West Hill or Westminster – local author shares experience of Claire Wright campaign

PRESS RELEASE

West Hill or Westminster

“This is the remarkable story of an independent’s first ever campaign to win the Parliamentary seat of Devon East. In the 2015 General Election, lacking a party label, an experienced party machine and relying on private donations and friends, County Councillor Claire Wright, a hard-working and energetic candidate from West Hill in Devon, contested one of the country’s safest Tory seats. She won the highest number of votes, 13,140, of any independent in the UK. Only one other independent candidate attracted even 5,000 votes. Usually, independents fail to win more than a few hundred votes and their story is seldom heard.

This book offers a rare insight into what is necessary to challenge the big parties. Written by a member of the core team, it reveals the techniques and dilemmas, the problems and successes of the campaign. It explains how the independent, backed by hundreds of supporters, beat three of the four national parties. The developing drama is put into the context of the wider national political scene during the last 100 days and the immediate aftermath of the General Election is discussed.

West Hill or Westminster? will appeal to all those interested in politics, especially at grass roots level, and will be a revelation to the inhabitants of East Devon on the mechanisms behind their own election. This is the 10th book by Philip Algar. Initially an economist, he spent many years as an editor, journalist, lecturer and occasional broadcaster, working in 30 countries.

This book is available from local bookshops and from Amazon or Lulu within the next few weeks. The author, Philip Algar, can supply copies for £9.99 including postage and packing.”

“Brave Hugo”?

From today’s Sidmouth Herald Opinion page:

‘Regarding last week’s front page story about our MP Hugo Swire’s ‘big vision’ for Sidmouth sea front.

It should be noted that Sidmouth has successfully resisted all such overwrought ideas for 200 years. It is this above all else that gives the town such a unique character. It’s unmolested and historic frontage with the sea is not only its greatest attraction and income generator; it is why tourists, visitors, writers, artists, home-buyers come again and again.

It is hard to believe that Hugo (or anyone) truly believes that a multi-story car park and a marina must adorn the nation’s best preserved Regency sea front – and effectively ruin its character (see the East Devon Watch website for possible examples). Will our Westminster representative be remembered as the one to place the first carbuncle?

Is he immune to the messages of Sir John Betjeman, Jane Austen, Elizabeth Barrett Browning who all treasured the town’s character and spoke out against such cultural short-sitedness?

This is not a ‘brave’ vision Hugo, it is a tragic one.

Peter Nasmyth

(author of ‘Literature and Landscape in East Devon.’)’

Oh, naughty Hugo ….

… who boasts on “his” Twitter account that he got on to a “Leader Board” whilst doing a publicity stunt workout … only to have someone post below his photograph that, actually, as only 38 people took part in the challenge, EVERYONE got on to the “top 40” Leader Board!!!

image

 

 

Hugo says tax credits have been much too generous

“Tax credits need to be reformed for numerous reasons not only because they are complicated and prone to error but because they encourage employers to keep wages low because they know the state will top up their wages bill; in effect they are being given a licence to pay less. More importantly tax credits discourage recipients from working harder and longer hours for more pay so productivity and aspiration suffer. An example of this is a single parent with three children who works 16 hours a week on the minimum wage – earning them roughly £5,400 per year. Adding together child tax credit, working tax credit and support for childcare, he/she could receive an additional £23, 885 a year. They would effectively receive around 80 per cent of their income via benefits. However there is little incentive to switch to a job working more than 16 hours a week. The tax credits drop sharply; net income increases more slowly and recipients can face a high marginal tax rate.”

http://www.exeterexpressandecho.co.uk/letter-Hugo-Swire-tax-credit-reduced/story-28110462-detail/story.html

Three kids AND working 16 hours a week at a minimum wage job, probably on zero hours – how does she do it!

