Wednesday 21 October 2009

Dear Peter … sod off!

That appears, in a nutshell, to have been Gordon Brown's response to the DUP's attempt to wring concessions out of the transfer of policing and justice powers to the Executive.

At various stages, but very clearly on 12 October, Peter Robinson has set out his shopping list:
"I am on record as saying that for practical reasons devolution cannot happen by Christmas. Last week I was asked what Christmas I was referring to. The truth is that I am not driven in this process by any timetable. Devolution will happen when the conditions are right and community confidence in such a move is present. Devolution will only happen when the terms - which the public endorsed - are met. That is a firm and binding commitment.

There are many steps which can be taken to assist in building community confidence not least issues surrounding the security of serving and former police officers many of whom found that their PPW licences were not being renewed. Also the service of the Part Time Police Reserve needs to be properly recognised. The community needs to be confident that acceptable mechanisms exist to de-escalate disputes around parading. "

In brief, then, the shopping list included:

- The PPW issue – more ex-RUC officers to be allowed to carry guns
- Retention of the PSNI reserve
- Abolition of the Parades Commission

Today Gordon Brown published his long-awaited proposal:

"Dear Peter and Martin

I promised to write to you setting out the elements of the financial settlement that you agreed to present to your respective parties.

Our discussions on the finances have been careful, detailed and considered and I am grateful to you for the time you have given to them. Together we have, I believe, achieved an outcome in which we each have confidence and which will ensure that when policing and justice powers are transferred, the Northern Ireland Justice Department will have a secure financial foundation which we all recognise is important in ensuring confidence in the policing and justice services across the community. I believe the settlement which is outlined below is a good settlement which will meet the needs of a devolved Justice Department.

The key elements of the settlement are:

The Northern Ireland Executive will have access to the reserve to meet any exceptional security pressures relating to policing and justice. On the same basis, HM Treasury will be prepared to make available up to an additional £37.4 million in 2010/11.

Capital budgets in the next CSR period will be sufficient to enable the Executive to take forward routine, but necessary work, to maintain the operational capacity of existing assets, to complete the police training college and to come to its own view about the relative priorities for new capital expenditure including Magilligan Prison and other projects in the period ahead.

The legal aid allocation is a £20 million a year addition to baseline through to the end of 2012/13, after which efficiency savings will be expected to take effect, allowing the baseline increase to be reduced to £14 million a year. To meet additional pressures over the next two years, including other courts pressures, we agree the need on a one-off basis for a further £12 million. If, in the event, pressures turn out to be higher than this, HM Treasury will provide further money from the reserve up to a maximum of £39 million. Until the end of 2012/13 this access to the reserve will not be recouped from future EYF.

HM Government will gift the four agreed former military bases to the Northern Ireland Executive. It would be anticipated that a portion of the land in Omagh will be used for an educational campus but it would be expected that disposal proceeds from the other sites would be used, on a basis agreed with HM Treasury, to meet exceptional resource pressures (including potentially equal pay claims). HM Treasury will work with the Northern Ireland Executive to help ensure that any timing issues, related to delays in securing these disposal proceeds as a consequence of market conditions, can be addressed on an agreed basis.

On police pensions, previously identified pressures of £101 million can be fully addressed through technical changes which will include a public expenditure neutral DEL to AME reclassification.

There are potential pressures (the “long list”) of around £15 million in 2010/11 on resources relating to policing, prisons and probation. This should fall to around £10 million a year in the next CSR period. Baselines will need to be sufficient to meet these pressures. In addition £30 million in unallocated EYF and underspends generated in future years will be available to meet pressures.

Prior to devolution the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland and the head of the PSNI will agree on how front-line policing is protected while ensuring the greatest efficiency.

Hearing Loss. The Northern Ireland Executive will meet the first £12m of claims in any one year. Any sums incurred above that will be met through access to the reserve, based on annual agreement between the Northern Ireland Executive and HM Treasury on the litigation strategy. To assist the Northern Ireland Executive to meet the expected £12m a year pressure, the Treasury will be prepared to acquire from the Northern Ireland Executive sellable assets worth up to £12 million a year for five years, or £60 million in total.

HM Treasury and Northern Ireland Executive will need to agree on the valuation
methodology.

I believe that this is a very strong settlement which will ensure that all the people of Northern Ireland continue to have high quality policing and justice services.

Yours sincerely

Gordon Brown"

And, of the 'shopping list' items … not a single mention.

So where does this leave Robinson and his 'community confidence' (aka DUP approval)? He is forced now even further into his corner – he claimed that a financial settlement was what was blocking the transfer, but thought he'd cleverly add on some 'shopping list' items too. Now, he has a clear and public financial offer, but no shopping list items. If he refuses the offer he is showing that the financial argument was spurious (and he had wasted a lot of Gordon Brown's time pretending that it was important), but if he accepts the offer he is doing it having visibly failed to wring extra concessions out of the British government.

Watch Robinson squirm to try to present this as a major victory for unionism. He'll emphasise the financial benefits which, on paper look pretty slim.

9 comments:

Watcher said...

Brown's history. Cameron is an ideological Unionist allied formerly with The UUP. More bad news for the potatoe chompers...

Anonymous said...

Dan - is that you?

hoboroad said...

Bad news for the DUP and I doubt the MP's on the Tory benches will forget Iris Robinson showing them 9 fingers after the DUP done a dirty deal with Labour on 42 days detention.

Anonymous said...

Watcher displaying the inherent racism and bigotry in Loyalism again. Well done a chara!

Watcher said...

Yes, I must watch myself - the whole world's watching including 'da two governments' or is it 'da three governments' as one comic said on another thread..

LOLOLOL

Anonymous said...

No, its Donald Duck.

Anonymous said...

Anonymous said...

Dan - is that you?

haha. No response from Watcher. I wonder did he "get" the reference.

I'm sure he was slagging off someone's spelling recently here too. People in glass houses.

Unknown said...

feck all wrong wit spuds lad

Anonymous said...

Mare munay fair daing nathin' fur sum of Olsters peepul