Thought I`d give a different slant to my blog this month - give you the French perspective.
So the UK is going to sign up to the new European Convention without a referendum - and even before the debate in parliament starts we have the weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth particularly from our brethren south of the border. Unlike the Scots, I don`t think the English are natural Europeans. We after all have the Auld Alliance and the shared history of fighting the English!
Come the constitution we`ll get even more of those terrible European influences bearing down on us - like maybe clean, litter-free streets, busy and buoyant town centres, a superb network of public transport, trains that run on time and are clean, good healthy eating ( you really don`t see all that many obese people in France ) and good weather - well maybe the last one is going a bit far.
You can tell from this onslaught that I have been out of the country for a short time - and in fact have been in two of South Ayrshire`s twin towns across the Channel. The first visit was to Villenuve-sur-Lot,celebrating 20 years of twinning with Troon. This was the `official` part of my trip - though I hasten to add that myself and my fellow councillors who travelled to France did so at our own expense (before the word`jolly` springs to mind!)I then travelled north - via the magnificent TGV - to visit Ayr`s twin, St Germain-en-Laye where I have many friends.
Both towns are very different, one rural and the other, sitting next to Paris, very sophisticated. But both have much in common - both are clean, vibrant and bustling and despite having large supermarkets on their peripheries, the town centres are full of independent little shops doing a roaring trade. Not a charity shop or for let/for sale sign anywhere to be seen.
The ceremony to mark the town twinning anniversary was the naming of a roundabout, Place de Troon. Not very exciting you might think. But forget your Whitletts, the Villeneuve roundabouts bear little resemblance to ours. For a start they are generally covered in flowers and are extremely decorative. The town obviously has a very active Parks Department. As we left the workmen were out taking down the first of the hundreds of floral baskets bedecking the town and wonder of wonders, scooping up all the autumn leaves with their giant industrial hoover`.
In St Germain-en-Laye the council workers were out each morning power-washing the streets and the town sqaure, which no longer has cars clogging it up thanks to a spanking new underground car park. There was almost no litter to be seen and certainly no chewing gum disfiguring the pavements.
And the lesson you ask? Obviously the French are doing something we`re not. And I`m not just talking South Ayrshire - but the whole of Scotland. Speaking to the French councillors they have cashflow problems, priorities and social problems too, but they seem to manage it better. There`s a lot we could learn from them I think - but I guess an exchange research visit will be out of the question!
But the French in general definitely think more in European terms than we do. It was obvious even at the small ceremony to mark the 20th anniverary. While the Scottish contingent spoke of friendships old and new and more `parochial` matters the Villeneuve mayor spoke of the bigger European picture and the relationships between countries.
Both approaches of course have their place.
Just one PS on the trip. The Saturday night was the big Gala Dinner - but was also the night France played England in the semi finals of the rugby World Cup. Villeneuve you must remember is in the rugby playing region. First course came, then the next. . . . Just over an hour later, as the hands on the clock approached quarter to eleven the main course finally arrived - the entire kitchen staff had been watching the game! Shame about the result.
Saturday, 20 October 2007
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