Jim Spud Murphy- Love Him or Hate Him -He is Not Returning to Westminster Holyw(R)ood Beckons

1. Just who is Jim Murphy?

a. James Francis Murphy is a British Labour Party politician who is the current Member of Parliament (MP) for East Renfrewshire. He previously served as Secretary of State for Scotland in the the Cabinet from 2008 to 2010. Prior to this, he was the Minister of State for Europe from 2007 to 2008, the Minister of State for Employment and Welfare Reform from 2006 to 2007 and the Parliamentary Secretary at the Cabinet Office from 2005 to 2006.

b. Jim Murphy is married He is a season ticket holder at Celtic Football Club, and captains the Parliamentary Football Team. He is a vegetarian and teetotal. Murphy was born in Glasgow and raised in a flat in the Arden. He was educated at St. Robert Bellarmine School until 1979, when he was 12, when his family emigrated to Cape Town, South Africa, after his father became unemployed. In Cape Town, he went to Milnerton High School. In 1985, Murphy returned to Scotland aged 18 to study Politics and European Law at the University of Strathclyde in Glasgow. He was a student at Strathclyde for 9 years, but did not graduate from the university.

2. May 1996; Jim, (Spud) Murphy A Stranger to Democracy

a. Murphy masqueraded as a defender of students when he was the president of the National Union of Students, and he did get his reward from New Labour for selling working class students out. He became the New Labour MP for East Renfrewshire. Some students were well aware that Murphy did not have the interests of the NUS membership, particularly poor and working working class students close to his heart. Instead, they regarded him as a NUS president who actively supported the Labour government achieve its aims of introducing fees and loans for education. His style was dictatorial.

b. At Manchester University, only a select group of hand-picked Murphy supporters were able to question Murphy on his reasons for supporting the introduction of loans and education fees and the gradual elimination of grants. All other students raising their hands were ignored. In due time Murphy’s position became much clearer to an increasing number of students. In Leeds, Murphy was fortunate to escape unharmed when he drew the ire of many students on a Save Free Education Rally when they saw him in attendance.

c. At the time there was a rumour that Murphy would be rewarded by New Labour with the chance to contest a seat in Scotland for the Labour Party if he could succeed in pushing through the party’s introduction of education fees. For many students,this seemed too absurd and corrupt to be believed, the rumour had to be nothing more than just a rumour. However, time revealed the painful truth.

d. During Murphy’s presidency in 1995, the NUS dropped its opposition to the abolition of the student grant in line with the Labour Party’s policies. Subsequently he was condemned by a House of Commons Early Day Motion introduced by Ken Livingstone and signed by 17 Labour MPs for ‘intolerant and dictatorial behaviour’. The EDM also makes reference to his parliamentary ambitions.

e. This is the same opportunist Jim Murphy that later breezed his way to the top echlons of the labour Party, under the protection of Tony Blair. The demise of Blair has brought a halt to his ambition. Ed Miliband recently, “put him out to pasture” removing him from the, “top team”. desiring greater distance between the controlling labour Party machine, in England, Murphy has been given a mini-coach and sent to Scotland with the express purpose of, “stirring the s***. Beware this guy, we nicknamed him, “The Undertaker”. Ignore his message. Vote, “Yes” to independence in the referendum. http://www.indymediascotland.org/node/18398

3. June 1996; Early day motion: MR JIM MURPHY AND THE NATIONAL UNION OF STUDENTS 12.06.1996

a. “That this House condemns the intolerant and dictatorial behaviour of the President of the National Union of Students, Mr Jim Murphy, who has unconstitutionally suspended NUS Vice President, Clive Lewis, because he took part, in a personal capacity, in an open debate at Queen Mary and Westfield College on the issues raised by the Campaign for Free Education; further notes that along with President Elect, Douglas Trainer, both men have warned NUS Executive member, Rose Woods, that if she attends the Scottish launch of the Campaign for Free Education she too will be suspended from the NUS Executive; reminds Mr Murphy and Mr Trainer that freedom of speech is a right in the United Kingdom, that they have no power to overturn the results of elections that went against their preferred candidates and that, whilst these methods are a common practice in dictatorships around the 4. world, they are not acceptable behaviour from someone such as Mr Murphy who is putting himself forward as suitable for election to the House of Commons”. http://www.parliament.uk/edm/1995-96/991

