GFTU BGCM Minutes 2017
BRO IAN LAWRENCE (NAPO): These types of debates are especially difficult for
me personally, I guess Yvonne as well. We are not going to argue at all
against anything that anyone has said and you will know absolutely personally
we support every word of it. However, we must abstain from this vote,
regrettably, on the basis, quite simply, that NAPO does not have a political fund
that would even allow us to do the sorts of activities as suggested in the
motion, because it would bring us into conflict with the legislators. However,
we have not sat on our hands doing nothing so far in this election and we have
written (and please forgive me, colleagues from Scotland) to all the
mainstream parties in England and Wales, because they represent where we
have members to ask them about their manifesto commitments, how they tie in
with our objectives for our members and we will promote those amongst our
membership in order to assist them in their decision making process.
That is to clarify why we are abstaining, but I do not want to waste time explain
myself on that for the next two minutes or so. I want us to think beyond where
we are now. Manuel said the idea that we cannot change things is manifestly
in us. Absolutely spot on. Glyn talked about Leicester City winning the
Premier League from an impossible position. Fair point. If I say something
which will bring a deep sigh you had better look at the stats. Our current
electoral system in the UK is not only corrupt, it militates against the prospects
of progressive left leaning parties winning outright power. Let me tell you, yes,
we will be getting out there and exhorting people to change their minds and
vote Labour, but unless you do that in the 280 to 300 marginal seats that exist,
every vote out there is almost wasted, it counts for absolutely nothing under our
current system, a system that was built on the basis of a duopoly between the
two main contending parties all those years ago, but we live in a different
political landscape now. I am not going to argue about a particular system of
reform, but I want to put a marker down for further debate going forward in the
GFTU and its affiliates and that is to promote the debate around proportional
representation. If you want a Government that is going to do the things we all
want then you have got to start looking at a system that makes it possible or
more possible and there will be people who will say, “They have coalition
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