• Support Wokingham Today
  • Get the print edition
  • Sign up for our daily newsletter
Sunday, June 28, 2026
Wokingham.Today
  • HOME
  • MY AREA
    • All
    • Arborfield
    • Barkham
    • Beech Hill
    • Binfield
    • Bracknell
    • Charvil
    • Crowthorne
    • Earley
    • Emmbrook
    • Finchampstead
    • Grazeley
    • Henley
    • Hurst
    • Lower Earley
    • Norreys
    • Reading
    • Remenham
    • Riseley
    • Shinfield
    • Sindlesham
    • Sonning
    • Spencers Wood
    • Swallowfield
    • Three Mile Cross
    • Twyford
    • Wargrave
    • Winnersh
    • Wokingham
    • Wokingham Without
    • Woodley
    • Woosehill
    • Yateley
    Screenshot

    Sports Direct coming to Wokingham

    The team behind the show.

    106-year-old Jessie to open Hurst Show

    Screenshot

    Armed Forces Day event cancelled

    Wokingham Bikeathon

    Things to do this weekend in and around Wokingham

    Shinfield Studios.

    More movies coming to Wokingham borough?

    Wokingham In Need is creating a nature garden at Windmill Primary School. Picture: Windmill Primary

    Alpacas give the go-ahead for Wokingham school’s nature garden

    Edward Naysmith Picture: Andrew Merritt

    RaW Sounds Today: Edward Naysmith, Seenius, Old Park Road

    Jane hopes to encourage greater understanding, empathy and awareness of the changes that are needed to create a more inclusive society through her book. Picture: Stewart Turkington

    Wokingham CEO shares realities of raising a disabled child

    Oakwood Centre in Woodley.

    SME business event next month

  • CRIME
  • SPORT
    • All
    • Binfield FC
    • Reading FC
    Pic: Louie Holliday.

    Second Wokingham flag at the World Cup

    Cricket Picture: Wikimedia Commons

    Oaks sink Brickhill as Finches stand tall in Slough thriller

    Golf Picture: Pixabay

    Golfing in Berkshire

    Reading FC midfielder Charlie Savage Picture: Luke Adams

    Reading FC braced for bids as Championship clubs step up interest in Charlie Savage

    Reading FC

    Reading FC miss out on defender as League One side swoops to sign ex-transfer target

    Rob Couhig Picture: Luke Adams

    Reading FC owner unveils major stadium upgrades as club targets Championship return

    Mega new sports facility in Wokingham Without Picture: Wokingham Borough Council

    Mega sports hub planned for South Wokingham as parish council backs vision

    Rams RFC Pictures: Paul Clark

    Rams RFC young guns commit future to club ahead of new season

    Reading FC owner Rob Couhig

    ‘We didn’t do a good enough job’: Couhig reflects on Reading FC’s end of season failure

  • READING FC
  • COMMUNITY
    The team behind the show.

    106-year-old Jessie to open Hurst Show

    Wokingham Bikeathon

    Things to do this weekend in and around Wokingham

    Shinfield Studios.

    More movies coming to Wokingham borough?

    Wokingham In Need is creating a nature garden at Windmill Primary School. Picture: Windmill Primary

    Alpacas give the go-ahead for Wokingham school’s nature garden

    Jane hopes to encourage greater understanding, empathy and awareness of the changes that are needed to create a more inclusive society through her book. Picture: Stewart Turkington

    Wokingham CEO shares realities of raising a disabled child

    Five places to find ice cream in Wokingham. Picture: Elza Kurbanova via Unsplash

    Where can I find a cooling ice-cream in Wokingham?

    The team at Power of Pilates.

    Business scoops award for second year

    A book sale in July should keep readers of all ages happy during the summer holidays. Picture: First Day's Children's Charity

    Calling all bookworms: don’t be bored this summer holiday

    Dragons at The Lexicon in Bracknell.

    Watch out for Dragons in Bracknell

  • LIFESTYLE
    • All
    • Food
    • Health
    • Obituaries
    • People
    Wokingham Bikeathon

    Things to do this weekend in and around Wokingham

    Dragons at The Lexicon in Bracknell.

    Watch out for Dragons in Bracknell

    It's important to keep dogs cool in high temperatures, says the RSPCA. Picture: RSPCA

    RSPCA recommends temporary dog lockdown

    Pic: Louie Holliday.

    Second Wokingham flag at the World Cup

    The Bull at Barkham Picture: Phil Creighton

    New landlords revealed for Barkham pub

    Dr Lynn Thomas, medical director of St John Ambulance gives advice on keeping safe in hot weather. Picture: St John Ambulance

    Be safe in the sun

    Carola Baer,.