4. February 2010; Murphy’s faith card unlikely to win votes

a. It is interesting to note the Scottish Secretary, Jim Murphy, intends playing, “the religion card to win votes” This is the same Mr Murphy who, last month, was reported as aiming to counteract the threatened opposition of the BNP in his East Renfrewshire Westminster constituency, by uniting, “Christian, Muslim and Jewish groups to battle the party, which he described as ‘abhorrent'”. However, it should be noted that this is also the same Mr Murphy who was apparently happy to support the present government in its attempts to add further restrictions to the Equality Bill – thankfully blocked by the House of Lords – that would have removed the right of churches and other Christian organisations to refuse to employ persons who do not share their core beliefs, in particular those whose sexual conduct is contrary to the teachings of the Bible.
http://www.scotsman.com/news/murphy-s-faith-card-unlikely-to-win-votes-1-792087

b. Comment:

i. Calton jock: at interview Roman Catholic candidates seeking a job as housekeeper to the parish priest might be asked, Do you wear a condom during sex? An affirmative answer would be sufficient grounds to reject the candidate. Bonkers Spud.

ii. Rev C Brian Ross, Motherwell: I think it would be more accurate to say that, instead of “Labour trying to reposition itself as the natural party of religious voters” it is trying once more to get the endorsement of the Roman Catholic Church in particular which used to be taken for granted. Labour knows that a candidate being given the Church’s blessing is worth a lot more than thousands of pounds spent on leaflets through doors. Unless the SNP candidate is called John Paul, I suppose.

iii. Barry Lees, Greenock: You describe MP Jim Murphy as being a “devout” Catholic, that is: he subscribes to all the tenets, beliefs and instructions of that faith. That being so, he cannot speak to other faiths in the way he does because one of his beliefs and prayers he will offer is for the conversion of England, and so the United Kingdom, to the Pre – Reformation beliefs and practices. Others can fill in the many fault lines in his attempt to win votes.

iv. Tom Reilly, Edinburgh: Jim Murphy’s religion, or lack of it, is of no concern to me, nor I imagine to most in Scotland. His use of religion, and his “devout” Catholicism, to further his, and Labour’s, ambitions is disgraceful. To quote Keir Hardie, it is an insult to the founders of the real Labour party. Today’s Labour is no inheritor of those principled, decent men and women, who strove to improve the lot of those at the lower reaches of society.

v. Bill McLean, Dunfermline: Jim Murphy is taking Labour into dangerous territory when he calls on it to make a special play for the religious vote A poll by ComRes published last week showed that those who define themselves as “non-religious” are equal in number to those who say they have a religion. If Labour starts favouring religious voters by promising regressive legislation, dictated by out-of-touch and dogmatic religious leaders, it risks alienating that half of the population who say religion has “little importance” in their lives. Other polls have shown that most ordinary Catholics are completely out of sympathy with the teachings of the Church on issues such as contraception, euthanasia, homosexuality and abortion. Why, then, would they want such issues on the agenda of a political party? His personal religious enthusiasm may be blinding Mr Murphy to the facts. One of those facts is that it is no longer the case that clerics can dictate the way their congregations vote. People are too independent-minded now to be herded into the voting booth by religious considerations alone.

