Recently I was asked to speak on the radio about a particular high-profile person who has been used for almost 30 years by various governments to add some balls to delivery of government targets, largely around poverty and homelessness. The person in question is a tough, no-nonsense woman who, using some oft used cliches, does not ‘entertain fools gladly’ and ‘takes no prisoners’.
She is, and has been, impressive. What’s not impressive is the tasks she has been set. Another cliche springs to mind: ‘A racehorse used to pull a milk cart.’ In other words she has been assigned, not on all occasions, a job to do that lacks depth and does not utilise her true skills. I concluded my piece by suggesting that if said person had put her labours to getting rid of poverty, had been tasked by government to do so, she would have been much more formidable in her 30 years of governmental labours.
I have often pointed out that government is fascinated with projects and initiatives. It loves nothing more than to come into office with a new-broom-like attitude that eventually is less of a new broom than a sweeper of problems to under the carpet. It rearranges the problem only for a new administration to wield their own new brooms and initiatives and projects. In some ways it is like an old-fashioned department store that fills its windows full of new products; yet behind the flash novelty is the same old drab delivery. The same old predictable failure to address the issues.
Get the latest news and insight into how the Big Issue magazine is made by signing up for the Inside Big Issue newsletter
Three decades is roughly the period that the subject of the radio programme and I have been operating in the governmental sphere. She as a big fixer, me as a provider of emergency help, through work, to those cursed by homelessness and poverty. Neither of us has solved the big problems that society needs to face.
The inability of government to shift resources into preventing the inheritance of poverty – meaning there’s always a new generation available to join poverty at birth, and on most occasions remain in poverty for the rest of their lives. Neither of us has got any government to take a fresh look at how it allocates budgets and resources towards prevention of problems. They simply accept the growing poverty budget.