For comparison:

[Bankers] “Total bonuses over the past year rose by 4.9 per cent to £40.5billion, of which £14.4billion was paid in the finance and insurance industry, a 2.9 per cent increase, the ONS said”

http://www.thisismoney.co.uk/money/news/article-2737778/Bankers-bonuses-rise-double-rate-average-worker.html

Tax credits cost about £30 billion a year.

https://fullfact.org/economy/welfare_budget_public_spending-29886

“No 10 ridiculed after adding poppy to David Cameron Facebook picture”

First it’s Hugo Swire and Councillor Elson whose photos are changed by EDDC, now it’s David Cameron’s who has had his doctored to add a large poppy.

It seems that when Tory politicians don’t like their pictures – they just airbrush them!

http://gu.com/p/4dp3q

Though no-one appears to have doctored the picture in this article, which accompanies a story about Mr Cameron accepting free membership of an expensive private members club:

http://gu.com/p/4dpv8

where it also says:

… But what kind of club has Cameron joined? It’s one where the dress code requires that men refrain from wearing such excrescences as collarless shirts and deck shoes, while women will be shown the door for sporting denim or exposing their undergarments. It’s one where the menu doesn’t have prices (according to Zagat: “Members sniff, ‘If you ask how much it costs, you can’t afford to eat here’”), but will reportedly offer Dover sole meunière at £40 and wine from £60 a bottle. It’s one where Vivienne Westwood launched her memoirs in 2014, and where Boris Johnson held his Christmas party. It’s one with which Dave and Sam Cam are familiar, since they had a lovely election victory dinner there in May.

Earlier this year, though, the owners of Mark’s decided that their club wasn’t quite exclusive enough. So they chose to cull about a third of its members. “Members will be asked if they want to join the club again,” Charles Price, the American entrepreneur who oversees the club, told Vanity Fair. “If they do, they can submit their applications.”

The idea was to make Mark’s the most exclusive club in London. “It’s going to be a global A-list, from a variety of backgrounds, old world and new world,” Price said. “You can’t just have a name or money to get in; the main qualification is you have to be interesting.” So, while Mark’s closed its doors in July and Paris-based designer Tino Zervudachi gave the club a multimillion-pound makeover, there was a kind of night of the posh knives in which membership was reduced from 2,500 to 1,500.” …

Multi-storey car park with apartments

As suggested by Hugo Swire in today’s Sidmouth Herald, here’s one to think about:

image

Source: http://www.dezeen.com/2008/02/17/mountain-dwellings-by-big/

or maybe this one:

http://www.al.com/business/index.ssf/2014/05/publix_to_build_grocery_store.html

Together or separate? Why change a photograph?

Who swapped this picture:

hands1

for this picture:

hugo-swire-mp-and-cllr-jill-elson-at-working-together-1_full

on this web link:

http://eastdevon.gov.uk/news/2015/10/local-mps-hugo-swire-and-neil-parish-support-east-devon-working-together-event/

and why?  Surely the top one is much more illustrative of working together than the lower one, which seems to imply some sort of pecking order?

Note:  Owl saves all its lovely links …..

The Local Plan, Knowle relocation, Sidmouth Mill Street – Hugo thinks it’s all a dog’s dinner

Members-of-ParliamentHugo-Swire-MP

Photo Source:  Daily Mirror

Fresh from his fine performance at the Houses of Parliament Dog Show, Hugo Swire has some harsh words for our local district council in this week’s Sidmouth Herald. What a pity that he didn’t make his views known before the local and national elections …..

 

 

Here is the article from today’s Sidmouth Herald:

Swire 30.10.15

His idea for a multi-storey car park-cum housing block over the Ham car park might raise more than a few eyebrows.

Amongst his comments are the following:

“… People are put off by multi-storey car parks, but we can do a clever design that incorporates multi-storey parking and residential homes with affordable housing – which is what we need to bring people into this part of the town. …”

Er, not sure the people in the apartments upstairs would welcome the intense vehicle particulate discharge of the multi-storey car park below them – or the noise  …

“ … You are solving the parking issue and if we do it as one, we are really invigorating the whole of the town. I think the one thing we lack is a marina and I don’t see why we could not have one in Sidmouth – it would bring people into town. “Again, the whole redesign of Alma Bridge and also the Drill Hall area needs to be done as one .”..