5. February 2010; Church launches government attack

a. The Roman Catholic Church in Scotland has accused the Labour government of conducting a “systematic and unrelenting attack on family values”. The attack came as Scottish Secretary Jim Murphy, a practising Catholic, claimed religious faith had a role in British politics. Mr Murphy said in a lecture that Labour best represented people of faith. But Scotland’s most senior Roman Catholic accused the government of “undermining religious freedom”. And a spokesman for the Scottish National Party said Mr Murphy was guilty of “crude electioneering” by trying to “corner the market regarding people’s faith”. A tangible example by the government over the last decade that it acknowledged or endorsed religious values would also have been welcomed Cardinal Keith O’Brien

b. Mr Murphy focused on the key part “values voters” can play in the election when he delivered the Progress lecture in London on Tuesday evening. He argued that faith values have always been “at the very foundations of the Labour Party”. In his lecture, the Scottish secretary said: “In the US, faith has long played a central part in politics. Not surprising for a country where 60% of people say that God plays an important part in their lives. “But it’s wrong to think that it plays no role in British politics.” The MP for East Renfrewshire added: “Faith voters massively outweigh ‘Motorway Men’ or ‘Worcester Woman’ or any other trendy demographic group identified by marketeers.”

c. He also told the audience that like faith, the family was “another force for good” and “the most important thing in our country”. The minister added: “As well as providing a supportive intellectual environment, it’s a potential source of financial support in difficult days.” His comments were in contrast to the stated attitude of former Labour communications chief Alastair Campbell. Despite former prime minister Tony Blair’s strong religious faith, Campbell famously said: “We don’t do God”. Mr Blair himself said he had avoided talking about his religious views while in office for fear of being labelled “a nutter”. Jim Murphy said religion was at the “very foundations” of the Labour party

d. Cardinal Keith O’Brien, the leader of the Roman Catholic church in Scotland, welcomed Mr Murphy’s “recognition of the role played by faith and religion in society”. But he added: “A tangible example by the government over the last decade that it acknowledged or endorsed religious values would also have been welcomed. “Instead we have witnessed this government undertake a systematic and unrelenting attack on family values. This is a charge I personally put to Gordon Brown when we met in 2008 and I have seen no evidence since then to suggest anything has changed.” Ironically, Mr Murphy had been due to mention the Cardinal by name in his speech by saying: “When the Cardinal speaks, people listen.”

e. Conservative leader David Cameron recently spoke of the importance of his Christian faith, while acknowledging that it grew “hotter and colder by moments”. He said he did not have a “direct line” to God and did not pray for guidance from the almighty.

f. Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg has said he did not believe in God. However, he later added he had “enormous respect for people who have religious faith”, that his wife is Catholic and that his children are being brought up Catholic.

g. A spokesman for Scottish First Minister Alex Salmond said: “Politicians are fully entitled to declare their personal testament, as the first minister has done and indeed would encourage others to do so. “However, it is quite a different matter to make any suggestion that a political party should seek to corner the market regarding people’s faith. “To do so would be absurd, unreal, and bear the hallmarks of crude electioneering, which would backfire rather badly. “The reality is that people of all faiths and none support the different parties in Scotland, and that forms part of the vibrant political system we have.”

h. Terry Sanderson, president of the National Secular Society, said: “Jim Murphy is taking the Labour Party into dangerous territory when he calls on it to make a special play for the religious vote. “His personal religious enthusiasm may be blinding him to the facts. It is no longer the case that clerics can dictate the way their congregations vote. People are too independent-minded now to be herded into the voting booth by religious considerations alone.” http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/8529789.stm

6. February 2010; Jim Murphy – risks alienating voters by over-playing religion

a. Labour’s Scottish Secretary, Jim Murphy, risks alienating the Party’s core vote if he continues to insist that it embrace a religious agenda, says the National Secular Society. Reacting to Mr Murphy’s speech in Westminster today to Labour think tank, “Progress”, Terry Sanderson, president of the National Secular Society, said, “Murphy is taking the Labour Party into dangerous territory when he calls on it to make a special play for the religious vote. His personal religious enthusiasm may be blinding him to the facts. It is no longer the case that clerics can dictate the way their congregations vote. People are too independent-minded now to be herded into the voting booth by religious considerations alone. The society that we live in today is very different to the one that existed fifty years ago, and we want our politicians to reflect that change. Even in the last twenty years Scottish mass attendance has almost halved. The Labour Party should rein in Mr Murphy before he does it permanent damage. A poll by ComRes published last week showed that half of those who define themselves as Christian say that religion is of “little importance” to them.”

