Did your MP vote to hide their huge expense claims?

A full list here of MPs who voted in the Freedom of Information (Amendment) Bill to exempt themselves from FOI legislation.

The only local MP who voted in favour was Labour’s public schoolboy fantasist and paedo-obsessive Dan Norris. None of our other local Labour MPs could, apparently, be arsed to get to the commons to vote against the bill although Bristol West Lib Dem Stephen Williams did.

This raises the question of where were our New Labour MPs on Friday and what were they doing to earn their £800 odd of public money for that day? Norris and Williams we know attended. Dawn Primarolo has just had a major operation so The Blogger will grudgingly let her off. But what of New Labour backbench loyalists Naysmith and McCarthy?

Any sightings of this pair on Friday gratefully received. Strangely McCarthy usually updates her blog on Fridays and is only too keen to tell us, when it suits her, what she’s been doing and who she’s been seen with. Last Friday, in gruesome detail, she described her mercy mission to Bristol Cathedral – with onion up sleeve – to weep for Bristol’s home care workers whose livelihoods are being destroyed by her government’s own policies. The Friday before she helpfully listed her favourite pop songs about politicians. This week, when missing a controversial vote allowing MPs to withhold financial information about themselves from the public, she’s strangely reticent about what she was actually doing…

Meanwhile The Mail on Sunday claims David MacClean, the author of this iniquitous little bill to help MPs fill their boots with publicly-funded expense claims, bought a £3,300 quad bike on parliamentary expenses!

For the record, here’s what local MPs receive from public funds:

Kerry McCarthy (Labour, Bristol East): salary – £60,277; expenses – £127,797; total – £188,074

Stephen Williams (Lib Dem, Bristol West): salary – £60,277; expenses – £113,947; total – £174,234

Dawn Primarolo (Labour, Bristol South): salary – £99,908; expenses – £133,354; total – £233,262

Doug Naysmith (Labour, Bristol North West): salary – £60,277; expenses – £128,447; total – £188,724

Dan Norris (Labour, Wansdyke): salary – £60,277; expenses – £154,447; total – £214,724

Posted in Bristol, FOI, MPs | | There is 1 comment

"In home care time and space are the same thing"

Councillors come good

No leadership? No problemo! Says Kim Il Bey-Non, Eternal Shop Steward of the Numpty Republic of Transport House.

While people across the city see only another embarrassing Labour-inspired city council shambles unfolding, The Home Care Workers Blog run by sections of the T&G very close to the Bristol Labour Party are hailing Tuesday night’s Council House fiasco as a glorious victory for the workers… Just one more heave for victory, eh?

The T&G are also inviting us to believe – with no evidence at all – that the Lib Dems are on the verge of a historic u-turn and will be stopping home care privatisation after “discussions” this week. Labour leader, Helen Holland, buying time to avoid explaining why she won’t take power – and do as she’s promised and campaigned for – was spinning a similar line in the Evening Cancer as well.

Meanwhile the Lib Dems, presumably as a part of this imaginary “climbdown and surrender” strategy going on in Helen Holland’s and T&G boss Alun “I’m the daddy” Beynon’s heads, have written to Local Government Minister Phil Woolas demanding that the Labour Group, Tory Group and lone Green on Bristol City Council are arrested for failing in their legal duty to elect a leader of the council on Tuesday night. Yeah. Sounds just like the Lib Dems are about to cave in don’t it?

But why are the unions taking this line? Have they lost their grip on reality? Or could it be that T&G boss “I’m the daddy” Beynon’s buying time too? After all he sold his members the idea that campaigning for his son and the Labour Party at the elections would save their jobs. It hasn’t so far and increasingly looks like it won’t. Is Beynon staring utter humiliation in the face after employing the most useless set of tactics since Graham Taylor had an office at the FA? “Can we not knock it Alun?”

The fall out for Beynon if his Labour Party electoral strategy fails should be career destroying. Contrary to his ludicrous blog headline, most home care workers were livid with the Labour Party councillors on Tuesday night. Not one was heard to say “Councillors come good,” that’s for sure.

