• 9 months ago
Catch up on the latest political news from across Kent with Rob Bailey, joined by Conservative Paul Bartlett from Ashford and Liberal Democrat Mike Sole from Canterbury.
Transcript
00:00 Welcome to the Kent Politics Show live on KMTV.
00:28 I'm Rob Bailey. It was Brexit's fourth birthday this week, and yet we're still talking about
00:32 reasonable worst case scenarios. That was how Ashford Borough Council described the
00:37 risk of 14-hour delays at Dover when new Brexit checks are imposed in October. And Kent County
00:43 Council leader Roger Goff told a committee of MPs it could get even worse.
00:49 One main concern is how it will impact Kent's £4 billion visitor economy. Here's Deidre
00:54 Wells, Chief Executive of Visit Kent, who gave evidence at the committee.
00:58 I think we need to have a constructive dialogue with the EU and particularly with our partners
01:03 in France. I think there probably is some, two particularly longer-term strategic infrastructure
01:10 challenges that we need government support for. One is around the congestion of the port
01:15 itself and support for the Port of Dover to be able to do all they can to be able to mitigate
01:22 the bottleneck that happens because of the sheer geography of the site. But also I think
01:28 to look at what are we doing more strategically to get more passenger transport off the road.
01:34 So for example, to lobbying for the return of the Eurostar to Ashford and Epsley to ensure
01:40 that people who perhaps before might have got a train over to France are now driving.
01:47 Here with me is Conservative Paul Bartlett from Ashford and Liberal Democrat Mike Soule
01:51 from Canterbury. Thanks for joining us.
01:53 Paul, I want to start by coming to you. What we understand at the moment, and the details
01:58 still aren't actually confirmed, but from October anyone travelling to the European
02:02 Union for the first time, if they're a British citizen, will need to submit themselves for
02:06 face scans, fingerprint scans and biometric checks before they can travel. Obviously Ashford
02:13 have been at Parliament this week talking about the impact. I wonder whether you can
02:16 just explain to us what risks you think that has for Ashford and for Kent.
02:20 Well, it's the longer time that it will take for passengers to get into the Schengen area,
02:26 the EU single travel area. We understand that travellers are going to be required to have
02:34 their fingerprint taken and a face scan taken. That will take two to three minutes for each
02:41 passenger travelling across the channel. And the point is that there isn't the space to
02:49 deal with all of that at Dover or at Dover at pace. So I understand the Department of
02:57 Transport are working with the EU in order to identify potential sites away from the
03:05 port itself in order to do the bulk of the checks.
03:10 But as it stands, that means we're looking at an autumn and potentially leading into
03:13 Christmas of Operation Brock and the ominous sounding Brock Zero, which is the one that
03:18 pushes everything back towards Maidstone. That's the expectation.
03:21 Well, we've had 38 years of stack of Brock. So it's really a constant aggravation for
03:30 people throughout Kent. You're absolutely right. There are additional risks. But this
03:38 EES system has been kicked into the long grass a couple of times by the French government.
03:48 They've recently just postponed it until after the Paralympics because I think they are absolutely
03:54 aware that this will cause difficulties for people coming into France and they didn't
04:00 want to affect their own tourist traffic visiting the Paralympics. So I think they're aware
04:07 of the issues that this will have on the French economy. And so I'm confident that the parties
04:13 will work together between now and October in order to resolve it.
04:18 We heard Visit Kent were part of that Kent emissary up to Parliament to talk about this
04:24 week and the particular concern was about the impact on tourism. And one of the things
04:29 that Deirdre Wells said during that was that there would be a particular impact on coach
04:34 trips to Kent coming in from Europe being put off by the kind of delays they might see
04:40 now and an awful lot of those are coming to Canterbury, Mike, where you're based. Are
04:43 you worried about the impact on the economy of the city?
04:46 Oh, very much. We've already seen a huge reduction in the number of coach trips coming through
04:50 to Canterbury since Brexit. And this is going to add to that. No one is going to come on
04:55 a day trip to Canterbury knowing you could spend 15 hours of it stuck in a queue. It's
04:59 just not going to happen. And those of us who campaigned against Brexit, we warned about
05:04 this right from the start. We knew it was going to be a disaster. There shouldn't be
05:07 a surprise that there are extra checks when you need to come into the country. Nobody
05:12 wrote on a big bus 15 hour delays. And this is what we're going to have. And it's completely
05:18 wrong that here in Kent we're having to put up with this. We're bearing the brunt of Brexit
05:23 in Kent and our roads shouldn't become lorry parks and car parks where people just queue
05:29 up. The government's got to recognise this. It's got to give us a fair deal in Kent and
05:34 recognise that we're the gateway to Europe and the whole country needs to chip in and
05:38 help us sort this out.
