Norway’s Undying Gratitude to Shetland

Norway’s Undying Gratitude to Shetland - Scottish Review article by Kenneth Roy
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Norway’s undying
gratitude
to Shetland

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With one final
shove, the bin
clicked shut

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Daughter
of the
Farm – 1980

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essayoftheweekDamnably difficult questions about modern art

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3The Cafe

The Cafe is our readers’ forum. Send your contribution to islay@scottishreview.net

Today’s banner
Sunset over Glasgow taken from Kelvinside
Photograph by
Ann Donaldson

6


Coffee
The Cafe

Was the editor right

to abstain

from voting?

I wanted to thank Kenneth Roy for his latest piece (3 May). I have come to exactly the same conclusion about not voting, for the first time in my life, in Kirkcaldy. Local governance outside of rural communities and big cities appears to most of us here like a club of old insiders protected by a monstrous machine of bureaucracy. Yes let’s have a mayor who is visible and who will stand up and be responsible directly to local residents.

Anne Bonnar

Coffee

George Gunn

Coffee

Strong stuff by Kenneth Roy in Thursday’s editorial. After 40 years working in and with local authorities I felt a bit shocked that in a democracy an influential journal would argue against voting. But I found I could not disagree with what he had written.
     Things have indeed come to a sorry pass. There is great sadness there also. Sadness of failed hopes. Also sadness of failed endeavour. Above all, sadness of the failure of our institutions to engage with people. There is much to learn from what the British often call ‘overseas’, a quaint way of referring to the rest of the world. As in all countries many of our most intimate and vital daily services are provided through the local structures we choose.
     The great conundrum of the modern world is how to find the best route through on the one hand, increased knowledge, skill and science, and on the other increased personalisation and localism.
     I shall not vote for I am ‘overseas’ and failed to organise a postal vote in time. But I shall watch the Highland results with interest and hope they stand up well in terms of those voting. The key questions are not who but how many? How low, and this applies in England also, how low can polling rates go?
And then what solutions? Whilst the Ken and Boris show is quite fun it is on its last legs. The astute and feisty Liam Byrne may liven matters up in Birmingham. I cannot see anything similar for any part of Scotland. Still, Ewan Aitken might have made a good elected mayor for Edinburgh.
     Kenneth Roy is right. Radical change is needed. New thinking. Why not 400 local authorities? Volunteers as leaders? National collaboration on shared services – electricity, commissioning, road works. Local engagement on what works best, locally. The most democratic act tonight is not to vote. Let’s work for that not to be true in eight years’ time.

Angus Skinner

Coffee

Thank you for Kenneth Roy’s article. It convinced me and many other Scots
not to bother voting.

Tom Cochrane

Coffee

I much appreciated Kenneth Roy’s article on the subject of a few, or indeed many, reasons not to vote. I also appreciated his phrase describing local councils as ‘convenience stores’, as the same councillors seem to keep being voted back in. Nevertheless, while heeding Kenneth’s views, I didn’t follow his advice and went up to Erskine Hall here in Anstruther to perform what I thought was my democratic duty.
     Out of five, a mere one party was represented out of the nearly empty hall and worse was to come as I was presented with my voting slip, into which I was asked to choose my favoured candidates from one to five. The menu was hardly tasteful, ranging from Conservative and Labour, UKIP and the Liberal Democrats, quite amazingly, x 2. My initial reaction was why would I ever vote for the Liberal Democrats again, after they, so shamefully, sold their soul to the Conservatives in the ‘Fawlty Towers’ of the present coalition government. At least ‘Fawlty Towers’ was a comedy compared to this tragedy cutting my choice in one stroke from five to three. Of the three, UKIP seemed not to be a choice at all. 
     Now down to two, my choice was reduced to the somewhat predictable SNP and Labour. My next reaction was where are the Green Party, of whatever shade and where is any mention of socialism, a word, according to the lone party representative standing outside the hall, the Labour Party can no longer even spell. With little hesitation in these circumstances my number one went to the SNP, although given a wider choice, it might have been different. Thereafter, I was struggling, not over my remaining choice, but rather if I had a remaining choice.
     Reluctantly, Labour, by default, won my silver medal, but sadly has it come to this? Perhaps, Kenneth Roy is right in answering a bold no to the query: ‘To vote or not to vote, that is the question’.

Ian Petrie

Coffee

Since Kenneth Roy is so disgruntled with South Ayrshire Council (and rightly so from what I’ve seen in recent years when I visited) why doesn’t he stand for election as an independent? Surely it is people like him who should be on South Ayrshire Council and who would help prevent the on-going destruction of the quality of Ayr.

Margaret McGowan

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