Meet the Candidates (East Devon PPCs, and for Sidmouth Town and District Council), organised by VGS

Click here for details: VGS hustings poster1.pages

100 doctors: use your vote to ensure the NHS in England is reinstated

Leading doctors in the NHS have accused the coalition government of a catalogue of broken promises, funding cuts and destructive legislation which has which has left the health service weaker than ever before in its history.

… As medical and public health professionals our primary concern is for all patients. We invite voters to consider carefully how the NHS has fared over the last five years, and to use their vote to ensure that the NHS in England is reinstated,” they write.

The signatories to the letter include Dr Clare Gerada, former chair of the Royal College of General Practitioners; Prof John Ashton, retired director of public health; epidemiologist professor Michel Coleman; Simon Capewell, professor of public health in Liverpool; Trisha Greenhalgh, professor of primary care at Oxford; Martin McKee, professor of European public health, and Raymond Tallis, emeritus professor of geriatric medicine in Manchester.

The letter, which the doctors have written in a private capacity, challenges the government on its NHS record and deplores the current pressures facing the health service.

http://www.theguardian.com/society/2015/apr/07/more-than-100-top-doctors-attack-government-record-on-nhs

The only Parliamentary candidate who has done this for years and continues to do it is Independent Claire Wright.

Devolution is a key election issue for 18-24 year olds

Just a third (32 per cent) of 18 to 24-year-olds polled by ComRes, for the Local Government Association (LGA), said they are certain to vote in May’s election.

Almost two-thirds (64 per cent) said a manifesto commitment to shift power and funding for public services from Westminster to their local community would be important in enticing them out to the ballot box on May 7.

Half (51 per cent) said national TV debates between the main party leaders would encourage them to vote and just 26 per cent would be persuaded by celebrities.

Other findings of the survey of young people include:

73 per cent said decisions about how local public services are run should be made by their local council rather than national government in Westminster.
Three-quarters (75 per cent) of 18 to 24-year-olds believe their local council is best placed to make decisions about services for young people in their area as opposed to MPs (12 per cent).

Seven in 10 (71 per cent) said they would find it easier to influence services run by their local council rather than those run by MPs in Westminster.

Despite young people trusting councils more than central government and MPs when it comes to their local area, too many local decisions – such as how to give young people the advice, skills and experience needed by local businesses – are dictated by government.

http://www.local.gov.uk/web/guest/media-releases/
/journal_content/56/10180/7166749/NEWS

Westpoint- Planning application to remove exemption for Speedway/Timed Car Trials. Public Meeting planned 15th April (tbc).

New concerns for Save Clyst St Mary campaigners, outlined in this message today from organiser Gaeron Kayley:

‘ In case you weren’t aware, Westpoint has applied for an exemption to its planning permission to allow timed car trials on its site. Obviously this is a concern as it is likely to be very noisy and could potentially cause additional pollution to the area too..

This is the link to the planning application (15/0139/VAR):
https://planning.eastdevon.gov.uk/online-applications/applicationDetails.do?activeTab=summary&keyVal=NIGLWSGHHHM00

As you can see, there is barely any info about what it actually entails at present

Here are the links to the company’s website:
http://www.bhpperformanceshow.com/

and

http://www.bhpperformanceshow.com/gallery

It might also be useful to have a look at their own clip on YouTube:

Although the application is for one day, we fear this will be a sliding slope and that there might be additional requests for more days – hence the reason we have brought it to your attention.

Having spoken to The Parish Council, I can confirm there will be a public meeting in the School Hall on Wednesday 15th April Starting at 19.30 (This date and time is subject to confirmation once the school has re-opened).

On a different note, we understand there have been some recent changes in personnel at East Devon District Council, including a new Head of Planning. However, at present, there is no clarification of this on their website. To save time and ensure that we can have direct contact with the right people, if and when this is required,we would be grateful if any member of our group working for EDDC could contact us to confirm appointments and contact details. This will ensure we can get in contact with the right people and not disturb those unconnected with our interests!’
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Is it appropriate for a developer to arrange a parliamentary candidates meeting for 15 people who bought their flats?

