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Welcome to my diary spot on Southport.gb.com where I
have provided regular updates on life as your
Member of Parliament for Southport. I hope this gives you an insight into
the working life of an M.P. Please keep checking back for further
regular updates, especially during the General Election campaign where I
will be fighting to continue representing you as your Liberal Democrat
Member of Parliament. If you would like to help me in my campaign please
visit www.southportlibdems.com
or www.johnpugh.org.uk for ways
to help. |
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2005
20th March 2005 -
Sleepless in SW1
6th
February 2005 - Fall from Grace
24th
January 2005 - Autism, Elections, Plugs and Imposters
For year 2004 and earlier
entries - Please click here
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20th March 2005 -
SLEEPLESS IN SW1 |
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SLEEPLESS IN SW1
I awoke last Sunday morning thinking it must be Saturday. I went round on Friday wondering why I hadn't got the football results. I was showing all the symptoms of the seriously deprived of sleep. Yes it was the week of the great Terror Laws debate when the House of Commons sat without break for around 36 hours when M.P.s dossed down in their offices, Peers debated our civil liberties at 5
am and the only sleep many MP's got was between the 3 am and 8 am sittings .Officially though since Friday was not a sitting day it was still a very long Thursday in parliamentary time.
In all a strange experience graced by some
marvelous speeches and a certain amount of real tension. Old stagers lamented the grumbling and lack of stamina of younger members. "You should have been here during the great debate of …………………….. ", they would say referring back to a time when men were men and half our legislation was framed by people suffering from the sort of chronic tiredness only usually encouraged in KGB interview rooms. Could this be why every
MP'.s room has a rather comfortable sofa or chair- a recognition that survival and mental health in our strange world depends on a capacity to catnap?
That by itself would not be so bad but consider this. The House of Commons adjourned at 7 on Thursday to resume at 11 that evening. Could you hazard a guess of where and how some members might have filled in time waiting for the house to convene ? I have to observe that some honourable members judging by the raucous atmosphere when the house resumed at 11 were not just tired, but as they say 'tired and emotional' . |
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PARKING
Back home the perennial hubub on parking issues has re-appeared as a result of some asine blue sky thinking out loud by Sefton officers. I am reminded nostalgically how often this particular political chestnut crops up prior to elections and how similar the debate is every time. When I was a council group leader I opposed the extension of pay and display beyond Bootle and Southport town centre but it was regularly rumoured that pay and display would be extended to everywhere you could find a shop. Every year sensible people said that there was no majority on the council for it and therefore it wasn’t going to happen. Every year some political opportunist wanting to stir things up said
"They're only saying that before the election- Watch what happens afterwards !".
After a run of the usual dire prophecies on parking from the usual political sources in 1994 I offered publicly before the local elections to eat five years of full council agendas if the prophets of doom were correct and it all happened after the elections.
Frankly we needed to establish who was telling the truth. I enclose the picture. Ten years later the agendas are still in mint condition- not even chewed around the edges. I wish I could say the same about myself.
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ELECTIONS
General Election campaigns
are now in all but name well underway and as a someone who was human being before they were a politician and have kept my membership going, I have much sympathy with the electorate. Although it’s the time when they -the electors have the power ; its also the time when they feel most got at. Gone are the days when at public hustings candidates made their pitch, voters listened, questioned and then voted.
Now all those bright ideas that clever salesmen employ are taken up by political parties and used to effect. Not because it’s the best way to do things and satisfies the intelligence of both voter and 'voted for' but because they believe it works. Around the parties now sit phalanxes of political consultants, ad men, pollsters etc.-a long way from Gladstone speaking on the balcony of the Dukes Hotel.
Image replaces substance. The Conservatives ,I believe, have machine into which they can feed you shoe size, credit history, the kind of cat food you buy etc and will enable them to profile you. Thus if you get a letter prefaced " Dear Yachstman and Father of Six I know you have a lifelong interest in lupins" well you'll know what is going on. I am of course being somewhat arch and ironic here but I hope making my point which is a rhetorical one "Is there a future for a more direct mature dialogue at elections and how is that future to be advanced ?" |
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ALZHEIMERS
Wednesday was budget day and the air was thick with the sound of Tory foxes being shot - (well they do support the pursuit ) but also an occasion for a number of charities to lobby
MP's. Chief among these was the Alzheimer's Society - lovely people. We had a deputation from Southport and we talked of the chances of getting care for Alzheimer's treated as nursing care. It’s a very important issue effecting more and more families and a very good case. I do think the government will have to respond constructively.
