Real Zorro strikes again and he’s not happy!

Real Zorro obviously has very high standards.  As a public service he has been investigating the quality and availability of information that the two front- runners in East Devon’s elections are providing us with, including what is apparently now called  a “360 degree multi-media presence” which Real Zorro knows all about!

He finds Claire Wright’s presence (website, blog, Facebook, Twitter, You Tube and probably lots of other things) up-to-date, easy to access and informative.  

But, oh, he is SO disappointed both with Hugo Swire and East Devon Conservatives, where information is sadly lacking,  web pages are SO old and so out-of-date it is embarrassing (or should be) and the lack of “news” and “events” is particularly worrying.  

Seems like they don’t have many people who are able to work this interweb malarky and they don’t have much of a social life either ….!

http://realzorro1.blogspot.co.uk/

Hugo says people who rip down posters are sad and fear democracy

Hugo Swire says on his Twitter feed that people who rip down election posters are sad – indeed they are.  He also thinks they fear democracy, which is also true.  We should all have a fair crack of the whip (unless we are Independent candidates who don’t like Whips very much!).

But we must also add that ANYONE who puts them up on a highway will have them taken down by Devon County Council – and that’s democracy at work too!

Major Tory donor benefits from Government advertising and Tory election visits

The Independent – JCB and its billionaire owners donated more than £1 million to the Conservative party in the financial year 2014-15, Electoral Commission records show.  The company was subsequently featured prominently in Government-sponsored and promoted advertising.  The Independent states

…”JCB’s headquarters in Staffordshire has been used by the Government as the location for several prominent speeches, announcements and PR visits.

Downing Street chose it as the location for David Cameron’s long-awaited speech on immigration last November, which generated a large amount of media exposure for the construction and equipment firm.

George Osborne visited the company immediately after delivering his 2013 Autumn Statement, again attracting media coverage for JCB. 

Transparency data revealed that the firm smoothed the trip for the Chancellor by providing a helicopter, meaning he did not waste too much time travelling up north for the PR stunt.

Other UKEF publications that feature JCB include the promotional brochure ‘How UK Export Finance is Helping UK Business: Making Exports Happen’ and another document titled ‘Competitive export finance for growth’.

JCB and the Bamford family have donated nearly £6 million to the Conservative party. 

Lord Bamford, chairman of JCB and his brother Mark are long-term supporters of the Tories and together with Lord Bamford’s son George, the three of them have personally donated more than £2 million to the Conservative party since the Electoral Commission obliged parties to disclose donations over £7,500 in 2001. 

Donations from three companies owned by the family – JC Bamford Excavators Ltd, JCB Research and JCB Sales Ltd – total £4 million.

Labour said government ministers had “serious questions to answer”. Shadow Cabinet Office minister Jon Ashworth said: “This smacks of cronyism. It seems taxpayers’ money is being spent promoting a major Tory donor.

“The Tories are ramping up advertising spending in advance of the election, looking after their mates and their electoral interests in the process. People expect better and will not accept public funds being used in this way.”

A Conservative party spokesman said: “We are proud to be backed by a great British success story, a British company that employs thousands of people here in the UK and operates around the globe.

“Unlike Labour, donations to the Conservative party do not buy our policies, our leader of our candidates.“

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/generalelection/cash-for-adverts-major-tory-donor-benefits-from-governments-advertising-spending-spree-10197056.html

When is a Tory not a Tory?

When standing for a town council, of course: http://eastdevon.gov.uk/media/1051007/sidmouth-north.pdf
Confusing for voters, though, when the very same Stuart Hughes (or a different one?) was the proposer for Tory PPC Hugo Swire. See  http://eastdevon.gov.uk/media/1050699/spn-nop-sps.pdf
EDW note: The second link, above, has a useful list of polling stations…which voters are sometimes unsure of. 