What has this country’s once proud Labour movement now sunk to? The likes of bureaucrat Beynon and politico Helen Holland using and exploiting workers for their own political purposes and then trying to save their sorry, hypocritical arses by releasing statements so absurd, untrue and departed from reality they could have come out of the propaganda department of the Korean Workers Party or, er… Graham Taylor:

“Sometimes it’s very hard to follow what would have happened and sometimes it’s hard to follow what has happened.”

.

Posted in Blogging, Bristol, Labour Party, Local elections 2007, Local government, Media, Trade Unionism | | There are 2 comments

Ding-dong Bells, Foie Gras it no longer sells

Bristol Animal Rights Collective Bristol Animal Rights CollectiveBARCBARC

Big shout out to the Bristol Animal Rights Collective. After just one vocal protest outside upmarket Montpelier eaterie Bells Diner, run by media-darling chef Chris Wicks, the restaurant has stopped selling Foie-Gras with immediate effect.

The Animal Rights Collective turned up for a second demo at the restaurant only to find that Wicks has already pulled the vile food for posh idiots off his menu. The Collective flushed with this success headed immediately for Juniper restaurant on Cotham Road where a very brief demo had the management there agreeing to ditch their food for sadists. Result!

Bristol Animal Rights Collective say they will be monitoring both establishments to ensure Foie-Gras stays off the menu. They say this about food:

Foie-Gras is the grossly enlarged liver of a duck or goose which has been force fed enormous quantities of food with a metal pipe up to 3 times a day. The birds livers swell up to over 10 time their natural size. Many birds choke to death when food is forced into their lungs. The production of this disease marketed as a delicacy has been banned in the uk but is still imported from France.

If you see any business selling this shit let Bristol Animal Rights Collective know. Let’s boot this nasty little trade out of Bristol.

Posted in Activism, Bristol | | There are 3 comments

Golly! Bunter wants a job

Cabinet of all the talents

A shameless pitch today from Bunter Eddy to today’s Evening Cancer for a job in the cabinet. After his and Peter Abraham’s vomit inducing moral homilies and lectures to the Lib Dems on responsibilty and integrity on Tueday night, we now find Bunter, as usual, heading at breakneck speed to the lowest common denominator by selflessly offering himself to the service of the city in a Labour-Tory coalition to save the home care service.

This offer has nothing to do, of course, with the fact that Bunter will do anything to get some power and that the refugees from Henbury golf club that make up the Bristol Tory Group under his leadership haven’t a cat in hell’s chance of winning an election and forming a cabinet under his leadership. Ever.

So surely this isn’t a case of Eddy shamelessly thrashing about desperately trying to get his hands on any little bit of power any way he can? Is it?

To confirm the strength of his conviction the dope says this about the Lib Dems:

“The Lib Dems do not have the competence, character or conviction to govern effectively.”

Presumably the way to demonstrate competence, character and conviction then, is to pimp yourself in the pages of the local press?

Labour leader Helen Holland, so far, is rebuffing Eddy’s heartfelt offer. “I feel that there’s an element of party political game-playing here,” she told The Cancer. Apparently with a straight face.

Meanwhile over on the Lib Dem supporting Labourwatch blog they’re reporting rumours of a potential Labour-Conservative coalition in Bristol. What can it all mean?

(Cartoon by Evelyn Post. Evelyn Post is The Bristol Blogger’s resident cartoonist. He has a woman’s name)

Posted in Bristol, Bristol Evening Post, Conservatives, Evelyn Post, Labour Party, Local elections 2007, Local government | | There are no comments yet

Bristol's Knights of the Brown Nose

Croydonian has compiled a list of Labour MPs who have not put their name to the pathetic, anti-democratic coronation of  Gordon Brown as Labour leader. New Labour Brown nosers to the bone, not one Bristol MP is on that  list.

Kerry McCarthy, Doug Naysmith, Dawn Primatolo arise, I declare you Knights of the Brown Nose.

Posted in Bristol, Labour Party | | There are no comments yet

I'm backing Bolton!

I’m sick of these mainstream party tossers pissing about and refusing to run the council so I’ve started a campaign to get Charlie Bolton to run for leader.

If you think Charlie Bolton should cut through the crap and run for the leadership of Bristol city Council visit his blog and tell him!

I'm backing Bolton!

