Lib Dems lose control of the council

The Liberal Democrats have lost control of Bristol City Council at the Council House this evening after the Tories joined with Labour to vote to reject a minority Lib Dem administration led by new leader Steve Comer.

The central issue during an ill-humoured debate, predictably, was home care. Comer rejected Labour demands to call an immediate halt to any further privatisation of the service and instead, as predicted by The Blogger, offered Labour the opportunity to run the city and halt the privatisation themselves.

The Tories, despite generally being in favour of such outsourcing, for their own mysterious political reasons supported the Labour position and effectively voted the Lib Dems out of office.

It is now thought Labour will form a minority administration propped up by the Tories and move immediately to end the privatisation plans. This will rip-up the Parrott Report, the long-term strategy for social services they developed and unaminously accepted before they left office in 2005.

As The Blogger said a few days ago:

… whilst the Labour party are at liberty to reverse their own policy derived from their own report they may find that doing so plunges the city council’s social services back into a financial black hole…

More on this tomorrow.

Posted in Bristol, Conservatives, Green Party, Labour Party, Lib Dems, Local elections 2007, Local government, Trade Unionism | | There are no comments yet

Sacrilege!

Radiant House

Further proof, as if it’s needed, that this city is run by an unholy alliance of charlatans, philistines, bureaucratic retards and the plain demented. Last week the bastards demolished Radiant House, by far the best modernist building in the city centre, if not the whole city.

Going, going...

The building (above) that is no longer there was actually a façade put up in 1935 on an older building. It was designed by Whinney, Son & Austen Hall and for many years it served as the city’s gas showroom. When British Gas left the building it was taken over by the city council and renamed Colston House after their beloved slave trading freemason hero. They also thought, presumably, that effortless suburban touches like putting up some hanging baskets and not bothering to maintain or clean the landmark building would bring out the best of those cool, elegant modern lines.

There’s no doubt the building has some architectural significance. It appears in both the Pevsner guide to Bristol and Tony Aldous’s book ‘C20/21 Bristol’s Modern Buildings’. The dated modernity and faded optimism it now represents should be good enough to grace any city, especially Bristol which is not exactly overrun with attractive buildings. You need only look next door to the council’s Amelia Court, which looks like it was designed by a gay cake decorator after a particularly raucous night with the crystal meth to see that.

Alas the city council’s Culture and Leisure Department think differently. The kind of people who disguise their rancidly impoverished intellects and bureaucratic mindsets behind the term ‘culture’ decided the building had to go as part of The Colston Hall redevelopment. Rather than keeping the building’s facade and developing the concert hall’s foyer around it, which was entirely possible, the council’s culture pseuds have decided to replace it with a bright yellow corrugated iron-looking warehouse.

New Colston Hall foyer

The ludicrous new building is yet more of this overpriced, off-the-shelf, sub-Norman Foster erotic gherkin bollocks that Sunday supplements for the chattering classes are full of and that serve to keep the UK’s lucrative concrete industry ticking along nicely. You can almost see the architect twat responsible in his strange trousers, horn-rimmed specs and sketch pad going in to meet the city’s cultural bureaucrats. Using all the insight they gained from their second class arts degrees from third class institutions they no doubt lapped up the architectural “vision” on offer…

It’s a fucking ugly, concrete yellow shed you daft sods!!!

Indeed it’s the sort of ugly yellow shed you might expect to see in an out-of-town shopping development agreed by a planning committee containing Richard Eddy and Helen Holland. But in the middle of town? For your major concert venue? Replacing an already critically acclaimed building? I don’t think so.

It really makes you wonder how these decisions are reahed. Ok, so the corduroy jackets in the lower reaches of the culture department get a stupid plan together. As usual… This plan goes to senior officers who see no problem. It goes to planning officers and experts who see no problem. They send it to members and executive members who see no problem. It goes to a planning committee who see no problem. At no point in this process did anyone state the blindingly obvious: “This new building is a load of shit. It’s an ugly yellow concrete shed. Fuck off and come back with a good idea involving the excellent facade we already have.”

At least we now know how we got the centre everybody hates. The whole of the council and everybody in it is completely fucking stupid. Why have them? You might as well ditch the lot of them, save loads of cash and get Sid and Doris Bonkers from Sea Mills to decide everything. They couldn’t do any worse could they?