Parish council told co-option meetings for additional councillors must be in public

A story in today’s Western Morning News (page 3 no online link available) says that a parish council in Cornwall (St. Agnes) has been told to “forget” a meeting it held behind closed doors to co-opt councillors when too few councillors stood for the available seats – something that has happened in many East Devon towns and parishes.

A parishoner objected and said the meeting should have bee  held in public and the Cornwall Association of Local Councils agreed that this was the proper procedure to follow.

One wonders how, in this day and age, any council could consider holding such a meeting behind closed doors but, alas, there are still some dinosaur councils which seem to be unable to adapt to demepocracy and transparency ….. and Clerks and CEO’s who seem to like that situation …..

‘Great Support for Candidate who Cares’ (WMN letters)

Here’s the link:  http://www.westernmorningnews.co.uk/WMN-Letters-Great-support-candidate-cares/story-26373893-detail/story.html

Another reason to vote Independent

“This election’s manifestos, one regrets to report, remain unenlivened by a single obscenity. Ukip’s bellicose little document aside, they are decent, civilised, kid-gloved affairs, reluctant for the most part to go on the offensive against the other parties for fear of negative campaigning. 

By a striking coincidence, almost all of them advocate a prosperous economy, a better deal for young people, a better deal for old people, a better deal for farmers, babies and badgers, a world-class educational system, affordable housing, controlled but fair immigration, the best possible start in life for your child, higher wages for everybody and equal opportunities for all. Only the Greens break with this bland consensus by having a special policy for helping bees. 

Not a single manifesto has the guts to declare its intention to discriminate against people with freckles, strip the inhabitants of Swansea of their civil rights, deport Bruce Forsyth or promise a free bottle of whisky a day to every household. Most of them promise to put the patient first when it comes to the NHS, rather than breaking with this banal orthodoxy and prioritising syringes or stethoscopes instead.”

Important dates for new councillors

Wednesday 13 May 6-9 pm  New councillor induction

Wednesday 20 May 6-9 pm – second new councillor induction meeting (NOT a repeat)

Wednesday 27 May 5.30 pm – Chief Executive Briefing

Wednedsay 27 May 6.30 pm – Annual Council Meeting

Tips:  

Do not be intimidated or misled by any information given to you, check it for yourself and sort out the subjective advice and objective advice, the wheat and the chaff.

Much is made of what councillors CANNOT or SHOULD NOT do rather than what they CAN AND SHOULD do.  Always double-check what you have been told.  You have wide powers and basically you are free to do anything that is lawful and of benefit to the district.

Some “old guard” councillors who may be re-elected may be very reluctant to let go of the reins of power – they may have to be wrestled from them.

The Chief Executive and his officers must maintain political neutrality throughout the life of the council.

Much will be made of ” this is how it has always been done”.  To which the reply should be: “Why?  Is there a better, more democratic and transparent way to do it in future”.

More information on Local Plan arrangements 

From EDDC website

“Eight-week consultation on draft Local Plan starting on 16 April

A fresh public consultation on the future blueprint for planning in East Devon will be launched on Thursday 16 April and will run until Friday 12 June.

Planning Inspector Anthony Thickett has advised East Devon District Council of the matters that he wishes to see consulted upon, following the completion of extra work that planning officers were required to do to supplement the previously submitted draft Local Plan.

The Inspector has given the council a list of questions and these will be available for interested members of the public to view online, at Knowle and at libraries and town council offices across the district for a period of eight weeks.

Awareness

Awareness of the latest opportunity to comment on aspects of the draft Local Plan 2013-2031 will be raised via a number of channels, including public notices, a press release, social media, EDDC’s website, emails and letters to all individuals and agents on the Planning Policy service’s database, and documents placed in council offices and libraries, plus Exeter Central Library.

As before, it will be possible for people to submit comments online or on forms that may be emailed or sent through the post. These will be available on the council’s website and at the various access points around East Devon. Details about the consultation are available on the New Local Plan and current consultations page.