    Carola returns for Wokingham Pride

    Elaine Chalmers-Brown (centre) with cllr Jenny Penfold (l) and MP Peter Swallow (r) (Image: Jennie Green)

    Bracknell homelessness champion awarded MBE in King’s Birthday Honours

    PHILLIP Stephen Willans

  • WHAT’S ON
    • All
    • Arts
    • Entertainment
    Screenshot

    Armed Forces Day event cancelled

    Sparks Picture: Andrew Merritt

    RaW Sounds Today: Sparks, Blu Peter, Jervaulx Singers

    A Paint and Prosecco event in July will raise money for The Cowshed. Picture: SabFrei via Pixabay

    Paint and Prosecco in Wokingham

    Last year's puppy winner. Picture: Emma Merchant

    Waggiest tail, best trick and more: Popular dog show returns to Wokingham

    Woodley Carnival on Saturday.

    Everything you need to know as Woodley Carnival returns this weekend

    Not Now Norman Picture: Andrew Merritt

    RaW Sounds Today: Not Now Norman, Hawkwind, Neil Wighton

    No new is bad news for communities

    Why thousands rely on independent local news – and how you can help

    AThe Unthanks Picture: Andrew Merritt

    RaW Sounds Today: The Unthanks, Fawlers, TRASHCAT

    Reading and Wokingham area pubs and breweries are in the 50th edition of the CAMRA Real Ale Guide Picture: Pixabay

    Wokingham Ale Trail to launch on Sunday

  • BUSINESS
  • ADVERTISE
  • CONTACT
No Result
View All Result
Wokingham.Today
No Result
View All Result
Home Featured

LETTERS: Ditching Thatcherism or doing something different?

by Phil Creighton
June 2, 2017
in Featured, Opinion
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

A recent poll for a national Pro-Tory Sunday newspaper (Mail on Sunday, May 21) asked the question: ‘Is Mrs May Right to ditch Thatcherism?’ 46% of respondents answered in the affirmative against 16% who disagreed.

The truth is that May has no more “ditched Thatcherism” than David Cameron who once proclaimed “I am a Thatcherite” – which was the most honest thing he ever said.

It was Margaret Thatcher who first made elderly dementia sufferers sell their homes to pay huge fees for residential care in private nursing establishments.

Theresa May’s recently-announced plans to make people use the “equity” in their overvalued homes to pay for social care is a clear continuation of this Thatcherite policy, which is certainly intended to be extended into other chronic care areas like renal dialysis and ultimately all medical treatment.

Another lie doing the rounds in the neo-liberal media is that Jeremy Corbyn has “abandoned the centre ground” of politics in attempting to drag the Labour party away from Blairism, which was Thatcherism by another name. When exactly did Thatcherism become “centre ground?”

New Labour’s fervent continuation of Thatcherite financial deregulation,some of us will remember, ended in the banking crisis of 2008 for which everybody except those actually responsible are being made to pay on an ongoing and indefinite basis.

Related posts

Man arrested after crash near Wokingham leaves motorcyclist with life threatening injuries

Man charged with sexual assaults

It is no surprise, therefore, that a former Blairite Labour MP, Tom Harris, can be found in the pages of the aforementioned pro-Tory rag absurdly praising as “socialist” Theresa May’s stated, utterly Thatcherite, intention to abolish the universal heating allowance and “triple lock” on state pensions, which he describes, respectively as a “New Labour bribe [to] older,wealthier voters” and a “scam”, though they are very much “old-Labour”-style policies.
Theresa May claims she wishes to “target resources” on the “most needy”.

Given her party’s record for driving severely disabled people deprived of their benefits to suicide this must be seriously doubted.

What will happen in the event is that millions of struggling elderly people who have worked and paid taxes all their lives will, on losing these benefits (as well as the universal pensioner bus pass which is also in the Tories’ sights), be encouraged by the Tory media to resent those still receiving them and demand that they should also lose them.

Another ploy being used by May and her supporters to justify her attack on the elderly is the concept of “intergenerational equity”, the idea that the old, with their free bus passes etc, are parasitically “living it up” on the backs of the young even though most pensioners still pay income and other taxes.

This nasty propaganda,designed by the REAL parasites to turn younger citizens against each other’s parents and grandparents, is beyond contemptible.

R Griffiths, Earley

Sour grapes and innuendo

I read with interest last week’s letter headed “Promises, Promises” which was full of inaccuracies, sour grapes and innuendo (The Wokingham Paper, May 25).

Firstly I should point out that the Liberal Democrat Group has consistently voted against any development on Elms Field. Only last week I went even further to indicate that if we had an opportunity to run the Council we would immediately set up a Moratorium on the whole of the Wokingham Town Centre Regeneration project of all areas not yet started, or contracted including Elms Field.