The driving force behind this latest city centre planning fiasco is the city council’s Head of Culture, Paul Barnett. The man who managed to screw up the Abolition 200 celebrations and get every black group in the city to boycott the event; the man who tried to demolish the industrial museum and build a greenhouse filled with computer games and the man who’s sat on his hands and let the Ashton Court Festival collapse.

There’s a jeroboam of Champagne from The Blogger to the executive member who finally does the city a big favour and sacks this destructive little cunt.

Posted in Bristol, Developments, Local government, Middle class wankers, The Centre | | There are 4 comments

Sunday Times' punk's not dead shocker!

Sunday Times Punk

Sitting here listening to my free ‘Anarchy in the UK: 30 years of punk’ compilation courtesy of The Sunday Times I find myself agreeing with Banksy in a recent Independent interview:

“I love the way capitalism finds a place – even for its enemies. It’s definitely boom time in the discontent industry.”

Are there Sunday Times readers across the country pogoing around the living room and getting into tinny live versions of The Buzzcocks’ ‘Boredom’ and admiring ‘Germ Free Adolescents’ as they flick through the Style section?

There was at least one bona fide classic on the disc though. An acoustic version of Wreckless Eric’s monumental ‘Whole Wide World’ that I’d never heard before. Part 2 next week. Here’s hoping it’s got Larry Wallis’s ‘I’m a police car’ on it.

Posted in Banksy | | There is 1 comment

Election aftermath: Bunter's bumper balls-up

Eddy and golly

Nationally the Tories gained 911 new council seats and secured 40% of the vote at the local elections. This puts them – just – on target for a general election victory. But there was little to celebrate for Bristol’s Tories at these local elections and certainly no sign of a ‘Cameron bounce’ in Bristol.

Despite efforts to take seats in, amongst others, Hengrove, Cotham, Bedminster, Brislington East and St George East, Tory efforts were wasted as they failed to gain a single seat and their overall vote fell 5% on last year to 25%.

This has to be classified as a personal disaster for the self-styled populist Tory boss Richard “Bunter” Eddy – already widely viewed as a ridiculous and embarrassing figure by most people outside the Council House Tory group. Leading the party into elections for the first time, he’s predictably taken the party backwards although it’s unlikely his rather dim, unreconstructed membership will place the blame on him.

Bunter

The reasons for the dismal Tory performance are twofold and quite obvious. Firstly, there’s little use for a Tory Party in Bristol since both the Labour Party and the Lib Dems have ruthlessly pursued Thatcherite policies for a number of years now.

Privatisation, corporate friendly development policies, a relaxed attitude to free market ideology, selling off of public assets, implementation of flexible labour arrangements within the city council, tough talking and few results on crime, the obsssession with anti-social behaviour, outsourcing, consultants, endless public-private partnerships, heavy city centre investment allied to neighbourhood neglect, PFI, the handing of power to unelected quangos, useless private sector-led responses to major public interest projects such as transport, constant promotion of large-scale, loss making landmark ‘Bilbao-style’ capital projects and pitiful PR-led promises and initiatives that come to nothing have been the hallmarks of both Labour and Lib Dem administrations for at least ten years now. Where is there for the Tories to go? Where’s the clear blue water?

However, for the Bristol Tories, there’s a starker issue than policy to be considered. Image. Perhaps the most significant occurrence, from the Tory perspective, in the election period was the quiet defection of Jack Lopresti from his safe Bristol Tory seat in Stockwood to Patchway in South Gloucestershire.

Young and ambitious, Lopresti has harboured parliamentary ambitions for some time now and his defection to South Gloucestershire is widely interpreted as a snub from the frustrated young councillor to the Bristol Tories and their peculiar and self-defeating style.

At present the Bristol Tories are not in any sense ‘Cameroons’ or modernisers. Hell, they’re not even Thatcherites yet. To understand the Bristol Tories you need to go back to, at least, the fifties. This is the Tory Party of backscratching self-interested chaps in pinstripe suits, gin-soaked colonels and secondhand car-dealing spivs. Basically it acts like it’s the political wing of the Bristol Rotary Club rather than a 21st century political party.

Now while pinstripe suits, faked posh accents and reactionary rhetoric about gypsies and Europe might play well in Bunter Eddy’s strange little fiefdom of Headley Park, it has little appeal or relevance anymore for wealthy Clifton, Redland and Cotham or the inner-city where the Tories really need to start performing if they’re ever to revive in Bristol.

