Pledge news

Oh my aching sides … Whatever will that rump of sleazy lawyers who make up most of the Labour Party these days come up with next? Er, this?

Yes, in a desperate bid to create an appearance of integrity in the face of a cabinet knee deep in financial scams and an MP class loaded up with tax payer funded plasma TVs and quality soft furnishings, Labour’s Prospective Parliamentary Candidates (PPCs) have now bodged together something they’re calling “Five pledges that show we mean business”.

(Note the term “business” here. Not “socialism”; “social democracy”; “social justice”; “fairness”; “democracy”; “equality; “fraternity”; “liberty” or any other term you might associate with left of centre politics.)

Now stop laughing at the back there please. This is serious. These wannabees are promising to, “subscribe to high standards of integrity, transparency, accountability and financial economy” OK?

So who’s this at number 73 on the grand Labour list of political integrity then? Why it’s Sam Townend, Labour PPC for Bristol North West.

Surely not the same smarmy well-paid barrister-boy Sam Townend, Labour PPC for Bristol North West, who had to recently resign his Lambeth Council seat in London after being exposed for trousering £10,212 of council tax payers money in allowances while turning up for only two meetings because he now lives in Bristol?

Indeed it is.

So this pledge, rather than suggesting we’re now on the verge of a new era of integrity in politics, actually creates the impression these people would sign papers to put their own kids in Guantanamo and agree to the full waterboarding treatment if they thought it would help them get elected on to the Westminster career ladder and gravy train doesn’t it?

Meanwhile “Five pledges” Townend’s new Bristol North West constituency party is no stranger to some odd financial arrangements itself since he appeared in town.

As reported by the Blogger at the arse end of 2007, it seems Townend’s selection and nomination for the Bristol North West seat coincided with two mysterious cash payments into his new Constituency Party’s funds amounting to exactly £10,000.

The money was listed as being donated by the ‘Bristol Labour Group’, using a Council House office address where local government officers – not Labour Party staffers – are based.

And despite enquiries, nobody on the ‘Bristol Labour Group’ – whoever they may be – seems able or willing to explain where this large sum of cash might have come from.

Former Bristol Labour Group leader George Micklewright has even gone to the trouble of outlining the historically poor financial situation of ‘The Bristol Labour Group’ on this blog and has described the £10,000 cash they suddenly rustled up out of the blue in 2007 – oddly coinciding with the Bristol North West candidate selection process – as “magic money”.

“Clearly the Labour Group account was used as a conduit,” concludes Mr Micklewright.

But a conduit for who?

In the current climate of mistrust and disgust at politicians’ financial arrangements, isn’t it about time ‘the Bristol Labour Group’ properly identified itself and explained where they got this £10k in cash from and why they donated it to their North West Constituency Party?

Surely there must be perfectly simple and honest explanation for it all don’t you think?

Posted in Bristol, Bristol North west, Elections, Labour Party, MPs, Politics | Tagged , , , | There are 8 comments

Counting the cost of Brown's Britain (reprise)

40% – pay rise awarded to Bristol City Council’s new Chief Exec, Jan Ormondroyd, for the year 2008-09 – before she had even done any work for Bristol. Ormondroyd’s pay packet is in the region of £180k a year or £92 an hour

3.5% – pay rise refused to Bristol’s bin men, employed by the council’s subcontractor SITA, for the year 2008-09. Median salary for bin men is £12k a year or around £6 an hour.

Support Bristol’s bin men!!

Senior public sector management looters out of the Council House now!!

Posted in Bristol, Economy, Local government, Politics, Trade Unionism | Tagged , , | There are 7 comments

City council: crap legal threat of the week

The saga of the People’s Republic of Stokes Croft’s artwork destroyed by Bristol City Council “by mistake” takes a new laughable legal turn.

Having now made a very public and PR-friendly apology for the news media‘s benefit, the council has now returned to business-as-usual – lying, bullying and threatening – to get their own way.

You may remember that after the council vandalised the artwork, PRSC immediately used the space to condemn the council and advertise Chief Exec Jan Ormondroyd’s email in large letters so we could write to her direct and tell her what a tosser she is.

Now the PRSC blog reports:

the owner reports that last week, BCC contacted his agents to request permission to remove the “Council Vandalism” piece. The owner referred them to ourselves… Still we heard nothing…

The following day, the owner was contacted again by BCC. This time they informed him that he required planning permission to paint on the front of his boarded up shop, and that the “Council Vandalism” piece was therefore illegal…

Really? Illegal to paint what you like on a building is it? Not according to, er, Bristol City Council it isn’t.

