Statement to Council

The Liberal Democrat Party

The Liberal Democrat Party

The following is what I said to the Council tonight. I tried not to be personal and I did try to maintain the moral high-ground. Unfortunately, the same cannot be said of a couple of Councillors there tonight. Chairman Councillor Brenda Collard conducted the meeting professionally and politely however.

I will post again soon with some radical proposals that I personally believe are long overdue and desperately necessary.

But on with what I said:

“When I requested an opportunity to make a statement to this meeting, my intention had just been to explain my reasons for leaving the Conservatives in favour of the Liberal Democrats. I will still do that, but afterwards, I would also like to address some specific accusations levelled at me.

“Over the last year or so I have been struggling with my conscience: At the next General Election could I go and ring on the doors of residents of Adur and Brighton & Hove and explain to them why they should vote Conservative?

“Since it became clear to the media that the next government would be Conservative, more and more honest policies have been released. So the Conservatives will set an arbitrary limit on the number of immigrants allowed into Britain. Regardless of the fact that immigration from outside the EU is very difficult in any case, there will now be a limit set by politicians for political rather than economic or cultural reasons. Now, presumably someone’s husband will be told he cannot come to the UK; or the next Director of a large UK company will be denied access because he is that one person over the limit.

“The Conservative Party has been at sixes and sevens over its policy on the European Union promising referenda on treaties that would be illegal under international law and then, when realising this, making no decision at all about what to do about the supposed problems with EU membership. To be clear I have, in the past, been critical of the EU because like most institutions, it is imperfect, but it is better to have a policy of positive engagement than no policy and be isolated by hostility.

“A Conservative government would remove Stamp Duty for first time buyers, but this tax slows movement in the housing market at all levels and it is extraordinarily non-progressive to tax one group just because you can. The Liberal Democrats have a coherent taxation policy that will favour those who most need lower taxes.

“For the last six months, the Conservatives have been publicly confused about their stance on the Financial Services Authority. The FSA currently plans to introduce tough qualifications to try to improve the skill-level of this country’s financial advisers. The current hoo-har over Structured Products backed by Lehmans and likely future crises are the fault of advisers who do not understand how these products work resulting in poor advice being given. A Financial Stability Committee with the FSA left alone to continue where it has expertise is the Liberal policy and the right one.

“Finally, the Conservative Party website describes its policy for National Security thus: “we must defend and make the argument for our shared liberal values” while it intends to continue the fight in Afghanistan where recent laws have stripped womens’ rights back to a Taliban-level of liberality. I quote from the charity Human Rights Watch “[The law] allows a rapist to avoid prosecution by paying ‘blood money’ to a girl who was injured when he raped her.” A new law also allows men to deny their wives food if they fail to obey sexual demands. If these are our shared liberal values…

“I could go on about national and international politics but I shouldn’t ignore the local arena. Our Council has argued for a long time that interference by Whitehall is the one major reason that we are unable to make real, significant and valuable changes to the way we run things. The Liberal Democrats have issued strong words in this respect at a national level.

“So I left the Conservative Party in my heart earlier this year. And then I found my natural home in the Liberal Democrats.

“I had hoped to work with the Conservative administration until May for the benefit of the people of Adur District and I believed, perhaps naively, that the Tory leadership was honest and, like me, here for the benefit of the residents. But it seems holding onto power is more important.

  • “Rather than issue a press release that suggested that Cllr English had missed many meetings, when he had in fact missed one;
  • “Rather than issue a press release that suggested I had been deselected when actually I had not sought reselection for the reasons I just gave,

“they could have spoken of their personal disappointment in the decision Cllr English and I had taken and reassured the public that they were a steady hand to run the Council.

“I made this decision on principles and I hope, despite this bad start, we can work together in a constructive and positive way in the future.”



Like this entry? Share it with others:
Facebook |  | Delicious |   |  | 

, , , , , , , , ,

  1. #1 by Leanne Tustin on December 9th, 2009 - 8:47 pm

    Hi Gavin :)
    I am very very proud of you!
    VERY VERY!!!!! PROUD!!

  2. #2 by Angus on December 9th, 2009 - 11:32 pm

    Hi Gav, assume as I was one of the few who spoke last night, that I am one of those who, in your opinion, surrendered the “moral high ground”. But to what exactly?

    Quite honestly, I have absolutely no issue with your apparent epiphany (misguided though I believe it is); freedom of expression, belief and political view are pretty much absolute to my mind and if you believe the Lib Dems are your cup of tea, that is entirely fine by me. I could almost go as far as respecting your decision to ‘defect’ but for one, in my view overwhelming, reason. Integrity.

    You may consider my ‘digs’ yesterday were petty but, and this is where I am afraid given your actions, it is obvious we disagree, I sincerely believe that in not resigning and allowing the electorate the opportunity to make a choice, you have further damaged the already low opinion the electorate have of politicians at all levels of government.

    You were elected by the people of Buckingham ward as a representative of the Conservative party, and we have to be bluntly honest here, such is the beauty of local politics it seems unlikely you were alone, but you won because you were wearing a blue rosette.

    It is my personal view that ‘ratting’ is dishonourable (and I accept that as a ‘ratter’ you are in distinguished company – although it has to be said that Winston saw the light and ‘re-ratted’) and betrays the trust given to you by the electorate.

    I regret therefore, and I sincerely do regret, that unless and until you grant the electorate of Buckingham the opportunity to judge you in black and orange, the moral legitamacy of your position as an elected representative is, to my mind, in question.

    I have absolutely no doubt that we can work together in a constructive manner, if and when you have been elected as a Liberal Democrat Councillor.

    Angus

  3. #3 by Gav on December 10th, 2009 - 5:49 pm

    Thank you Angus.

    I did think your comments were petty, and I disagree with you that I was elected as a Conservative. If that’s the basis upon which people choose to vote, that is their error: voters are not voting for the Conservative Party or for David Cameron, or Neil Parkin, even — they are voting for the person and that is how our democracy is designed (if ‘designed’ is the right word — I refer you to previous posts where I highlight the flawed system we have with the head of government being entirely unelected).

    I was surprised at your comments not least because the £20,000+ cost of holding a by-election is significantly larger than the Members Allowances I have supposedly accepted while I missed a couple (okay, four) meetings, and that your party’s press release suggested I refund (and which ignored the fact that a large number of Conservative Councillors had a worse attendance record than Carl English).

    So if it would be unreasonable to hold a by-election for the sake of cost, the other alternative would be to sit quietly until the next election making no impact at Council meetings (as most Conservative Councillors sincerely cannot because of the party whip) and betraying my beliefs and the public who provided me their mandate.

    Finally, don’t you agree that my decision must be on the basis of principle in order for me to move from the party that is overwhelmingly in power in Adur and that is widely predicted to beat Labour at the next election, to join a party in third place (currently) nationally and with only one Councillor at Adur? I could understand the behaviour of my colleagues in this respect if I had gone the other way.

    The moral high-ground was mostly surrendered by another who spoke out of turn and in conflict with the Council’s constitution and caused our Chairman to mouth me an apology!

    Again, in earlier posts, I have referred to a number of Councillors who do a good job and who deserve, on a personal level, the trust the public places in them. Of course my own judgements in this regard, could be as out-of-line as some Conservative Councillors’ opinions of me are, but you were one of those to whom I referred.

  1. No trackbacks yet.

Comments are closed.


SetPageWidth