Talk:Natascha Engel
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[edit] Photograph
This page needs a photo Matthewfelgate 00:03, 3 June 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Original research
I have added the {{original research}} tag because of the speculation in the article over Natascha Engel's career and political philosophy, following concerns raised at Wikipedia talk:WikiProject UK Parliament constituencies. Sam Blacketer 21:44, 7 February 2007 (UTC)
- I understand your concerns and I've replied to Galloglass's comments at Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject_UK_Parliament_constituencies#Natascha_Engel which may address some of yours. As I said to Gallowglass, if you've got ideas on how to 'neutrally' present the facts, then please help :-) —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Dsmith1usa (talk • contribs) 10:47, 8 February 2007 (UTC).
[edit] Copyediting
I've completed my copyedit and am now happy with the article as it stands. As far as I can see, all the original research has gone, although no doubt more and better sources can always be found. I have no intention of reverting if Dsmith1usa wants to insist on his version; others are welcome to give their opinions on which is better. Sam Blacketer 13:30, 8 February 2007 (UTC)
- Thanks Sam, that's a good deal better. Clearly presented, easily read and all verifiable in reliable sources. Ta. Hiding Talk 14:46, 8 February 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Why it is not necessary to say 'unsuccessful'
To be "a candidate" must by definition refer to an unsuccessful candidacy. If a candidate was successful, then it would say "elected as MP" rather than "was a candidate". In addition, referring to all candidates who do not win as "unsuccessful" begs a question: was Roy Jenkins unsuccessful in Warrington in 1981? He wasn't elected, but by coming close he demonstrated the electoral appeal of the SDP and therefore scored a big political success for the party. Sam Blacketer 14:45, 8 February 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Why it is necessary to say 'unsuccesful'
The current version - and we are not finished, yet - from what I can see says, 'he fought.' Nothing about your definition of 'candidacy'. But if you insist, with respect, on your pedantry, I look in the Collins dictionary I have to hand and it says nothing about direct implication of failure. And pulling-up an on-line dictionary, all the pointers are towards an expectation of success. But anyway, even if he 'fought,' to use your 'candidacy alternative,' I think it perfectly reasonable, with many others, I suspect, to tack on, possibly silently, 'Well ... did he win ?' (And that was exactly the question I asked myself! I've never heard of Randall [MP for Uxbridge] or Salisbury Jones.) It's rather like posting something like, 'Liston fought Clay.' (Fact) Yes, well, who won? Also, it was interesting to note that while I was being sermoned on what is up to Wiki standard and what is not, that you almost immediately tripped-up over your own shoelaces with an opinion about Engel being '...identified as a potential for future office.' At least you were 'gracious' enough to haul back on that (grudgingly, I suspect - never nice to be part of a bunch of preachers/inquistitors and then get 'hoist with your own petards,' eh?) So, in terms of word definition and what is or is not 'opinion' vs 'fact,' (btw. I do recommend reading, the 'Malleus Maleficarum,' the precision of some 'definitions' is, well, um, astonishing) that's two that have exploded (so far). I was running accross three 'pages,' yesterday, trying to keep-up with developments, so, now I've answered this here, I'll be working on the Engel talk page. No, I'll not 'simply' revert, but thanks for your contribution, and now let's hold you, and, indirectly, Galloglass - who appears to think that 'merely' arranging to get elected to Westminster doesn't register on the scale of political accomplishment - to your own 'high' Wiki standards. Be seeing you. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Dsmith1usa (talk • contribs) 10:55, 9 February 2007 (UTC).
[edit] Verifiablity
Sam writes: 'Her connections with allies of Gordon Brown were remarked upon.'
Where were they remarked upon? —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Dsmith1usa (talk • contribs) 11:52, 9 February 2007 (UTC).
- In the Independent on Sunday piece to which you provided a link.
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- 'By contrast, Natascha Engel, an aide to the Treasury minister John Healey, has easily overcome local opposition to be selected for Derbyshire North East. However, she denies that having impeccable Brownite connections helped her to the job.
- "I was expecting that to come up, but in fact people were much more interested in local issues," she said, adding that the term "Blair babe" was outdated and insulting. "It is sexist, patronising nonsense."
- But it is likely that Ms Engel will have to endure a different sexist and patronising label as one of a new generation of "Brown babes".