b. He went on to say, “If the Labour Party starts favouring religious voters by promising socially regressive legislation, dictated by out-of-touch and dogmatic religious leaders, it risks alienating huge numbers of people. Other polls have shown that ordinary Catholics are completely out of sympathy with the teachings of the Catholic Church on issues such as contraception, euthanasia, homosexuality and abortion. A 2007 YouGov poll showed that only a quarter of Catholics (and only a seventh of the population) agreed with Catholic dogma on abortion. This suggests allying a political party to religion is electorally very dangerous. This is why the electoral results of the Christian Party are pitiful.”

c. He added, ” The British Social Attitudes Survey, published last month about religious leaders trying to influence how people vote in an election, showed that 75% of respondents thought that they shouldn’t, while 67% think religious leaders should stay out of Government decision-making. When asked: “If many of our elected officials were deeply religious, do you think that the laws and policy decisions they make would probably be better or probably be worse?” Nearly half of respondents thought they would be worse, whereas only 26% thought they would be better.” http://www.secularism.org.uk/labour-risks-alienating-voters-b.html

7. March 2010. Glasgow Council Corruption

a. Scottish Secretary Jim Murphy has entered the Glasgow City Council scandal. Murphy has issued a statement to the press warning critics to, “stop knocking” the whole city of Glasgow, after the resignation of its disgraced council leader, Steven, “bin laden” Purcell. The, “critics” are calling for an independent inquiry into Labour controlled Glasgow City Council and its NGOs in regard to the awarding of contracts and jobs to Labour Party members. In trying to distance the Labour Council of shame from Purcell, Murphy protecting the Labour Party said it was, “more than one individual”. Murphy then went on to link the Glasgow Labour Party with Glasgow by saying; “I just wish people would stop knocking Glasgow”.

b. People aren’t knocking Glasgow, they are asking serious questions about Labour’s practices. And those questions aren’t going away until answers are provided. Who got the millions of, (disappeared) pounds of Glasgow taxpayers’ money? It seems that Murphy doesn’t want people asking questions so is attempting to smear them by saying they are attacking the city. That won’t wash and Glaswegian people aren’t that stupid Murphy despite what you think! The cry from the public and clean politicians is, “We have to find out whether this is serial fiddling or an orchestra of fiddlers.” http://glasgowunihumanrights.blogspot.co.uk/2010/03/labour-mp-jim-murphy-thinks-glaswegians.html

8. March 2010; Murphy Upgrades his Office on Taxpayers Money

a. You mean Jim (Spud) Murphy from the East End of Glasgow? The young student who, as an active member of the, Revolutionary Communist Party, was at least 10 streets further to the political left than Tommy Sheridan ??? More money has been spent on fixing up Dover House in London over the past two years than in the whole of the previous five years, it was disclosed yesterday. Public cash has gone on things like new carpets and oak floorboards, wall and ceiling decorations, a new fireplace, air conditioning, new cupboard doors and CCTV cameras. Since 1999, a succession of Labour ministers have authorised more than £3.3 million of “refurbishments” to the Scotland Office’s Whitehall headquarters, as well as its smaller Edinburgh base. More than £1 million was squandered in 2007/08 alone with a further £400,000 last year, leading to claims that the government “wasted” public money during the height of the economic crisis. http://www.scottishsundayexpress.co.uk/news/uk/162972/Labour-blows-1-4m-on-Jim-Murphy-manor

