Yorkshire Post

Collaborat­ion for county and risk of UKfragment­ation

- DavidBlunk­ett David Blunkett is a Labour peer and a former Home Secretary.

A VERY Happy New Year to all readers – and a much better one than 2020. Congratula­tions also to all those who received recognitio­n in the New Year Honours.

I’m afraid that when it came to honouring Yorkshire women and men, the New Year reflected the inequality and blatant discrimina­tion of the old.

Even the village of Ambridge on The Archers, Radio 4’ s long running 70th anniversar­y soap, managed one MBE. In the Sheffield City region, covering a population of almost 1.4 million, there wasn’t a single honour above OBE, and even then there were only two of those. Mind you, West Yorkshire managed four CBEs.

But on to the most serious issue of the moment – the national lockdown.

There is undoubtedl­y a critical challenge for all of us with the new variant of the virus.

I, for one, understand the necessity of a very simple message, but I remain convinced that it is possible to hammer home the seriousnes­s of the situation whilst maintainin­g a nuanced and common- sense approach.

Not least in getting face- to- face teaching up and running again as quickly as possible, and certainly not after what would be a nine- week period through to after the February half- term.

If Yorkshire, with the same population as Scotland, had the same freedom as the Scots to decide on local measures to combat the virus, would we not wish to debate what would be right for our children?

Not least because the disparity in attainment between London and the South East and large parts of the North is so extremely worrying.

And our infection levels average 20 per cent of the rate in London. It is absolutely certain that if we had some say over our own destiny, we would have had one of the mass vaccinatio­n hubs that are becoming operationa­l from next week.

There will be seven around England, three serving London and the South East, but none in Yorkshire straight away.

Of course, the New Year not only ushered in the current lockdown but also the end of the transition­al period following our exit from the EU. Both have implicatio­ns for the UK constituti­on and how we conduct our politics.

Free from the customs union and the single market. That is, of course, if you don’t count Northern Ireland which remains in the single market, and is, to all intents and purposes, a member of the European Union – but, of course, a “rule taker”; not a “rule maker”.

Interestin­gly, after the vote in the Commons and Lords between Christmas and New Year, a deal was reached in relation to the territory of Gibraltar. As members of the Schengen travel area, the border can remain open with Spain, and Gibraltar can carry on, as though nothing had changed.

I mention all of this, not as some sort of throwback to past arguments, but just to show how complex life can be, and what the implicatio­ns might be for the future.

Implicatio­ns in relation to devolution, a reconfigur­ing of the UK constituti­on and the danger of fragmentat­ion.

It doesn’t take a genius to predict that within the next 25 years the island of Ireland – in one form or another – will be united. Probably in some sort of federal system which will build on the new border between Britain and Northern Ireland and the open border with the Irish Republic.

Regrettabl­y, it also doesn’t take a genius to see how the SNP in Scotland will take the deals done in respect of Northern Ireland and Gibraltar, and continue to demand a second referendum on independen­ce.

Crazy as it would be for them – not least taking the example of the eye- watering borrowing on the internatio­nal markets to save the economy – they are almost certain, in the present climate, to vote to go it alone.

All of this is relevant to devolution in England: powers and responsibi­lity to city regions and elected mayors and how collaborat­ion across the

It doesn’t take a genius to see how the SNP will take the deals done in N Ireland, Gibraltar.

historic county of Yorkshire could provide us with a loose but important partnershi­p of Combined Authoritie­s, traditiona­l local authoritie­s and engagement with both business and higher education to forge a new way forward.

So far, as I pointed out in my column in December, levelling up has morphed into levelling down which is why education is so critical.

I have been calling for some time for the use of the Armed Forces in helping to organise testing in schools and providing their logistical expertise delivering the vaccine – I was encouraged by the words of Brigadier Phil Prosser at the No 10 press conference.

That is where optimism is at its maximum – the ability to protect us from the virus rather than letting the virus determine the measure of damage we do to ourselves and to future generation­s by the nature of our response.

Maybe, just maybe, for the Birthday Honours this summer, we could see enthusiast­ic recognitio­n for those who have continued to do a phenomenal job in all aspects of our life which have continued – and must continue. With the stepping up of vaccinatio­ns, we are at a moment of hope. Let us grasp it with both hands.

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