Joined January 2009
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What's my low light of 2024? Threats of redundancies on the #IsleofWight (Vestas and primary schools). #BBC #PoliticsSouth
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Vix Lowthion πŸ’š retweeted
Westminster may finally be about to have the argument it has spent 40 years avoiding. If Andy Burnham returns to Parliament, the political class will know how to cover it. A leadership drama. Who is up, who is down, whether Keir Starmer can survive, whether Labour is once again turning inward. The familiar machinery of Westminster psychodrama will whirr into life. That framing misses the larger point. Burnham’s possible return matters not because of what it says about Labour’s leadership, but because of what it reveals about the British state: what it can still do, what it has forgotten how to do, and what kind of country it must become if it is serious about resilience. Britain is finally having a more serious conversation about national security. The Strategic Defence Review, the pivot back towards Europe, the recognition that hybrid warfare turns citizens, infrastructure and civic institutions into part of the front line: all of it marks a real shift in how the state thinks about its own survival. But at the centre of that conversation lies a question that the defence establishment, and most of Westminster, still does not want to answer. What kind of society do you need to be before resilience is possible? Finland is now the model everyone cites. Comprehensive security. Whole-of-society defence. Civilian preparedness woven into military planning. British strategists admire the Finnish system and ask how it might be copied. But the admiration stops short of the uncomfortable question: why does it work there? The answer is not geography or history or some mysterious quality of Finnish national character. It is structural. Nearly 80% of Finns say they would defend their country if attacked. In Britain, the figure is closer to 33%. That gap is not an accident. It exists because Finland has spent decades building a society in which people have a genuine stake in what they are being asked to defend. Energy is affordable. Housing is available. Public services function. Institutions command trust. The Nordic welfare state is not a sentimental add-on to Finnish security policy. It is the foundation of it. You cannot ask people to defend a country that does not work for them. Britain has spent 40 years building the opposite. The privatisation of essentials – energy, water, transport, housing – transferred wealth upwards from households to shareholders while making the basics of everyday life more expensive. The state, stripped of the tools to control costs at source, has been reduced to compensating after the fact. Out of every pound the Government spends on housing, 88p goes to subsidising private rents. Just 12p goes to building homes. When energy prices spiked in 2022, the Government spent Β£40bn in a single winter cushioning the blow, not because it had a resilient energy system but because it lacked one. Debt interest now consumes more than Β£100bn a year. Britain has the highest debt servicing costs in the G7: the compounding price of financing failure rather than eliminating it at source. This is what bond market dependency actually looks like. It is not an abstract fiscal condition. It is the consequence of a state that has been stripped of the supply-side tools that would let it cure the problems it now pays, indefinitely, to manage. And here is the paradox the Treasury refuses to confront. The countries that borrow most cheaply are often those that have retained the public investment model Britain abandoned. The spread between UK and Dutch borrowing costs has widened sharply not because markets fear public investment, but because they have lost confidence in a model that borrows to subsidise private failure while never addressing its causes. This is the connection Britain’s defence debate is missing. The familiar framing, that social spending is what must be sacrificed to meet the NATO target, is not merely politically toxic. It is strategically illiterate. Cutting the foundations of social cohesion to fund the hardware of national defence is self-defeating. You end up with planes and no pilots, submarines and no crew, an army that cannot recruit because the society it is meant to protect has stopped believing in itself. I think Burnham understands this. That is why his programme is more interesting than the leadership gossip suggests. What he has been building in Greater Manchester – public control of transport, expanded social housing, investment in the productive foundations of the city economy – is not a nostalgic rerun of postwar nationalisation. It is a proof of concept for a different kind of state. The Bee Network is the most visible example, but the argument behind it travels. A state that can shape markets is not condemned to subsidise their failures. A state that produces affordable energy through public generation does not need to spend tens of billions cushioning every price shock. A state with a serious public housebuilding programme does not need housing benefit to rise endlessly in line with private rents. A state that builds institutions people can see, use and trust begins to restore the civic confidence on which resilience depends. The real constraint on Britain is not money. It is capacity: the workers, institutions, supply chains and public purpose needed to turn national will into national renewal. Britain’s tragedy is not that it has run out of money. It is that after 40 years of hollowing out the state, it has made itself less able to act. Burnham’s critics will reach for the familiar warning. Borrow more, spend more, spook the gilt markets, repeat the Truss disaster. But this misunderstands both the problem and the opportunity. Bond markets do not have ideological preferences. They have functional ones. They prefer clarity, credible revenue streams, productive investment, and a state with a plan. What they punish is not public ambition but incoherence. A properly designed productive state programme would not be a leap into fiscal fantasy. It would be an attempt to end the much costlier fantasy that Britain can keep borrowing to compensate for broken markets while refusing to repair them. The defence conversation and the economic conversation need to become the same conversation. Finland did not build national resilience by choosing between welfare and security. It built resilience by understanding that they are inseparable: that a country in which the basics work, where people trust one another and the institutions around them, is one that can face danger with something more than anxiety. That is the deeper argument Burnham represents. Westminster will be tempted to treat him as a leadership story. It should resist the temptation. The question is not whether Burnham can return to parliament. It is whether Britain can return to the idea that the state should make life work. Because a country that cannot command the confidence of its people cannot truly defend itself.