- Hope this helps. Sam Blacketer 12:33, 9 February 2007 (UTC)
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- No, with respect, Sam - you wrote that (I'm talking about your misunderstanding of timing. You do it later on with your trying to provide a continual text of what Engel did prior to being elected. There are things that were done [alledgedly] but the timing is unclear. That was why it was bullet pointed.) That was/is selective editing on your part from my original article. You well know, I pulled that from her period of being selected - the controversy over all-women select lists. My concern, and I gave references, also from people from BECTU, was about after the election. I hope this helps. (BTW. I notice, you are like Gallowglass when caught bang to rights on your previous claims to have some sort of divine insight into the meaning of words ... you move along. You don't answer the questions you are directly confronted with. Where's your previous 'confidence' on your definition of 'candidate?') . You do move on don't you (LOL)? **BANG** that's three Sam. You are so much fun, I think you could provide us, with you 'earnestness,' with Wiki entertainment until we die ... keep going :-) Dsmith1usa 14:29, 9 February 2007 (UTC)
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- I'm afraid I'm having difficulties understanding both your meaning and tone. I don't see this as some titanic tussle between personalities, but as a joint effort to write a better article about one British MP. The comment about Natascha Engel's connections with allies of Gordon Brown follows in the text immediately after the statement that she had been selected as a candidate; the quote from the article is therefore highly relevant. Yes, I selected out the part of the article which mentions Natascha Engel as being close to Gordon Brown allies – I do not see the problem there. An accusation of 'selective quotation' normally means that contradictory writing is not selected, but I am unaware of anything either in that article or elsewhere which observes that Natascha Engel is unconnected to Gordon Brown allies.
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- 'Titanic tussle' (laughter) oh, you do have a way with words, sort of, don't you, Sam ;-)? Nope, I definitely wouldn't put in the 'Titanic' class. More like, (all aboard )the Skylark.
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- For what it's worth, I still don't see why it is necessary to write that any election candidate who does not get elected is "unsuccessful". It is standard form in books like "Who's Who"
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- you see, Sam, now you start singing a different story ... before, according to you, writing 'candidate' was analytical with failure. I merely pointed out that there is no clear analytical connection. You start to gabble ... retreating from your previous stronger assertions, and, as I said before about Gallowglass and you, you ignore previously pointed out awkward points, and continue...
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- to write that a person had "Contested" an election without having to draw attention to their not having been elected. Any reader of the article will understand without having to have it pointed out to them.
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- which once again is you tripping-up over your holier-than thou shoelaces. This is your opinion on something which is completely subjective.
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- In the Wikipedia article on Screaming Lord Sutch it is never once mentioned that all of his electoral contests were unsuccessful. Sam Blacketer 14:27, 9 February 2007 (UTC)
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- Screaming Lord Sutch Priceless, Sam, priceless, that you use Sutch an example. Oh, you are a one aren't you?
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- Thanks for your ever engrossing contributions ... you are a vast seam of possibilities that should be mined. Be seeing you.
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- I don't know how I have managed to offend you, but please understand this - if I change something you have written, it's not me criticising you as a person, or even as an editor, just me offering my opinion that the article would be improved by the change. Sam Blacketer 18:22, 9 February 2007 (UTC)
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[edit] Engel on Iraq
Ok. moving on a bit Sam Blacketer from making-up and then trying to defend fairy stories about connotations of the word 'candidacy,' let's look at Engel on Iraq and how you've taken information from my contributions and, in your zeal to 'lend a hand,' completely missed the point - do you look at the datings of documents (that whole hard business of timing)? You write:
However, she has said in an interview, [citing my ref. Labour MPs on Iraq - part two] that she would have opposed the Iraq war had she been in Parliament at the time.[emphasis added]
With respect, Sam, it seems to be a case of RTFQ (which of course is what Engel doesn't want gulls to do!):
Natascha Engel - North East Derbyshire
If you were an MP at the time, how did you vote on military action in Iraq? Against.
[emphases added]
And so we venture to the politician's Enchanted Lands of the counterfactual - the (Hopeful v Ignorance [sic]) general purpose 'let-off'). Now you may point to my pedantry, so to speak, and say something along the lines of, 'Well, clearly(!), what was meant was that,"If you had been ... how would you ... etc. etc." (a significant, and entirely meaning shifting change of tense and the degree of the hypothetical). This is rather like your earlier assertion that "Any reader of the article will understand without having to have it pointed out to them." You appear to be quite happy to zip the pointer sharply toward the subjectivity end of the 'objectivity---------------->subjectivity' spectrum at the 'meta-level,' and in doing so, remove important information that may provide a more 'objective grasp' (pure objectivity being a pot of gold at the end of some rainbow in the land of Oz, in the human way of being). So you're not so keen on 'fact' v 'opinion' distinctions around here - at this level - it seems. I believe, again with respect, that is called hypocrisy.
Why is pointing this out important, with respect to Engel. Well, it's like when I came along and started working on this benighted article and came accross a simple and bland, 'She opposed the Iraq war.' No, there is no justification for writing anything like this. The most you can do is say she claims. The reason it is very important is that Engel appears to have convinced everybody - including you it seems - that she has made some sort of verifiable pre-war statement. Probably on ther strength of the subtle opportunity for misinterpretation illustrated above. Now as she got elected to our consituency, be sure the Stop the War Coalition and 'fellow-travellers' tried to get hold of her 'form.' I was a part of the effort (viz. my original enquiry that sparked all this bullshit off). We found zilch. In fact, it seems that Engel has a real antipathy to writing things down or admitting the possibilty to be held to account (I have personal experience of this, btw. and ask some of her ex-colleagues from BECTU at ITV at the time trying to get union recognition: I included three references in this area, which you saw, in you 'god'-like Wiki wisdom to summarily remove.