Owl can visualise now the wonderful image of Hugo drawing into Sidmouth Marina for his annual visit ….. and, yes, Hugo, your constituents in Sidmouth have been saying this for years, only your fellow Conservative councillors have disagreed.

…Mr Swire admitted the Government’s commitment to building more houses created a problem in Sidmouth, where much of the land is within an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB).  This, he says, is why there needs to be an established Local Plan, which would provide a blueprint to determine areas earmarked for future development for the next 15 years and beyond.
Speaking about the delays in drafting a plan, Mr Swire said: “It has been a nightmare.

Well, only a nightmare for your constituents, Hugo – a beautiful dream for our council and its developers.

“I have said this is an absolute priority and it has been extremely frustrating that we have not got here sooner.  If you live in a place, you do not want the field next door to be covered in houses, but if everybody said ‘not here’, there would be no more new houses. “We are determined to get more people on the housing ladder. If we build houses in the right area, then people will not complain.

Yes, Mr Swire, we have all been saying this for the whole 7 -plus years that the Local Plan has been under discussion by your fellow Conservatives.

“I would favour putting more at Cranbrook, but then what is the knock-on effect on our services? “The sooner we come up with the Local Plan, the sooner we can have a more rational discussion about it.” …”

Er, no Hugo, that’s not how it works.  Once the Local Plan is agreed the discussion is over.  The time for rational discussion has already passed.  It was done by many of your constituents in front of Planning Inspector, Mr Thickett – twice.  But, unfortunately, you were not there to give him the benefit of your wise words.

A bit of closing the kennel door after the dog has bolted, perhaps …

 

Hugo Swire’s dog “wins” competition

” … Old Etonian Foreign Office minister Hugo Swire, an ex-pig farmer, got his paws on the public vote thanks to his 14-month-old blond cockapoo Rocoo.

He won after he was caught red-pawed sending a mass e-mail begging for votes.”

http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/tories-triumph-westminster-dog-year-6727910#ICID=sharebar_twitter

A bit like a General Election, then!

Blond cock-a-poo?

Hugo’s bottom slap just got worse …

“Ask Holly: My boss keeps flirting with me”

“Dear Holly,
My boss keeps coming on to me and I don’t know what to do. Most of the time, it’s just the usual ‘playful’ slaps on the buttocks, or ‘accidentally’ dropping his pen on the floor and asking me to pick it up, but it’s only a matter of time before he tries to get me involved in that pig nonsense. How can I fend off his attacks but still keep my plummy job?
Hugo Swire
Westminster

Dear Hugo,

Maybe your boss is lonely. Sometimes grown ups just want a friend. Like my teacher, Mrs Dodkins. She’s always cracking maths jokes and trying to get everyone to join her rubbish choir, but no-one ever does because her breath smells of coffee and she openly says One Direction aren’t very good, but she has no taste because she’s MEGA old, like 36 or something and too outdated to appreciate real art.

Hope that helps

Holly”

http://www.thedailymash.co.uk/features/agony-aunt/ask-holly-my-boss-keeps-flirting-with-me-20151022103201

“David Cameron playfully slaps Hugo Swire’s bottom

Or, as The Huffington Post UK online put it:
“Watch David Cameron Give His Foreign Minister A Cheeky Smack On The Bum”.

Not content with holding hands with EDDC councillor Jill Elson recently:

https://eastdevonwatch.org/?s=working+together

Hugo Swire attracted a “playful” bottom slap (see pictures in article cited below) from David Cameron at the banquet for the Chinese president Xi Jinping:

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3283007/Watch-moment-David-Cameron-strolls-past-minister-China-state-banquet-playfully-slaps-BOTTOM.html?b

Dave and Hugo were contemporaries at Eton and Mr Swire must have felt quite at home at the banquet, his family firm having had very extensive interests for many, many years in Hong Kong.