In this final round of consultation, the council will be asking residents to comment only on revisions to the earlier version of the draft Local Plan.

The Inspector’s questions that are open for comment will be grouped together in four clusters, plus there will be a fifth section for comment on any proposed changes not covered by the Inspector’s questions.

The four specific clusters concern:

  • Housing levels and development in the plan
  • Gypsy and Traveller provision
  • Site allocations
  • Community Infrastructure Levy (CIL)

Each access point will have a package of information available, including guidance notes explaining what the Inspector wants to know and how to fill in the electronic forms or paper documents.

Comments must be received by 12 noon on Friday 12 June 2015 at the very latest. The responses received will be collated and sent on direct to the Inspector for his consideration. It is anticipated that the Inspector will be able to reconvene hearing sessions in July.

Any enquiries relating to the Examination of the two documents should be addressed to the Programme Officer, Amanda Coombes, at the Council Offices in Sidmouth, via email or by telephone: 01395 571682.”

The curse of leaders who get too powerful

Editorial in today’s Independent newspaper:

Editorials

Rahman rumbled


Tower Hamlets is a warning. Local politics will be open to abuse so long as mayors can run their councils unopposed


Local government has long been the weakest link in the country’s democratic infrastructure. The verdict that LutfurRahman, the one-time mayor of Tower Hamlets, was guilty of corrupt and illegal practices represents only the latest episode in a long line of crooks and chancers, of whom T Dan Smith, the corrupt leader of Newcastle upon Tyne in the 1960s, was the flashiest and most audacious.


Too often local council leaders become national figures for all the wrong reasons, either purely political or personal – Shirley Porter, in Westminster, for alleged gerrymandering, and Derek Hatton in Liverpool, for sacking his own workers, their redundancy notices delivered by a fleet of taxis.


Mr Rahman’s disqualification is unprecedented for a directly elected mayor, though some others, not least Ken Livingstone in London, have had their share of (much less serious) scrapes. Mr Livingstone may now regret defending Mr Rahman against what he called “smears” when the initial investigation began last year. The verdict vindicates the journalists who first raised doubts about Mr Rahman – and were dubbed “Islamophobic” for their troubles, as were many of those, including political opponents, who stood against him.


In any case, local democracy is certainly not receiving the attention it deserves. On 7 May, people will also be voting in contests covering all 36 metropolitan boroughs, 194 districts, 49 of the unitary authorities, and for various directly elected mayors.


In most of these elections, much more than Westminster this time round, the results are a foregone conclusion. One of the more regrettable consequences of the decline of the Liberal Democrats was their disappearance in council chambers where they were usually the only opposition to an overwhelmingly Labour or Conservative administration.


Outside Scotland and Wales, where the Scottish National Party and Plaid Cymru are now making local politics more competitive, Ukip and the Greens are still a minor, though sometimes significant, force. (Not always an effective one, as the chaotic Green-run Brighton and Hove administration and tweets from the madder Ukip councillors prove.)


So far too many councils are virtual one-party states. Take the local authorities covering the constituencies of the Prime Minister and the Leader of the Opposition. In the Tory West Oxfordshire, the Conservatives have a grip on 40 of the 49 seats; in Doncaster, Labour holds 50 of the 63 places on the council. In the Miliband family’s home borough of Islington, Labour represents 47 of the 48 wards.


Where such one-party dominance is coupled with a powerful directly elected mayor, as was sometimes the case in TowerHamlets, democracy cannot flourish. By contrast, the London mayoralty works so well because the Mayor’s actual powers are very limited, his ability to raise funds confined to public transport and congestion charging, and he spends comparatively little. Despite the big personalities of Mr Livingstone and Boris Johnson, real power is actually dispersed through the 32 London boroughs. But the mayors in other cities have far too much power and budget for comfort.