You write, 'I don't know how I have managed to offend you,...' Well being patronizing is a good way to start:
I hope we don't have a difference of opinion on what constitutes "fact" and what is "opinion". Your remarks about how Natascha Engel redefines socialism is opinion, not fact.
Give me strength, do you think I need to be lectured, least of all from somebody that appears to be as so self-satisfied as you, on facts v opinions?
And yes, I'll have more to say on Engel and socialism (an advanced preview, she doesn't refer to it, she defines it! I hope we don't have a difference of opinion on the difference between 'references to' and 'definitions').
You say:
...offering my opinion that the article would be improved by the change...
Sam, I have no problems with this and if you read my initial tentative approaches wrt. the Engel correspondence I have, I show willingness to collaborate to improve. You may have different approaches in style, but bear in mind that others may have done a lot more study of the person that they are trying to write about than you. I take it you're not an NE Derbyshire constituent? Also, unfortunately, you got caught-up in my responding to Gallowglass who appears to think that being elected to Westminster is not (politically) significant.
BSY Dsmith1usa 11:11, 10 February 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Fish in a barrel (with all respect)
- Please read Wikipedia policy and comment on contributions, not contributors. I will take the two points about the article which you raise in turn.
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- Oh, dear, this, with respect again, is turning into something like shooting fish in a barrel. Feel my empathy. (I'm also suspecting, the more, I read it, [with your opening invitation to 'Please read ...' etc. etc.] that you would have been quite at home with the Malleus Maleficarum ;-)
- First, while it is the case that Engel's answer to the Guardian questionnaire is 'slightly confusing' on the face of it, ...[my emphasis]
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- I can see you are a master of understatement since it is (possibly) a posit...
- ...the meaning is clear because of the undoubted fact...[my emphasis]
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- ...(well thanks for 'placing that firmly in position')
- ...she was not a Member of Parliament in March 2003.
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- ...and who is that supposed to be clear to? Political anoraks? Now here's some of my subjectivity (taking advantage of your generous leniency at the meta-level). Being a part of this consistuency and knowing, from personal experience, some of the impoverishment - especially since the Thatcherite driven demise of the heavy industries - less fortunate people have little time to explore the political backgrounds of parliamentary candidates who they have had no say over and find out when they first appeared in a parliament; no they are too busy merely trying to survive on IB, IS or JSA. You'll be lucky if two in ten, round here, can tell you who Engel is - never mind when she was elected. (As far as those stats. are concerned btw. it was a straw poll but just after here election, I put my shoeleather on the streets and went and polled myself. I wasn't 'disappointed.')
- Moreover, even if that source was ignored, there is an alternative and possibly better source: an article on page 2 of The Times of 26 April 2005 entitled "Only one in 12 of Blair's new candidates support him in public on the war". This article includes a table of Labour candidates which includes Natascha Engel in the "Against the War" column.
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- As far as your reference to the Times is concerned: Sam, who've you got writing your material? I wish I could take you down, as my guest - and I do suspect that you would need the 'protection' of a local - to one of the 'hard pubs' in the villages/towns near here, and watch the reaction while you poll their reading of the Times (ROTFL). Minding my own business while supping a pint of Mansfield one Sunday, reading the (Sunday) Times, and with no disrespect to my friends and acquaintances, one of the women patrons, in all innocence, God bless her, asked me, 'Do you read all those words in that newspaper?'
- There is no source which I can find reporting her views at the time...
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- ... thanks for more corroboration of our original findings around here...
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- and why?...
- ...which is why it is written as her views looking back.
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- Zapping that pointer over to 'meta-subjectivity'.
- What the article used to say is really neither here nor there.
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- Mmmnnn ... an interesting way of saying something. What it is I'm not quite sure and I don't think I'm alone. Why? has the (written) article suddenly cried off of saying what it did. Has a time-traveller nipped-back and altered history and the text is changed. Even Orwell didn't dream of this for the workings of the 'memory hole,' So I'll just leave off with, 'No unless you do have a real concern to get to the truth.'
- Secondly, the problem which the article used to have in relation to the 'Political Sympathies' section was that it contained a great deal of original research: unless Natascha Engel actually spoke of the Golden Rule herself, there's no justification for introducing the topic in the article. Sam Blacketer 18:09, 10 February 2007 (UTC)
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- Well, I was going to deal with this, today, but there were other 'fish' that were floating upside down begging to be put out of their misery, Sam. So, I'll do it tommorrow, rest assured.
