Edinburgh Evening News

Public utilities need our vote

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It’s been reported that the collapse of the privatised and heavily indebted Thames Water could trigger a government borrowing crisis. Nonsense.

The $15 billion debt is a drop in the bucket, and since the shares are valueless, the UK government won’t pony up the whole amount anyway.

Also recall that Sunak blithely announced the defence budget will jump from £55 billion pa to £87 billion by 2030. That tells you the UK values bombs over clean water.

It’s doubtful the UK government will learn the key lesson from this debacle that water, an essential public good, should have never been privatised in the first place.

But don’t expect common sense from English Labour. Its solution is to ban bonuses for water bosses, not to bring England’s filthy and costly water back into public ownership.

So how did Scotland dodge this particular privatisat­ion bullet? It did it via a popular referendum, a basic political right under a system of direct democracy.

When the Tory government proposed privatisin­g Scotland’s water in 1994, which 90 per cent of Scots opposed, Strathclyd­e Regional Council organised a postal referendum asking them if they agreed with the UK government’s proposal. Then 71.5 per cent of all voters - 1.2 million people took part and 97.2 per cent voted No in the UK’s largest ever council referendum. Westminste­r backed down and Scotland’s water remained in public hands.

The Strathclyd­e water referendum showed that if people are given a voice, their will can prevail and serve as a check on government power. Scotland’s constituti­on, embodied in the 1689 Claim of Right, says the people are sovereign and Westminste­r has agreed.

So, the way out of this failing union is for the Scottish people to convene a Constituti­onal Convention to draft a constituti­on based on Direct Democracy, putting themselves back in charge of their nation.

Leah Gunn Barrett, Edinburgh

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