05:41 Some people might ask whether there's an element of scaremongering here because this might
05:46 be a very short term problem. People only have to do these checks once effectively.
05:50 So if someone is travelling regularly across to Europe, that two minute delay won't be
05:55 for every trip. And over time we're going to see a much smoother journey. Do you think
05:59 that that might be the case?
06:00 Well, I think it's inevitable that over time the delays will decrease. But the fact is
06:05 they're going to be there to start off with and they will be there for many years because
06:09 not everybody goes to France every year. Some people might only go once every 10 years or
06:16 whatever it may be. So yeah, I think the worst impact will be this year. It will gradually
06:20 decrease, but there's always going to be delays. And certainly whatever happens, those delays
06:25 will be much longer than they were before Brexit.
06:28 Some criticism of Brexit. Now I know that you're on the record in the past being a Brexiteer,
06:32 Paul. Is this an unreasonable cost that Brexit's imposing on Kent?
06:36 No, not at all. It's about making sure that borders are secure. And it's very important
06:43 that we work with our EU partners in order to do that and that we achieve the aims of
06:50 all parties together. I think eight years after the vote, it's just beginning to grate
06:56 a little bit about how dreadful Brexit is and is going to be. I mean, we just need to
07:04 grow up now and live with the new arrangements. Brexit has delivered enormous gains to the
07:12 UK economy. We have the boost to financial services. And it's great news this week that
07:19 finally the Labour Party has got on board with one of the biggest problems of being
07:25 in the EU, the prevention of bankers being able to get their bonuses. And now we finally
07:32 have the Labour Party embracing the idea of enhanced bonuses for the City of London. That's
07:39 the kind of thing that's going to turbocharge the UK economy. And of course, just a little
07:45 thing of rolling out the Covid jab is a lot easier, a lot easier and a lot sooner than
07:51 the rest of the EU. Brexit was a good idea and it's delivering benefits.
07:57 One of the things that was quite notable about the performance up at Parliament this week
08:02 was that Ashford Borough Council sent one of your economic managers there. They said
08:06 that there'd been some survey work done by Ashford Council on the impact that this was
08:11 likely to have. 80% of businesses said Operation Brock, when it's enforced, hits their income
08:17 and that they don't want this to happen. And it's undoubtable, isn't it, that Operation
08:22 Brock has been put in force much more because of issues caused by Brexit at the Port of
08:27 Dover. It's a consequence, isn't it?
08:30 Well, I don't think that's true. I mean, we've had Operation Stack for 38 years and we've
08:37 had succession of governments who failed to tackle the problem that congestion across
08:44 the short straights is causing. The simple answer is that we need additional infrastructure
08:51 in order to move people and goods across the short straights quicker and easier. Dover
08:58 is a very, very constrained site and until there is meaningful investment in the area
09:06 in order to encourage additional transport opportunities. One example of that is, of
09:12 course, closing Ashford for passenger, foot passenger transport. And that's the kind of
09:20 thing that the government needs to work on, work on the additional facilities that are
09:26 necessary in order to get people across the Channel Tunnel swiftly and with some style.
09:32 Mark, I'll bring you in on this. Obviously, the claim that Brexit has been a net positive
09:37 for Kent.
09:38 I completely disagree with that. I was meeting last night with members of the National Farmers
09:42 Union. I mean, the things that they now have to put up with, the veterinary checks and
09:47 the health plant health checks that we've got at the port that didn't exist before.
09:51 We've got to sort those out. We've got to make trading with the EU easier. We've got
09:56 to start building these bridges back as well with the EU. Ideally, I'd like us to see us
10:01 rejoin the single market again. I think that should be our first priority. And we should
10:07 aim towards that so we can trade on a much easier basis with our European neighbours.
10:13 Whether we fully reverse Brexit, I think is a bit further down the line. But moving towards
10:17 a single market, making trade as easy as possible is what we need to do and stop these delays.