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- Off over to Cif right now ... enjoy ... pass regards on to the likes of Gallowglass. You are all so much fun. In fact, 'Oooohhh, I do like you...'Dsmith1usa 10:53, 12 February 2007 (UTC)
[edit] The naming problem (Engel and the Golden Rule)
Sam Blacketer complains:
- ... unless Natascha Engel actually spoke of the Golden Rule herself, there's no justification for introducing the topic in the article.'[emphasis added]
Well, if some talk of a 'Morning Star' [sic] and others talk of an 'Evening Star,' who has the 'right' name?
You say:
- She referred to socialism as,...
(I'll deal with the problem of 'references' and 'definitions' [especially to socialism] later)
- ..."the simple idea that if someone helps their neighbour, their neighbour will help them".[emphases added]
So, there, whether you like it or not, she, "...actually spoke of [to use your own language] the Golden Rule herself..." Whether she used, 'Golden Rule,' audibly or textually, is irrelevant. She gave an audible and (through Hansard) a textual record of a recognition of (ethical) action between human beings that there are many other names for. This verifiable information you saw fit to delete.
I take it you've not done much thinking about the naming problem? Godel's work, for example, that put an end to many fairy stories and much wishful thinking, was hinged on paying careful attention to something that appears so simple as the 'thing' and the 'name of the thing' (to put it as simply as I can).
So, I've tried to respond to your 'naming' difficulties.
Tomorrow, I will go on to deal with other of your 'facts' v 'opinions' concerns in this area. BSY Dsmith1usa 13:31, 13 February 2007 (UTC)
- I have no idea what this point is relating to, but you're committing the very definition of original research per our policy on no original research. Hope that helps clarify Sam's edits and explain why yours are in conflict with our policies. Hiding Talk 10:41, 14 February 2007 (UTC)
- Block writes, 'I have no idea what this point is relating to,...
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- So if you don't know or understand what is being talked about, why do you think you are in a position to say anything useful?
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- Here, at the meta-level I'm reasoning about (claimed) objectivity at the object-level. Is it the case that Sam has had to call out other 'Wiki-gods' to defend that which he (clearly) lacks the strength to defend himself?
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- Laughable.
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- No, no Wiki-gods have been called down from almighty Eikilympus to rain down upon your head the mighty wrath of objectivity at the object-level, since that would be moving from the sublime to the ridiculous. What people are trying to point out to you is that your edits don't comply with our policy. Why don't I know what point this relates to in the article? Perhaps because you haven't fully identified it. However, I would have hoped you could have assimilated the broader point of my comment, but I'll restate it again for you. What you are advocating is:
“ | the very definition of original research per our policy on no original research | ” |
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- Hope that helps. My parents used to tell me that if I had nothing nice to say, maybe I should say nothing at all. Perhaps you could consider that, along with our policies and guidance on civility and assuming good faith. Good day to you, and happy editing. Hiding Talk 11:31, 14 February 2007 (UTC)
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- Oh, dear, you do set yourself up, don't you? I like you, tooo...
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- My parents used to tell me that if I had nothing nice to say, maybe I should say nothing at all.
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- Are you telling us this attitude is, um, encyclopaedic? Being 'nice'. You and Sam have the same person writing for you, don't you?
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- As, I said, before, laughable :-) :-)
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- Anyway, Why does Sam seem to be needing you? Now twice you have confessed you don't know f**k about what you're attempting to talk about (you know this is even more fun, grappling at the meta-level - with you, Hiding, I'm persuaded, before the 'gods' finally turn me off, to have a go. You are a delicious challenge (unless the truth is, actually, Wiki, 'Can't stand the truth' - and you seem to the case in point why Wikipedia is growing, regardless of past good work - I've cited in other areas - to be a JOKE). Hope this helps, and btw. would you go on and explain to, Sam, that the phrase, 'Hope this helps,' cuts no mustard with folks that have been around the net/web for a quarter of a century. Responding to debates becomes pretty-well pathetic. Jeeezzzz, it was used-up as (an intimidation) tactic decades ago.
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- I'm tired. I'm among friends, right now, who are looking at all your pretensions. There's laughter. Sam one way and Sam the other. Yes I'll deal with your arguments at your beat at any level - object - "meta-level" - "meta-meta-level." What you, clearly don't have is the possession to 'turn it back on itself.' I'm going to make a guess on this, now you may have to take this one word at a time ... Godel's Theorem.
- Oh, you wanted a pointless debate. You have a fundamental misapprehension as to the nature of Wikipedia. But thank you for playing. I'm off to clip clop over the bridge with the billy goats gruff. have fun with your friends and be careful of the traffic. Hiding Talk 17:26, 14 February 2007 (UTC)
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- See below.
[edit] The difference between 'refers' and 'defines'
Mmmnnn ... No, I'm not going to bother anymore, because, clearly, Wikipedia, initially full of good intentions, through the likes of you and Sam is turning into the joke that is being increasingly commented on.
I tried to help. BSY
[edit] On pointless debate
Block writes:
- Oh, you wanted a pointless debate.