9. September 2012; The Scottish Palestine Solidarity Campaign strongly condemns the candidacy of Jim Murphy MP, former Chair and continuing member of Labour Friends of Israel

a. Throughout his political career, Murphy has demonstrated blind support for the Israeli state, and blatant disregard for Palestinian lives and human rights. Examples of Murphy’s contemptible views abound. In a 2011 article, Murphy expressed the sentiment that ‘Labour still loves Israel’, condemning the principled decision of the TUC to review its relationship with Israel’s racist trade union, the Histadrut. At that point in time, Murphy called trade unionists’ decisions to respond positively to the Palestinian call for Boycott as a ‘step backwards’, yet since then, no doubt much to Murphy’s chagrin, the Scottish TUC has reaffirmed its support for the Palestinian call for Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions year after year.

b. Murphy’s recent complicity in Israeli atrocities goes on. Murphy has visited Israel at least three times since 2011: in June that year, receiving a £3,234 donation from pro-Israel lobby group BICOM to cover his expenses; in September 2012, to speak at the annual Conference of the ‘International Institute for Counter-Terrorism’ in Herzliya, and again in October 2013, on a visit with a ‘defence and security focus’, which included visits to the Israeli-occupied Syrian Golan and to Israel’s apartheid wall in the West Bank. To an Israeli audience, Murphy lauded the State as a partner in ensuring ‘anti-autocratic instincts which gave birth to the Arab Spring are not abused by those who seek control for malign purposes’. Israel has been a vital partner, yes, but in the suppression of these anti-autocratic instincts, lobbying hard for the restoration of US military aid to Egypt following General Sisi’s coup last year. Following Israel’s November 2012 attack on Gaza, Murphy spoke only of Israel’s alleged ‘right to defend itself’, without as much as a passing condemnation of the murder of hundreds, many of them already refugees, in one of the world’s most heavily populated strips of land.

c. Whilst Murphy has claimed that that ‘to equate Israel with the vile racist regime in South Africa is both ignorant and outrageous’, veteran leaders of South Africa’s liberation struggle such as Archbishop Desmond Tutu have long condemned Israel as an apartheid state; Israeli poet Yitzhak Laor has gone further, noting that ‘the system preserving this apartheid is more ruthless than that seen in South Africa, where the black were a labour force and could therefore also make a living.’

d. Such an apologist for the State which has perpetrated the ethnic cleansing of the indigenous people of Palestine from 1948 to the present day should have no place whatsoever in Scottish politics, let alone as Leader of Scotland’s second-largest political party. We urge all those with a vote in the Scottish Labour leadership election not to cast their vote for Murphy under any circumstances, and to hold the other leadership candidates to close scrutiny with regards to their positions on Palestine. http://www.scottishpsc.org.uk/index.php/142-western-complicity/1967-till-today/political/the-right/tories-and-new-labour/1668-jim-murphy-champion-of-apartheid

10. June 2010; Murphy The Welfare Minister

a. Murphy was Welfare minister in the last Government and oversaw the introduction of the Employment Support Allowance (ESA), etc, no mention by the faux anti-imperialists about that. He has simply never met a blairite policy or a party-line in his entire electoral life he didn’t agree with. Have a look at the rest of his voting record. His office running costs alone (which exclude the staffing budget) are higher than the median household income in the section of his constituency that counts as Labour’s support base (Barrhead, as East Refrewshire has previously been, in it’s past incarnations, a strong Tory seat). This is a Politician who, in the early years of his tenure claimed over £17,000 travel allowances, while 36% of his constituency live in the areas belong to the upper 25% of most deprived areas in the country.

b. Jim Murphy is the Labour MP for East Renfrewshire and shadow secretary of state for defence.

i. Voted very strongly for the Iraq war.
ii. Voted very strongly against an investigation into the Iraq war.
iii. Voted very strongly for a stricter asylum system.
iv. Voted very strongly for Labour’s anti-terrorism laws.

