“Ask difficult questions, rock the boat, annoy and upset powerful people …”

In an article titled “These failures show that Rotherham is not alone” by Gaby Hinsliff in today’s Guardian:

… “Casey signalled that an unhealthy culture had become embedded partly because this was a solidly Labour council, one where there was not much political opposition, but also officers who knew the same old people would be re-elected next time. It didn’t do to fall out with them. The same will be true not just in solidly Tory councils but in any organisation where people stay forever, where problem employees aren’t confronted but kicked upstairs.

And that’s why all institutions need faintly oddball, stubborn, counter-cultural people who may well be irritating to work with but ask the questions others don’t. Several of the MPs who have campaigned on institutional child abuse have the same quality; so do most of the investigative reporters who have pursued the story and so arguably does Casey.

It is to be hoped that Goddard does too, because if sunlight is the best disinfectant then contrariness – the ability to ask difficult questions, rock the boat, annoy and upset powerful people – is a crucial second line of defence. An organisation that can listen when the wrong people are talking inside it has at least a chance of listening to the wrong people outside too.

http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/feb/05/child-abuse-failures-rotherham-management

Claire Wright’s odds improve yet again!

As of this evening:

Con 1/10
UKIP 10/1
Claire Wright 10/1
Lib Dems 50/1
Labour 100/1

Recall that Claire Wright started out at 66/1 and Hugo Swire at (as we recall) 1/18. A truly astonishing reversal of fortunes – and still 3 months to go.

If you want a truly LOCAL MP who has devoted herself for years to fighting on local issues and has a sound track record on them, she really is the only choice.

Hugo Swire has rarely been here over the last 5 years as his Foreign Office travels take precedence, the UKIP candidate moved here only when his candidacy was announced a few months ago (though still retaining his family home elsewhere), the Lib Dems have yet to reveal their candidate and the Labour candidate dropped out last week and has not yet been replaced.

Remember if you want to bet responsibly and you are over 18, betting can be found under:

Politics/General/Election/Constituencies/Devon East
(NOT East Devon)

And clever those who got in at 66/1!

Independent now “front-runner” to unseat East Devon’s MP

Message sent in to EastDevonWatch:

FIND OUT HOW CLAIRE WRIGHT WOULD REPRESENT YOU AS OUR NEW MEMBER OF PARLIAMENT IF EAST DEVON ELECTS HER IN MAY. She’ll be at a PUBLIC MEETING IN SIDMOUTH, WEDNESDAY 11 FEBRUARY 2015,
7PM, UNITARIAN CHURCH (AT THE JUNCTION OF HIGH STREET WITH ALL SAINTS ROAD).

The public meeting scheduled for 7 pm on Wednesday 11th February in Sidmouth’s Leigh Browne Room has been moved around the corner to the larger premises at the Unitarian Church on the corner of the High Street and All Saints Road.

A spokesman for Independent Candidate Claire Wright said: “Claire lives in West Hill, Ottery St Mary. Sidmouth was chosen as the first venue in her planned series of public meetings throughout the East Devon constituency as she bids to become our next Member of Parliament.

“Since the meeting was announced last month, Claire has been overwhelmed with messages of support from Sidmouth residents. She has therefore decided to move the event to a larger venue to accommodate the likely numbers.

“Another public meeting is scheduled for Woolbrook on 1st April and Claire will also be attending several events and taking part in election hustings with other candidates in Sidmouth during the run up to May 7th’s General Election.”

When Claire Wright first announced her candidature the bookmakers gave odds of 66-1 against her winning. The odds have shortened week after week since then and she is now seen as the front-runner to displace the current MP.

Claire Wright lays down challenge to Hugo Swire

CLAIRE WRIGHT CHALLENGES HUGO SWIRE TO PUT RESIDENTS BEFORE PARTY AND TO STOP THE SAVAGE CUTS IN DEVON’S GRANTS

Claire Wright, the Devon County Councillor and Independent candidate running against the current MP, Hugo Swire, at the General Election, has challenged her opponent.

“On 10th February, the House of Commons will be deciding on Council Budget cuts for the next financial year. The leader of the Conservative-led Devon County Council, which has secured savings of £128 million since 2009, has warned that further cuts of £50 million will have to be made in the next financial year and another £34 million in the following year.

“In the past, Mr Swire, you have voted for annual cuts without even making an argument on behalf of your constituents. As your website still claims that you were ‘sent to the Commons to speak up and vote for the people of East Devon’, speak up now!

“The hard-pressed people in our constituency, not least the large number of carers who face problems as the local NHS struggles to cope on an unfair grant, need help. We are confronted with the prospect of more savage cuts which will cause massive hardship, especially to those who are already severely penalised by earlier reductions in expenditure. They are often the people least able to cope with the cuts and many of them find it hard to believe that ‘we are all in this together’”.

Claire Wright continued. “Devon is the third largest county in England, has a higher than average-age local population, a lower population density and is the destination for huge numbers of holiday makers. Their needs, too, must be catered for if tourism, a key factor in the local economy, is to be sustained. The county cannot stand any more swingeing cuts. Who would have thought, just a few years ago, that many in the constituency would have to visit food banks?

“The relatively less difficult cuts in expenditure have already caused genuine hardship. Now the prospect of even more reductions implies a bleak future for thousands already suffering from the impact of earlier decreases. More cuts will make it even more difficult to meet core duties in protecting children, the vulnerable and the elderly.

“We have seen threats to, or closures of, inpatient beds at community hospitals, minor injuries units, youth centres, libraries, care homes, day centres and children’s homes and services. Now, if further drastic cuts are imposed, we shall see, for example, reductions in county-sponsored bus services, which will have a grim impact on the elderly who lack private transport and are too frail to carry heavy shopping so have to use local bus services frequently. Some £1.7 million must be saved from the budget of £5.376 million for 200 public council-run bus services which carry 4.5 million passengers annually.

“The allowance for school children is £300 per head per year less than for children elsewhere. Will it be cut again? The council has said that the school crossings budget must be cut by £100,000 per year in the next two years.

“Highway budgets are being cut to our extensive network and some of our roads will no longer be gritted, resulting in more accidents which will add to the pressure on the already challenged Royal Devon and Exeter hospital. Eight million square metres of grass verge will no longer be cut. What impression will that give our tourists? The Coalition government wants councils to use their reserves: Devon’s reserves of £14 million would vanish in a few days.

“I am angry at the way in which the Coalition government spends our money. They spent £70 million setting up the unwanted Police and Crime Commissioners and wasted £3 billion on the reorganisation of the NHS. Now they are proposing to spend £50 billion on the HS2 project. It is shocking that this money is being wasted when the when the government is cutting public services back strongly and causing hardship.

“As the fifth largest economy in the world it is ridiculous that some people in the UK have to choose between heating and eating. We can offer a better life to our citizens through eliminating waste, redistributing national income more fairly and securing a higher tax take from those companies, which, obeying the law, nevertheless deny this country billions of pounds in tax income each year.

Even Devon County Council Conservative leader, Councillor John Hart has publicly urged Devon MPs to back the council and vote against the cuts.

“I call on Mr Swire to choose to support the residents of East Devon, instead of his political party and, on February 10th to argue against and vote against the savage cuts.

Future family heirlooms! (and no, the middle one is NOT blue and white!)

IMG_0692

The diamonds on the EDA rosette are said to represent the 7 main towns of East Devon, the green our (fast diminishing) green and pleasant land and the blue the sea beyond it.  The rosette for Claire Wright is NOT blue – it is a deep emerald green – blame the poor camera for the poor colour rendition!

Claire Wright endorses East Devon Alliance move

From Claire Wright’s Facebook page:

LOCAL HISTORY was made today, with the East Devon Alliance announcing that it has registered with the Electoral Commission to field Independent candidates for the East Devon District Council elections in May…..

The inspirational and irrepressible Paul Arnott and Cllr Ben Ingham, chair of the East Devon Alliance and Leader of the East Devon Independents respectively, both gave BRILLIANT speeches at Axminster this morning, to a room full of East Devon Alliance supporters.

The aim is to end the oppressive Conservative rule in East Devon. As Ben [Ingham – Leader East Devon Alliance]put it – “and let a breath of fresh air into a stagnant room.”
Exciting times!”

General Election: balance of power

It seems Independent MPs and the very small parties may well hold the balance of power after the next General Election whichever mainstream party has most seats. One vote either way on a contentious issue such as the NHS might well be crucial.

Time for Ladbroke’s to drop Claire Wright’s odds again perhaps!

Independent councillor calls for more Independent Councillors

[At her manifesto launch] Mrs Wright called for more councillors of other political parties to stand at this May’s town and district council elections, adding: “We have a Conservative crime commissioner, a Conservative MP and every council locally is Conservative.”

“The county council…tends to be, fairly progressive, but the district council is…a dinosaur. It has always had a large Conservative majority…getting things through is quite difficult because they block vote, and that can’t be good for democracy.

“People are tired of the old political parties, and May 7 has to be about getting a better balance on EDDC, and [a greater number of] other councillors, especially independents, because they don’t have to toe a party line and can vote with their consciences.”

