Sunday, 30 April 2017

Veronica Newman of the Campaign for an English Parliament suggests size is no impediment to the case for an English Parliament.


Veronica Newman of the Campaign for an English Parliament had an excellent letter in the Western Daily Press on April 29th.  It was a rebuttal of a previous correspondent’s claim that due to the size and population of England an English Parliament would lead to an unstable United Kingdom.  The letter contains pertinent and illuminating facts about some of the states making up the federal systems of other major nations.

Below is Veronica Newman’s letter as published in the Western Daily Press.

Size not important in democracy fight.

In his letter of April 21, Robert Craig asserts that there will never be an English Parliament as England would need to become independent from the UK and due to the size of England’s population a federation would be unstable.

I would like to draw Robert Craig’s attention to some countries which currently have federal systems that function perfectly well even with states of very different sized populations:

USA – Largest state California population 39,250,017, smallest state Alaska population 739,828

Canada – Largest state Ontario population 13,448,494, smallest state Yukon population 35,874

Germany – Largest state North-Rhine Westphalia population 17,904,65, smallest state Saarland population 1,027,700

I venture to suggest that size does not matter in the case of a parliament for England, in a federation it would be unable to dictate to the other states and there is no prerequisite for independence.


Veronica Newman
The Campaign for an English Parliament
Trowbridge, Wiltshire




As a further example I would add Australia to Veronica Newman’s list.  Of its six States, New South Wales has the largest population at 7,757,800, which is 32% of the nation’s population while Tasmania, the smallest, has a population of 519,800 making up only 2% of the total.

Thursday, 20 April 2017

Cadbury Castle, near Sparkford, in South Somerset. A tremendous Iron Age hill fort.


Cadbury Castle, one of the most impressive hill forts in Britain, is just south of the A303 only a couple of miles from Sparkford.  I followed the signs from Sparkford to South Cadbury where the Castle looms above the village from which it takes its name.  A short distance past the church is a small car park for the use of those visiting the Castle; it is only a few yards from the steep and stony, tree lined lane up to the fortress.
Cadbury Castle an Iron Age hill fort, near Sparkford, in South Somerset.  This view was taken from the north.

Climbing the steep track through the defences of this impressive Iron Age hill fort is well worth the effort as the views are magnificent.  At the 502ft high summit is a monumental stone pointing out geographical features and the distances to them. 
To the north-west is Glastonbury Tor with the Mendip Hills and Brent Knoll beyond while to the south-west is Ham Hill and its war memorial.  Alfred’s Tower is 10 miles to the north-east on the Somerset side of the border with Wiltshire.


The view to the south west from the summit of Cadbury Castle.

Pevsner describes Cadbury Castle as: “A tremendous Iron Age Camp covering 18 acres.  It is the mightiest prehistoric camp in Somerset, and one of the mightiest in Britain.  The fortress is three-sided, guarded by no less than four huge banks and ditches.  In places the height of the bank is over 40ft above the bottom of the ditch.” 
Arthur Mee in his The King’s England, Somerset (Hodder and Stoughton Ltd., 1927) writes: “To the south its grassy slope is gentle, but to the north are ditches and ramparts strengthened with stone walls, now half-buried and overgrown with trees and bushes.”
A section of Cadbury Castle's defensive banks and ditches.

Cadbury Castle is also a candidate, among many, to be King Arthur’s fabled Camelot. Amongst the evidence is Arthur’s Well on the eastern side of the fortress.  King Arthur’s Hunting Causeway, still in use as a bridle path in the early twentieth century, links the Castle to Glastonbury Tor which many believe to be the Isle of Avalon.  The significantly named River Cam, a tributary of the Yeo, flows nearby.  Sally Jones in her Legends of Somerset, (Bossiney Books, 1984) states: “In one legend Cadbury is hollow and King Arthur and his Knights sleep in the great cavern, waiting for the day when they will awake and save England.”  With conflict spreading around the world that day might not be far off!

Saturday, 15 April 2017

Shudrick Valley on the eastern fringe of Ilminster in South Somerset. Saved for future generations to enjoy.


Well done to the stalwart campaigners from the Save Shudrick Valley Group (SSVG) who have succeeded in saving the valley from development, thus ensuring that future generations can enjoy this picturesque little corner of South Somerset.
The view to the east from the footpath along the floor of the Shudrick Valley.


A Planning Inspector has dismissed an appeal by developers against a decision by South Somerset District Council to reject a plan to build 220 houses in the Shudrick Valley on the eastern fringe of Ilminster.  

To read a statement from the SSVG check out this link to an article from the Ilminster Press:
http://www.ilminsterpress.co.uk/blog/2017/04/11/ilminster-news-shudrick-valley-saved-as-appeal-is-rejected/


Monday, 10 April 2017

West of England mayoral election - sadly there is no candidate from the English Democrats. However, Stephen Morris steps up to the plate in Greater Manchester.



As someone who lived in Bristol for 60 years before moving to Somerset, I take a passing interest in the West of England Mayoral election – in effect an election for a mayor of Greater Bristol.  It is a pity there is no candidate from the English Democrats.  However, I am pleased to see tireless campaigner Stephen Morris is standing for the English Democrats in the Greater Manchester mayoral election.
In a recent interview he gave to Mancunnionmatters I noted three of his policy statements with which I entirely agree.
He opposes building on the green belt and proposes all new planning applications would have to include solar panels on residential property and industrial units. 
He is against hospital car-parking charges saying: "We already pay for hospitals with our taxes.  Parking charges are an attack on the sick injured and vulnerable and we can't have it".
Regarding the Green Party he suggests that their "open border policy" makes it not such an environmentally friendly party as it would seem. 
For Mancunnionmatters entire article on Stephen Morris, the English Democrats' candidate for the Greater Manchester mayoral election, here is a link: