110,000 problem families <\/strong><\/p>\nFirstly, what is a “family?” A whole kinship group, the nuclear family, any co-residents in a property? There’s no room for sociological niceties in this policy. However, without even a working definition of what counts as a “family”, the whole approach becomes hot air.<\/p>\n
The UK government, under the pressure of the baying press, has been deifying the “family” for a few years, to the point that now well nigh all policies are presented as “family” policies.\u00a0 Which is odd given that a huge minority of people don’t live in “family” groups.<\/p>\n
Even the government now seems to acknowledge that there may be sometimes be a dark side to its cosy “family” ideal. We all know there are whole families that any sane person will move to the next county to avoid.\u00a0 But still.<\/p>\n
How are these bad “problem families” going to be identified? Are they families in which everyone commits crimes? We have laws that are supposed to bring penalties if you get caught. There is an old-fashioned idea of presumption of innocence surely.\u00a0 Are they “families” overwhelmed by poverty, illness and mental problems?\u00a0 Even the shittiest family grouping is hardly responsible if one of its number goes and stabs someone.<\/p>\n
Are they going to be the sort of families who spends their lives under social services supervision, with the kids in and out of care? The forms of intervention don’t seem to be effective yet, do they? Maybe some serious action to help ease the misery of the kids involved might be more effective than heaping even more pressures on them.<\/p>\n
The worst 20,000 facing eviction? <\/strong><\/p>\n\n- Well, this assumes that ALL problem families live in council accommodation. A bit odd (a) for the party that was once identified with the labour movement; (b) when public housing is becoming almost non-existent and (c) when any successful criminal “families” are more than likely to own their own property.<\/li>\n
- It assumes that some scale of “worst” can be applied. Again, this can’t involve actual engagement in crime otherwise the perpetrators should surely just be arrested and charged in the traditional manner. So what will it come down to?<\/li>\n
- It puts a bizarre numerical value on the numbers of people judged “worst” and due to be evicted. Will there be targets? Will numbers of problem families be shared out equally between local authorities? In that case, playing football in the street might get you seen as a problem in some Surrey suburbs, whereas you might need to engage in a random arson campaign before you disturb teh neighbours in some Glasgow streets.<\/li>\n
- Even imagining for one moment that these twenty thousand “families” are the genuine causes of all crimes, what about the children and adults in these families who are blameless? Are the innocent now to be punished for other people’s criminality?<\/li>\n
- Can someone – anyone – please explain to me how making 20,000 families homeless will cut knife crime?<\/li>\n
- Is there evidence that homelessness works wonders for child development? Are the homeless uniquely moral?<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n
Hint to Gordon Brown – yet again. (Please start paying attention, Prime Minister…..)<\/p>\n
Mad social policies that pretend to be “tough” but – in fact, show an incapacity to use simple logic and usually involve hammering the poor – aren’t going to win you the election. The hangers and floggers Tories in the Daily Mail readership are just not going to vote for you, no matter how much you pander to them. And it makes the rest of us despair.<\/p>\n