I’m a nurse and a charity manager. My career has been about trying to support people and as far as possible, help them to help themselves.
I passionately believe in fairness. We may never truly have ‘equality’ but we should always strive to be fair.
At the moment, I don’t believe our government are acting in a fair manner.
In fact, they have openly stated this much over the ‘Toilet Tax’, when they acknowledged that it was an unfair tax, but they did it anyway.
Governments sometimes have to make difficult decisions, often unpopular ones too. But they should not deliberately be making unfair policies.
On the Isle of Man, we have food banks and people in fuel poverty. If we’ve really had thirty years of uninterrupted growth, then government need to look at why we have pensioners choosing whether to eat or heat?
The people I talk to have not experienced uninterrupted growth in their standard of living, so where is it?
Having worked in the NHS, private and charity sectors, I frequently say that government must learn lessons from the charities, where every pound we spend has to be spent wisely. This is cultural. And it is a culture that the government should be looking to adopt, to spend our money carefully. They must target our resources effectively.
I believe we have to challenge the manner in which we are governed. Good governance has to be at the heart of everything government does. Legislative Council is failing us, as demonstrated by the current inability to appoint new members. The Council of Ministers act as a party in all but name, with policies that the majority of members did not face the electorate with. The block vote system reduces accountability. Rightly or wrongly, many people increasingly believe that politicians have forgotten that they are there for the benefit of the people and not the other way around.
LibVan are a team of likeminded individuals. We will offer the voters a choice, our manifesto will be there before they vote, not afterwards. And they can hold us to account. If they do not agree with our policies, then they can choose to vote for a different candidate. If people believe that the current system works, then they can vote for someone who will maintain the status-quo. But if the electorate want change, then LibVan offers the vehicle that can deliver this.
If I am elected, I will work diligently to improve the lives of the people in Douglas South and the Island in general. ‘People’ will remain my primary motivator. I have financial and management experience, but it is improving lives that matters the most.
A vote for me, as a LibVan candidate, is a vote for a fairer future.