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Alex Rich's avatar

Thank you for answering my question - I 'd say the policies you advocate for, whilst radical in scope and effect, are still fundmantally moderate because they require recognition of compromise. 3 of those policies you have suggested (planning, finding savings and raising tax) have not found favour with populist politics and likely never will because it involves actions which appear detrimental to the electorate in the short term, instead of pinning all problems on one specific group. My real worry is not so much that politics is going to lead us down the path of radical government, but more that it will lead us to more cakeist government, which is not a recipe for a successful country.

Martin Stanley 🇺🇦's avatar

I got to know the UK Chagossians some years ago. They (or their parents) had been appallingly treated but resettlement is now impractical. There is no infrastructure outside Diego Garcia, and rebuilding and subsequent supply chains would be very expensive - even if, as seems unlikely, they would want to swap life in the UK for a small island life.

I am not an expert on the strategic questions but agree that there is in practice no threat to the US/UK base. Would growing Chinese influence over Mauritius matter? Not sure.

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