Anyone else think this is poor judgment on the part of candidates to accept an invitation to talk to just 15 of his leasehold occupiers about issues of the day?

“Issues affecting Devon’s older population were put firmly on the pre-election agenda at a special event in Honiton hosted by Churchill Retirement Living.

The specialist developer invited the local MP Neil Parish and representatives from each of the main political parties to meet with existing and prospective Owners at Holyshute Lodge in Honiton and address the issues important to them in a lively ‘Question Time’ style debate.

The events come on the back of a recent survey by the retirement developer, which found that three-quarters of over-60s believe they are “unseen and unheard” by the major political parties, while one in ten are so disenfranchised that they aren’t certain they’ll vote in this year’s general election.

Over 15 voters aged 60 and above attended the event to put their questions to Neil Parish MP (Conservative) and Labour candidate Caroline Kolek. Topics raised included the privatisation of the NHS, immigration and social care policy.”

http://www.exeterexpressandecho.co.uk/Issues-affecting-Devon-elderly-discussed-Honiton/story-26290408-detail/story.html

Force young people to vote – even for “none of the above”

But why just 18 year olds (the article says to get them into the habit of voting) and what if ” none of the above” is the majority choice!

http://www.westernmorningnews.co.uk/Young-people-forced-vote/story-26287132-detail/story.html

MP voting records

Is your MP a Tory or Lib Dem? Want to know what they’ve been doing in your name for the last five years?

See if they have a parliamentary record worth defending — or one they’d rather you didn’t know…

http://www.labour.org.uk/w/tory-libdem-voting-record?source=2015_03_26_MP_voting_record&subsource=labour_twitter&utm_medium=twitter&utm_source=labourUK&utm_campaign=2015_03_26_MP_voting_record

This is what happened when Hugo Swire’s name was input:

voting

Pizza: the Tories’ secret weapon

For Hugo Swire:

http://www.hugoswire.org.uk/news/local-mp-gets-behind-sainsburys-food-counter

and

George Osborne:

http://www.itv.com/news/meridian/update/2015-03-31/george-osborne-gets-a-pizza-the-action-in-hove/

AND David Cameron, George Osborne AND Boris Johnson – though this time it is the upmarket Swiss resort of Davos where all the rich people meet once a year:

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/meanwhile-in-davoshow-the-pm-george-and-boris-digested-the–gdp-slump-8467629.html

Hugo Swire doesn’t think youthful politicians are a good idea

Question: If you could change one thing about British Politics what would it be?

Hugo Swire’s answer: Make sure that our ageing population also had representatives of their own age and reverse this constant demand for elected politicians to be youthful

http://www.eastdevonconservatives.org/news/spotlight-rt-hon-hugo-swire-mp

Now, who might he be thinking of!

“A view from a disenfranchised youth”

When this magazine’s editor wrote a TV review about politics, Ella Marshall wrote a letter to protest its tone: “Next time you want to publish an article with consideration towards young people, I suggest you let one of us write it”. So we did. Here’s what Ella, 16 – and a Youth MP– had to say on behalf of those too young to vote

* Give us our vote. Lower the voting age to 16 and re-engage young people with the governance of our country. Sixteen is the age at which we may pay tax, are able to have sex and sign up to the military and yet we’re not mature enough for the basic human right to contribute to democracy? Don’t be afraid of amplifying our youthful, and possibly more alternative, political opinions.

* Education shouldn’t be used as a political football. If you do reform schools further, it must be a method by which you can help us grow into rounded human beings, rather than a labour force worn down by our own target grades before the age of 16. We need a curriculum for life. This means professionals visiting schools who are able to teach us about both the physical and emotional aspects of sex. And please stop putting merciless amounts of pressure on our hard-working and dedicated teachers.g

* Hands off the NHS. Government officials who are rich enough to afford private healthcare have been progressively selling off sections of our most essential public service for the past five years. There is no way that moving towards a more privatised system will benefit anybody, other than the privatisers.