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Vix Lowthion πŸ’š retweeted
A battle for the soul of this country indeed! IOW Greens Ft @ZiaYusufUK

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Vix Lowthion πŸ’š retweeted
Great to see this new video from @IOWGreenParty doing some myth busting about the Green Vote. Great work @VixL Number 6 is my favourite! πŸ’š
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Vix Lowthion πŸ’š retweeted
WE SHOULD ALL VOTE GREEN πŸ’š
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A Labour candidate, a Green candidate and an Independent walked into an Ale House.... Another regular week day evening with Steve Reading and Julie Jones-Evans and Vix Lowthion ! Newport is in safe hands! Balanced with a beer...
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Vix Lowthion πŸ’š retweeted
I’ve decided to step up and stand as a local councillor for the Green Party in May. I’m standing in a current conservative ward, with a strong Reform presence. However, I believe Greens can win anywhere. It’s time for a politics of hope and unity. Can you chip in and help the campaign? actionnetwork.org/fundraisin… Thanks friends πŸ€— πŸ’š
Vote Green on May the 7th! βœ… Local services that work for YOU βœ… Green policies that put people and the planet before profit βœ… Politics of Hope and Unity βœ… Housing and infrastructure that meets the needs of the community, not landlord profits Promoted by Robert May & The Isle of Wight Green Party - 28a Victoria Road, Shanklin, Isle of Wight PO36 8AL
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Yes - I am standing as the Green candidate for Carisbrooke and Gunville! Big shoes to fill: Cllr @JoeLever89 has done a fab job for the last 5 years. This is my first ever time to stand in an IW Council election. Please send support! πŸ’š
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Top of the World with @IOWGreenParty @SouthernVectis @rachelmillward @quayarts Such a positive day
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Huge THANK YOU to @SouthernVectis for showing us around just one of your growing fleet of electric buses yesterday. With another order on the way, almost the entire timetable will be electric next year! And thank you @rachelmillward for coming on board with the @IOWGreenParty πŸ’š
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Anyone can become a Friend of us on the #IsleofWight !πŸ’š
I just contributed with @VixL: Friends of the Isle of Wight Green Party. Contribute here: actionnetwork.org/fundraisin…
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Curriculum changes welcomed: βœ…οΈAbolished EBacc βœ…οΈOracy skills βœ…οΈDigital & financial literacy Doesn't go far enough: ❌️Inadequate funding ❌️High stakes testing ❌️Reliance on exams @TheGreenParty would emphasise equality, collaboration & skills for 21st century.
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Vix Lowthion πŸ’š retweeted
.@ZackPolanski is by far the coolest political leader in this country right now
4 Nov 2025
was not prepared for who was standing behind her 😭
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Vix Lowthion πŸ’š retweeted
28 Oct 2025
This Saturday I’ll have been a member of the Green Party for 8 years, and a councillor for (nearly) 6 of them. That doesn’t make me β€˜old school’ but it shows I have some skin in the game. I’ve never been happier with where we are as a party and the people we’re welcoming in.
27 Oct 2025
People occasionally ask me how old school Green members feel about the @ZackPolanski surge and all of the new members - implicitly wondering if they’re feeling possessive about what was their thing. This from @stuartjeffery is more of a reflection of the attitude I see.
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So, there are still more residents of the #IsleofWight than members of @TheGreenParty ... 🏝140,800 Islanders πŸ’š140,000 Greens So only just. Probably been outnumbered by now as it's been 20 hours since the last membership count!
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Vix Lowthion πŸ’š retweeted
21 Oct 2025
IOW east - what colour is that @VixL πŸ‘€ #IOW @onthewight
πŸ‡¬πŸ‡§ | Projected result of this week's @YouGov poll ➑️ RFM: 26% | 290 ( 285) πŸŸ₯ LAB: 20% | 106 (-305) 🟦 CON: 17% | 43 (-78) 🟧 LDM: 15% | 92 ( 20) 🟩 GRN: 15% | 37 ( 33) 🟨 SNP: 4% | 46 ( 37) πŸ”² PLC: 1% | 6 ( 2) /- vs. GE2024 Highest Green % with YouGov
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Vix Lowthion πŸ’š retweeted
21 Oct 2025
Solidarity with @ZackPolanski and every one of us with wonky teeth. Whether you have straight teeth or wonky teeth, whether you were born in Britain or you came here yesterday... Us Brits STICK TOGETHER TO DEFEND OUR BRITISH WAY OF LIFE πŸ€­πŸ™ŒπŸ»πŸ’ƒπŸ»πŸ’ͺ🏻🦷 πŸ‡¬πŸ‡§
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Vix Lowthion πŸ’š retweeted
πŸŽ‰ We've done it. We've passed 100,000 Green Party members! πŸ“ˆ But we're not stopping there. πŸ’š Let's make hope normal again! Join the Green Party today!
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Vix Lowthion πŸ’š retweeted
Looking forward to it!
Super excited and thankful to be included on the Education Panel at the @NEUnion at @TheGreenParty Conference this weekend πŸ’š In these challenging times, to be given a voice and to have it amplified by my Union and also my Party is so very important to me....
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Super excited and thankful to be included on the Education Panel at the @NEUnion at @TheGreenParty Conference this weekend πŸ’š In these challenging times, to be given a voice and to have it amplified by my Union and also my Party is so very important to me....
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I hope to see you there! With @natalieben @sairskay . Saturday 4th October, 1.30pm, Purbeck Lounge, Bournemouth
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