Working Together

EDDC recently held an event to publicise the many ways it “works together” with local organisations:

elson

 

http://eastdevon.gov.uk/news/2015/10/local-mps-hugo-swire-and-neil-parish-support-east-devon-working-together-event/

Hugo Swire accused of abandoning British political prisoner in Burma

“Burma Campaign UK today accused Foreign Office Minister Hugo Swire MP of failing in one of his most fundamental duties, the support and protection of British citizens overseas.

Hugo Swire, the Foreign Office Minister with responsibility for Myanmar, has abandoned Philip Blackwood, a British political prisoner serving hard labour in the country’s notorious Insein Jail, the group said in a statement on 5 October.

.. when Foreign Office Minister Hugo Swire visited Myanmar a few weeks ago, and met with government officials, he didn’t even call for the release of Philip Blackwood or the other two political prisoners in this case.

The Foreign Office is trying to treat this as a lower level consular case, rather than a political case where Ministers must intervene. They are also trying to hide behind Philip’s dual nationality, saying consular arrangements have to be made with New Zealand. This is a red herring, as this should not be treated as simply a consular case. There is no justice or rule of law in Myanmar.

“We have seen how the British government has abandoned Burmese political prisoners as it prioritises securing trade deals with Burma’s military backed government, but now it is even abandoning its own citizens,” said Mark Farmaner, Director of Burma Campaign UK.

“Hugo Swire seems prepared to let an innocent British citizen and his colleagues rot in a Burmese jail rather than risk upsetting his new friends in the Burmese regime. It is time for a fundamental review of British policy on Burma, and a return to prioritising human rights.”

http://www.mizzima.com/news-international/uk-government-abandons-british-political-prisoner-myanmar-jail

Hugo Swire, arms salesman – surely not?

Revealed after a Freedom of Information request:

“I bet you never thought that one of the duties of a foreign minister is to act as an arms dealer for private companies to dodgy governments, or that Royal Navy warships act as floating sales offices for arms-deals. But last June, Hugo Swire MP, a foreign office minister, had a week-long trip to Latin America, which included a stop in Colombia to act as an official weapons salesman for arms firm BAE Systems.

The meeting—part of which took place on a Royal Navy ship—was revealed earlier this year. Full details of the event were supplied to me last month under the Freedom of Information Act.” …

” … The documents say the ship was there for “defense and security exports.” With help from the UK’s government-run arms sales unit, called “UK Trade and Industry Defence & Security Organisation,” Hugo Swire used the ship to push the proposed deal. In the papers released to me, The British Ambassador to Colombia, Lindsay Croisdale-Appleby says, “the visiting HMS Portland gave a spectacular setting for an evening reception for senior members of the Colombian navy and defense ministry.” At the meeting, “The minister highlighted a proposal by BAE Systems to supply Ocean Patrol Vessels to the Colombian Navy.”

http://www.vice.com/read/a-british-defence-minister-acted-as-an-arms-dealer-to-colombia-849

Yes, we all know that arms dealing takes place – but do government ministers have to be the salesmen and the Royal Navy has to be used as a sales office?

Black is white and white is black: Hugo Swire changes his tune on Knowle

MP Hugo Swire seems to have forgotten his own pre-election advice that there were “more intelligent ways of using Knowle”, and that it was “prudent” to “put Knowle relocation on hold”. At yesterday’s poorly-attended tea and talk meeting in Sidmouth, he apparently told some attendees that the Knowle protest was just “a parochial matter”.

Some former Sidmouth District and Town councillors, who recently lost their seats, were amongst the few people present at All Saints’ Hall. They must be glad of his change of mind.