Secondly, the main issue relating to the Independent Remuneration Panel (IRP) last autumn was not the basic allowance, but the number of Special Responsibility Allowances (payments) that an individual Councillor should receive.

The IRP panel recommended that this should be restricted to one (which the Lib Dem Group supported). However this was overturned when the majority of the Conservative Group voted to remove this restriction.

At present, therefore, certain Councillors will be able to receive multiple payments (running into several thousands of pounds) over and above their basic allowance. This is what the Lib Dem group opposed and was the reason the IRP panel resigned en block shortly afterwards.

Also please note, last autumn I advised Wokigham Borough Council (WBC) and through a letter in this paper, that the Lib Dem Group have agreed not to receive any additional SRA payment over and above the one payment recommended by the then IRP panel.

The pay rise referred to in last week’s letter covered a 1% rise in Councillor Basic Allowance which equates to £1.27 per week (before tax).

This element is supported by the vast majority of Councillors on WBC.

Thirdly I am Leader of the Lib Dems on WBC, not Cllr Clive Jones and what is more he did not make any complaint about another Councillor, so that section of the letter is pure fiction.
The main thrust of last week’s letter was about trust and integrity.

These are issues I as leader of the Liberal Democrat Group on Wokingham considers to be of the greatest importance.

We as a Group have worked tirelessly all year round for the residents of Wokingham Borough and will continue to do so.

Cllr Lindsay Ferris
Leader of the Liberal Democrats on Wokingham Borough Council and Member for Twyford

We need our health card

Brits going to Europe, and all EU residents visiting us, will no longer be able to use their EHIC cards for emergency treatment. This is according to two UK Parliamentary Select Committees. This was confirmed by the Brexit Minister, David Davis, when cross-examined by the Brexit Select Committee recently.

He’s also quoted, officially, as having told the Committee that he “hadn’t thought of that one!”

The UK Parliamentary Health Select Committee made the same point, and an independent health expert stated the likely travel insurance cost, without the EHIC card, for a Brit visiting France for a week, with diabetes and mild depression. He was quoted “between £800 and £2,500”!

So unless you risk travelling uninsured, that’s what you’ll likely have to pay after Brexit for insurance! Did anyone vote for this?

As far as I know, only the Lib Dems want to keep the EHIC card, as part of ensuring citizens’ rights.

G Paterson, Earley

Tan Hill level crossing & lack of communication

We should like to comment on Cllr Bowring’s letter on this topic (The Wokingham Paper, May 27).

We have to repeat that neither of us was made aware of the recent proposals surrounding Tan Hill crossing.

We are concerned about the inadequate notification given particularly when a Ward Councillor was not notified of the proposed action and more importantly local residents.

Imogen was not elected to represent the area until late February and certainly nothing has been said about this in the last three months.

We had mentioned to the press that we felt that a communication from Wokingham Borough Council (WBC) to all impacted members should have been sent out, however this was not. Unfortunately the communications from WBC on various issues, but especially highway matters is rather inconsistent and patchy to say the least.

Regarding secrecy, Cllr Bowring failed to mention that the now ex-leader of the Council removed the Liberal Democrat representation from two important Highways/Local Planning Working Groups in a fit of pique last October.

Therefore the Lib Dem group has been kept in the dark about many important issues, including issues in their own Wards, since that date.

We hope that the new Leadership will put an end to this unnecessary and un-democratic action.

Cllr Imogen Shepherd-Dubey Member for Emmbrook
Cllr Lindsay Ferris Leader of the Opposition

Mental health costs

These are my views on three hot topics – relating to mental health and its costs.

First, tuition fees. We currently have on placement with us a German psychology student.

He is very bright, speaks perfect English, and is one of the few top students who is shortly to move on to a PAID psychology placement. But she failed to get into university in Germany – where higher education is free. Capitalist societies will only invest money where there is a clear return – in the very brightest, and in skills that they can’t do without – such as medicine, teaching, and engineering.

So this student came to study in England where we now have the American system. Access is easier, but you have to pay fees. Abolish fees, and only an elite would get into higher education.

Second, dementia care and its costs. Is all the money that the NHS spends on health education ultimately beneficial? In recent years, two of our members died – both in their 80s.

One drank like a fish, smoked like a chimney, was hugely overweight, and merrily tucked into chocolate cake – despite being diabetic! He was up and about, and enjoying life – to the day that he died of a massive heart attack – aged 83!

The second neither drank nor smoked. He was very careful with his diet. He spent his latter years in a nursing home – at huge expense to his family. He could not stand up, and so was lifted with a hoist. He was doubly incontinent, had to be washed, dressed, and fed.

By the time of his death, aged 89, he barely recognised his relatives.

We are agreed to a man, that we would rather be the former member, than the latter!