Here’s an email from the council’s very own planning enforcement expert, Jon Bishop to the councillor for the area, Mark Wright on this very issue from March:

>>> Jon Bishop 03/19/08 9:08 AM >>>

Hi Mark

Under schedule 2, part 2. Class C of the General Permitted Development Order, planning permission is not required for any application of colour to the exterior of a building unless the painting is for the purpose of advertisement, announcement or direction.

The same ‘permitted development’ right applies to buildings in conservation areas so in theory someone could choose to paint their house purple without the need for planning permission.

In fact, if you look at some of the terraces in Cliftonwood you will see quite a range of colours. If the building in question is listed as being of architectural or historic interest then the painting of its exterior may require listed building consent.

Best wishes Jon

Dearie me. Are the council just using the law when they feel like it now? Presumably on the instructions of their Chief Executive, who apparently doesn’t like being forced to be made directly accountable for her reprehensible actions in large letters on one of the city’s major arterial roads?

If you need planning permission for the purpose of advertisement, announcement or direction why hasn’t the council enforced this law for private advertising hoardings over about the last 25 years then? Bit of a precedent set there maybe?

What a sad little bully Ormondroyd is. Although perhaps what she needs to understand pretty urgently is that we are being forced against our collective will to piss away £180k a year on keeping her in a style she’s done nothing to deserve and for that we’re gonna make her directly fucking accountable any way we feel like.

So Jan, if we want to publish your email, your salary, your address, your expenses or anything else we bloody well feel like saying about you in ten foot high letters we bloody well will. And if you don’t like it then fuck off back to Bradford.

As for your pathetic legal bullying, why not pick on someone your own size? Leave the artists alone you miserable little shit of a woman and get your halfwitted legal gang to try their bullshit on the Bristol Blogger if you fancy a fight with locals.

Of course – judging by past precedents of pompous idiot council officers threatening “legal action” against Bristolians – you won’t because you ‘d be pissing those expensive pants you’ve looted from the public purse in five minutes flat at the first sign of a fight.

These soppy city council legal threats never materialise do they? Because they’re actually a load of council senior management fantasy-world bollocks.

Perhaps someone should explain to them – for their own sakes – they’re here to serve us not threaten us?

Posted in Ashley, Bristol, Bristol West, Environment, Graffiti, Local government, Planning, Politics, Stokes Croft | Tagged , , | There are 18 comments

Election 2009: fuckwit candidate of the week

Step forward Labour candidate for Easton Mohammed Arif who along with his agent Terry Cook has spent the day delivering a leaflet around the ward with a headline: “Bristol-Bath Cycle Path: Labour action, Lib Dem excuses”.

The story finds Labour taking credit for saving the Railway Path from becoming a BRT route and is accompanied by a photo of Arif, his councillor colleague Faruk Choudhury and an unidentified group of campaigners.

Alas, it seems the pair of spivs Arif and Cook are a pair of stupid, insensitive twats too. For starters the photo features Greenbank environmental campaigning legend Pete Taylor, who sadly died a few weeks ago and – to say the least – was no fan of the Labour Party.

Others in the photo include the Green Party candidate for Easton, Katie Buse, a major challenger to Arif, while the rest are from the ‘Keep the Bank Green’ group who have been fighting the Labour administration’s efforts to sell off protected park land on the Railway Path to property developers.

The photo has nothing to do with BRT on the Railway Path and is full of people who loathe Bristol Labour and the local businessmen, slum landlords and property developers it now stands for.

Oh and it’s called The Bristol and Bath Railway Path not Bristol-Bath Cycle Path as the former Cycle City Champion Terry Cook has called it. Cretin.

Posted in Bristol, Bristol and Bath Railway Path, Bristol East, Developments, Easton, Environment, Green Party, Local Elections 2009, Local government, Politics | Tagged , , , , | There are 14 comments

Greedy bastard watch

Why are former Lib Dem leader and Eastville Councillor Steve Comer‘s travel and subsistence expenses so high?

Since he won the Eastville election in 2005 he has claimed £2,481.36 in travel and subsistence expenses (£411.06 in 05-06, £409.27 in 06-07, £955.01 in 07-08, and £706.02 in 08-09) and and has been the highest claimant by far in each of those years.

The total of claims for the last four years are as follows;

Steve Comer (LD) £2,481.36

Peter Hammond (Lab) £641.91

Gary Hopkins (LD) £447.40

John Bees (Lab) £363.90

Barbara Janke (LD) £363.90

C Smith (Lab) £345.40

P Abraham (Con) £290.65

R Stone (Lab) £212.50

J Smith (Lab) £205.04

C Davies (LD) £189.50

J Clark (LD) £183.85

D Pickup (Lab) £162.30

M Wright (LD) £158.00

There are then 11 councillors who have claimed for amounts belows £100 (3 Lib Dems, 1 Conservative, 7 Labour) and over half of our councillors have made no claims at all.