No, I made the mistake of thinking that hanging around the Village Pump would be a good idea in the attempt to work on my concerns on 'objectivity.' That perhaps there may be the possibility for good quality collaboration. Read, again, carefully, my response to your earlier contribution:
- Um. I'm guessing the MP and article is Natascha Engel. Looking at the article I think you may have some problems with original research and the neutral point of view. That's just my opinion on the article. Hiding Talk 18:35, 7 February 2007 (UTC)
- You are correct. As for your concerns, I have them myself. One Sam Blacketer has added a tag to the article, which is fair enough. I reply to the concerns on the talk page.
It goes on:
- If she publishes them herself on a website, or you post them on a blog, then you can cite them, but it's still only as reliable as the source you're citing. Night Gyr (talk/Oy) 23:06, 10 February 2007 (UTC)
- Thanks for that info. Night GyrDsmith1usa 11:44, 12 February 2007 (UTC)
See, politeness all round. Irritation sets in when the likes of Sam tries to convince a 'newbie' that, for example, words like 'candidate' are analytic wrt. a state of failure:
- To be "a candidate" must by definition refer to an unsuccessful candidacy. (the word according to Blacketer).
Tripe, and demonstrably so. You like tripe, do you?
- Thanks Sam, that's a good deal better... etc. etc.
Can't stand the stuff myself.
- I'm off to clip clop over the bridge with the billy goats gruff.
What consenting animals and adults do in their privacy is no business of mine (and I'm not even going to waste whimsy on your oh, so transparent allusion to trolls - I bet that's used-up all your humor allowance for the month - be gentle with yourself ;-) BSY
(btw. don't waste key strokes. I'll not be back this way) Dsmith1usa 15:16, 19 February 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Seven Questions to Natascha Engel
Shortly after Engel's election in 2005, since so little was known about her in the constituency that she had been parachuted after Barnes retired, I was moved, in a spirit of democratic concern (since the turnout and mandate had reached all time lows), to ask Engel seven questions that I thought were going to be occupying much of the time of this parliament.
She was in the middle of bearing her latest child (Anton) and so the response was delayed - understandably so - but the response, when it came was voluble and reasonably interesting. All the more so, since subsequent attempts to draw her out - in written terms - have seen a certain ...erm ... 'bashfulness,' should we say on certain matters.
So, here we go:
What action will you take to (addressed to Engel):
Q1: promote electoral reform such that each vote counts the same as the next leading to re-enfranchisement, the obviation of the need for the electorate to vote tactically "in the dark" to cut the power of an overweeningly arrogant executive - the "elected dictatorship" - and the destruction of the despicable "bogey-man" scare tactic of "vote for us or you'll get them" (the "1 in 10" argument deployed on the eve of the election, shown, formally, several times to be nonsense before the election and demonstrated by the action of the electorate to be nonsense)?
Engel on Electoral Reform: This is a subject close to my heart. I do not believe that the current system either encourages participation in the democratic process, nor is it representational for the reasons you outline. The first-past-the-post system is becoming increasingly obsolete. I have been trying to find out as much as possible about alternative electoral systems, but have been disappointed to see that every system has serious flaws.
The advantage of FPTP is the constituency link. In an ideal world, FPTP gives the constituency electorate a direct avenue to get rid of an MP in an election. This means that there is some sort of accountability as well as a strong element of representation. In practice, of course, this often not [sic.] happen in 'safe' seats. I think also at local level, the argument about negative/tactical voting, does hold true. A Labour voter in North East Derbyshire who votes for the liberals (or UKIP in the last election) effectively gives a vote to the Tories. A Liberal in Chesterfield voting Tory would be to the advantage of Labour. Either way, the system is far from ideal and prevents smaller single-issue parties from having any representation. Given that the electorate is increasingly moving away from the idealogical frameworks which were presented by Labour and the Conservatives and towards cherry-picking from a menu of policies, our electoral system should change to accomodate this. I find the Billy Bragg model of proportional representation for the Upper House very appealing, but I would like to do some more research on this before making my mind up.
Q2: ensure the withdrawal of British forces from Iraq on the expiry of any current U.N. mandates at the latest, preserving British lives and saving British treasure?
Engel on British forces in Iraq: I am a Labour Party loyalist. I believe very strongly that I stood for election on a Labour Party ticket and was elected as a Labour candidate. If I disagreed with Labour policy, I should have stood as an Independent or as a candidate for another Party. I therefore have no intention of voting against the Labour whip. There are, though, matters of conscience and I believe that Iraq was one of those. I would have voted against the war on Iraq and if the voter was tomorrow, would still do so. I think we were wrong for many reasons. But I support Harry Barnes' views on this. He did vote against the war, but has been very involved in ensuring that the transition to democratic government in Iraq and the building of lasting infrastructure has been as smooth and beneficial as possible. I do not think we should withdraw British troops immediately. I think that would compound an already terrible situation. The withdrawal of troops would leave a political vacuum which could be filled by something far worse. Saddam Hussain not only slaughtered his own people, he also ensured that there was no infrastructure for anyone else to govern. The least we can do is to provide the minimum in terms of public utilities and services and to foster self-government in a country that has been ruled by fear. I would not have gone to war with/in Iraq, but I'm happy to see Saddam Hussain gone.