Twissgate: London’s Victoria and Albert Museum makes Claire Wright famous and Councillor Twiss infamous!

The Victoria and Albert Museum in London has a current exhibition (soon to close) called “Disobedient Objects” which the museum describes as:

“From a Suffragette tea service to protest robots, this exhibition is the first to examine the powerful role of objects in movements for social change. It demonstrates how political activism drives a wealth of design ingenuity and collective creativity that defy standard definitions of art and design. Disobedient Objects focuses on the period from the late 1970s to now, a time that has brought new technologies and political challenges. On display are arts of rebellion from around the world that illuminate the role of making in grassroots movements for social change: finely woven banners; defaced currency; changing designs for barricades and blockades; political video games; an inflatable general assembly to facilitate consensus decision-making; experimental activist-bicycles; and textiles bearing witness to political murders.”

A major exhibit is a wall of recent sayings associated with civil disobedience:

cull

Look very carefully at the slogan between “Badger Watch Area” and”London’s Burning” and you will see the slogan

“Cull the Tories”

This exhibit wall was curated by the V and A and, as far as we know, the museum has not been reported to the Metropolitan Police.

FAME AT LAST!

https://eastdevonwatch.org/2014/12/19/cullgate-spreads-through-the-blogosphere/

http://www.westernmorningnews.co.uk/Police-urged-investigate-cull-Tories-blog-remark/story-25016293-detail/story.html

Claire Wright (Ind) Manifesto launch press release

The Independent Parliamentary candidate for East Devon, Claire Wright, launched her general election manifesto in Exmouth on 27th January.

Speaking to 80 enthusiastic supporters, she explained that her manifesto was unique because it was based on the local voters’ concerns. It took into account hundreds of responses to a survey, comments from street events in all the constituency towns and many villages, conversations with thousands of local people and hundreds of town centre traders, “the life blood of our local economy”.

bnSome 40,000 leaflets had been distributed, which prompted more ideas and offers of help. Claire Wright also mentioned her experience on the East Devon District and Devon County councils and looked forward to a series of public meetings.

Now, with less than 100 days before the general election, she outlined some of her policies. The subject of greatest concern to local people, and to the rest of the country, was the future of the National Health Service. “East Devon’s community hospitals…have never been more at risk than they are now. We hear every day of the postponement of operations and of casualty departments not being able to cope.” She warned that in five years’ time, as demand grows, the NHS in Devon will be over £400 million in deficit and vowed to fight to protect local health services and argue for more funds for this area which has been historically under-funded.

Claire Wright condemned the East Devon District council for failing to agree a local plan which had allowed “rapacious developers” so “we are at a high risk of speculative and large-scale development”. This could not continue: the infrastructure was creaking. The environment also concerned local people and “human beings cannot exist without a successful natural world and this would also be a priority area for me”.

The possibility that the ground occupied by the Exmouth Rugby Club might be used for a new supermarket would damage local traders and was not consistent with current supermarket policy. The area should remain a sports field. Claire Wright condemned EDDC who had taken at least two years to decide on the future of “the unique” Exmouth Sea front, thus causing planning problems for local businesses. The council had behaved “quite badly”.

The council-imposed cuts and the proposed Devon County Council reduction of another £30 million next year were criticised. There were closures or the threat of closures, for youth centres, libraries, care homes, day centres, children’s homes, minor injuries units and inpatient beds. The use of food banks, even in East Devon, “had shot through the roof”. The House of Commons would soon be voting on funding for local authorities. “We shall see whether our current MP, yet again, votes in favour of the monumental cuts meted out to local authorities.”

How could some of the essential services could be funded? Claire Wright cited the “dubious HS2 project whilst local lines are denied funding”. It should be scrapped and the money spent on what people want. The plan to create elected police and crime commissioners had cost £70 million, equal to £14 per vote recorded. “We don’t need the commissioner: we need more police constables”. £3 billion had been spent on “yet another confusing and totally misguided re-organisation of the NHS… Government priorities on spending are wrong” and the cynical phrase “we’re all in it together, has never had such a hollow ring”.

There was widespread anger with East Devon District Council and its “arrogant bulldozer attitude to local people’s views”. It will “go its own way, even if it harms local people’s livelihoods” and the formation of many campaign groups, such as the East Devon Alliance, “should have sounded alarm bells to our MP and the local council but they appear to be deaf and blind to the threat posed by the public’s fury”. “Because the council and our MP are members of the same political club, challenges to either are few and far between. This damages democracy, the credibility of local government and its parliamentary representatives.”

