Yorkshire Post

Our freedoms are eroding despite promises

-

Tony McCobb, Kirk Ella.

Your editorial (March 28) regarding the record release of raw sewage into our rivers and seas is yet another example of this Government’s inability to protect British citizens.

The deliberate underfundi­ng of the Environmen­t Agency under the guise of ‘cost-cutting’ exposes individual­s to illness and disease, as well as damaging those tourist areas which depend on water activities.

I always thought that a government’s primary duty was to protect its citizens and promote their welfare, but the casual indifferen­ce to our health is symptomati­c of a wider political malaise.

The drive to ‘get Brexit done’ without understand­ing how business and trade work has undermined the country’s economic growth, leaving us vulnerable to outside forces which have raised industrial and food prices.

This Government’s inability to control the quality and price of imported food exposes us to dodgy products and dangerous food. The recently proposed off-site inspection scheme has been called ‘a gift for meat smugglers’.

The Government’s desperatio­n to ‘do a deal’ with Australia and New Zealand has undermined our farming industry. Farmers are crying out for a basic income to compensate for inadequate government funding since we left the European Union.

The impending tariffs (up to £145 per shipment on imports of plant and animal products) from the EU will restrict choice and put up prices for British consumers. European producers may well decide not to bother with Britain at all, yet most of our fresh food is imported from Europe. How can such naïve, impractica­l trade barriers make us healthier, safer and more productive?

On leaving the EU we were promised ‘freedom’ but nobody explained who would be free to do what, nor what we would be free from. It was just a slogan. We now see the depressing queues at Dover at holiday times restrictin­g our liberty of movement.

The City of London, our great financial hub, was going to be liberated and make us more prosperous, yet lots of city institutio­ns and firms are leaving for Paris and Frankfurt. Many of our firms had to set up sister companies in Europe in order to continue to trade more easily and efficientl­y.

Far from making us free, this vast exodus of British resources has made us more vulnerable. Our ability to travel, work or study in

Europe has obviously been seriously restricted.

Our freedoms have also been restricted on a political level. The right to vote has been limited in the Tories’ favour by the introducti­on of unnecessar­y rules about photo identifica­tion, rules which ReesMogg himself called a form of gerrymande­ring.

Our freedom to protest peacefully or make valid criticism of the Government has been severely limited and criminalis­ed. ‘Big Brother’ surveillan­ce has been extended, including by a prepostero­usly named Online Safety Bill. The constant attack on the European Court of Human Rights, the brainchild of Winston Churchill, deliberate­ly undermines our diminishin­g rights.

Boris Johnson promised that Brexit would ‘Unleash Britain’s Potential’. The leash gets shorter and tighter by the day.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom