Monday, 9 October 2017

Continued strong showing for Southend Labour on the doorstep

Those inventive Westcliff residents, beautifying the local area with unwanted white goods


An interesting doorstep session this weekend. A mixed bag of responses, but Labour scored 48%, some distance ahead of the hapless Tories who can’t catch a cold at the moment, not in Milton ward anyway.

The two main issues today concerned street begging and pavement cycling. I am doing what I can to address both issues, although street begging is easier to deal with, even if not entirely solvable.

It is some six months to the next round of local elections, and in six months anything could happen. However, at the moment it does look quite promising and Labour gains are that are being seen across the country in by-elections should be repeated in May next year. My doorstep experience over the summer and into autumn suggests that the Labour vote is as solid as ever, whereas there is considerable cause for alarm in Conservative circles.

In addition to our solid showing in the polls, our membership surge and increased levels of activism should assist us in our aim of a growing presence in the council chamber. I can report that local Labour meetings are witnessing higher levels of interest than has been the case for a number of years.

Southend Labour are looking good.

Saturday, 7 October 2017

PRESS RELEASE: Peafowl in Chalkwell Park



Earlier this year Cllr Julian Ware-Lane (Southend-on-Sea, Milton ward) raised the issue of the four adult peafowl caged in Chalkwell Park, Westcliff-on-Sea. He questioned the suitability of their accommodation and wanted them re-housed. (http://awordfromwier.blogspot.co.uk/2017/03/the-welfare-of-chalkwell-park-peacocks.html)

Since then Cllr Ware-Lane has had a number of people contact him on this issue, all wanting the animal cruelty he exposed to end, and a new home to be found for these birds.

With the support of Cllr Charles Willis, Cllr Ware-Lane has sent a Motion for Full Council to consider.

“Animal cruelty should not be a party political issue, and I am hoping that the Motion will attract support right across the Council Chamber” Cllr Ware-Lane said.

Cllr Willis added: “I am delighted to support this motion. I have been a long-standing advocate for animal rights”

This is the Motion to Full Council. It is proposed by Cllr Julian Ware-Lane (Labour, Milton), and seconded by Cllr Charles Willis (Labour, Westborough).

There are a number of peafowl caged at Chalkwell Park. These large birds are usually seen roaming free on large estates and zoological gardens, and I cannot recall another example where these birds are caged.

The cage at Chalkwell Park is not nearly large enough, and as the photo shows, when the peacock displays his magnificent plumage there really is barely enough room for him to do so. These birds roam large estates and parks normally; there is no room for flight at all, and these birds can fly.

Aside from the smallness of their present enclosure, this is a sparsely decorated cage that is often dirty, and certainly gives every impression of neglect. These birds are often tormented by visitors and their pets, as if them being caged gives permission to this poor behaviour.

Earlier this summer two chicks were hatched. The peahen was trying to protect them, a difficult job in a small enclosure. One was killed by its sibling. The bowls for feeding and drinking are designed for adult birds, and are too high for chicks; how were the chicks meant to feed and drink?

A resident informed the Council about the chicks, and the dead one was removed. However, since the Council were unaware up to that point that there were chicks then clearly accusations of neglect are appropriate.

This cage is the last vestige of the menagerie that once housed many animals such as bears and chimpanzees. Nowadays this would not be allowed.  This is a throwback to an era when animals were not treated with respect. That peafowl are still caged is a disgrace to the town, a town that prides itself as being cultured.

Motion to Council:

We call upon the Council to uphold the highest standards with regards to animal rights.

To this end we want the four peafowl housed in the Chalkwell Park menagerie to be moved to somewhere more suitable.

There has been offers of new homes, and we call upon the Council to fully investigate these.

We urge the Council to expedite a move to a more humane home for the peafowl with utmost speed to end this example of animal cruelty.

Tuesday, 3 October 2017

Bottoms on the green benches



In our imperfect electoral system it is not the number of votes that each party acquires that counts, it is the number of seats in Parliament. This figure shows the respective seats gained by the two main political parties at every General Election since World War Two.

The most obvious trend is that once the leading party, the Government, starts losing seats this trend continues until their defeat. This will not be welcome news for the current Prime Minister. However, Mrs May might console herself with the fact that whilst her party are likely to lose seats at the next General Election (based on the precedent of history), this does not necessarily mean that the next GE will witness a Labour victory.

Labour has fifty-five fewer MPs than the Conservatives at the moment, a gap that has been bridged before (1997 and 1964). It must be said, though, that it was Blair and Wilson, two electorally successful Labour leaders who achieved this feat. Corbyn has yet to prove himself a winner, and who knows when he will get his chance to do that. However, he will rightly welcome another chance to chip away at the Conservative led in the House of Commons, and next time may yet see him given the keys to number ten.

The biggest leads for Labour over the Conservatives occurred under Tony Blair, whose worst result still saw Labour with 157 more MPs than the Tories. Blair’s electoral achievements exceed all since WWII, not even Thatcher versus Foot came close to the drubbing inflicted by Blair on John Major.

Minority Governments have been quite resilient, and I am not expecting another General Election any time soon. My money is on 2021, but this is just a guess. With fewer by-elections these days I do not expect the whittling away of the Coalition’s majority, a phenomena that gave both John Major and James Callaghan some fraught moments towards the end of their respective premierships.

GE
Lab
Con

Lab - Con
5-Jul-1945
393
197

196
23-Feb-1950
315
298

17
25-Oct-1951
295
321

-26
26-May-1955
277
345

-68
8-Oct-1959
258
365

-107
15-Oct-1964
317
304

13
31-Mar-1966
364
253

111
18-Jun-1970
288
330

-42
28-Feb-1974
301
297

4
10-Oct-1974
319
277

42
3-May-1979
269
339

-70
9-Jun-1983
209
397

-188
11-Jun-1987
229
376

-147
9-Apr-1992
271
336

-65
1-May-1997
418
165

253
7-Jun-2001
413
166

247
5-May-2005
355
198

157
6-May-2010
258
306

-48
7-May-2015
232
330

-98
8-Jun-2017
262
317

-55

St Luke's Voice Winter 2018/19 edition