Claire Wright promised to continue to challenge the councils and to condemn unnecessary expenditure. She would back the campaign for votes for young people who tended to be ignored. “People of 16 can get married, join the armed forces and pay taxes. Youth unemployment rose by 30,000 to 764,000 in the three months to last November. They should be represented.”

Speaking with conviction, she explained why a vote for an independent was a very positive vote and, that, as an independent, she would never have to choose between her conscience and a party line.

Betting odds shorten on Wright (Ind) and lengthen on Swire (Con)

Claire Wright started at 66/1 and is today 10/1, just behind UKIP at 8/1. Odds on Hugo Swire have dropped to 1/7.

Should you fancy a bet (but, of course, bet responsibly and be over 18) Ladbrokes Online do not make it easy to place one!

First you need to go to the A-Z of betting headings and choose Politics, then General Election and then General Election Constituencies. At this point they make it even harder: in the A-Z of constituencies our district comes under D for Devon East and not E for East Devon!

East Devon: General Election Political News

In the East Devon constituency as of today:

The Green Party has decided not to put up a candidate in East Devon.

The Liberal Democrats have yet to announce if they have a candidate.

Labour Party candidate Jessica Pearce has withdrawn her candidature and Labour must now find a substitute.

Confirmed candidates as of today: Andrew Chapman (UKIP), Hugo Swire (Conservative) and Claire Wright (Independent).

Independent Parliamentary candidate launches Manifesto

Independent Parliamentary Candidate Claire Wright launched her Manifesto in Exmouth this morning.

Thanks to Real Zorro for this link to the Manifesto:

Click to access CWrightJanFeb2015Leaflet.pdf

And here is the speech she gave this morning – stirring stuff:

http://www.claire-wright.org/index.php/election

Take note Ladbrokes!

OSC draft minutes: “remaining inaccuracies”, and “a little more for the record” from EDA.

Councillor Tim Wood, Chair of the Overview and Scrutiny Committee (OSC), has been copied in to this e-mail just sent to EDDC from EDA Chair, Paul Arnott. (This evening’s OSC meeting begins at 6.30pm at Knowle.)

‘ I note that Tim (Wood) as Chairman of the Overview and Scrutiny Committee in question, has removed the falsehood that Mr Williams had been “accused” by me of “meddling” with the police investigation. It is regrettable that EDDC published this in draft form online, and an apology from the council would be usual in the circumstances.

As you have already sent out the amendment, there is little point in my further commenting on its remaining inaccuracies. I will take the Chairman’s thanks for my taking time in transcribing the recording and pointing out the errors in the minutes as read.

However, it seems worth saying just a little more for the record, for Tim to consider in his role as Chairman of Overview and Scrutiny. As a former MP his experience in these matters carries much weight in the district.

Mr Mark Williams’ own published account and recorded statements in November disclose that very early in the timeline of the investigation – in the Spring of 2013 – he offered prejudicial opinions to the police in relation to the motivations of those who may have wished to give evidence in this matter.

Then, on the conclusion of the matter in November 2014, he repeated this course, and attempted to heap more blame on these same people, to their material disadvantage. It was an open effort by him to discredit councillors and public alike.

In summary, Mr Williams sought to do reputational damage both before and after the investigation. He then interfered with the course of any further internal investigation by attempting to eliminate a named councillor from the process.

In his November 2014 statement, sent to every councillor before your last meeting, he then falsely smeared the East Devon Alliance, of which I am chairman.

For your information, the EDA was not even constituted until some months after Mr Williams’ own colleague, Ms Denise Lyon, freely decided to report Mr Brown to the police, presumably with his knowledge and tacit approval.

If Mr Williams was keeping a cooler head he would understand that the East Devon Alliance was constituted after the event, and well after his own council had decided it must involve the police.

Many independent-minded, experienced council tax payers considered at the time that from that point on the whole process would require strong independent scrutiny. This is a function which the East Devon Alliance, amongst others, has performed valiantly, I’d suggest, on this and a range of other key district issues. They deserve greater respect than inaccurate and arrogant assertions from the man whose wage they pay.

On a personal note, just to be very clear indeed, I have never had any knowledge of Mr Brown, and had only ever heard his name mentioned, prior to the Telegraph report in March 2013, when local councillors, particularly my ward member Cllr Helen Parr, stated privately that they believed him to be one of a small number who had brought the planning system into disrepute over many years. Who could disagree with her?

These opinions were being freely offered years before Cllr Claire Wright, for example, was even a councillor. Perhaps they never came to Mr Williams’ ear.