It’s no accident that the Barbara Janke/Stephen Williams Bristol West Lib Dem polite and caring conservative style is making all the electoral running in these wards at present while the Tories increasingly find themselves squeezed by the Greens. David Cameron and his laughable crew of Old Etonians – hardly the brightest bunch to get to the top of the Tory Party – understand all this perfectly well and have positioned their party to make gains in such wards. But the message seems to have stalled as it headed west.

It’s perfectly obvious there will be no Tory revival under Eddy and his mentor, the crashing bore and equally ineffective Peter Abrahams. Indeed were this London, not Bristol, the most ruthless and effective election-winning machine in western Europe would have had these two buffoons out on their pin-striped backsides long ago.

Bunter Eddy

But this isn’t London. It’s Bristol. And we can only conclude that the Tory Party here are a bunch of bumbling provincial idiots. Presumably they’re quite happy to let Bunter continue on his electorally disastrous and well-past-its-sell-by-date path, while dining out on the little bit of power he currently holds courtesy of the hung council?

Thanks to Bunter, his party will be a laughable irrelevance and a politically marginal force in the city for at least another generation. Thank you very much indeed Bunter.

Incidentally, Lopresti lost in Patchway and is no longer a Tory councillor.

Posted in Bristol, Conservatives, Local elections 2007, Local government | | There is 1 comment

Labouring under an illusion?

A Labour Party story crudely planted on today’s front page of The Evening Cancer – Who’s in charge? – threatens stalemate and meltdown at The Council House unless the Lib Dems reverse their home care privatisation plans as Labour is demanding.

Labour leader Helen Holland, obviously the source of the story, is quoted at length in the paper – seemingly happy to spout an unvarnished Labour line – calling on the Tories to support Labour in demanding that the Lib Dems run their minority administration on her terms.

Meanwhile “Consistent” Stevie Comer, the new Lib Dem leader, is still keeping his counsel, confining himself to a brief statement: “Discussions between the parties will need to take place before the [full council meeting on Tuesday].”

Once again – given the opportunity – Comer has failed to confirm he intends to run a minority administration. Maybe Helen Holland is going to be in for a shock on Tuesday? Will she find she actually has to implement her election promises rather than sanctimoniously issuing directives to her opponents in the pages of the right wing press?

Posted in Bristol, Conservatives, Labour Party, Lib Dems, Local elections 2007, Local government | | There are no comments yet

Comer-tose or on his toes?

The Home Care banana skin…
Homecare banana skin

The news just in is that ‘Consistent’ Stevie Comer, the glorious new Lib Dem leader, has been reelected to the National Executive of the PCS (Public and Commercial Services Union) to continue his selfless battle on behalf of his members against the privatisation of public services.

He’s been elected again as part of the union’s ‘Democratic Alliance’ slate, a left-wing grouping within the union that supports a larger grouping that’s even further left – ‘Left Unity’ – against what they describe variously as ‘right-wingers’ and ‘Blairites’ who support further privatisation of public services.

Comer, a week into his new leadership role here in Bristol, has so far remained eerily silent on the matter of home care privatisation – or any other policy for that matter. Not for him any “it’s business as usual” statements a la Janke on election night just before she was unceremoniously dumped.

Apart, that is, from Comer enthusiastically confirming Janke’s nomination of Abdul Malik for Mayor to The Evening Cancer yesterday. As if anyone gives a toss which councillor gets chauffeured around Bristol in a Roller wearing fancy dress to meet the Rotary Club and open fetes?

So the question is: will Comer, the trade unionist, follow his apparent convictions, perform a credibility-shredding u-turn and scrap the privatisation of Bristol’s home care service? Or will he prove he is yet another leader with plenty of ambition and no convictions and continue with the home care privatisation? No easy choices there.

Or has Comer got another plan? His silence, apart from a few bland words over the weekend, means he hasn’t yet committed the Lib Dems to running another minority administration. So what’s to stop him inviting the Labour Party to act on their apparent mandate from the electorate, form a minority administration propped up by the Tories and reverse the privatisation of home care themselves as they’ve pledged?

It’s hard to see how the Labour Party could decline the offer. After all they had home care workers out campaigning for them during the elections, they had the T&G printing leaflets supporting their stance on home care and they were promising the electorate they would stop the home care privatisation. What an opportunity for them to put their beliefs into action…

Not quite. Actually doing what they’ve promised might prove difficult. Firstly the Bristol Labour group would have to defy their own government’s policy on home care, which they may get away with. But what might prove more tricky for them to do is rip up their own blueprint for Bristol’s social services they bequeathed the Lib Dems when they left office in May 2005.