Q3: restrain Blair if he starts showing signs of his fatal weakness for the Sirens of Bush, for example, when the Iranians refuse to take orders, in June [this correspondence was in 2005], from Washington on their enrichment programs and Bush starts his demonization of Iran in the run-up to the already planned bombing raids - in concert with the Israeli proxy under Sharon [sic.] - in the Iranian nuclear facilities?
Engel on Restraining Tony Blair: I understand what you mean by that phrase but I would take issue with it. Tony Blair is the democratically-elected leader of the Labour Party, and as we are currently forming the government, he is the Prime Minister. His 'power' is directly related to the size of his majority and his ability to persuade. Each individual MP can vote for or against individual pieces of legislation/issues of the day put before them. You imply he has powers beyond this, which he does not. On the issue of Iran (and I obviously don't have any expert or inside knowledge of this any more than anyone else does) I don't believe that either the UK or the US has the resources available to commit to another war. From what I have read, they are already stretched in Iraq and other 'missions.' I also think that lessons have been learned from Iraq and another venture like this would be highly unlikely. There also seems to be some real diplomatic progress even after the elections with Iran, but I'll keep in touch with you on this in future as we see the developments.
Q4: protect the principle of "habeas corpus" and trial by jury and defeat further infringements of civil liberties, such as indefinite detention orders and I.D. cards, promoted under the guise of the "war on terror" or its sanitized sibling, the "national interest ?"
Engel on Civil Liberties: I voted with the whip on the first reading of the ID card bill. I find this area very difficult. I have lived in Germany and in Spain where ID cards are compulsory. It does make life different, and both countries are distinct from each other. At the moment, ID cards in this country are very much NOT about the "war on terror" and are therefore being called 'entitlement' cards. I'm not sure if they will ever be introduced, but if they are, I believe the cards and legislation will be very different from what is being outlined today. The argument that both the US and Spain have ID card systems in place [in the case of the US, Engel is factually incorrect - there is no ID card system in the US], and yet suffered attacks by terrorists is a compelling one. It means that the civil liberties v security argument is a non-starter. On trial by jury I am less worried. The proposal is to have more cases eligible for hearing without juries ie raising the threshold, rather than getting rid of juries altogether. That I would oppose, but given the huge backlog in our courts, and the types of trials that would be heard without a jury, I don't think this is what the press is claiming.
Q5: support the demand for complete political accountability in the Iraq adventure and possible criminal prosecutions before the ICC of British politicians - the enablers, justifiers and apologists - and complying military personnel for breaches of International Law including, but not limited to, promoting and prosecuting an unprovoked war of aggression against a sovereign state and acts contravening the Geneva Convention including, but not limited to, illegal detention and torture?
Engel on Iraq: I am going to limit myself to campaigning for the release of 'prisoners' held at Guantanamo Bay and closing the camp. Your question deserves a fuller reply but it will take me more time. I think, though, that any human rights abuses or torture must be stopped and prevented.
Q6: help your constituents bridge the democratic deficit between themselves, parliament and the EU through understanding constitutional arrangements? (This question was, 'scrutinize the proposed E.U. constitution for the enhancement or disadvantage of the local exercise of democratic power?' Superceded in a supplementary after the French and Dutch referenda.)
Engel on EU Constitution: This question has been superceeded by events [see above], but just to let you know, I am a strong supporter of Europe and the European project. I think the EU constitution was a missed opportunity, and will now not see the light of day (in the wake of the French and Dutch 'No' votes). I have just read your amended letter (I'm taking them chronologically...) and see that the question has changed. I could write a lot about how I intend to help constituents bridge the democratic deficit. I think that local forums such as yours would be the best way to engage people immediately - and even hold political seminars on this issue. I was thinking about a Question Time style debate where leading proponents of both/all positions could be invited to take questions. Some MPs have also set up Citizens' Juries and constituent polling/referenda on certain issues in their constituencies. I think these are a very good idea and I'd like to try this out to see how many people take part. Ultimately, I agree that this is a matter of 'education' - ensuring that people have a deeper understanding of the European debate that straight bananas and banning crisps. I have strong views on why greater European integration is desirable and how integration should work, but I know that there are many people who hold the opposite view, as sincerely as I hold mine.
Q7: bring climate change to be a forefront issue of Labour concern such that the environment, global commons and social justice, nationally (education, hospitals etc. etc.) and internationally (clean water supplies, electrical power, education, hospitals etc. etc.), become drivers of economic policy and not followers of the myths of the "free" market and the somehow Divine Providence if the "invisible hand" of Laissez faire (i.e. economics starts to follow politics rather than the other way round)?
