Sometimes I feel like half of my job is essentially keeping up with the news. Which is fantastic, because that's what I do in the good ol' States anyway. Now, I just need to keep up with British news, start to recognize names and Committees I've never heard of before and be able to write about all of it.
So here are some of the news items that seem to be continually popping up on my computer at work. And yes, most of them have the word "cuts" in the headline...
EMA Cuts
I mentioned this topic a bit in my post about student protests, but it deserves a little more recognition. The Coalition government basically decided to cut the Educational Maintenance Allowances, which help certain students pay for their educational expenses.
Scrapping this plan set off more student protests, and basically every Labour MP endlessly criticized the government for changing the British institution of accessible higher education.
Go England, Go.
Forestry Commission Woodlands Sell-Off
Yes, this seems random. Yes, I have spent a good deal of time researching it. It turns out that while the United States is full of random forests and field, Great Britain is the size of the state of New York. So when the government plans to take 15% of public forests and woodlands and sell them to private owners, people get slightly upset. Especially when millions of people go to the English countryside for recreation and whatnot...
But having the ability to to make 100 million pounds by selling publicly owned forests: priceless to a coalition government pledging to stimulate the economy by cutting the deficit.
NHS "Reforms"
To the average American citizen, the UK's National Health Service probably seems like one of those outrageous European health care systems. The UK has actually had the NHS since after World War Two, when the overwhelming majority Labour government adopted the system in 1948 as a wartime and emergency health service. NHS is now a publicly funded health care system, a valued institution in the UK and the only still-standing achievement of the Labour government majority following World War Two. It never actually was supposed to grow as large as it is today, but from what I have heard the British still view it as one of their idyllic institutions.
The NHS came under scrutiny two weeks ago, however, when Prime Minister David Cameron announced plans to drastically cut the NHS budget in favor of reducing the deficit. Scrapping the NHS would be one of the biggest cuts in the UK government since the infamous Margaret Thatcher.
Deja vu, right?
In other news circulating Portcullis House... which I unfortunately don't have the time or space to discuss thoroughly enough... ahem...
-The protests in Egypt. Cameron and Obama discussed the Egyptian protests. The House of Commons also held a debate today on them. This is going to be a huge international issue.
-AV filibustering was still occurring as of yesterday... Today the Labour peers finally reached a deal in the vote though.
-And Ed Miliband, the Labour Party leader, is a square.
To fully understand how the British public perceives Ed Milliband, check out Awkward Ed Miliband Moments.
And now you know everything.
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