After the discovery of a £21m hole in the social services budget in 2004, the Bristol Labour group unaminously agreed to implement – wholesale – the proposals contained in the ‘Parrott Report’. A report they personally commissioned from an ultra-Blairite consultant – John Parrott.

The report basically proposed the privatisation of most of Bristol’s adult social services including meals on wheels, home care and care homes and has been being implemented for the last two two years. And unfortunately no plan B was drawn up or proposed by any party on the council.

So whilst the Labour party are at liberty to reverse their own policy derived from their own report they may find that doing so plunges the city council’s social services back into a financial black hole. Especially when their T&G paymasters object to the next phase of Labour’s Parrott plan – the selling off of council care homes and the privatisation of that service.

Bristol Labour Party appear to have backed themselves into a corner here. If they don’t do what they promised the electorate, they’ll be exposed as the bunch of opportunists they really are. If they do as they promised, they’ll create yet another financial crisis in social services and plunge the city back to the dark days of Micklewright and Bunyan and short term fixes – running up and disguising huge debt, making arbitrary cuts in other services and slyly selling off any assets and services not nailed down. In fact, precisely the kind of privatisations they’ve campaigned against at these elections.

The ball’s firmly in Comer’s court on this one then. Does he go for glory, run the council and become a laughing stock, rank hypocrite and lead the Lib Dems to further electoral doom and gloom in two years? (Already, whilst the PCS leadership remains tight-lipped about him, there are whispers from grass roots members of the PCS asking what an Orange Book Lib Dem is doing in their midst. These whispers can only get louder…)

Or does Comer hand the reins to Labour, sit back and watch the biggest and most sensational Labour meltdown to have happened in Bristol in living memory?

Over to you Stevie.

Posted in Bristol, Labour Party, Lib Dems, Local elections 2007, Local government, Trade Unionism | | There are 4 comments

Hug the Hoodie?

Venturers
Those selfless charity workers

He’s back! After all these years it looks like Nicholas Hood the disgraced Merchant Venturer caught bang in the middle of the Enron scandal is quietly attempting a return to public life.

The former Chairman of Wessex Water, who made a mint out of water privatisation then another mint when Wessex was sold to Enron to create their ‘global’ water business Azurix, is currently appearing at The Council House, sitting alongside clueless local councillors and making decisions on our behalf on The Downs Committee.

Hood is also listed by the brass-necked Society of Merchant Venturers as their second-in-command or ‘Senior Warden’ as they like to call him.

I wonder if any of the seven councillors sitting down and working with Hood have bothered to raise any questions about his business dealings or his reckless way with public money?

As vice-Chairman of Azurix, Hood made a small fortune for himself as his boss Rebecca Mark walked away with $100m whilst the obvious questions were not asked. Ordinary Enron employees and investors later lost jobs, homes and pensions at the hands of the fraudsters running the bent energy business.

In Bristol, Hood chaired @Bristol until 2001 and squandered £40m of public money on a vanity project creating a Harbourside white elephant where a key revenue stream was handed by Hood to his corporate friends at Nestle. The doomed project has recently made staff redundant and closed two-thirds of its operation to avoid bankruptcy after a halt was finally called to the millions in public subsidies Hood’s attraction required.

Anyone wishing to join the lynch mob should assemble at Merchants Hall in Clifton at 11.00am on 16 July 2007 when Hood will be putting in his next appearance for The Downs Committee. It’s listed by the city council as a public meeting too!

Posted in Bristol, Harbourside, Local government, Merchant Venturers | | There are no comments yet

"The dodgiest guy in the room"

Enron logoWessex Water LogoAzurix Logo@Bristol logo

Venturers logoBusiness West logoSWRDA logoFestival of Ideas

There’s at least one event not to be missed at this year’s ‘Festival of Ideas’ – Bristol Harbourside’s upmarket wafflefest for Guardian readers.

Next Monday at The Watershed the festival is screening the inarguably excellent ‘Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room’ – the film version of Fortune reporters Bethany McLean and Peter Elkind’s book about the collapse of the notorious Enron Corporation, one of the greatest scandals in corporate history.

So who have the festival organisers invited to introduce this film and perhaps deliver some heartfelt and tasteful moral homilies on corporate responsibility? Um, er… Wessex Water Chairman Colin Skellett!