Engel on Climate Change: I think that climate change has jumped right up the political agenda since the G8 meeting at Gleneagles. I think all governments - even the Greens - would have problems taking this issue on because people will always believe that hospitals, schools, transport, broken paving slabs etc will always be more important because they are more immediate. There is also the fact that people will not stop driving around in gas-guzzling cars or buy cheap air tickets for foreign holidays. So, I think that this is less to do with economics and more to do with the attitude of individuals. This attitude is not restricted to Britain, but the whole of the developed world. I also think that this should not just be a Labour issue, but something which should be dealt with by political consensus across the parties.
This question and answer series is reproduced with Engel's written permission to distribute. In the absence, apparently, of any means to render this material, through any Wikipedia machinery, citable and free of conflict of interest from contributors, me, Dsmith1usa 11:02, 13 April 2007 (UTC), particularly, it can serve, at least, as comparator for 'verifiable' references that may be brought in to resolve 'citations needed.'
- All of the above is original research and has not been published; it is therefore not verifiable. I'm afraid I do not see how it can be used in writing the article. Sam Blacketer 13:21, 13 April 2007 (UTC)
[edit] The Hain 'n Natascha Interlink (Greasy Poles)
She didn't just vote, she went 'n campained ... down London, in Camden ... oh, btw. nothing to with her constituency ... which happens to be NE Derbyshire ... go figure ...
http://regentsparklabour.blogspot.com/2007/06/camden-deputy-leadership-hustings.html
Picture soon ... love'yall Dsmith1usa 09:09, 6 July 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Engel becomes PPS ... to Hain (Greasy Poles II)
"Quelle surprize!?!"
Ya can't make this stuff up can ya?
Excellent contribution Nigel45. My eye's been off the ball with her, recently, fighting fires elsewhere: politico-media complex.
Regards - Dsmith1usa 09:20, 18 July 2007 (UTC)
[edit] David (Newton) Salisbury-Jones and Beating the Liberals: Lessons from Lambeth - Controversy
Background information for the record.
One Gavin Whenman posted, recently, on his web site:
a note:
http://www.gavinwhenman.com/2008/03/03/leaked-labour-smear-document/
about his 'coming across' a document that appeared to have been the cause of some considerable controversy back in 1998 managing to make it into the headlines of the mainstream media:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/174929.stm
Whenman attributed the document to a 'Luke Akehurst' and gave a web site (call it LA1):
http://lukeakehurstsblog.blogspot.com/
mirrored at:
http://www.voidstar.com/ukpoliblog/index.php/fid/641
A contributor to the blog pointed out that this was probably a 'spoof Akehurst' and provided a second web site (call it LA2):
http://lukeakehurst.blogspot.com/
Checking Hackney Council's web site:
seems to confirm that the 'second' Akehurst (LA2) to be the 'real thing.'
The posited 'spoof Akehurst' claimed he originally tried to 'frame' David (Newton) Salisbury-Jones,:
http://lukeakehurstsblog.blogspot.com/2006/08/attack-attack-attack-yellow-peril.html http://lukeakehurstsblog.blogspot.com/2008/03/beating-yellow-peril.html
a vet (who he identifies as the 'dutiful husband' of Natascha Engel) with a practice at the Vale:
with authorship to side-step the 'controversy,' but then appears to reclaim authorship. The 'real Akehurst' at Hackney recalled that 'Dave' Salisbury-Jones was the author but that he [Akehurst] had distributed at Hackney.
The document in question is Beating the Liberals: Lessons from Lambeth:
http://www.hotlinkfiles.com/files/1161562_f5icx/beatlib.pdf
The dating of the document, 1998, is consistent with Salisbury-Jones's term as councillor at Lambeth (Prince's Ward) 1994-1998. There is no direct attribution on the document itself, though.
A read through is sufficent to explain the controversial nature of the document in its expressed degree of political cynicism and implied contempt for political rivals (viz. the Liberal Democrats) and, indeed, the electorate itself.
Lomcevak (talk) 11:02, 29 March 2008 (UTC)
- I don't know what this is directed to. Any controversy over this 1998 document is not relevant to Natascha Engel given that she did not write it and there is no reliable source which has questioned her actions. The above, with its talk of 'spoof blogs' is the epitome of the non-reliable source: blogs themselves are certainly not allowed to act as sources for anything controversial. This is a biography of a living person, and David Salisbury-Jones is also a living person; we also need to be aware of turning this article into a WP:COATRACK. Sam Blacketer (talk) 11:13, 29 March 2008 (UTC)
-
- I will certainly bear this in mind. Thank you.