10:22 But more importantly, at the moment, dealing with the immediate problem, we've got to get
10:26 money from government to help us solve this problem of the queues that are going to build
10:30 up.
10:31 There's an issue there of Eurostar. Obviously, no international services have run from Kent
10:35 since the pandemic. One of the reasons why they're not coming back is because these new
10:39 checks require infrastructure. They require booths where people can take these fingerprints
10:43 and they require border staff to do that stuff. And Eurostar said it doesn't want to invest
10:49 in that until it knows how smoothly it runs. So this is directly stopping return of those
10:54 vital services that Paul just talked about.
10:55 Yeah, it's so important to get Epstein and Ashford back up again, taking passengers to
11:00 and from Europe. It's important for this country, it's important for Europe as well. And any
11:07 pressure that can be put on Eurostar to do that. But also, if they need infrastructure
11:12 and assistance, the government need to accept that and help them do it. This government
11:17 have enabled Brexit. And if we want to have decent trade and decent transport links with
11:23 the continent, then the government have got to step in and help out.
11:26 Paul, oh, OK, sorry, it's time for a short break. When we return, we'll hear about concern
11:32 over jobs at some of Kent's biggest employers, including Kent County Council. It also includes
11:38 reports of redundancies and restructuring at the University of Kent and issues that
11:42 will affect 200 jobs in children's services and family services at KCC. So stay with us.
11:48 We'll be back soon with more discussion.
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14:40 (upbeat music)
14:42, (upbeat music) Welcome back to the Kemp Politics Show
15:12 live on KMTV.
15:14 Next tonight, we'll turn our focus to reports of trouble
15:16 with two of Kent's biggest employers.
15:19 The University of Kent is reported
15:20 to be putting staff at risk
15:22 and scaling back one of its campuses.
15:24 The university, which is based in Canterbury and Medway,
15:26 blames its financial challenges
15:28 on fixed tuition fees and rising costs.
15:31 Meanwhile, Kent County Council is said
15:32 to be cutting 208 jobs from children, young people,
15:36 and education services.
15:38 We asked Adam Price of Medway Labour
15:40 what university cutbacks would mean to Medway.
15:43 - That is disappointing, but obviously,
15:45 I think it's the University of Kent,
15:48 alongside other large organizations,
15:50 they have to take stock of how their finances stack up.
15:54 They need to take stock of their estate, et cetera.
15:58 From what I've seen,
16:00 I think they're gonna be concentrating on certain courses
16:04 such as business and IT related ones.
16:07 That's not to say that they're gonna put out
16:09 all the other courses as well,
16:11 but I think every organization has to be able
16:13 to cut their cloth and also pay attention
16:17 to what the market needs.
16:18 - Still with me is Conservative Paul Bartlett from Ashford
16:22 and Liberal Democrat Mike Soule from Canterbury.
16:25 And I should say, before we start discussing this,
16:27 I'm a full-time employee of the University of Kent
16:29 and I'm actually affected by this.
16:31 I wanna put that on the record
16:32 just in case there's any conflict of interest here.
16:34 But Mike, I mean, how much of a surprise was it
16:36 for you to hear this week
16:37 that the university is having some difficulties?
16:40 - Well, everyone's having difficulties.
16:42 People at home have been having difficulties
16:43 with the cost of living.
16:44 Local governments having difficulties.
16:47 All businesses have had difficulties.
16:48 High interest rates and inflation
16:51 means that people are having to look at their budgets.
16:53 And of course, the university's got other issues as well.
16:56 Going back to Brexit, unfortunately,
16:58 since Brexit there's been a large reduction
17:00 in the number of European students coming to study.
17:04 We've also, as mentioned in your piece,
17:06 tuition fees have been frozen.
17:08 Now, that's good for students,
17:09 but it's not so good for universities
17:10 who depend on that money.
17:12 So it's tough.
17:14 And universities also need to look at their courses.
17:17 And I think we've seen that at Kent,
17:18 some courses have really grown in popularity.
17:21 Things like business and law are doing really well,
17:24 attracting students, offering UK-class,
17:29 world-beating degrees are great.
17:31 But in other areas, unfortunately, journalism,
17:35 things like--
17:37 - I'll defend journalism to the hilt,
17:39 but I'll let you go.
17:40 - History of art, those sort of courses,
17:42 very good courses.
17:43 But if students aren't coming to them,
17:46 then the university needs to look at how they're financed,
17:48 and that's what they're doing.