* We want less “long-term economic plan” and more “ordinary lives matter”. Every 11 minutes, a family in Britain find themselves homeless and yet, according to the Office for National Statistics, there are over a million empty homes in England and Wales. The richest 1 per cent of people have the same wealth as 55 per cent of the population. We, as young people, are taught about the importance of paying tax and contributing to society and yet there seems to be a different standard for the financial elite.

From the same article below:
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/caroline-lucas-reveals-10-things-no-one-tells-you-before-you-first-enter-parliament-10149138.html

Whips: what they don’t tell you in Parliament by Caroline Lucas

From

“Caroline Lucas reveals 10 things no one tells you before you first enter Parliament”

Whips are all-powerful

Another shock was to see how the powers of parliamentary scrutiny are so poorly exercised. Membership of the ad hoc ‘bill committees’ set up to go through draft legislation line by line is one of the best opportunities to have direct influence over future laws. That’s why the whips generally try to keep people with too much expertise or independence of mind off these committees. Sarah Wollaston, the Conservative MP for Totnes and a former GP, tells of her enthusiasm to sit on the Health and Social Care bill committee. Instead, the whips told her to sit on a committee examining double taxation in the Cayman Islands. When she protested that she knew nothing of the subject, the whips replied that was all to the good: all they wanted her to do was to vote the right way at the right time.”

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/caroline-lucas-reveals-10-things-no-one-tells-you-before-you-first-enter-parliament-10149138.html

Well, he would wouldn’t he!

Election candidate Neil Parish supports bid to make Devon more dementia friendly

http://www.exeterexpressandecho.co.uk/Election-candidate-Neil-Parish-supports-bid-make/story-26278235-detail/story.html

Yes very nice, but would any prospective MP NOT do this?

Cost to him: nothing
Cost to government: nothing

Let’s see more on what he personally will do in government on the NHS, family carers and local government adult care services for people with, or caring for, those with dementia.

Reduced benefits, reduced respite care and stretched and cut-to-the-bone adult services throw these costs on to families and force charities to step in to fill the funding gaps.

Intermittent giving to charity is no substitute for guaranteed funding.

Sidmouth: meet your candidates

From the East Devon Alliance website:

eastdevonalliance.org.uk

(where – as soon as nominations have closed in 9 April – you will find details of all candidates standing under the East Devon Alliance umbrella)

This month the Vision Group for Sidmouth (VGS) is running three “Meet the Candidates” events in the run up to the elections on May 7th.

Dates for your diaries are:

EDDC – Wednesday 15th April

Town Council – Tuesday 21st April
East Devon Parliamentary – Tuesday 28th April.

For the EDDC and Parliamentary elections you will need to forward your questions to

info@visionforsidmouth.org

before the event. More details on the Vision Group for Sidmouth website.

Read more at: http://www.eastdevonalliance.org.uk/news/20150402/vision-group-for-sidmouth-meet-the-candidates-events/

What odds now Claire Wright?

Now pulling crowds in to her events …

Started at 66/1
then 33/1
then 25/1
then 20/1
then 16/1
then 9/1
then 6/1
now 9/2 (4.5/1) at William Hill 5/1 at Ladbrokes

Those people who got their bets in early must be feeling very excited! But still a profit for anyone still keen to get involved.

You must be over 18 and please bet responsibly.