The solution is to introduce proportional representation in local councils, which would encourage councillors to work together, blur tribal distinctions and help politics to mature generally. In “hung” councils this has become the norm, and there is no evidence that these are worse run than their one-party state counterparts. The second stage is to end the experiment of directly elected mayors, outside the special case of London.


In many cases they lack legitimacy. In cities such as Leicester the electors were not even offered a referendum to say whether they wanted this radical constitutional innovation in the first place. In Hartlepool, the voters signalled their disaffection by voting in a man in a monkey suit, who served three terms in all before the directly elected mayoralty was abolished by referendum three years ago.


As part of the “Northern Powerhouse” scheme, the Government and local authorities of Lancashire seem determined to create a mayor of the “Greater Manchester Combined Authority” by 2017. That promises the worst of all worlds: a one-party regional government in an unaccountable mega-council. With so much focus on devolution for Scotland, and coalitions at Westminster, local democracy seems set to continue on its path of benign neglect.”

A BBC reporter visited the richest, poorest, oldest and youngest constituencies in England to find out what people thought of the General election and voting.  Results were fairly predictable – confusion about who to vote for in Eastbourne (oldest), a predisposition for Labour in Nottingham (poorest), staunchly Conservative (richest),  apathy and confusion in Blackburn (youngest) but he ended his piece by saying:

“Apart from a Conservative billboard, as we pulled out of Eastbourne, I didn’t see a single election poster on the entire 634-mile trip. No boards in gardens, no party stickers in windows. For large parts of the country it barely feels like there is an election happening at all.”

It just shows how different East Devon is from the rest of the country!  But we knew that anyway!  And we know why:  people such as Claire Wright and the East Devon Alliance are aware that there is a need for REAL change in the district and are prepared to do something about it.

Parachute MPs in safe seats

“The policy of parachuting in candidates from Westminster to a safe party seat somewhere so that that person is essentially guaranteed power is poisonous.”

Safe constituency?

Letter published by Western Morning News:

“So Mr Swire, in defiance of the Electoral Reform Society, regards Devon East as a “safe” Conservative seat? But how would he know when, until recently, he he has little contact with his constituency?

Have his advisers not warned him of the huge popular support for homegrown Independent candidate Claire Wright who is now the only parliamentary candidate who could unseat him? Has he not been told that she has actually listened to the concerns of local people? Is he not aware of her impressive record of public service to her community in combating inappropriate development of East Devon’s precious green spaces, in campaigning for greater local democracy, and in fighting to keep hospital units and other key public services, all of which have been under sustained attack from Mr Swire’s government’s cut-backs? 

And does Mr Swire think that by erecting large expensive blue billboards in fields (often those owned by those who have been exploiting our green and pleasant land) that he can persuade the public to vote  again for a party whose planning set-up has given the green light to such developments?

It is often unguarded comments that show the true nature of a person. Mr Swire’s arrogant joke when acting as auctioneer at the exclusive Mayfair fundraising party in February reveals his  attitude to those less fortunate than himself – he said that anyone on benefits could afford to bid £55,000 to support the Conservative Party.”

Michael Temple (Sidmouth address and contact number)

 

 

Body language

Great photo of Hugo Swire at the Clyst Vale Community College hustings on the Facebook Page of Claire Wright Independent Parliamentary Candidate page  – his body language says it all!

It can’t have helped that this was one of the local places where Claire Wright received her education.  Maybe she would have been intimidated if she had been at Eton (Hugo’s old school) though we doubt it!

Isn’t Exmouth so lucky to have Clinton Devon Estates looking after its interests …

Clinton Devon Estates took the time, trouble and money to put this advertisement in this week’s Exmouth Journal.  Judge for yourselves whether this is a good thing for Exmouth or not.  The fact that the new draft Local Plan is out for consultation at the moment is a total coincidence no doubt.