17:49 I understand there's gonna be a full consultation on this.
17:51 So nothing's set in stone yet.
17:53 So we'll have to see where it goes.
17:54 But it's understandable that they've got to look
17:57 and see what works and what doesn't.
17:58 - Paul, interesting start to this discussion
18:01 because we heard from a Labour councillor there
18:03 who was talking about market forces in higher education,
18:05 a Liberal Democrat councillor talking about market forces
18:08 and the marketisation of higher education.
18:11 I imagine that you agree as well,
18:12 but do you think higher education should be a market?
18:16 - Well, I think that's right
18:18 because essentially what universities are doing
18:21 is they're providing services to their customers, students.
18:26 And I think it's essential that they do this
18:28 on a commercial footing.
18:30 And of course, they need to charge fees.
18:33 However, it is a regulated fee, and that is set,
18:37 ceilings are set by the government for UK students.
18:42 They are able to charge more for non-UK students.
18:48 And within that straitjacket, if you like, of the pricing,
18:53 they have to provide the services that their clients want.
18:59 Now, a number of the courses that are at risk
19:02 are very valuable courses.
19:04 One assumes that there are other places
19:06 which can provide those services.
19:09 Unfortunately, it may not be in Kent in the future.
19:13 It's a great shame, but we do understand the pressures
19:16 that all businesses are on constantly
19:19 in order to match their services to their clients.
19:24 - Mike, it's always been a difficult issue
19:25 for the Liberal Democrats, the tuition fees.
19:27 Obviously, it blew up spectacularly for you
19:29 in the early days of the coalition in 2010.
19:33 And it's often regarded as being a mistake.
19:35 A lot of Liberal Democrat voters didn't want it.
19:38 But the fee was set at that point at 9,000 pounds.
19:41 It's been reviewed once in that time.
19:44 In 2017, it was raised to 9,250 pounds a year
19:47 for domestic undergraduate students.
19:50 There was no provision in the law at the time
19:52 for it to be raised with inflation.
19:54 That 9,250 pounds per year in 2017
19:57 would be 11,830 pounds today
20:01 at a time when universities, if they were sitting here,
20:04 the university would say that their costs,
20:05 particularly things like energy costs, are through the roof.
20:08 Has the government created an environment
20:11 in which higher education cannot succeed?
20:13 - Well, first of all, Paul asked earlier
20:16 that after eight years of voting for Brexit
20:18 that we move on from that.
20:19 I think after 14 years, since the decision was made
20:22 on tuition fees, we can move past that now.
20:24 And I have not actually heard anything
20:27 from the Labour Party or the Conservative Party
20:29 of any significant plans to change tuition fees
20:32 in the future.
20:34 What we need to look at, though,
20:35 is what we can do at the current situation.
20:38 And I think one thing we could certainly do
20:40 is get EU students back in our universities.
20:42 And we can do that by joining the Erasmus+ programme.
20:45 That would be so much better for the universities.
20:47 Then they would get extra students coming in, extra fees,
20:50 and we wouldn't be having this discussion
20:51 we've got at the moment about withdrawing courses.
20:55 And we should also be looking to support students more
20:57 through bringing back the maintenance grant
20:59 for those on low incomes.
21:00 That would be very, from poor families,
21:02 but very gratefully received, I know.
21:05 - Paul, a European future to save UK universities.
21:08 What do you think?
21:09 - Well, I should think that universities do need
21:13 to attract students from all parts of the world.
21:18 And the UK is well known as a good destination
21:22 for non-UK students.
21:25 And I suspect that that will continue.
21:28 They are able to charge a higher fee for overseas students.
21:33 And I've no reason to think why that won't continue.
21:37 - Well, we'll move on.
21:39 And so the other part of this is that this week,
21:42 Kent County Council, we heard reports of 208 jobs
21:45 being at risk within the children, families,
21:47 young people units, particularly affecting,
21:49 I think, open access children's services.
21:52 Mike, can KCC realistically say
21:57 that these job cuts won't have an impact on public services?
22:01 - No, I think it's foolish to think
22:03 that if you take staff out of the system,
22:06 it's not gonna have an impact.
22:07 There's gonna be less staff there having less contact
22:10 with their clients, with their customers,
22:13 and with residents because of this.
22:15 And the whole thing about family hubs is less centres.