It followed a meeting I had with a lady from Sheffield University who was interviewing me about mental health- not happily my own ! I was late for our
rendezvous and my office paged me and as often when paged messages get sent over the phone and then typed and sent on ,you get some strange results. The lady's surname was 'Dyath'. My pager went. I picked it up and looked at it . The printed message said ominously "Dr Death is waiting for you in the Central Lobby". I thought twice before going ! |
The Alzheimer's Delegation |
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6th February 2005 - Fall from Grace |
I've called this month's
entry 'Fall from Grace". It was prompted by the death of my uncle who
bears the same name as me but was a priest who worked in the
Bahamas
. He died in
Wales
but lived the bulk of his life out in the
Bahamas-
a kind, selfless man, he adopted and sent through college several orphans-
all of whom bear the Pugh name. I tried to look up references to him on
the worldwide web and while doing that stumbled across a reference to
myself not as an M.P. but in my previous incarnation as a teacher.
I used to do occasional assemblies when I taught at Merchant Taylors'
which were well received and some erstwhile 'fan' had got and published
the text of one on the web.
Assemblies at Merchant Taylors were more terrifying than speeches in
parliament. Imagine a room with 700 silent adolescents and 30 staff and
all still and everyone looking at you, I found the only way I could put
myself at ease was to try to amuse with a mixture of humour and serious
intent. I needed a good idea and a dose of irony. That's the recipe I
tried.
Eventually I mastered the art and in my last ever ten minute assembly had
grown so bold that I accompanied myself with a singing electric fish. It
worked to the extent that I got an unprecedented spontaneous round of
applause for the assembly. I knew then that I should quit or else I would
get more and more outlandish.
Anyway I re-read my old assembly in the same spirit one reads letters
one has written long ago. I never kept any script I used regarding them as ephemera- so it was truly like meeting some bygone self. I could
pick up the arch and ironic tone I intended in the script but to me it was like a jolt - like discovering a fall from grace.
To be honest it was refreshingly different in tone and expression to the carefully monitored and policed utterances you come out with in the
media glare of politics where any misplaced word can be pounced upon,
wrenched out of context and used against you. I sensed the freedom I still feel even now when I talk to school groups and children but which
as a politician you indulge in at your peril.
Anyway see what you think. Imagine it is 8.50 Monday morning in a large school hall full of boys 11-18 - your colleagues standing round
the sides. You walk in. The entire room stands up. You go up on the stage- you ask them to sit .They fall silent. Only your voice for good
or ill will fill the next ten minutes. You've decided to speak about 'eccentrics' and you hope for the reassurance of a smile, a laugh- a
response from the sea of faces.
Does it sound to you like a politician ? Would it be good if politicians sounded like this ? All I know is that I'd sooner you read
this than many a political speech -even ones made by me!
A Plea for Eccentrics
I do not know if you have ever thought what an odd situation we‘re in now. Here are you still half asleep, having come from the organised
chaos of your different homes. Most of us emerged from that deeply puzzling condition we call sleep an hour or so ago, pushed aside our
Thomas the Tank Engine duvet, looked around for our clothing, tuned in our radio and while cleaning our teeth tried hard to focus on the day
ahead. Your thoughts turned to your projects for the day: what you hoped, what you feared.
And here you sit now plonked in assembly next to other strange, in the proper sense, alien, beings whose point of view you can only guess at,
whose experiences you can never have, whose history can never be yours, who you will only share a fraction of your life with. Of course exactly
how alien and strange they are may depend partly on who exactly you are sitting next to.
These ought to be very exciting thoughts. I am looking down in front of me at a range of assorted first years, none of whom have any
experience of being twelve before. All round you stand staff, many of whom equally and implausibly claim to have never been thirty before. We
are all travellers through time on a voyage as unpredictable as any made by Columbus, where even those old salts in the bows of the ship,
who have to get off first, have only the vaguest notions. No-one can remember signing up for the voyage and no-one has any clear idea of
where were going. In the immortal words of Alexei Sayle " Its a funny old world".
