Posts Tagged ‘English Regions’

Conservative MEP Ranking Ballots

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For the first time every member of the party is being given an opportunity to vote on the rankings of Tory MEPs and candidates. This is fantastic news as it counters my comments in this post.

While it is a secret ballot I am keen that everyone knows which MEPs are Eurosceptics and which are Europhiles. Then people reading this can vote along those lines without having to go to the same effort as me!

So here’s how I’m voting:
1. Daniel Hannan MEP
2. Nirj Deva MEP
3. Richard Ashworth MEP
4. (Because you are required to rank all candidates) James Elles MEP

You may remember that Mr Elles is a pro-EU Tory who supported the Lisbon Treaty and who wishes to remain in the EPP-ED.

And in Ballot 2:
1. Richard Robinson
2. Nina Kaariniemi
3. Sarah Richardson
4. Tony Devenish
5. Therese Coffey
6. Marc Brunel-Walker

Please bear in mind that my decisions regarding Ballot 2 were largely as a result of answers on Conservative Home’s Goldlist site

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Adur Telephones, SEERA and Policy and Strategy

First, a warning. Adur Council’s telephones stopped working at 4pm this evening. While this is rectified, it is my duty to give you the out of hours Duty Supervisor’s number: 07713 889 128.

Last night’s meeting

Second, at last night’s meeting some more things were said that I didn’t really cover in my post because I was a bit of a hurry. As I’ve said many times recently, one of the items under discussion was key to a merger of services with Worthing and the accompanying savings in salaries which we must find because of the Labour Government’s swingeing cuts to grants and increases in demands on local Councils.

Members of the public are so infrequently in attendance that it is necessary to mention them when they are. Last night former-Councillor Peter Berry was in attendance. He had some questions to ask about the merger and, I quote, said that the Councils were “creating a staff surplus by reorganising the workload”. This, apparently, was supposed to be a negative criticism of the Councils plans whereas, in fact, it was a ringing endorsement of our policy. As a service organisation (as all Councils are) salaries and staff costs are the vast majority of our funding need. So to create staff surpluses is to create savings. To say that we are doing that by reorganising the workload is to say that we are creating efficiencies.

Many people criticise the NHS and other government bodies for ‘having too many chiefs and not enough Indians’; how wonderful then, that I can report that our Council is doing exactly what that adage criticises: reducing the number of managers by sharing managers between the two authorities! It’s really gratifying and a genuine good news story.

SEERA

In my last post I criticised the now dying SEERA for claiming that SEEDA was an unelected quango and I celebrated our Prime Minister’s decision to erase Regional Assemblies.

But I was, not unusually, being naively optimistic. SEERA is, for its faults, at least partially democratic in that some of its membership is Councillors from across the Region. SEERA, because of that, was becoming a thorn in the side of the central government and was likely to refuse to accept the house-building proposals that Gordon Brown recently announced. This would have been [in a fake posh voice] damned inconvenient, what! So in an act of sheer arrogance he decided to give it to the South East England Development Agency instead and close the troublesome assembly which was more and more likely to try to embarass him.

Far from being a positive step for democracy in England it is yet another attack on the democratic will of the people in this area who overwhelmingly do not support the ruling party. As the Tories came to regret using Scotland as a test bed, Labour will hopefully regret pushing the English — and especially those of us in the south — around.

Tonight’s Policy and Strategy Committee…

… was great, what more need be said? Well, actually, it would be nice to have some members of the public at the next one!

If you don’t like your Council tax rises, if you wonder how that hair-brained plan came to fruition, if you watch Newsnight or Question Time (or both!), if you enjoy debate or if you care about your local community then come along. It is really entertaining (normally) and it gives a real insight into how and why decisions are made.

I’m not over-selling it. Really.

No, really.

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SEERA Ironic?

SEERA says the following in their most recent propaganda email:

Ministers are transferring strategic planning powers to Regional Development Agencies – unelected quangos – to by-pass councils’ opposition to excessive growth in South East house-building rates.

Do they not see the irony of pointing out the unelected-quangoness of SEEDA when SEERA itself is an unelected quango?