Multi-millionaire Skellett originally filled his boots courtesy of Thatcherite high-priest Nick Ridley’s very clubbable approach to water privatisation in the 80s and since then Colin’s not really had to look back.

The Merchant Venturer should be able to tell us a thing or two about Enron anyway as he was a well remunerated Executive Director of Enron’s European subsidary Azurix – owners of Wessex Water until 2002 – working right alongside the Enron super-crooks Jeffery Skilling and Kenneth Lay as well as fellow Merchant Venturer Nicholas Hood.

Hood – who used to like styling himself as ‘a friend of Prince Charles’ to the local press – was the vice-Chairman of Azurix and was also the original Chairman of @Bristol until the Enron scandal broke in 2002 and he resigned and scarpered very sharpish indeed.

Whilst at @Bristol Hood negotiated a £13m government subsidy towards the cost of developing the complex from the SWRDA where – presumably coincidentally – his Azurix colleague and fellow Venturer Skellett conveniently sits on the board disbursing public money on our behalf.

It’s a shame then that these two captains of local industry didn’t see fit to spend some of the taxpayers money they were sharing out on a decent business plan for @bristol isn’t it? The complex, of course, recently made staff redundant and closed two-thirds of its operation to avoid bankruptcy. Not that any of this is Skellett’s or Hood’s responsibility. Oh no.

Unfortunately it’s not clear – as yet – if as part of his introduction to the film Skellett will also be providing an exclusive insider’s account of being investigated for bribery. In 2002 he was arrested by the SFO after £1m was discovered in his personal bank account that had been placed there by Malaysian Company YTL.

YTL had purchased Wessex Water from Azurix earlier that year and the SFO were investigating whether Skellett had received the money as a sweetner to favour the Malaysians during the Wessex Water post-Enron sell-off.

The matter was resolved when Skellett explained that the £1m was in fact a consultancy fee paid in advance for the next five years… Nice work if you can get it!

And a few more conflicts of interest whilst we’re at it… The Festival of Ideas is organised by Bristol Cultural Development Partnership – a ‘public-private’ quango awash with public money and based at Business West’s Leigh Woods HQ. The board of BCDP includes Venturers such as John Savage – Business West boss and now an SWRDA board member alongside Skellett – and Louis Sherwood – a non-Executive Director of merchant bank HBOS and a Director of… Wait for it… Wessex Water… Right there alongside Skellett! Phew what a small world! Very cosy indeed up there in corporate-quango-land with the public money innit?

You can see for yourself just how cosy on Monday at 6.00pm at The Watershed – themselves recently the recipients of Skellett’s largesse with public money. His SWRDA recently handing the cinema with a bar £6m for Bristol’s ‘creative industries’. Mind you it’ll take some creative industry to sell this dodgy old corporate pimp as some kind of commentator on business ethics.

See you there!

Posted in Bristol, Harbourside, Merchant Venturers, Middle class wankers | | There are 4 comments

Elections aftermath: The Fall of House Janke

There was a short farting sound like the voice of water down the plughole – and the shallow and smelly puddle at my feet closed sullenly and silently over the fragments of the “House of Janke.”
With apologies to Edgar Allan Poe

Madeleine
“The disease of the lady had long baffled the skill of her physicians. A settled apathy, a gradual wasting away of the person, and frequent although transient affections of a partially cataleptical character, were the unusual diagnosis.”

At least two years after her sell-by date and the Bristol Lib Dems have finally given their leader, Barbara Janke, the heave-ho in the wake of a not very good night at the elections. The Clifton-based political hobbyist – funded with hubby’s cash from dodgy arms dealers BAE – should have gone over two years ago after her appalling and duplicitous display over the John Astley affair.

However, the Bristol Lib Dems – not exactly kitted with the keenest of political antennae – stuck with Janke at the behest, it seems, of their national party management who always found the snobby – “call me madam” – cow from Surrey far more of an attractive proposition than the people of Bristol ever did.

The decision to ditch Janke appears to be a panic measure from the Lib Dems. They have not so much woken up to Janke’s incredible levels of personal unpopularity in the city due to her snooty, unapproachable Clifton attitude and her policy-free management style of politics as realised their seats are now in danger and are trying to save their own skins. Hardly the stuff of considered decision making.

They may have also been unimpressed with Janke’s completely bonkers performance on Thursday night where she insisted to the press, despite another obvious meltdown in her party’s vote, that: “It was a good night for the Liberal Democrats.

