June 2012

Curated from , written by Editor

by Atul Hatwal

As Labour’s internal battle between the moderates and the left rumbles on, evidence reaches Uncut that some selective re-writing of recent history is under way.

The GMB kicked-off the latest witchunt against Progress at their conference. Paul Kenny, seen as the most pragmatic and savvy of the current generation of leaders, turned up the heat in his speech. The couldn’t have been any clearer,

“On Progress let me say this. I know that at this very moment a resolution is written and will be delivered to the Labour party shortly. It is a rule amendment which will go before this year’s Conference for next year which, effectively, will outlaw Progress as part of the Labour party, and long overdue it is.”

But now, the GMB is backtracking. Talk of “outlawing” Progress and changing the Labour party’s rules has been quietly dropped and is in the process of being airbrushed out of accounts of their conference.

Last week, the union’s national political officer, Gary Doolan, sent a private with some very careful wording. The relevant paragraph comes at the end:

“In addition, there has been much debate about GMB’s Motion 154 to Congress, which has been described as “banning Progress from the Labour Party”. Just to clarify the situation I have included the actual Motion 154 for your perusal.”

The operative phrase here is “there has been much debate”.

No view on who started and led this debate. Certainly no sense that it was the general secretary of the union that raised the prospect of proscribing Progress and actively welcomed it. Instead, this is a discussion that has emerged without origin. What us? No way guv. Couldn’t be us.

Then Doolan attempts some sleight of hand. “Just to clarify”, he refers to the original motion from their conference. This calls for Progress to be monitored rather than expelled. Directing councillors to the motion rather than the words of the general secretary, which drove the news stories, is deliberately misleading.

The reason for this clumsy artifice? Pressure on the GMB from Labour’s leadership to calm the rhetoric and defuse the situation.

Any time Ed Miliband has to spend publically addressing Labour’s internal divisions, rather than attacking the Tories, paints the party as riven by the old conflicts of the 1980s. Unfortunately for the leader, he keeps getting asked about it.

The good news is that the GMB are still listening to the Labour leadership. Otherwise there would have been no change in position. The bad news is what they consider to be a de-escalation.

It’s a sign of where the modern union movement is politically that a call to single out a specific organisation, which has broken no rule or ordinance other than to hail from a different wing of the Labour party, is seen as an acceptable, moderate line to take.

What happens next will be key. The leadership now want this row to go away. It served a purpose in silencing Blairite MPs but if it rolls on into Labour party conference, this debate will soon morph into a media narrative about another Labour lurch to the left.

The question is, after so much sabre rattling, will all of the unions simply drop the witchhunt and do as the leadership say?

The answer will reveal much about the true balance of power within Labour between party and union bosses.

is editor at Uncut

Green city boast set to haunt former coalition

Council's C02 reduction targets not monitored properly, urgent management action required say auditors

It should come as no surprise that the first major review to be conducted by Birmingham City Council under Labour control may expose serious flaws of a flagship policy much trumpeted for eight years by the outgoing Tory-Liberal Democrat coalition.

That is the claim – however wildly improbable it seemed  to some of us at the time – that Birmingham was leading the way on tackling climate change through various green initiatives that were on course to reduce carbon emissions by 60 per cent by 2026.

The problem was,

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Tough new measures that crackdown on genuine corruption and increase transparency in public life by requiring councillors to declare their financial and trade union dealings will take effect next week, Local Government Minister Bob Neill announced today. (continues…)

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From today more communities will be able to bid to take over local services they think they can run differently and better as the Community Right to Challenge provisions come into effect. (continues…)

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Andy Street, chairman, Greater Birmingham and Solihull Local Enterprise Partnership GREATER Birmingham and Solihull Local Enterprise Partnership leaders have pledged to continue revitalising the area’s economy by creating new jobs and opportunities for growth.However, less than…

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Budget2011 / transportWEST Midlands transport authority Centro has been handed a £33m fighting fund to help tackle congestion, reduce carbon emissions and kick start the regional economy.The money has been awarded to Centr…

Tory duo in battle for Police Commissioner job

Bennett and Tildesley head to head in open primary elections

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Two Conservatives are battling it out to decide who is to be the party’s candidate for West Midlands Police and Crime Commissioner.

Former Birmingham city councillor Matt Bennett and Solihull borough councillor Joe Tildesley must face a series of four open primary hustings which will determine whose name goes on to the ballot paper for the PCC election on November 15.

Anyone on the Electoral Roll in the Police Authority Area may register to attend and vote at the meetings by emailing [email protected] .

The primaries will be held in Erdington on July 4, Walsall on July 5, Halesowen on July 10, with the final session at Solihull on July 11.

The process, throwing the final decision open to non-party members, is in contrast to the Labour Party’s tightly controlled selection for PCC candidate, which saw only 29 per cent of members take part and resulted in victory for Wolverhampton councillor Bob Jones.

Both of the prospective Conservative candidates are expected to criticise Coun Jones’ longstanding membership of the West Midlands Police Authority, painting him as ‘yesterday’s man’.

Jim Cooper, chairman of the Conservative organising committee, said: “The new Police and Crime Commissioner will be elected to represent the views of the public. We believe the public should have a voice in selecting our candidate.

“The Labour Party has restricted the choice to their members only and they have selected someone who has already been a member of the police authority for 27 years. Where are the new ideas?”

Matt Bennett served as a councillor in Birmingham for Stockland Green ward from 2008 to 2012 and is a former executive member for children’s social care. His career outside of politics has been in public and voluntary sector management.