Posted in Bristol, Green Party, Local elections 2007, Local government, Southville | | There are 2 comments

"There are going to be some stark choices ahead"

Yesterday’s Guardian had an interesting interview with Sarah Pickup, Hertfordshire’s Director of Social Services, on the stark financial issues facing adult social care provision – which includes home care services. Unfortunately the interview is not on the web yet.

Pickup is from a finance background and knows her stuff. She is not the kind of over-promoted social worker that Bristol’s city councillors have consistently employed and supported to manage this city’s social services department from crisis to crisis.

At the end of a thoroughly depressing interview Pickup says this:

“We are facing enormous pressures in adult care and the current situation is not sustainable if we are to continue delivering a high standard of service. We have a moral obligation to provide these services, but we need more assistance. We need more money from the government it is as simple as that.”

As co-chair of the resources committee of The Association of Directors of Adult Social Services, Pickup is in a good position to test the wind with regard to any strategic decision in favour of of social care in the CSR (Comprehensive Spending Review) this autumn.

She is not, it is fair to say, bubbling with optimism. “If the CSR comes up with absolutely nothing, which is something people increasingly feel,” she warns, “there are going to be some stark choices ahead.”

Let’s hope every Labour politician and wannabe Labour politician reads this and understands this. It is a Labour government – first and foremost – driving adult care policy and financially squeezing it to the bone, not local politicians. Let’s hope they also understand that daft, populist, off-the-cuff spending decisions on adult care might be enough to start a spiralling financial crisis.

We had a financial crisis in social services in 2004, which destroyed day care and meals-on-wheels. We do not want another crisis that destroys more of our city’s vital services for the most vulnerable.

Those who want to keep home care in the public sector need to note this and deliver a coherent and costed plan of how they intend to proceed. These services are too important to be left to the vagaries of arseholes playing populist games and seeking positive PR.

The facts are: if you want to keep home care in-house then something else will have to be cut. We need to know what that is now. It’s no good taking spending decisions now and then trying to find the money in 6 months. We’ve been there before.

The Labour Party and their unions have had since February to supply an alternative, costed plan on the future of home care. Where is it?

Posted in Bristol, Home Care, Labour Party, Local government, Trade Unionism | | There are 2 comments

Back to the future

Back to the Future

Just like the good old days… Peter Hammond prancing like a tit in the council chamber; John Bees slamming down his copy of The Daily Star, stubbing out his Lambie and reprising his tired old working class, man of the people, I’m-union-’til-I-die schtick and Helen Holland wiping her brow copiously and being oh-so-concerned for the downtrodden of city.

Meanwhile over on the Tory benches Tweedle-Dee, Peter Abraham, and Tweedle Dum, Richard Eddy, are revisiting their obscure moral point scoring routine for old time’s sake while all 30-odd Lib Dem councillors sit, dumbstruck, shuffling papers and staring at their feet, praying that one of them will eventually stand up and manage to string a few coherent sentences together that resemble an argument.

Haven’t we been here before? Twice to be precise. In 2003 when the Lib Dems made huge gains at the local election and declined to form a minority administration and again in 2004 when the Labour Party walked away from “The Rainbow Coalition” after Barbara Janke declined to inform anybody about what she may have known about John Astley’s sexual pecadilloes.

This time round the issue is home care. The Lib Dems wanna privatise it, the Labour Party don’t and the Tories seem to see it as a useful political tool to get their tired old stagers Eddy and Abraham back in the cabinet and at the top end of the councillors’ pay scale.

To be fair to the Lib Dems they did offer to form a minority administration – three times! Although admittedly their efforts were muted – Comer, Hopkins and Dr Jon Rogers mumbling a few words from hastily drawn up notes on the back of fag packets – knowing full well that the Labour Party, on a very high moral horse indeed and supported by the Tories, would reject their offer unless they agreed to do a u-turn on home care.

The Lib Dems declined the u-turn, got voted down by the Labour/Tory alliance and then invited Labour to form an administration. And this is where things get murky. Throughout the evening, one after the other, Holland, Hammond and Bees thundered – to applause from their union friends’ carefully orchestrated audience of home care workers – that the people of Bristol had spoken at the elections and wanted an end to home care privatisation.

