Friday, March 26, 2010

Labour is working


The bar chart above makes for sobering reading. Basically it indicates that the richest households in Britain are around £25,000 a year worse off as a result of changes to the tax and benefits system introduced by Labour since 1997. This is in contrasts with the so called “working poor” who are now better off by almost £1,700 per annum.
Hat tip to LFF


So Labour is working after all!

Saturday, March 20, 2010

Stoke Central

I have decided to put my name forward for Stoke Central... will post more if shortlisted (the deadline for the submission of CVs is next Tuesday, March 23rd).

Friday, March 12, 2010

Should all Labour PPCs commit to an 'ethics' pledge?

As the next election date fast approaches and Labour candidates are busy printing off leaflets and generally getting ready to do battle we need to ensure that we give some thought to how best we can set about using the election to restore trust and confidence in 'the system' after the events of the past year. One idea is for Labour PPCs to pledge to stick by an ethical and operational code of conduct which she/he would then be compelled to self-evaluate against at least yearly and before local people are given the opportunity to scrutinise his/her actions via an annual constituency meeting where the MP would report back on his/her work.

For example Labour PPCs might commit to:

  • Monthly on-line publication of all expenses and allowance claims.
  • No paid or unpaid employment outside of their full-time position of being an MP.
  • Responding to all enquiries from constituents within a specified period - say 5 working days?
  • Holding monthly surgeries (I am still amazed that some MPs do not do this)

What have I missed?

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

MP bloggers talk but don’t listen

Some recent research by the Hansard Society has found that although 83% of MPs have a personal website, only 11% of them blog, less than one in four use social networking sites and that the typical ‘digital MP’ uses his or her presence on the web as a ‘digital newsletter’ rather than as a tool to enhance engagement or democratic participation. The report concludes that 'new media' remains an "untapped area" for political engagement in the UK.

Like the iPod, having your own blog is fast becoming a status symbol. It is therefore no surprise that politicians are getting wise to the potential of the blog as a means of engaging with the electorate in a fast and efficient manner. As the Hansard report points out, the problem is that most MP bloggers see the internet as a means of communicating 'their message' rather than a means of engaging with voters about local, regional, national or international issues. It is no surprise that political blogging has become immensely popular in the UK over the past couple of years. Labour List and ConservativeHome are both well established and are beginning to provide a much needed platform for a vibrant and passionate grassroots debate about the future direction of both parties. Blogs take the media out of the hands of the corporate world and put it into the hands of anyone with a computer and an internet connection. Some of the popular ‘tabloid’ blogs like Guido Fawkes and Iain Dale's Diary receive hundreds of thousands of hits each month and are proving to be influential in setting the news agenda ahead of the printed and broadcast media. But all politics is local politics and those candidates and elected representatives who understand this and establish blogs that invite local people to engage in the local issues are beginning to understand the power of the 'new media' in modern campaigning.

What the last US presidential election showed - and the Obama team ruthlessly exploited - is that modern politics and government are changing in a fundamental way. Politicians need to become more transparent, more open in their dealings with the electorate. Interactive sites and tools like Twitter and Facebook, are ways of achieving the greater transparency and openness that a weary post-expenses scandal public not only wants but demands. People all over the world are embracing new technology and unless politicians do the same they risk losing a vital link with the people they are trying to reach, represent and govern.