I and many others consider that Mr William’s attack on Cllr Wright (and others) – both through the document he published before the November O&S, and indeed his disgraceful attack on Cllr Roger Giles during that meeting (which does not seem to have been seen as noteworthy enough to make the minutes) – were astonishingly ill-judged for one in his position. A matter for scrutiny, perhaps?

As to the police investigation into this matter, let it be recorded that it accomplished nothing other than to provide six hundred days political cover for EDDC to refuse to openly debate and make amends for its mistakes in Planning policy.

Any sincere and rigorous internal investigation carried out by councillors supposedly keen to get to the facts in Spring 2013 would have ranged from the inappropriate influence of the EDBF to the real narrative behind the catastrophic failure to implement a Local Plan in a timely fashion. This failure, predicted by many, leaves us without any protection for our district from opportunistic and unsustainable development. There is no gain in this for the residents of East Devon; the gain is plainly elsewhere.

With hindsight, it appears that the public interest in this matter would have been for Ms Lyon not to have made a report – not an allegation, it should be noted – to the police, but instead to have put extra impetus and urgency into the TAFF set up to look at matters in this area. Instead, this TAFF was put on ice. Tonight we shall learn of its refreshed remit, and precisely who the Chairman of O&S, and the officers he has consulted, deem helpful to sit on it.

As a layman, it would not be difficult to reach the conclusion that the police role as this story played allowed the council to keep this whole matter in the long grass. It can also be fairly commented that the police did not seem in any great haste to retrieve it.

all best wishes

Paul

Allegedly misleading draft minutes of OSC amended…in part.

From EDDC to EDA Chair, Paul Arnott, this afternoon:

The Chairman of Overview and Scrutiny Committee has provided the following words for proposed amendment to the minutes of the 13 November 2014 meeting.

Minute 47 (page 4) second paragraph be replaced with:

‘Mr Paul Arnott spoke from the floor putting some critical questions regarding the work both of the police and the Council in the investigation of a former councillor. He claimed that “the chief executive of the compromised authority did what he could to meddle with the internal investigations​” and also asked the police and crime commissioner, Mr Hogg, if he found it coincidental that something like six hundred days after a report was made from this authority to the police about the conduct of a former councillor, five hundred and ninety-nine days later, and one day before he appeared before the committee, the police finally announced that there would be no further action. Mr Hogg did not comment at the time but later, in response to questions to Mr Hogg and senior police officers, it was made clear by Superintendent Perkin that the police investigation had been long and complex and that they did not think the senior investigating officer would have been aware of this meeting.’

Minute 54 (page 12) 8th paragraph from the start of the minute be replaced with:

‘Councillor Claire Wright commented on the recent circulation of a letter of the East Devon Alliance. She went on to state that any attempt to eject her from the membership of the Business TaFF would send a message to the public that the Council had something to hide.’

These proposed amendments have been circulated to the Overview & Scrutiny Committee, for their meeting this evening (6.30pm, Knowle).

For EDA’s response, see next blogpost….

Cllr Claire Wright on ‘The battle to protect our trees’ (Tues 20 Jan, 2.30pm. Manor Pavilion)

In her capacity as Tree Champion, Cllr Claire Wright will be giving a Talk on ‘The battle to save our trees and biodiversity–a councillor’s perspective’, by invitation of the National Trust Sidmouth Centre. All welcome. Admission ( £3 NT members, £4 non-NT members) includes tea/coffee and biscuits afterwards.

Man the defences!

One needs a sense of irony when reading this Express and Echo reader’s letter. One suspects it may pass over the heads of many in our majority party!

http://www.exeterexpressandecho.co.uk/Reader-8217-s-Letter-sort-MP-does-East-Devon-want/story-25811722-detail/story.html

Exmouth Journal: Swire takes two pages to say all he does is shake hands and check his Twitter feed whilst Wright questions EDDC HQ “scandalous plans” on Letters page

Below is a direct quotation from two pages of (free publicity) for Hugo Swire in this week’s Exmouth Journal.  Hard to know why the newspaper published his long and rambling article as it had nothing to say about Exmouth or East Devon but had LOTS and LOTS to say about his globetrotting!

image1

Compare the two glowing pages on Swire’s international profile to the succinct and straightforward letter from Independent Parliamentary candidate Claire Wright in the same newspaper on Knowle relocation:

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We know which we prefer!

East Devon Prospective Parliamentary Candidate featured on Oscar Pearson’s prestigious ‘Chat Politics’.

Councillor Claire Wright was invited to explain why she is standing as an Independent in the May 2015 election. Her response makes very interesting reading, and includes her excellent Parliamentary Campaign Launch speech (June 2014). Here’s the link:
http://www.claire-wright.org/index.php/post/why_would_anyone_run_for_parliament_as_an_independent