Over the last four years total transport and subsistence claims from councillors are £6,527.25, of which Comer accounted for £2,481.36 (or nearly 40%) on his own.

The average annual claim over the four years (excluding Comer) was £106.47 while Comer averaged £620.34.

No doubt there’s a “perfectly reasonable explanation” for Comer’s large expenses claims and it’s obviously “all within the rules”.

So has he done far more traveling on council business than any other councillor? And why? Or does he get a lot of free lunches off the council taxpayer?

I think we should be told …

Posted in Bristol, Bristol East, Eastville, Lib Dems, Local government, Politics | Tagged , | There are 26 comments

MP "Two Beds" in Habitat bath tidy Scamalot shocker!!!

Another bad day for Bristol politics. We can’t even do the MPs expenses scandal – ‘Scamalot’ – with any class or style.

While the rest of the country is getting suitably worked up over whipping, flipping, double dipping and egregious claims for moat dredging, duck islands, multiple homes, electric gates and all those other “unfortunate errors in accounting”, what do we get?

Bristol East MP Kerry sodding McCarthy’s phantom bed and £17.50 bath tidy from Habitat.

Shit. How are us bloggers supposed to stay in business with material this thin?

Just goes to show: Tories claim expenses in poetry while Labour claim them in prose …

Posted in Blogging, Bristol, Bristol East, Bristol Evening Post, Conservatives, Labour Party, MPs, Politics | Tagged , , , , | There are 5 comments

Vote 2009: launch night …

When I get round to writing my intellectually dazzling and profound extended essay on the hidden semiotic meanings to be found in images of local politics, rest assured the photo above – of this year’s Bristol Green Party election launch – will be taking pride of place.

But let’s forget, for a moment, that the whole thing resembles an awayday with the cake baking sub-committee of the local Baptist church’s June Family Fun Day organising team rather than a set of progressive politicians ready to take control of a sophisticated 21st century western city.

Instead can someone tell me which ward the daft plastic windmill at the right of the picture’s running in? It’ll get my vote every time.

In a straight choice between the kind of weirdo that wants to be a Bristol City Councillor and a cheap, crap inanimate object, the inaminate object gets the nod every time from the Blogger.

Posted in Bristol, Elections, Environment, Green Party, Local Elections 2009, Local government, Politics | | There are 76 comments

Religion vs politics

Our private polling team have been out in Easton this week and we can EXCLUSIVELY reveal that, despite being nationally held in disrepute and in utter disarray, Labour appear set to win the ward in the forthcoming local elections on June 4.

This means that Abdul “the Mayor” Malik, the Lib Dem’s man from the mosque, is likely to be replaced by Mohammed Arif, Labour’s man from the mosque.

Is it a good thing that people appear to be being elected to office on the basis of their religion rather than their politics? And is this something that our mainstream parties should be openly embracing and encouraging?

They’re certainly not shy about lying through their teeth on behalf of these candidates.

“Arif moved to Easton in the 1980s,” explains his Labour managed website. Why then is his address listed as being in Mangotsfield in the official list of candidates (pdf)?

Posted in Bristol, Bristol East, Easton, Elections, Labour Party, Lib Dems, Local Elections 2009, Local government, Politics | Tagged , | There are 30 comments

"We need to sort Parliament out"

Says Bristol East MP, Kerry McCarthy.

Well, I’ll source the detonators if someone else gets hold of the explosives …

Posted in Bristol, Bristol East, Labour Party, MPs, Politics | Tagged | There are 19 comments

Election Question …

A reader writes …

Hello,

I wonder if you can help me, I have been trying(without success) to find a list of the EU and local candidates for Bristol.

I have been through quite a few different sites but cannot get any satisfaction, perhaps they are all hiding seeing as the present climate is anti politics!!

Got a feeling that I need to do something drastic this time and see if there is anybody not in the top three parties that I can trust enough to vote for.

This lot in our local government are a bunch of liars whose noses are so far in the trough they could get a job in Westminster as advisors.

I spent a couple of years fighting them over the prefab project (another story) so I got to know them well, especially as the same ones just seem to change chairs and positions but stay there like bloody old outdated fossils (yes that’s you Peter Hammond, you bearded Tory boy tosser with an equalities policy, ed.).

Sorry, waffled a bit. The prefab project is still going on, I had to leave mine three years ago and the site still has not been re-developed, so much for the jobsworths haste to chuck us out.

The scandal is that like the new development at Elm Grove/Filton Avenue, apparently the rented properties on the pre-fab sites are being handed over to housing associations, so I’ve been told.

Look out then for council tax rises in a couple of years, without rents they will have to find their dosh from somewhere.

Posted in Bristol, Bristol North west, Elections, Housing, Labour Party, Local Elections 2009, Local government, MPs, Politics, Privatisation | Tagged , , | There are 12 comments