22:20 And I think if you've got less centres
22:22 with less people in them,
22:24 you're going to be able to devote less time
22:26 to the people who need to access them.
22:28 I'm particularly concerned about those in the rural areas
22:31 who will not be able to access the services
22:33 that they previously could.
22:35 And it's no good saying things like,
22:37 "Oh, we can do things on Zoom now."
22:40 You can't replace things like a breastfeeding clinic
22:43 with a Zoom meeting.
22:44 We need to have places where people can get together
22:47 and help can be given to them.
22:49 'Cause in the long term, without that assistance,
22:52 things will be worse.
22:53 We're storing up problems rather than nipping them
22:56 in the bud and helping people at an early stage.
22:59 - Paul, a lot of families out there are struggling.
23:02 They're struggling because of the cost of living crisis.
23:04 We know that there is a lot of places in Kent
23:05 where these family centres provide really important services.
23:09 It's a seven million pound saving from a restructuring,
23:11 including these job losses.
23:13 Is that money, is that saving worth it?
23:15 - Well, let's look at the background to this.
23:20 We had an Ofsted report in 2022,
23:25 and there were findings of an independent review
23:28 of children's care services.
23:32 Both of those found that the services
23:35 that were currently being offered
23:36 did not follow the DFT guidance.
23:39 And so the County Council has received 11 million pounds
23:43 from the DFT in order to ensure that the services
23:47 are now fit for purposes.
23:50 The traditional way or the old way of doing it
23:55 resulted in fragmented services
23:58 and led to crisis intervention.
24:01 So these new proposals will deliver a much better service
24:06 and provide additional targeted help
24:08 for early identification of issues.
24:13 So I'm confident that this is a positive change
24:15 for the future.
24:16 Change is necessary, and we're following the DFT guidance
24:20 and are pleased to do that.
24:22 - There's context to this, isn't there, Mike?
24:24 I mean, this comes off the back of a very, very low settlement
24:27 from government for local authorities.
24:28 Councils across the country are struggling.
24:31 The cuts have got to come somewhere.
24:32 - This is purely a budgetary driven decision.
24:36 This is not as poor-
24:37 - No, no, no, it's not.
24:38 It's not at all.
24:39 It is driven by DFT guidance.
24:43 - Well, I disagree with you there, Paul.
24:45 I don't think we'd be making these cuts
24:46 if it wasn't for the fact
24:48 that local government finances are so stretched.
24:50 Now, I'm not pushing any blame at all for this
24:55 on the Conservative administration at KCC.
24:58 The problem has to come from government
25:00 who are not adequately funding local councils
25:03 to do the jobs that they need to do.
25:05 And especially here in Kent
25:06 where we've got additional pressures as well.
25:09 For example, dealing with unaccompanied asylum seekers.
25:12 That's where the problem is.
25:13 But I don't think we'd be looking at this now
25:16 if we didn't have those financial restraints on us.
25:18 - Paul, there is a big budget gap there, isn't there?
25:24 Do you feel that the government is letting KCC down?
25:26 Is this the Conservative government letting you down
25:28 in terms of what you're able to deliver?
25:31 - They're providing us £11 million
25:34 in order to roll out the new DFT guidance for family hubs.
25:39 What more do we want?
25:41 - Well, it's quite interesting.
25:42 James Cleverley this week was asking for, what,
25:44 £2.6 billion extra pounds to cover the cost of hotels
25:47 for asylum seekers who are stuck in the system
25:51 for trying to get their refugee applications processed.
25:55 £2.6 billion there, £11 million to KCC for this.
25:58 You need bigger amounts of money, don't you?
26:00 - Well, I don't think it's true
26:03 that the government needs to start to raise taxes.
26:07 I mean, absolutely right,
26:08 that more money is needed in order to deliver the services
26:12 that people want, but there's no need to raise taxes
26:17 in order to deal with that.
26:19 I think we're now moving into a tax-cutting regime
26:25 and we'll probably see some news on that
26:27 in the budget during March.
26:29 - Well, a good moment for us to end on.
26:30 That's all we've got time for here at the Kent Politics Show.
26:33 Thanks to both of my guests for coming in tonight.
26:35 We'll be back soon and there's more politics news,
26:38 analysis and opinion under the Politics tab at Kent Online.
26:41 Stay with us here because Kent Tonight is coming up next
26:44 with all the latest news from around the county.
26:47 Have a good evening.
26:48 (upbeat music)
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