This belief in the fundamental oddity of life, the utter weirdness of it all, is not shared by everyone. It afflicts me, and may at times
afflict you, but some people are not afflicted by it at all. They zip confidently round life equipped with a definite plan they seemingly
formulated in the cradle, working to some eerie timetable laid down for them. They progress through life from infancy on invisible tracks,
unswerving, without pause for reflection or self-doubt.
You know the sort of thing:
Get born
Acquire bladder control
Learn to read
Get to Merchant‘s
Pass GCSEs
Do appropriate A-levels
Go to university
Acquire a good income
Get a house with a patio
Produce 2 children, and call one Ben
Buy a very shiny car
Start jogging to prevent middle-age spread
Go grey
Retire
Lose bladder control
Die.
1 marvel at such well-organised, motivated people. It‘s as if someone unfairly has slipped them the rules and they‘re up and running in some
strange competition which I don‘t understand but they seem to. They get
on all right. If they were born molluscs they‘d have the best slime trails. If they were born dung beetles they‘d roll excellent dung
balls, but some of us would wonder why they lived like that or even if they lived at all.
I want to condemn these people who know — because they don‘t. I want in contrast to praise people who admit they haven‘t got it all sussed
out and are prepared to experiment to find out what‘s worthwhile in
life — who are prepared to do the unconventional — who cheerfully and courageously leap into the unknown.
I was telling the second year the other day about St Simeon Stylites - a man who in the third century built himself a pillar in the Syrian
desert about the size of the school clock tower and lived on it for an incredible 32 years until his death. He became a legend in his own
lifetime and was visited by people from as far away as Britain. Now I can think of lots of reasons why you might not wish to imitate Simeon
and head for a desert pillar: the loneliness, the possible boredom and the somewhat problematic arrangements for personal hygiene. But one
obviously poor reason for not doing it is that one simply must get on, there is something obvious one ought to instead:
Go to university
Acquire a good income
Get a house with a patio
Buy a very shiny car
Produce 2 children and call one Ben... etc
This is not necessarily or automatically a more sensible reaction to our very strange and exciting situation than becoming a hermit — and
those who think it must be have lost a feeling for the sheer oddity of life and are sadly doomed to be dull. Why should one not consider the
hermit option? The pay‘s rotten but the hours I‘m told are good. Why not as an alternative dedicate your life to saving the rain forest, or
lovingly restoring beautiful old machinery, writing poetry or finding a cure for senility?
Shouldn‘t we all really celebrate eccentrics as the explorers of existence? Is the man who cycles up and down the bypass with a bicycle
full of old newspapers and cardboard on a one-man campaign to stop smoking any madder than the man who drives down the bypass with burning
leaves in his mouth? So let us be slow to judge those who do seemingly mad and futile things — who practice Yoga, buy season tickets for
Burnley, take up Morris Dancing, enlist as school inspectors, or make their own soap. For the world is probably very much odder than we
think.
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John Pugh pictured in
Birldale Library:

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24th January 2005 - Autism, Elections, Plugs and Imposters |
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Autism |
Probably the one thing
people know about politicians is that they try to get themselves elected.
What they do when they get elected is often shrouded in mystery but is
probably more pedestrian. We all know what a doctor, a I've
called this month's entry 'Fall from Grace". It was prompted by the
death of my uncle who bears the same name as me but was a priest who
worked in the
Bahamas
. He died in
Wales
but lived the bulk of his life out in the
Bahamas-
a kind, selfless man, he adopted and sent through college several orphans-
all of whom bear the Pugh name. I tried to look up references to him on
the worldwide web and while doing that stumbled across a reference to
myself not as an M.P. but in my previous incarnation as a teacher.
I used to do occasional assemblies when I taught at Merchant Taylors'
which were well received and some erstwhile 'fan' had got and published
the text of one on the web.
Assemblies at Merchant Taylors were more terrifying than speeches in
parliament. Imagine a room with 700 silent adolescents and 30 staff and
all still and everyone looking at you, I found the only way I could put
myself at ease was to try to amuse with a mixture of humour and serious
intent. I needed a good idea and a dose of irony. That's the recipe I
tried.
Eventually I mastered the art and in my last ever ten minute assembly had
grown so bold that I accompanied myself with a singing electric fish. It
worked to the extent that I got an unprecedented spontaneous round of
applause for the assembly. I knew then that I should quit or else I would
get more and more outlandish.
teacher or bank
manager does when appointed but the nuts and bolts of an elected
politician's working life are fairly opaque. If indeed nuts and bolts can
be anything but 'opaque'.