Some history: https://eastdevonwatch.org/2015/01/03/another-split-amongst-east-devon-tories/

http://saveoursidmouth.com/2014/12/30/leader-paul-diviani-rejects-mps-call-to-put-knowle-relocation-project-on-hold-save-our-sidmouth-responds/

http://saveoursidmouth.com/2012/11/05/hugo-swire-has-asked-secretary-of-state-for-knowle-call-in/

Lobbies and buddies

“Often, on both sides of the Atlantic, the worst corporations win. The reason is straightforward: they are the ones spending money on politics. You don’t need to splash out on policies that align with the interests of the public; you do need to spend heavily on policies that damage the public interest; otherwise they will not pass. If a company is spending lavishly on lobbying and campaign finance, it is likely to be because it wants something that no one in their right mind would welcome. The more expensive politics becomes, the better the most irresponsible companies do.”

http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2015/aug/20/tory-lobbying-against-air-pollution-laws-smells-political-corruption

Our MP Hugo Swire has the official government job of buddying with several big corporations, some of which have had dubious tax situations:

The Tory “access for influence” buddy system that pairs high-ranking MPs (including our own Hugo Swire) with multinational corporation executives

One law, and three homes for the rich Housing Minister, who still claims £30,000 for hotel expenses in London

Sunday Times, page 14:

“Brandon Lewis, the housing Minister, has claimed more than £30,000 from the taxpayer for hotel accommodation in London for 2 years, despite owning three houses, two of them less than an hour by train from Westminster”.

Of course, Lewis has broken no rules.

Additionally, his Chelmsford home is on green belt land and was originally limited to occupation by agricultural workers, but its former owner successfully applied to have the restriction lifted.

He also hit the headlines when he rented out his home in his constituency and rented a flat there instead.

During his election campaign he said “Like everyone else, I was angry and disgusted at the behaviour of some members of Parliament at Westminster. nIt has taken a new generation of MPs to end the cosy arrangements that allowed individuals to apparently profit from the taxpayer”

The Sunday Times goes on: “Neighbours living close to his home in [his constituency] in Yarmouth claimed that he was rarely seen there. “He was here for a while before the election but generally we see him very infrequently” … “Once every so often there will be loads of cars parked there … a few times a year”.

Unlike our own dear MP Hugo Swire, who doesn’t even have his second home in our constituency, preferring a completely different part of Devon. Still, at least it is in Devon. Though we do not know how often he uses it, given that he jets to exotic parts of the world most weeks, and whether he deigns to visit his constituency when he IS there.

But so cheering to know that our Housing Minister has such wide experience of housing himself.

“WESTCOUNTRY TOURISM IS THE BIGGEST SECTOR FOR JOB GROWTH”

And what does East Devon District Council do? Sells its tourism assets to the highest bidder who inevitably develops “clone tourism” of the type you can get anywhere. And gives a councillor the title “Tourism Champion” when said champion then becomes invisible.

And do you think Hugo Swire (busy jetting off all over the world) or Neil Parish (who devotes himself to farming and roads) have the necessary “spine” required in the article.

And recall that EDDC slated former Independent Councillor Claire Wright when she had the temerity to suggest a cut in VAT for tourism!

Non-tourism, big business, preferably with massive development, has always been EDDC’s choice. What will they do now that our local economy is showing that isn’t working?


“IT’S OFFICIAL –
…”Without doubt, those national figures hide a much bigger message for the Westcountry, where tourism is a huge contributor to the regional economy. This should provide all Westcountry politicians with the ‘spine’ to demand the things that this vital sector needs to deliver its potential for the region’s economy:

A reduction in VAT, in line with continental competitors;
A review of the Government’s cuts to funding tourism promotion;
A commitment to delivering the long-promised improvements to road access to the Westcountry”, said Mr Hanbury.
“Right now, the Westcountry’s tourism providers are coping with the need for a total rethink of our traditional seaside product, and many providers are coming up with magnificent solutions. But those providers are competing on unfair terms with Continental rivals, who have far better transport links and lower VAT rates”, said Bishop Fleming’s Will Hanbury.”
http://www.exeterchamber.co.uk/its-official-westcountry-tourism-is-the-biggest-sector-for-job-growth/news/

Is it time the West Country had its own party!

