sarah Ferguson

Tyne and Wear and other metropolitan county councils are abolished

The Duchess of Windsor dies

Margaret Thatcher officially opens the first phase of the NIssan car factory in Sunderland

The first case of bovine spongiform encephalopathy is diagnosed in British cattle

1987

British Channel ferry MS Herald of Free Enterprise 

Margaret Thatcher wins record 3rd general election with majority of over 100

The Channel Tunnel is given the go ahead

Wall Street crash leads to £50 billion being wiped off the value of shares on the London stock exchange

The Kings Cross tube station fire takes place 

1988

Chancellor Nigel Lawson announces that the standard rate of income tax will be cut to 25p in the pound

The Church of England announces that they will allow the ordination of female priests from 1992

 The Piper Alpha oil rig in the North Sea explodes, resulting in the death of 167 workers

Paddy Ashdown is elected 1st leader of the Liberal Democrats

New licensing laws allow pubs to stay open all day in England and Wales

Duke and Duchess of York have a child – Beatrice

1989

94 people are killed in the Hillsborough disaster during the FA Cup semi-final

The Princess Royal and Captain Mark Phillips are separating after 16 years of marriage

Fall of the Berlin Wall and Iron Curtain


Monday, September 19, 2022

Quiet streets

I was struck today about how quiet the streets were. I had to leave the house to deal with my livestock but in the morning I was not having to dodge the rush hour traffic. It was the same this afternoon. People were staying at home to watch the Queen's funeral. I too watched it once the animals were fed. But it was a strange experience of usually busy roads standing silent here in Sunniside.

Sunday, September 18, 2022

Long to reign over us - 1970s

The third decade of HM The Queen's reign. The events below were those discussed at the Sunniside History Society last week when we looked at key events in the UK during the 70 years The Queen was on the throne.

1970

Martin Peters becomes the nation's first £200,000 footballer in his transfer from West Ham to Tottenham Hotspur

The Beatles break up

British Leyland announce Morris Minor to cease production

Surprise win for Ted Heath and the Conservatives in the general election

First walkabout by Queen in Australia, now a standard part of a royal visit

1971

Tyneside set film "Get Carter" starring Michel Caine is premiered. 

Decimalisation took place

1972

Unemployment exceeded 1M for the first time since the 1930s

7 week miners’ strike took place

Northern Ireland Parliament suspended

Queen Elizabeth II met her uncle, The Duke of Windsor, for the last time, at his home in Paris. The Duke died shortly afterwards, 35 years after his abdication from the throne

BBC launched Pebble Mill at One

1973

UK joins the EEC

Women are admitted into the London Stock Exchange for the first time

In May 1.6 million workers go on strike over government pay restraints

IRA carry out extensive bombing campaign in UK mainland

Princess Anne marries Captain Mark Philips

Peter Walker, the Secretary of State for Trade and Industry, warned that petrol rationing may have to be introduced in the near future as a result of the oil crisis 

1974

Implementation of 3 day week

The Prime Minister, Edward Heath, calls a general election for 28 February in an attempt to end the dispute over the miners' strike. No part has a majority.

Harold Wilson becomes PM

ABBA wins Eurovision with Waterloo

2nd election results in Labour majority of 3 seats


Inflation soars to a 34-year high of 17.2%

1975

Margaret Thatcher becomes Conservative leader

Inflation reached 24.2%

Queen's Bohemian Rhapsody is released

Two new laws, the Sex Discrimination Act 1975 and the Equal Pay Act 1970, come into force

1976

Harold Wilson resigns, James Callaghan becomes PM

Princess Margaret and Lord Snowdon announce that they are to separate

Jeremy Thorpe resigns as leader of the Liberal Party, David Steel takes over

Summer heatwave

£2.3 billion loan from IMF to bailout Britain

1977

Queen's silver jubilee

Income tax slashed from 35p to 33p

Queens UK jubilee tour starts in Glasgow

 The Queen becomes a grandmother for the first time when Princess Anne gives birth to a son

 The Morecombe and Wise Christmas Show on BBC1 attracts an audience ofover 28 million viewers

1978

Many British bakeries impose bread rationing after a baker's strike led to panic buying of bread

Lib Lab Pact ends

Inflation at 6 year low of 6.3%

1979

Winter of Discontent

Labour loses vote of confidence and then loses subsequent general election. Start of 18 years of Conservative government. Thatcher as PM

Former Liberal Party leader and MP Jremy Thorpe goes on trial at the Old Bailey charged with attempted murder. He is eventually cleared 

Lord Mountbatten and two 15-year-olds, his nephew and a boatboy, are assassinated by a Provisional Irish Republican Army bomb

The government publishes the Housing Bill which will give council house tenants theright to buy their homes from the following year