Third. The death of Moors murderer, Ian Brady. Would it not have been best for all concerned, and saved millions of pounds in precious mental health money, if he had been given a lethal injection half a century ago?

Successive governments have failed to hold a referendum on capital punishment – because they fear that a majority would vote for its restoration.

Pam Jenkinson, The Wokingham Crisis House

The borough’s’architectural features’

Travelling the highways, byways and footpaths throughout the borough, one cannot but notice and be somewhat underwhelmed by the ever-increasing number and assortment of “architectural features” appearing across the area.

A cornucopia of trenches, barriers, traffic signals, unhelpful road signs and, of course, the ubiquitous hoards of traffic cones, effectively adding to the chaos, confusion and misery of motorists and pedestrians alike.

While borough councillors are happy to spend millions of pounds on regeneration, they also appear to be willing to allow existing infrastructure to fall into disrepair befitting some third world country-pot holed roads, crumbling speed humps, fading road markings disfigured pavements and uneven and littered footpaths … the list goes on and on.
New housing developments continue to spread like some malignant rash across fast vanishing green spaces,with each new home bringing even greater congestion to already overcrowded roads.

The newly appointed, rather splendidly titled executive member for strategic highways and planning tells us that “no definitive programme has been submitted by the developer to date for the build of the North Wokingham Distributor Road”– what sort of answer or solution is that?

There does appear that in spite of council protestations a complete lack of urgency or structured planning on the part of WBC and developers alike to find a solution to the problem which, unless addressed, can only get worse.

J W Blaney, Wokingham

Keep up to date by signing up for our daily newsletter

We don’t spam we only send our newsletter to people who have requested it.

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

Tags: cllr lindsay ferrisGeneral ElectionLettersliberal democratcsviewsvote 2017WokinghamWokingham borough
Previous Post

Jobseekers are getting good advice from Adviza

Next Post

Dan Bateman “delighted” to return as Sumas new manager

FOLLOW US

POPULAR THIS WEEK

Reading FC midfielder Charlie Savage Picture: Luke Adams

Reading FC braced for bids as Championship clubs step up interest in Charlie Savage

June 21, 2026
The unit in Peach Street. Pic: Emma Merchant.`

Future of former M&S site takes centre stage

June 24, 2026
Reading FC

Reading FC miss out on defender as League One side swoops to sign ex-transfer target

June 20, 2026
Elaine Chalmers-Brown (centre) with cllr Jenny Penfold (l) and MP Peter Swallow (r) (Image: Jennie Green)

Bracknell homelessness champion awarded MBE in King’s Birthday Honours

June 20, 2026
Cllr Conway

FROM THE LEADER: Home thoughts while abroad

June 21, 2026
Twyford & Ruscombe Horticultural Association's Summer Show this month. Picture TRHA

Twyford produce show supports school gardening projects

June 21, 2026

ABOUT US

Wokingham Today is dedicated to providing news online across the whole of the Borough of Wokingham. It is a Social Enterprise, existing to support the various communities in Wokingham Borough.

Wokingham.Today is a Social Enterprise and aims to ensure that everyone within the Borough has free access to independent and up-to-date news. However, providing this service is not without costs. If you are able to, please make a contribution to support our work.

CONTACT US

news@wokinghampaper.co.uk

Keep up to date with our daily newsletter

We don’t spam we only send our newsletter to people that have subscribed

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

  • Support Us
  • Book Advertising
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Get the Print Edition
  • Sign up for our daily newsletter

The Wokingham Paper Ltd publications are regulated by IPSO – the Independent Press Standards Organisation.
If you have a complaint about a  The Wokingham Paper Ltd  publication in print or online, you should, in the first instance, contact the publication concerned, email: editor@wokingham.today, or telephone: 0118 327 2662. If it is not resolved to your satisfaction, you should contact IPSO by telephone: 0300 123 2220, or visit its website: www.ipso.co.uk. Members of the public are welcome to contact IPSO at any time if they are not sure how to proceed, or need advice on how to frame a complaint.

No Result
View All Result
  • HOME
  • MY AREA
    • Arborfield
    • Barkham
    • Beech Hill
    • Binfield
    • Bracknell
    • Charvil
    • Crowthorne
    • Earley
    • Emmbrook
    • Finchampstead
    • Grazeley
    • Henley
    • Hurst
    • Lower Earley
    • Norreys
    • Reading
    • Remenham
  • CRIME
  • COMMUNITY
  • LIFESTYLE
  • SPORT
  • READING FC
  • OBITUARIES
  • WHAT’S ON
  • BUSINESS
  • PHOTOS
  • ADVERTISE WITH US
  • CONTACT US
  • WHERE TO GET THE PRINT EDITION
  • SUPPORT US

© 2022 - The Wokingham Paper Ltd - All Right Reserved.