My sensitivity to that
misuse of language has been accentuated by a few visits I have been making
to teaching centres for autism- Autism Initiatives in Crosby, the unit at
Our Lady of Lourdes and Peterhouse. People with Autism and Aspergers
syndrome often are very literal in their interpretation of speech so that
when asked which road do you live in will reply ."I dont live in the road
". They are described as 'literal thinkers' which is a major problem with
the English language being so full of metaphors. |
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I learned a lot from the
visits that I could not have learned any other way and emerged full of
admiration for the teachers and parents who works so hard on helping
children and young adults to cope with this handicap. It is a spectrum and
strangely enough learning about it forces you to think hard about the
whole communication process - empathy, how we listen or fail to, how we
speak and the gap between speaking and communicating. There are practical
problems in the provision of the right kind of resources for autism
education and I will try to help with those but I felt that in many ways I
myself had gained a lot through these insights into a condition that seems
on the increase. |
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ELECTIONS AND SLOGANS |
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I wish I could say we were
all similarly enriched by the electoral process- but hey all you out there
for better or worse are going to suffer/enjoy one of the longest elections
campaigns in British history and its kicked off already! Not officially of
course but ..
What this has meant in the Commons is we are all debating laws with eyes
on the clock. It will be a race to get legislation through and there will
be casualties if bills hit problems in the Lords. Rushing through the
process of scrutiny though just leads to bad laws which we end up trying
to live with or good laws with unexpected consequences.
This will be especially
the case if many of the minds in parliament are thinking of the election
and not the process of law making. Of course key to any successful
election is a 'good slogan' or so the politicians believe and spend much
time crafting them.
In the history of
Southport there have been some good examples and some dreadful ones. In
recent memory Ronnie Fearn won in 1987 with his poster saying "He lives
here " plastered on hundreds of houses (More problems for literal thinkers
there!) . On the leaflets though we used the potent "Stand Up for
Southport" which I personally claim the patent for as I persuaded Ronnie
to use it.
Back in the 1910s
Southport M.P. Major Dalrymple-Wright (Conservative) campaigned on the
slogan "England for the English " . That's what his poster said .
'English' note -bad news for all those of Scottish, Welsh or Irish origin.
Those excluded must now include a fair section of the Southport
population. His opponent at that time had Jewish ancestry. |
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My all time favourite
though is one from Mr Astbury elected Liberal M.P. 1906 . His read "Vote
for Astbury and a Big Loaf for our Little Children". That's what I call a
slogan! |
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PLUGS (Nightlife) |
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I spent some time
pre-Christmas looking with the police looking at the management of
nightlife and I suspect some will have read of this elsewhere so I'd like
just to put some shameless plugs in for some of the places we visited.
I was impressed with
the Koronet in Coronation Walk with its smart decor and Frank Sinatra like
bar stools. It just seemed so chilled compared with other places. Other
clubs taking note and going for sophistication might be no bad thing.
Second plug must go to
All-White Taxis who from time to time bear the brunt of some nightlife
excess. They were very helpful in briefing me on their perspective and
with me in the belief that improvements need to be made. I did tell them
though that I would see they got mentioned in dispatches so you'll not be
surprised to see a rather big telephone number in the background. Is it
coincidence that I and the owner are photographed in front of it ? I think
not. |
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IMPOSTERS (The Youthie) |
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Enjoyed my visit to Meols
Cop Youth Club where some very personable kids from Meols Cop School
grilled me about life in the Commons. I did my impression of M.P.s jumping
up and down seeking permission to speak and we talked of the bad example
set by M.P.s at Prime Minister's Question Time - rowdiness, bullying ,
calling out- just the sort of puerile behaviour we try to stop in schools.
It was good fun talking
frankly to them. They knew very few names of politicians but I cant blame
them altogether for that. I got a nice letter from a Tory shadow minister
the other day telling me he was coming to Southport. He was sorry for the
late notice but he had suddenly been handed an invitation at the last
minute. Sad to say even I hadn't a clue who he was! Well hands up who has
heard of James Arbuthnot?
There are so many
shadow ministers and ministers around now that it wouldn't surprise me if
a complete imposter could turn up thumping the dispatch box in the Commons
and get away with it. Some say that happens all the time. |
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