Lomcevak (talk) 12:08, 29 March 2008 (UTC)
Lomcevak (talk) 08:54, 7 May 2008 (UTC)
[edit] DNS-J Corrected Dates of Lambeth Service
Tim Jones must've got these wrong since digging around Vale Vets website, I see Salisbury-Jones has actually put his service dates on his mini-cv:
http://www.valevets.com/index02.html
Lomcevak (talk) 10:15, 15 April 2008 (UTC)
[edit] ?Help? with Division Numbers
Much earlier I've put-up a footnote on a division on the Iraq issue. I see that earlier contributors have figured out something called 'division number.'
Would some wikikind tell me how I can figure this out? I've looked at the two previous divisions, but it is beyond me ...
(... me, oh, yeah ... particle physics ... no not string theory - I believe in finding things to actually test ... considered 'strange' by some ...)
... but I suppose that's politics for ya' :-)
Thanks for any help ... Lomcevak (talk) 11:25, 24 April 2008 (UTC)
[edit] Comments on NE and local by-elections from LA2 Blog (See above)
http://lukeakehurst.blogspot.com/2008/04/council-by-election-results.html
Lomcevak (talk) 12:37, 26 April 2008 (UTC)
[edit] Why saying '... moved to ...' is misleading: Engel, Three Houses and the ACA
Engel (and her husband Salisbury-Jones) have interests in (at least) three residential properties. These are a (relatively) long-acquired property in Lambeth (acquired earlier than 2000?), the house at Barrow Hill (S43 2PG: acquired in July 2006) in her constituency and a third in Streatham (SW16 2RB: acquired in October 2007). All are freehold. (Engel also notes, in her register of interests, commercial property in London, which, presumably, is the property associated with her husband's veterinary practice in Streatham Vale Vale Vets.)
Information about these property interests is available, simply and straightforwardly, through public domain information resources:
1) BT online telephone directory for all residential addresses and telephone numbers in Barrow Hill, Streatham and Lambeth
2) Plug information from 1) into a commercial online estate agent, such as mousePrice for property profile, pricing and area photographs
3) Plug information from 2) into online Land Registry for property title (ownership and mortgage information)
To simply say 'moved to' suggests a relinquishing and 'upping-sticks.' Clearly not the case with Engel - indeed she acquired the second (London) property after the Barrow Hill acquisition, deepening the London interests.
Thus the change in wording, for more accurate representation of the actual state of affairs.
Usefully, this situation also brings out, clearly, the current controversy surrounding the use of the Additional Costs Allowance (ACA). Parliamentary rules direct the use of the ACA to support of a secondary residential property (thus partitioning housing into primary [main home] and secondary) for the accomplishment of an MP's business between constituency and parliament.
Engel's website says that, 'Natascha and her family live in Barrow Hill' which is likely to be interpreted, by the average NE Derbyshire constituent, as implying that Barrow Hill is 'primary.'
However the concentration of London property and her husband's work location could also be taken to imply, reasonably, that, really, London is 'primary.' So there appears to be a contradiction which only stands a chance of being resolved (if resolution is possible) by a full disclosure of how the ACA - of which Engel takes the full amount - is being used. (Note that resolution of 'primary' and 'secondary' may be extremely important information to a constituent in a gauge of an MP's commitment to a constituency and his/hers/its affairs.)
Freedom of Information campaigner Heather Brooke has been persistent in efforts to force Parliament to open its books on expense allowance uses, particularly ACA, and Parliament through Martin (Michael, Speaker of the House), himself under investigation by the the Commissioner for StandardsOffice for possible misuse of public funds, has been equally persistent in blocking moves to force opening-up.
The latest gambit has been to plead MP's 'security': that disclosing address information, for example, may put MPs 'at risk.' In the case of Engel (Salisbury-Jones) at least, this pleading is made nonsense of here, since by following the three steps I have specified earlier, all such information (and more) is gatherable in under an hour, online.
Lomcevak (talk) 11:19, 2 May 2008 (UTC)
[edit] Additional Costs Allowance (ACA [second homes]): Martin (Speaker) Loses Case in High Court
As predicted (above) the Judge wasn't wearing the 'security' argument.
Lomcevak (talk) 10:08, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
- I've been watching this article for some time after being involved last year and I'm bound to say I think it is straying quite far from its purpose. It is a biography of Natascha Engel, not her husband, not anyone else, and it is a biography of the important parts of her life and not an attempt to record every fact of marginal relevance. We do not, for instance, need to know the names of her children. Sam Blacketer (talk) 10:17, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
-
- Well, the only thing I would say, from my perspective, is that I would have thought that a child is an important part of anyone's life and Engel, as a specific case, seems to make an especially big deal of it, with respect to wanting to show her constituents. So naming the children, in her entry, IMHO, is, in a sense, merely reflecting the importance she appears to attach.
-
- Anyway, in adding 'Lukas,' I think I was merely following a pattern of whatever I found here before. So feel free to remove. I have no problem. I can't speak for anybody else though, obviously.
-
- Lomcevak (talk) 10:52, 16 May 2008 (UTC)