Is the West Country being best served by either Conservative or Labour or Liberal Democrat national parties? Should we be following the SNP by attempting to look after ourselves after being overlooked and penalised in just about every major area of life?

A correspondent writes:

NHS
The decision was taken by the NHS CCG last Thursday to axe beds from both Ottery and Axminster hospitals, together with the minor injuries units at Seaton and Sidmouth.

An article in The Times in June 2015[1] reports that ‘patients in the countryside are left at a “severe disadvantage” by an NHS funding system that is skewed towards cities.’ It further states, ‘There’s diminishing availability of district nurses not because there are fewer of them but because they can do less if they travel further.’

Perhaps a report[2] by The King’s Fund, April 2013, entitled “Improving the allocation of health resources in England” can throw some light on the matter.

1. Oxford and London are “relatively over-funded compared with the rest of England”.

2. ‘In the mid-1990s, a decision was taken not to apply an updated weighting for need across all services, in particular not applying it to community health services.’

3. ‘The materially more significant political motivation is that all political parties have abided by the unwritten rule that no area should receive a real-terms cut in NHS funding as a result of resource allocation decisions. The political fallout from this would be immense and no party has had the courage to take such decisions.’

Education

Another important area where Devon receives insufficient funding relates to education. An article in the Western Morning News (WMN) of 13th March 2014, was headed ‘Westcountry schools get £23m extra next year to tackle under-funding.[3]

‘Education Minister and Somerset MP David Laws announces the money, available for 2015/16 was the “biggest step towards fairer schools funding in a decade”.’ The article later states, ‘The hand-out will act as a “bridge” until a new formula is developed to be introduced after the election in 2016, Mr Laws said.’

‘The South West in particular has been a long-standing loser. Devon sits sixth from bottom in a national league table of 150 education authorities in terms of funding.’

Rail Transport

This year, the WMN reported[4] (6th January 2015) ‘Trains serving the Westcountry are the oldest of any inter-city fleet in the country, figures have revealed against claims of massive under-investment in the region’s railways.’

‘Since the collapse of the rail line at Dawlish, critics have pointed to the chronic lack of rail investment in the South West. There has been growing criticism the response has been too feeble, with the promise of a review into an additional Dartmoor line the only clear pledge to date.’

Police

Finally, an article this week in the WMN of 20th July 2015[5] entitled ‘Scandalous divide between police funding’ states ‘Police in Devon and Cornwall receive less than half the funding per person enjoyed by forces in the capital, new figures reveal, as politicians continue their campaign for fair funding of rural services.’

‘Mr Hogg said these numbers revealed “the in-built metropolitan bias” of the current funding system.’

“The information that my office researchers have uncovered is scandalous. It is no wonder that policing is so stretched in Devon and Cornwall when Government funding is so unfair,” he said.’

Anyone else spot a trend here? The Westcountry and Devon in particular have been systematically denied adequate funding.

Now the government has announced a further round of swingeing cuts. How are they to be meted out? As our region has suffered historically from unfair funding formulas, just how does the government intend to implement these cuts in Devon?

The questions to ask are:

1) Why has our region been denied adequate funding in so many areas for so long?

2) When will Devon receive its fair share?

For example, if only the NHS in Devon had received proper funding, would the CCG have decided to axe beds or MIUs in local hospitals?

References:

1 http://www.thetimes.co.uk/tto/health/news/article4478425.ece
2 http://www.kingsfund.org.uk/publications/improving-allocation-health-resources-england
3 http://www.westernmorningnews.co.uk/Westcountry-schools-23m-year-tackle-funding/story-20805848-detail/story.html
4 http://www.westernmorningnews.co.uk/West-s-inter-city-trains-oldest-country/story-25812028-detail/story.html
5 http://www.westernmorningnews.co.uk/Devon-Cornwall-Police-receive-50-funding/story-26932344-detail/story.html