The eleventh hour: why you should vote Independent

For those who do not click on links, here is the text of Paul Arnott of the independent East Devon Alliance’s hopes for change at the crucial district elections as they appear in the current Devonshire magazine:

My first published book about fifteen years ago concerned a subject with a very boring name – adoption – with its potentially dull backdrop of social services and filing cabinets. The only way to animate it was by my personal story. I did not know until my mid-thirties that I had been illegitimately conceived in 1961 by a scared young Irish couple in London, who later went on to marry in Dublin and have four more children, my full-blood siblings. I was a devoted Englishman who it transpired had flesh and blood from County Carlow.

Now here is another boring word – planning. How to persuade a reader that at its dark heart may be the seedbed for the rebirth of our moribund national democracy? It has to be me again, for which I apologise. I was diagnosed with leukaemia four years ago, had a bone marrow transplant three years ago, am fully recovered and should be doing something quiet and nurturing with this reborn life – learning to paint, taking up the harp etc.

Instead I find myself chairman of a movement called the East Devon Alliance, which is supporting a network of Independent candidates to fight the majority of ward seats in the district election happening on the same day as those for Parliament.

It is the biggest Independent effort in British electoral history, more than 40 individual, plucky people who have decided they cannot trust our beloved environment to the whims of a one-party council dominated by pals of developers any longer. They have realised, in supposedly sleepy East Devon, that democracy can only be revived by entirely changing the guard. Indeed, perhaps in this roots-up path may be found the eventual route to national reform?

When I first fell amongst these lovely people, their horror stories from about twenty towns and villages were of a piece with my experience before being ill, making J.K Rowling’s A Casual Vacancy seem like a Year One show-and-tell project. To all of us, it was now beyond doubt that many dominant parish, town and district councillors (and sometimes clerks) mainly sought office to grease the wheels for planning consents for their allies.

Dysfunction was endemic in even the loveliest communities. Rigged agendas, bullying in meetings, and fixed minutes, were all product of the ugly elephant in too many civic rooms. In 2011, the coalition government, announced that in Planning the mantra would now be a “presumption in favour of development”.

It was game on for many well-placed councillors. The only protection against ill-conceived building in the wrong places (key agricultural land) for the wrong people (we need low-cost housing, not executive homes) was for a district to have an adopted (that boring word, again) Local Plan in place. By extraordinary chance, East Devon District Council has managed its affairs in such a way that after an unopposed four year term of office, in a relatively simple area to deal with, it has no such Local Plan at all. Naked in the conference chamber.

Instead, as in the Ireland of my genetic forebears, there is a rush for re-zoning arable for industrial estates, and a gross over-inflation of need at the upper end of the housing market. Of equal concern, there is no positive vision either. Nimbys is the stale acronym thrown at the likes of us. This is unjust.

All of us have identified adjacent to our towns and villages former factories or farmyards which are ideally located for brownfield development, many derelict for years.

Why isn’t the District Council making a united effort to build on these? Is it because this would reduce the need to build on the greenfield locations owned or agented by councillors’ pals, who have long favoured decisions to be made in skittle alleys, lodges and clubs.

We are now at the eleventh hour. I emerged from five months incarceration in a sterile, isolated hospital room to recuperate not in the pollution and tarmac of the London where I was born, but the valleys and hills of the county I love, the landscape which sustains our two essential industries of agriculture and tourism. I, and my fellow Independents, cherish and understand the meaning of stewardship – that we are but passing through. And if we can take back the reins of our afflicted district from the one-party group who now have hold, it is not too late for East Devon to become governed not as the land for robber barons but for a new era of stewards protecting democracy and environment alike.

Click to access devonshire_magazine_april-may_2015-return_of_the_good_stewards.pdf

Want an election visit from Hugo Swire? Put up a Claire Wright poster!

News reaches us of an Exmouth resident personally visited by Hugo Swire yesterday. Was it a coincidence that the resident had Claire Wright posters in the window?

The resident informs us that the household vote remains with Claire Wright and the posters stay up!

Time for more women in politics? Maybe – if more women vote for them!

Given that our choice is between 4 middle-aged (or even rather older) men is it time for East Devon to have a (younger than all of them) MP?

It appears that East Devon has NEVER had a female MP – time for change?

This article makes interesting reading:

…one million fewer women than men are thought to have voted in the last election. …

… Stereotyping by the media and an almost relentless focus on clothing and appearance does little to encourage more women to stand for election: the panel observed that women are still held to a different standard and still portrayed in a different way. We are unlikely ever to see “Downing Street Catwalk” headlines scrutinising the fashion sense of newly appointed male cabinet ministers.

The broader treatment of females in the public eye doesn’t help. Even as a journalist, Kuenssberg commented, “you get a huge amount of stick about what you look like, what you wear, what you say, that male people on air just do not get. And some of it is really unpleasant, and some of it appears in august publications.” As Chakelian also observed, in happily giving front-page attention to Nigel Farage’s recent comments about breastfeeding and women’s pay, the media offered a loud voice to the kind of “straight-up sexism” we thought we’d left back in the ’80s.

It’s not just the newspapers that treat women unfairly. Kuenssberg pointed out that social media “amplifies the best and worst of human behaviour”, and women in the public eye are often the targets of vitriolic attack. For many women, the prospect of their family being scrutinised in the press is considered too high a price to pay for becoming an MP. The appalling abuse directed at Jenny Willott MP after she discussed the challenges of balancing parliamentary duties with parenthood on Inside the Commons was highlighted as a case in point.

[How well we recall Leader Paul Diviani patronisingly referring to Councillor Claire Wright as “young lady” One wonders if he would have enjoyed it if she had then referred to him as “old man”!]

The panel did, however, offer a glimmer of hope. The use of social media has changed since 2010 – with growing numbers of people using these channels to call out newspapers and online commentators on their portrayal of women. This challenge won’t necessarily change behaviour, but it does at least give these issues a thorough airing.”

http://www.instituteforgovernment.org.uk/blog/10829/women-uncovered-gender-imbalance-in-politics-and-the-media/

Those 100 business people supporting David Cameron

Those 100 businessmen supporting David Cameron – half of them have either had honours granted by David Cameron and/or are Conservative Party donors.

Definitely time for change!

” ... 20 signatories who were awarded honours, knighthoods or peerages while David Cameron has been Prime Minister are: John Ayton MBE, Baroness Brady CBE, Peter Cullum CBE, Annoushka Ducas MBE, Sir Charles Dunstone, Philip Green CBE, Michael Gutman OBE, Wendy Hallet MBE, Brent Hoberman CBE, Sir George Iacobescu CBE, Ray Kelvin CBE, Sir Dick Olver, Alan Parker CBE, Tony Bidgley CBE, Nick Robertson OBE, Lord Rose, Baroness Shields OBE, James Wates CBE, Sir Hossein Yassaie and Lord Bamford.

The Conservative donors on the list are Aidan Heavey, Alex Baldock, Sir Cameron Mackintosh, Cassie Hutchings, Sir Charles Dunstone, Charles Wigoder, Sir George Iacobescu, George Weston, James Wates, John Elliott, Julian Granville, Lord Bamford, Lord Karan Bilimoria, Malcolm Walker, Michael Gutman, Michael Turner, Moni Varma, Neil Clifford, Nick Jenkins, Nick Leslau, Sir Nigel Rudd, Oliver Hemsley, Paul Walsh, Peter Grauer, Peter Jackson, Ralph Findlay, Robert Walker, Steven Cohen, Tim Oliver, Tony Pidgley, Will Wyatt, Zameer Choudrey.

There is no suggestion of any wrongdoing on the part of any of the signatories.

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/one-in-five-of-the-businessmen-who-signed-protory-letter-were-given-honours-by-david-cameron-and-one-third-are-tory-donors-10148897.html

Going, going, gone!

Auctioneering, and electioneering, feature in the latest posts on http://realzorro1.blogspot.co.uk/2015/03/independents-vote-in-change-vote-out.html