Gordon Brown has done well by England by announcing the abolition of Regional Assemblies, now it is time for their replacement to be an English Parliament.

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The State of English Politics

Adur District Council and Worthing Borough Council are embarking on a pioneering method of governance which will involve our two Councils sharing one Officer Management structure and sharing the provision of services between the two.

The process was initiated when Worthing’s Council was run by the LibDems and is continuing now that the people of Worthing have seen fit to give the Tories a go. So it should be plain-sailing. We should be finding it easy — two Conservative Councils working together. And it is and we are.

But it’s new to me — in Adur we have one LibDem and two Independents. The LibDem has never spoken at Full Council and the Independents are reasonable people who vote according to their beliefs; normally with the ruling Conservative administration. What’s new for me is having an opposition.

Tonight’s meeting was the first Joint Committee of the two Councils that wasn’t the cabinet of Worthing and the Policy Committee of Adur (SEMS). And because of political balances requirements, it was the first committee I’ve had which had an opposition present and able to vote. Tonight’s meeting was on the Redundancy Policy.

The reason I am telling you all this, other than for general interest, is to point out a couple of odd things:

  1. This isn’t political point-scoring, but the LibDems really didn’t seem to understand the Officers’ report
  2. Worse, when it was obvious they’d missed the point of it, they didn’t ask for clarification from the presenting Officer
  3. Worse still, when it came to voting on the Recommendations, the LibDems voted against or abstained despite having, apparently, no objections to the subject matter and having mooted no alternatives during debate

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One has to wonder why they bothered? Their number are too few to change the result without winning the argument, but they didn’t bother to tell the Conservatives what their apparently better idea was. I suspect, though this is me being cynical, they just want to be able to say they were against it if the merger of services goes belly up and redundancy payments are more expensive than we expect, but in whose interest is that?

This and another incident recently at Adur make me ask, out loud now: Do people really know what they are voting for?

I am more worried now than I was last year that I was elected unopposed. It shows a complete apathy on the part of every person in Buckingham Ward who does not normally vote Conservative. But there are other cases where I am sure Councillors would not be returned if their record was scrutinised or if a single member of the public attended a Full Council or Committee meeting.

My concerns over the ademocratic nature of devolution (which has deliberately excluded England),the EU and other issues are going to fall on deaf ears all the time people are voting, year in, year out, for Councillors who don’t work for the people or who are not up to the job. The position of Councillor is similar to the management board of a reasonably large company — we have the Directors reporting to us and we make the important strategic decisions as well as setting policies for the Directors and their reports to act upon. And yet the people who are most affected by Councillors actions are apathetic. They allow sub-standard democracy.

So this is a call to the people: pay attention and watch your Councillors, MP, MEPs and AM (Wales/Northern Ireland) or MSP (Scotland) — it is very, very important.

I may have mentioned this after last Thursday’s meeting but I think it’s worth mentioning as this post is turning into a rant: A member of the public asked what the Council was doing about the proposed closure of two of West Sussex’s three Accident and Emergency facilities. The question was asked in an accusatory way as if all the work on KWASH was being done by someone else. The question was asked as if by being Councillors we weren’t already doing our civic duty to some extent and as if, maybe, it would be helpful if the people did a little more themselves.

That’s unfair: amazing numbers turned out to encircle the two Hospitals with protestors, but it was Councillors and our, apparently tireless MP, who were doing the work there too. It’s such an important issue but I have not been contacted by a single constituent about it — not one.

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England: Will it ever awaken?

This from today’s Telegraph:

South of the Tweed, the backlash is starting
By Alan Cochrane
A weekend in England is all it takes; all it takes to confirm that “they” are not going to put up with “it” forever. “They” are the English and “it” is devolution.
Now, you may think you’ve heard this before; after all, people like me have been hunting for the English backlash ever since the Scottish Parliament opened for business.
And, frankly, it has been a long time coming. But coming it most definitely is. I was talking to a senior MSP yesterday and his assessment was an accurate one. “They (the English) seem to have gotten really annoyed about this student fees business.”
Last week’s announcement by Fiona Hyslop, the new SNP Education Minister, that, henceforth, Scottish students – and only Scottish students – would be excused their back-end payments for attending Scottish universities, appears to have been the last straw south of the border.
Perhaps it’s because of the manifest unfairness of it, certainly in a British sense, or maybe it’s because it primarily affects their off-spring – anything that hits your kids always brings a more emotional response – but the English taxpayers appear to have taken more exception to this bit of business than much else that’s happened in the last eight years.
And it has allowed them to add it to their long list of other “grievances” where the largesse of the devolved Scottish administration has given the residents on this side of the Tweed a better deal than those south if it. Things like free personal care for the elderly, free eyesight checks,
free bus passes and free access to better drugs.
All of this on top of what is seen as a small army of Scots in the Cabinet and, from June 27, a Scot as their new prime minister, without, it seems, so much as a by their leave.
Some English commentators claim that the incoming Nat administration in Edinburgh is bringing forward new acts of discrimination as deliberate provocation. They’re not. It’s not provocation, merely recklessness.
The Nats are determined to shore up their vote wherever they can – at the taxpayers’ expense, of course – and the students’ fees decision will do them no harm at all with the youth vote. Ditto with the so-called “grey” vote, following the announcement that free personal care allowances are to
be uprated. However, if in buying those votes, the Nats infuriate the English, then they’re not going to lose sleep over it, now are they?
All of which made my trip to Birmingham recently all the more interesting. There, in the tranquil surroundings of the house where Elizabeth Fry founded what we now know as the Quakers, I came face to face with the other side of the devolution coin – the English nationalists.
Mind you, the leaders of Campaign for an English Parliament are an incredibly mild-mannered bunch of revolutionaries. They are, also, extraordinarily polite.
In spite of all the slings and arrows that devolution has thrown their way, they bear no ill-will towards the Scots; they just want their own piece of the action. They acknowledge, as do most opinion polls, that the majority of Scots reckon that bones of contention such as the West Lothian Question should be addressed.
They have a long and hard fight on their hands, much of it down to indifference from the English media.
The reason I was in Birmingham was to make a programme about the demands for an English parliament for BBC Scotland, which is to be broadcast today.
Incredible as it may seem, there has not been even the slightest flicker of interest in this perfectly legitimate cause from the various arms of the BBC in England. Needless to say, however, one of the staunchest supporters of the Campaign for an English Parliament has been Alex Salmond.
I cannot imagine that this apathy from mainline broadcasters and newspapers will last, especially as every day of the Nationalist administration in Edinburgh appears to bring with it a new sense of outrage
from the ordinary voters of England.

  • Home Rule for England is on BBC Radio Scotland at 11.30am today and is repeated at half-past midnight.

See, told you we’re not bad guys.

I would take issue with the author’s implied blame of Scottish Nationalists. The problem is most definitely Scottish and English British Unionists, not Nationalists of either country. The Scottish Nationalist Party should not be blamed for using the power it has been granted in favour of Scottish people — it is the lack of similar power for England that gets my back up.

And now be aware of another blogbreak of perhaps up to a week!

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Good Riddance John Prescott

What a reflection of the Labour party that when John Prescott commits an assault on a video clip, the conference crowd cheers? Worse, one of the audience said afterwards “What an excellent video — it shows John making clear the Labour message”.

The fact that it was news that a politician apologised, as John did today, is a sad reflection on today’s political class. Let’s hope that he meant that apology and meant it for all the things he did wrong, not just playing croquet and corruption.

I won’t miss Two Jags, and I know I don’t miss his former department. I am disappointed that local Councils are still being told to do things that cost money and that the residents could do without — I am disappointed that the whole of Labour’s Whitehall machine is rubbish, not just JP.

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Write to your Regional Assembly NOW

This must not be allowed to happen. Read this and then write to the Councillor who attends the Regional Assembly from your local Council.

I will be writing to Adur District Council’s Cllr. Liza McKinney today.

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Cafe Press Shops (2)

I’ve added some more products to the first shop and opened another with overtly anti-Labour images…

Buy, won’t you now?

I hate the government shop
I love England shop

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The future of England

Tom Griffin’s a new blogger to me… I’ve not found him before, but my God, what an excellent article:

Read it now… really…. do!

Thanks to Gareth for the find.

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