Knowing when you are there
Like mine, I could
imagine that many minds are filled with one type of regret or the other, where
an unfortunate lack of insight at an opportunity we find ourselves in is not
used to any benefit until we have left that position.
The power of
hindsight reveals how we have misused both opportunity and responsibility, when
that unique situation we were presented with offered more than we realised we
could do.
A friend tried to
contextualise this with people who have been in power, position, and
providence, who failed to understand what they could do to change, improve, or
give enduring value to things and on their exit have resorted to writing
memoirs about how they were unable to do things they were so uniquely able to
do, when they were in that position.
Perfect vision
outside power
However, this extends
into other spheres of existence how when not endued with power, much is said,
but when those who saw so clearly out of power assume power, the realities
dictate everything that borders on hypocrisy and worse.
How one can soon
forget the moral standing that comes with position that you are left defending
the indefensible and justifying the unjustifiable.
Much as a critique of
our current government is difficult, it can be encapsulated in the recent
resignation last week of the Parliamentary
Under-Secretary of State (Minister for Homelessness and Democracy) whose brief
and responsibilities need detailing for context and understanding.
- Homelessness and rough sleeping
- Housing delivery and strategy engagement
- Homeownership and homebuying process
- Supported housing and domestic abuse
- Elections policy and delivery
- Planning casework
A total lack of
awareness
It just so happens
that as she was pushing reforms through the parliamentary process, she ran
afoul of the protections she was seeking to put in place. She evicted her
tenants on the pretext of needing to sell her property, only to put the
property back on the rental market, a couple of weeks later, at a hiked-up
rate.
She might protest
that she had done nothing wrong and every idea that this was rank hypocrisy
might have been an unfortunate coincidence of realising her property could not
be sold for the asking price, leaving her no other option but to access the
rental market again, but other lives are unravelled and upturned, I dare say, landlord
greed entered the fray.
Invariably, she
created an untenable situation for herself in government, that the only
recourse was to tender her resignation. You cannot superintend a law where
appearances suggest that it is one law for others whilst you find yourself
outside the ambit of the same law being promulgated.
Then taxes went up
again
Moreso, I can
remember in March 2024, the current Prime Minister then in opposition lamented
that we had reached the highest tax burden in 70 years, only for them to gain
power in July 2024 to find a £20 billion black hole.
That has instigated
another tax hike that might take the burden to the highest in about a century,
but how amnesia has overwhelmed any reckoning or memory. [BBC News: Tory Budget
2024: Is the tax take the highest for 70 years?] [BBC News: Labour Budget
2024: Key points at a glance]
Meanwhile, that was
£45 less, per month, on my take home pay when it all took effect, and they are
not yet done with the proposed tax rises. It just looks like the black hole is
getting bigger. [BBC
News: Reeves must raise tax to cover £41bn gap, says think tank] [The
Guardian: Reeves and Starmer to prepare ground for tax rises in a difficult
autumn budget]
Let’s talk for the voiceless
It is easy to talk in
opposition, when in power, reality bites and the choices to be made are more
impactful and far-reaching than they let on. Let us not delude ourselves, our
politicians are in the same game of trade-offs, beholding to some with great
influence and less so to those without a strong voice.
Except if you were a
tenant of Rushanara Ali who were fortunate to have their distress amplified enough
to force the minister’s hand, you are like many, on your own. [BBC News: Homelessness
Minister Rushanara Ali quits over rent hike claims]
The responsibility of
having opportunity and being in power is a great one, we often fail to make it
easier for those who gave us that opportunity to do something significant.
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