Murkrow
Says "also" and "or something" a lot
- Pronoun
- he
What the title says. At least, what would your top priorities be?
UK
UK
- Change the voting system to a form of proportional representation (most important issue, I mean that unironically)
- Undo all of the authoritarian stuff that's been pushed through in the last couple of decades (erosion of the right to protest, mass surveillance and opt-out censorship of the internet, allowing undercover police to break the law / have relationships under false pretenses, etc.)
- Close tax loopholes and pressure overseas territories and crown dependencies to stop being tax havens, so that megacorporations pay what they owe
- Reform government departments to operate based on what is practical rather than ideology. By which I mean, don't make claiming unemployment benefits difficult just because of the ideology that poor people somehow don't "deserve" it; look at whether being needlessly cruel actually costs more money through bureaucracy than it would save by preventing fraudulent claims. Same thing for prisons - being "tough on crime" isn't useful if it doesn't reduce the amount of crime.
- Houses are to be lived in, not an "investment". Furthermore, any time it looks like house prices might fall, landlords go crying to the government to do something about it. Investments can decrease in value, it's always a risk. I will build new houses and tax second-homes and I don't care if prices crash.
- Collaborate with devolved administrations to have a "British studies" class in the school curriculum. In addition to history and English literature. This would be focused on the history of the empire (including the bad stuff), and about the history of non-England parts of the UK. (Everyone in the UK already learns Shakespeare and the names of Henry VIII's wives. How many English people know anything at all about Welsh or Scottish history and culture?) It would also teach people about how the government works and the how it got to where it is today (magna carta, chartists, suffragettes, etc). I feel like this would boost support for the union more than the current attempt by waving the union jack around and naming bridges after Prince Charles.
- Hold citizens' assemblies in England to gauge support for devolved English parliament(s)
- Decentralise from the south-east (this applies to both the UK as a whole and Wales)
- Referendums are incredibly divisive, especially when it comes to massive things like membership in a union. I'd want to make sure there is understanding that it's not undemocratic to overturn the result of one by holding another. On the other hand, recognise that the non-status quo option has an advantage since they only have to win once if there are multiple referendums. I'd probably pass a law that says matters of constitutional importance can EITHER be "once in a generation" and only require a simple majority of >50% OR be voted on as often as people want but require a >66% supermajority to overturn the status quo.
- Invest in wind, tidal, and nuclear energy
- Don't just try to replace fossil fuel cars with electric ones, try to encourage alternate forms of transport as much as possible too.
- Modernise the railways in Wales and build a north/south connection