Mr Bennett said: “I am looking forward to these open primaries which are a great way of engaging with the public. I will use them to put across my message that we need tougher policing in the areas where antisocial behaviour is at its worst and that the rights of the public, in particular those who are victims of crime, are paramount.”

Coun Tildesley is a former Inspector in the West Midlands force with 30 years of policing experience.

During the last five years of his service he was a national Police Federation official working in London and also the West Midland Police Federation Chairman.

Operationally, he saw service throughout the West Midlands and worked in a number of specialist positions in the Traffic Department, Plain Clothes, Special Patrol Group and the Training Department. He received nine Commendations for outstanding police work.

He was elected to Solihull Council in May 2007. He was re-elected in 2011 with both the largest personal vote and majority of the seventeen seats up for election. He is the cabinet member for Education, Children and Young People.

  • A YouGov opinion poll has found limited support for Police and Crime Commissioners, with just 34 per cent saying they thought the new role was a good idea and would give a voice to the public. Just under half of Conservative supporters backed PCCs in the study.

Two-jobs Sir Albert in double trouble

Tories criticise council leader's hospital role, Lib Dems slam plans for 70,000 new homes

Opposition Conservatives and Liberal Democrats are set to launch a twin attack in a move calculated to embarrass Birmingham City Council’s new Labour administration.

Resolutions before next Tuesday’s (Jul 3) full council meeting contain thinly veiled criticism of city leader Sir Albert Bore’s two jobs, as well as the start of a campaign to oppose plans to build 70,000 new homes in and around Birmingham.

Tory councillors are trying to force Sir Albert to resign as chairman of the University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Trust, a part-time job for which he receives a salary of about £45,000 a year.

They say it is wrong that he should be paid twice by the public purse – he already receives £50,000 a year in a special responsibility allowance to reflect his work as council leader and a £16,000 basic allowance as a councillor.

Although a resolution tabled by councillors Deirdre Alden and Anne Underwood does not mention Sir Albert by name, it is clear that the wording refers to him.

It states: “This council believes that members of the council who are paid extra responsibility allowances should put in the required number of days which they are paid for.

“It is especially wrong for any council member to accept payment from the public purse for a second job whose hours clearly conflict with the work they are being paid to do to serve Birmingham City Council – since it effectively means that tax payers are paying a person two salaries to do two jobs in two places – but both at the same time.

“This council therefore calls upon any member of this council who finds themself in such a position to resign from one or other of their roles with immediate effect, so that Birmingham tax payers can be assured that, in these harsh economic times, they are receiving value for money from all their representatives.”

There is no chance of the resolution being passed in its current form. The wording will be amended by Labour to change the original meaning.

However, the Tory attack reflects unease about Sir Albert’s two jobs among some Labour members. The council leader has until now managed to brush aside criticism by claiming that he is used to working long hours and can easily combine his council and hospital roles.

The matter is expected to be raised again at the next Labour group meeting, where Sir Albert may drop broad hints that he expects to resign the hospital chairmanship later in the year.

Proposals to build 70,000 new homes for Birmingham people by 2026 could be more problematic for Labour. Sir Albert announced his intention to plan for huge development and warned that almost a third of the new dwellings might have to be built outside of Birmingham in areas like South Staffordshire, Redditch and Bromsgrove.

A Liberal Democrat resolution to the next council meeting raises the prospect of bitter battles over green belt development if the 70,000 new-build target is approved.

Lib Dem councillors David Radcliffe and Jerry Evans will point out that a previous plan to build 65,000 homes was rejected as too intrusive and thrown out by the council.

Their resolution notes: “There has been no valid public consultation on the 70,000 target. On present policies there is unlikely to be housing land available for more than 43,500 properties.”

It urges the council to reaffirm its support for the protection of public open spaces, and the protection of industrial land to provide employment opportunities.

It adds that policies should be developed which “ensure that brownfield development within the city is fully completed before the massive greenbelt developments required by the new policy are commenced and that if the policy is pursued escalating greenfield site values are captured for the public benefit.”

Councils ‘face £16.5b shortfall’ by 2020

Libraries and leisure centres may disappear to pay for social services, warns LGA

Local government is facing its greatest crisis under the twin cosh of savage spending cuts and the soaring cost of providing adult social care, a hard-hitting report has claimed.

Unless reform is introduced immediately the money available by 2020 to fund services like road maintenance, libraries and leisure centres will have shrunk by 90 per cent in cash terms, according to a detailed financial projection by the Local Government Association.

The growing crisis is fuelled by the rapidly rising cost of providing adult social care, combined with the increased cost of delivering councils’ other explicit statutory responsibilities like

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Wanted: Investor with £80m to spare in Aston

Council plan to create 3,000 jobs depends on attracting private sector cash

A pledge to create 3,000 jobs by building an advanced manufacturing hub on land close to the M6 at Spaghetti Junction will depend on Birmingham City Council being able to secure £80 million of private sector investment, it has emerged.

The council’s new Labour leader, Sir Albert Bore, announced plans for a 20-hectare Regional Investment Site (RIS) in East Aston last month, adding that the creation of skilled jobs in economic growth zones would be a priority for his administration.

The total cost of the scheme has been estimated at £97 million. About £2.7 million, to provide roads and basic infrastructure, will have to come from the public sector via the Government’s Growing Places Fund, which is administered by the council on behalf of the Greater Birmingham and Solihull Local Enterprise Partnership (GBSLEP).

But by far the bulk of the funding required will have to come from

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