So why couldn’t Labour form a minority administration with the support of their Tory friends and carry out the will of the people that they had been so eloquently expressing in the council chamber?

Um, er… They haven’t answered that one yet! Which, let’s face it, is pretty cheeky. Having run an election campaign to save the home care service, they are now declining to save the home care service. Having got the home care workers to campaign on their behalf at the elections to save their jobs, they are now declining to save their jobs. What a bunch of frauds. What’s going on?

It’s simple really. The Labour Party has made election promises they simply can’t keep. Firstly, it is Labour Party policy nationally to privatise home care services and they can’t go against that.

Secondly, home care privatisation is a Bristol Labour policy. In 2005 they personally selected at great expense a new-Labour consultant, John Parrrott, to devise a new social services strategy after they had run up a £21m debt in the department.

Parrott’s report clearly sets out a blueprint for the privatisation of adult social services including home care. The whole of the city council unaminously agreed to adopt this strategy at a full council meeting in March 2005 with little debate or scrutiny of what Parrott really had in mind. The resolution to accept the strategy was proposed by Labour Leader Peter Hammond – now a born again anti-privatisation campaigner – and seconded by then Social Services boss Robin Moss, who lost his seat for his troubles.

When the city council accepted the Parrott Report in its entirety there was virtually no opposition to it. Apart, that is, from a few ‘Save Bristol Day Care’ campaigners sat in the public gallery of the council chamber desperately waving copies of Parrott’s report and trying to tell seemingly ignorant councillors it was a privatisation plan. For their troubles, the campaigners got a considerable amount of abuse – much of it personal – from councillors of all parties.

Back then the trade unions were nowhere to be seen. The policy to privatise Bristol’s adult social services went through courtesy of Labour and with the tacit support of the unions. Precisely, now, the people objecting to it.

Moreover, since the debate and discussion over the Parrott Report was so cursory no other proposals were ever put forward. Privatisation of Bristol’s adult services was a fait accompli delivered by the Bristol Labour Party. It’s the policy they left behind when they left office in 2005 and it is a policy that has been pursued now for two years. Along with the Tories, Labour now seem to be disowning their own policy. Why didn’t they do that at the time? It stands to reason that if you do not agree with your own policy you can, if you want, reject it and come up with something you do agree with.

As things stand, the Bristol Labour Party has lied to the electorate and they have lied to the home care workers. They are the privatisers. Home care privatisation is a Labour policy locally – they devised it – and it is also their government’s policy. If this is not the case, why don’t they grow up, stop poncing about, stop hurling soppy abuse around the council chamber, stop blaming Lib Dems, stop blaming officers, take control of the bloody council and do as they promised?

Isn’t it the purpose of a politician to run things not mince around a council chamber offering up theatrical excuses why you can’t?

What’s really stopping the Labour party then? Surely they’re not promoting policies in opposition that they can’t deliver in power. Perish the thought!

COMING SOON: What next? Lib Dem stick or twist?

Posted in Bristol, Conservatives, Labour Party, Lib Dems, Local elections 2007, Local government | | There are 6 comments

Evelyn Post #3

First Council

Evelyn Post is The Bristol Blogger’s resident cartoonist. He has a woman’s name.

Posted in Bristol, Evelyn Post, Local government, Trade Unionism | | There are no comments yet

Another bloody shambles!

Having fought an election campaign “to save home care”, Bristol Labour Party have now declined the opportunity to do so!

After rejecting Lib Dem efforts earlier this evening to form a minority administration to run the city, the Labour Party have declined to form their own administration claiming they “need guarantees”.

This leaves the city leaderless and rudderless and Home Care workers furious. Many of them went out and campaigned for the Labour Party at the behest of their T&G bosses at these elections on the basis that Labour would save their jobs. But when Labour’s given the opportunity to make good on that promise they declined.

Never mind, at least the home care workers helped T&G boss Alan Benyon’s son get elected to right royally shaft them. Oh dear. What a cock-up!

The council will meet again next Tuesday to try and get some leadership together.

Posted in Bristol, Conservatives, Green Party, Labour Party, Lib Dems, Local elections 2007, Local government, Trade Unionism | | There are 3 comments