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Author Topic: The Voters Digest Prize Draw - Yet Again Blears is plainly barking  (Read 1227 times)

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Offline Grumpmeister

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Its not a case of people not wanting to be an active part of the country you demented bint. Its that there is a large part of those who are eligible to vote who see the Labour government as an absolute bleedin disaster but cant see any alternative to them and this view has ffiltered down into local government.

It doesnt really help when there isnt that much of an opportunity to actually meet local councillors. I've lived in this city for just under 5 years now and while I've had the normal junk mail flyers from the MP's and their challengers I've never seen anything from the councillors.

If you want to get them to start voting then we need councillors who will APPEAL to people.

Entering them into a prize draw isnt going to make you or them any more attractive to the voters.

Quote
Voters in English local elections could be entered into a "prize draw" in an effort to increase turnout, says communities secretary Hazel Blears.

She told MPs proposals to give people more of a say in local services, such as letting councils offer "incentives" to encourage voter registration.

For the Conservatives, Eric Pickles suggested the "booby prize" would be a Labour councillor.

Ms Blears was briefing MPs on plans to give voters more say in local services.

Outlining the ideas in the government's White Paper "Communities in Control" in the Commons, Ms Blears told MPs it had two aims - "rehabilitating local political activity" and giving more power to local people.

Elected mayors

She rejected the idea that people were apathetic, saying surveys suggest almost 70% of people wanted a bigger say in local issues, but she said the "structures and culture" of politics "sometimes alienates them".

She said people would increasingly expect and demand more power and governments had to adapt and change their system.

The White Paper contains measures to make it easier for English towns to get directly elected mayors.

Thirteen towns currently have directly elected mayors - including Ray Mallon in Middlesbrough, London's Boris Johnson and three others in London boroughs. Nearly twice as many towns have voted to reject them.

Currently cities or boroughs must get signatures of 5% of the population to trigger a referendum and signatures only remain valid for 12 months.

'More popular'

Ms Blears said in future names could also be collected online.

Other proposals included putting a duty on councils to run voter registration campaigns, working with schools to explain councillors' roles and to allowing local authorities to offer voter incentives - such as a prize draw.

Ms Blears suggested such a move might make it "more popular for people to vote".

She said the government would also review the "Widdecombe rules" which restrict council officers from political activity.

And organisers of local petitions, sometimes ignored by councils, will be given the opportunity of a full council debate on the issue if signatures amount to 5% of the local population.

The White Paper also proposes transferring control of some council assets, such as swimming pools, to neighbourhood groups.

And councillors who have served two full terms would be recognised by the title "alderman" or "alderwoman".

'Too timid'

Ms Blears acknowledged: "Not everyone wants to become an active citizen, but there are millions of people in Britain who want to do more for their communities but they lack the platform on which to stand."

Her Tory shadow, Eric Pickles, described the proposals as "essentially harmless" and his party agreed that the hurdles for towns to get directly elected mayors were too high, although "local choice must be paramount".

But he said the government's proposals were "too timid" and mayors should be given "real control" over policing.

And a proposal that people who do not get their bin collected on time should be refunded £10 was dismissed, as Mr Pickles said council "bin bullies" were fining people £75 for putting out rubbish on the wrong day, or not shutting the bin lid correctly.

He also opposed changes to rules keeping council officers out of politics, adding: "This is a return to the sweetheart days when officers and councillors swapped roles on a tit-for-tat basis.

"Such jobs for the boys brought so much corruption to local government."

For the Liberal Democrats, Julia Goldsworthy said many councils were already implementing the measures proposed and the government was "merely playing a poor game of catch up".

"Councils should be given control over their own finances so that they are no longer dependent on Whitehall handouts," she said.

"If ministers really believed in devolution, they would put their money where their mouth is."
The universe is run by the complex interweaving of three elements. Energy, matter, and enlightened self-interest.

Offline Snoopy

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Re: The Voters Digest Prize Draw - Yet Again Blears is plainly barking
« Reply #1 on: July 09, 2008, 05:35:57 PM »
Local Council Members ~ acting like a secret society and the Church complaining that the community had "deserted" them. The two reasons why, when I moved here, I started a "Community Magazine". They hated me for it but 7 years on and they all queue up to get their names, photos etc in it.
Basically I shone a spotlight on them and they started dancing  eveilgrin:

Seriously ~ Blears is completely wrong  but I have to say that the only way to meet your local councillors and get a hearing is to join them (or start a magazine and write about them)
I used to have a handle on life but it broke.

Offline Pastis

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Re: The Voters Digest Prize Draw - Yet Again Blears is plainly barking
« Reply #2 on: July 09, 2008, 06:06:47 PM »
You must have got the "Lite weight" version of that story...   eeek:


Like the Buddhist said to the hot dog vendor...
"Make me one with everything"

Offline Snoopy

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Re: The Voters Digest Prize Draw - Yet Again Blears is plainly barking
« Reply #3 on: July 09, 2008, 06:30:57 PM »
You must have got the "Lite weight" version of that story...   eeek:




You've only got to look at her really haven't you?

One glance and every fibre of my being is screaming "NUTTER ALERT!"
I used to have a handle on life but it broke.

Offline Grumpmeister

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Re: The Voters Digest Prize Draw - Yet Again Blears is plainly barking
« Reply #4 on: July 09, 2008, 06:35:13 PM »
Nutter? She looks like a discarded half done prototype of a Doctor Who villain.  eeek:

This is why I thing that the public should be allowed to vote for the PB but the cabinet oles should be applied for in the same way as any job. Put Alan Sugar in charge of an independant body and see how far through the selection process these useless arses get.
The universe is run by the complex interweaving of three elements. Energy, matter, and enlightened self-interest.

Offline Pastis

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Re: The Voters Digest Prize Draw - Yet Again Blears is plainly barking
« Reply #5 on: July 09, 2008, 06:35:30 PM »
You must have got the "Lite weight" version of that story...   eeek:




You've only got to look at her really haven't you?

One glance and every fibre of my being is screaming "NUTTER ALERT!"

I try not to. A few weeks ago on Question Time there was a hideous camera angle on her and, I kid you not, she bore an uncanny resemblance to Jack Nicholson playing the Joker! She's a poison dwarf in Clown makeup  sick2:
Like the Buddhist said to the hot dog vendor...
"Make me one with everything"