Hardly. The sums are simple. A 27 per cent share of the vote on a less than 40 percent turnout when only two-thirds of the city can vote means Janke’s crappy little administration got the thumbs-up from around 7 per cent of the electorate. That’s not a good night and it is no endorsement in any sense whatsoever of the Lib Dems.

The upward trajectory of the Janke’s Lib Dems throughout this decade actually came to an abrupt halt in 2005 when they finally became the largest party at the Council House and assumed minority control of the city. Janke – already considerably damaged in the eyes of the public by her non-denial denial of her knowledge of John Astley’s actions – then proceeded to run the city by continuing to implement the same Labour policies the electorate had rejected wholesale.

In the absence of a clearly articulated Lib Dem vision for the city or any policies beyond warmed-over New Labour crap, over a fifth of their voters have now deserted the Lib Dems in two years. And not for the Tories or Labour.

The section of the Lib Dem electorate seeking genuine change in the city has been embracing the Greens, occasionally Respect and in the case of Whitchurch Park – the BNP. The virtually direct switch of over 400 voters from the Lib Dems to the BNP in Whitchurch Park tells you all you need to know about the desire for an alternative in Bristol and Janke’s failings in providing it.

Janke – following a Bristol Lib Dem Saturday afternoon of the long knives – is succeeded by a couple of ambitious rookies – Steve Comer as leader and Dr Jon Rogers as his deputy. Both were elected to the council just two years ago for the first time and Rogers has not even chaired a committee let alone held a cabinet post.

The Blogger has already reported on political chameleon Comer. By day he’s a supporter of a far-left, socialist section of his union – the PCS – raging against privatisation; by night he comes to the Council House and promotes Thatcherite/Blairite/Orange Book – whatever you wanna call these public asset strippers infesting local government – privatisation policies.

Rogers, meanwhile, insofar as he has any politics at all, is an instinctive nanny-state Blairite control freak. He basically believes that if everyone would do exactly as upper-middle class liberal professionals such as himself command then the world would be a grand place indeed. This snooty arrogance might play well with the senior social workers and charity managers of his Montpelier ward but it is unlikely to go down very well elsewhere (except maybe Southville?).

The ousting of Janke and the selection of these two has all the hallmarks of panic and disarray. Comer’s brief statements to the press provide no evidence of any serious sea change in Lib Dem thinking at all.

He has said “I look forward to building on the work that Barbara Janke has done over the past 10 years as leader. Liberal Democrats have started to turn around council services in Bristol and I hope to have the opportunity to serve my home city of Bristol.”

This sounds appalling like a “business as usual” statement from the Lib Dems. The strategy seems to be “deckchairs on The Titanic” – pursuing the same failed and unpopular policies under new – equally uncharismatic and policy-free – leadership. If so, the Lib Dems are doomed.

However we shall have to wait until 18 May when the new administration is confirmed to see the real outline of Comer’s Lib Dems. Will he perform a personally tricky u-turn on home care? Will he decline to run a minority administration? Will he and Rogers put a coherent and original Lib Dem package of policies together for the city?

Or will ambition and ego rule the day with Comer and Rogers ploughing on to disaster in the dismal Janke-style?

COMING SOON: More election aftermaths…

“They’re like the political wing of the Bristol Rotary Club” – Eddy’s bellyflopping Tories.

“Are they just a cheap coat of greenwash over the centre right Bristol consensus?” – Bolton’s flailing Greens.

“Labour revival? Ha, ha, ha” – Holland’s Labour luvvies

Posted in Bristol, Lib Dems, Local elections 2007, Local government | | There are 3 comments

Who is the Bristol Blogger?

Seems to be the question everybody’s asking and some are answering. Suggestions sent to this site include Cancer editor Mike Norton (I kid you not!), a variety of Venue hacks – do I really sound anything like Daryl Bullock? – and a variety of people I’ve never heard of usually accompanied with addresses, emails and phone numbers IN BIG CAPITAL LETTERS. Thank god WordPress don’t do green ink…

However the most surreal suggestion so far comes courtesy of an anonymous super-sleuth on Charlie Bolton’s blog:

Bolton blog

So that’s that settled then. The Blogger is Diane Bunyan’s partner. What next? Will The Blogger be unmasked as Richard Eddy’s brother?

Posted in Blogging, Bristol | | There are 8 comments