Friday, January 27, 2017

Ralph Innes RIP

Our good friend Ralph Innes died recently. For many years he was the Constituency Political Education Officer - and what a job he did! I remember one Saturday seminar here in Lutterworth where we had Chris Mullins (then best known for his campaign to free the Birmingham Six) and Roy Hattersley. Ralph knew absolutely everybody in the Labour movement.


This beautiful tribute by his wife sums him up perfectly. He was a great man and will be hugely missed.



Ralph Innes obituary

Pat Parkin-Moore

Tuesday 17 January 2017 

My husband, Ralph Innes, who has died aged 97, was one of the influx of refugees from Nazi oppression who have enriched the life of Britain so much.

He was born Rolf Einzig, and brought up in Berlin in a secular Jewish family, the son of Bernhard Einzig, the managing director of an overcoat manufacturer, and his wife, Eugenia. When it became obvious that there was no future for young Jews in Nazi Germany, he came to Britain in early 1939 with the intention of completing his training in knitting technology.

Ralph worked on the night shift in a knitting factory in Manchester but then moved to Leicestershire, where he worked in a factory and continued his textile education at a college in Hinckley. When France was invaded during the second world war, there were scare stories about German paratroopers being dropped into the British countryside and many newspapers campaigned to intern German refugees. Ralph was taken to the Isle of Man, where hotels in Douglas, the capital, had been taken over as internment camps. Later the younger men were allowed to volunteer for war work in Australia or Canada and Ralph was sent to a hutted camp in Canada.

When Winston Churchill became the prime minister it was decided that refugees who wished could join the army. Ralph returned to Britain to sign up with theRoyal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers. He went with his unit to France after D-day (when he was advised to change his name) and, at the end of the war, was promoted to a sergeant in the Intelligence Corps because he spoke German and he interrogated some suspected Nazis.

After the war he worked in a knitting factory and then was employed as a lecturer in knitting technology at Derby Technical College. During this period he married, and had two daughters, Charlotte and Jennifer, but his wife, Bettie, died of pneumonia when the children were four and two and he brought them up on his own.

He became a senior lecturer at Leicester Polytechnic (now De Montfort University) and was a director of the Institute of Linguists, and the International Federation of Knitting Technologists. All his life he was a socialist, inspired by the poverty he saw in Berlin when he was a boy, and was a long-standing member of the Labour party. He and I married in 1989 and lived happily in the Leicestershire village of Croft.

Ralph is survived by me, his daughters, my four children, and his niece, Hetty. Ralph’s sister was the painter and illustrator Susan Einzig, who died in 2009.

Thursday, January 26, 2017

Speeding crackdown in Lutterworth and Broughton

Great news. Leicestershire Police are taking action against drivers who insist on speeding through our town and villages.


The speed enforcement dates are as follows: February 3 and 8; March 10 and 28; April 6 and 24; May 12 and 21; June 8 and 27.


Police have given fair warning. If you tend to be a tad heavy on the accelerator do yourself and us a favour - slow down! Don't forget that speeding fines and points have recently gone up. The penalty for using your mobile whilst driving will double in March.


This information came from Leicestershire Police's Neighbourhood Link. Why not Google them and sign up for alerts? Or you can click on the link on the right of this page. Under the nice photo of Willy Bach.





Tuesday, January 24, 2017

Brexit Lies - a farmer's story

Brexit is already having an effect on farmers here in South Leicestershire, one local dairy farmer told us earlier this month.


"Mine is a small business with a moderate turnover and currently no profits. I pay little tax but I do provide two and half jobs. I also pay several thousand pounds a month to other businesses for goods and services. My business therefore has a value to the wider community. But its future in threatened by Brexit. 
"I have come to rely on labour from Eastern Europe because British people prepared to milk cows are an increasingly rare commodity. My experience is repeated across the industry. Over 60% of staff on dairy forms in the UK are Eastern European. My Romanian employee has already left because the fall in the value of the pound has effectively lowered his wages.
 "The likely effects of Brexit are being downplayed to the public. Agricultural commodities are priced in US dollars. My costs have therefore risen by 15%. Dairy farming is not profitable enough to absorb the extra cost and the consumer will inevitably suffer. If we get to the stage of actually leaving the EU I believe the inflationary effect on food prices will increase dramatically.

"The referendum campaign was scandalous. Those who voted Leave were sold a lie."

Wednesday, January 18, 2017

South Leics Constituency Labour Party Dinner

Back in Lutterworth this year - Saturday March 11th 2017, 7:15 for 7:30 - Cricket Club Pavilion, Coventry Road, LE17 4RE.






Guests

 Liz Kendall MP (Leicester West) & Kate Hudson, Regional Secretary CWU.

Tickets £20.00. Contact David Fish to reserve and pay.

Contributions to raffle and auction gratefully received.

Monday, January 09, 2017

Archbishop's New Year Message on Refugees

Regular visitors will know that last year our local Labour branch raised funds for Syrian refugees. Just last week we discussed Britain's 'patchy' history in regard to accepting refugees. We might not all share Archbishop Justin Welby's faith, but we thoroughly endorse his sentiments here.