 

Thursday, April 23, 2015 Exmouth journal

CLINTON DEVON ESTATES

A statement from Clinton Devon Estates

Our support for the future of Exmouth

We understand that some residents are concerned about the future growth and development of Exmouth and the role of Clinton Devon Estates in helping to deliver it. We would therefore like to take this opportunity to explain how we believe it can be achieved responsibly and sensitively.

Our vision is for a wholly sustainable development to meet the social, economic and environmental needs of the next generation; providing our children and grandchildren with a well-connected, balanced community with homes for all ages, employment and space for nature and for leisure.

Seven years of research and feedback, including information received during our Plumb Park consultation, has informed our vision to support the sustainable development of Exmouth. One key finding is that hardly any affordable housing has been delivered over the past I 0 years. Our response to this evidence includes:

  • 350 new homes to be built at Plumb Park— 40% (140) of which will be affordable housing to enable younger people and families to stay in the town
  • An application for 44 houses at Douglas Gardens of which 24 are age-restricted, enabling independent living for as long as possible
  • A proposed care village to provide for Exmouth’s growing elderly population
  • All new homes and streets inspired by the Avenues Design Statement
  • 14 acres of public open space, including a hilltop park, and access to the Maer from Pound Lane, providing valuable space for nature
  • Multi million pound investment in Liverton Business Park to provide space for employment, for both small and medium businesses, within walking or cycling distance of new homes
  • A fast-tracked upgrade to the traffic system at Littleham Cross
  • A commitment to agriculture in the Littleham Valley

Clinton Devon Estates’ links with Exmouth go back many hundreds of years. Our track record of delivering homes and employment as well as our investment in agriculture, the environment and the local economy should offer reassurance that we have the best interests of the town and the community at heart, both for today and for the next generation. Indeed, all proceeds from our sustainable developments will be reinvested in Exmouth and the local area.

We invite you to view our masterplan for Exmouth’s sustainable future at http://www.plumbpark.co.uk

First Conservative Minister sighted in East Devon – Hugo feeling the pressure in his safe seat?

Ministers are usually wheeled out only in marginal constutuencies this late in an election period.  So why was the Transport Minister in East Devon (admittedly only a “flying” visit to the airport to sing its praises) and why did Hugo Swire feel it worth both a Twitter entry AND a picture ?  It’s not a marginal seat after all ….

Conservative leaflet says “Vote for Name Surname”!

Can’t be too many people called “Name Surname” in East Ham!

http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2015/04/22/tory-candidate-leaflet-urges-vote-for-name-surname_n_7115090.html

Sidford – car parking and loss surgery and shops – Herald asks for views

Conversation on Sidmouth Herald website on future of car par in Sidford after loss of doctors surgery and shop closures – development or not?

One commentator says:

“Without the Doctors Surgery will they [EDDC] still charge?”

Another replies:

Lexy’s the hairdresser is on the market…the Post Office is hoping to move into the Spar…The former Butchers is still for sale. Told another shop is on the market…….. 

These shops could do with their free parking again……”

and Sidmouth Herald responds:

I will ask the council about parking charges as a possible story in the paper. It has also been confirmed that the Lloyds Pharmacy will definitely close in the village (to be relocated to the new surgery premises at Stowford). 

I wondered how people feel about another business moving from Sidford? Please get in touch with me on 01392 888504 or eleanor.pipe@archant.co.uk. Thanks, Ellie



Channel E4 to close from 7 am to 7 pm to encourage young people to vote

Channel 4 is to to close its E4 channel on day of general election from 7 am to 7 pm to encourage the youth vote. 

“Viewers tuning in on 7 May will see “Darren”, the man responsible for keeping E4 on air, manning the control room in place of its regular programming.

The first time in the UK a channel has closed down to encourage people to vote, a pre-election marketing campaign will tell viewers: “How many times have you missed life-changing events because you wanted to watch your favourite show?

“May 7 is election day and Darren is going to turn E4 off so you might as well go and vote. You won’t forget will you Darren?”

http://gu.com/p/47mfa