11. October 2012: MP’s Sub-let Their Taxpayer Paid Flats to Other MP’s

a. Jim Murphy, MP for Eastwood, and Russell Brown, the Dumfries MP, are to meet officials from the Commons Fees Office this week to discuss repayment. Mr Murphy has admitted the Commons paid the full rent for his constituency office while he was claiming half the rent from the Eastwood MSP, Ken Macintosh. Mr Brown, who had the rent for his constituency office paid in full, received rent from the MSP Elaine Murray who is the new deputy minister for tourism, culture and sport. Miss Murray said it was inconceivable that Mr Brown would have “fiddled his expenses” and if there was any confusion it was because of the “lax systems at the Fees Office”.

b. A party spokesman said: “What these MPs did wrong was not returning this money, half the rent, to Westminster. They should have sent it back and asked for it to be forwarded to them for them to use to cover the costs of things like stationary and photocopying. “Instead they used the money themselves directly for this purpose, but they have receipts of purchase to show what it was spent on. They accept they made a mistake with the rules.” It has also emerged that the Labour Party overcharged for the rent of an office being used by Anne McGuire, and shared by the MSP Sylvia Jackson. The entire office rent for April was billed to, and paid for by, both Westminster and the Scottish Parliament. A spokesman said: “There was a mistake. The Fees Office is now aware of the mistake and the situation will be rectified in some way. We are being as honest as possible with this and are not trying to cover anything up.”

c. Pete Wishart, the Scottish National Party’s chief whip, said he intended to refer all three cases to Elizabeth Filkin, the Standards Commissioner. “If over claiming on Westminster office expenses was a big enough offence to topple a First Minister, then the consequences for Jim Murphy and Russell Brown are extremely serious,” he said. Mr Murphy should consider his position as parliamentary aide to Helen Liddell, the Scottish Secretary, and Mr Brown should not be allowed to carry on as a member of the Westminster Standards Committee.

d. “No politician should get rich by the back of politics”, Jim Murphy MP (Sky News Interview Apr 2010) Ready reckoner provides evidence his claims totaled just over £1 million. http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2220081/New-MPs-expenses-scandal-27-letting-London-homes-claiming-20-000-public-money-rent-elsewhere.html

12. January 2014; Pray to stay – expulsion threat for pupils who don’t say prayers

a. Children who opt out of saying prayers and singing hymns at Scottish faith schools are being threatened with expulsion. Evidence submitted to MSPs claims headteachers are trying to remove children or pressure them into switching school if they exercise their right to opt out of religious observance at denominational schools. And dozens of schools are failing to adequately inform parents about their rights when it comes to deciding whether or not to take part in religious aspects of the curriculum. The Sunday Post has learned of a case in which a girl was told she would have to leave her Catholic school if she did not take part in a traditional church ritual.

b. Critics last night described the revelations as “very worrying”. The Scottish Secular Society claim they are aware of “several” cases in which pupils have been forced to change school. Caroline Lynch, the organisation’s chairwoman, said: “It’s awful. One girl was told that if she didn’t learn part of the catechism then she’d be excluded. “In the last two months I’ve heard from three sets of parents whose children have been threatened with exclusion or told they were not at the ‘right’ school.”

c. The Scottish Secular Society is petitioning Parliament to change the law so parents and pupils opt in to religious observance rather than opt out. Lynch blames headteachers who believe that children who go to a religious school are automatically obliged to join in with religious observance including hymns, prayers and bible study. She added: “Sometimes headteachers just don’t understand the law. But, in some cases, it is people who believe that if a child is at their school then religion is part of the programme. That’s not acceptable. There’s a host of reasons why people send their kids to a particular school.”

d. Scotland has 370 state-funded faith schools of which three are Episcopalian, one Jewish and the other 366 Catholic. Just over a third of Scots claim to have no religion. Figures collated by the Scottish Secular Society show at least 26 schools in Scotland are failing to include information about the right to opt out in their handbook, which they are obliged to do.

e. Michael McGrath, of the Scottish Catholic Education Service, said: “Catholic schools are expected to comply with council policies and Scottish Government guidance on the provision of religious observance. “All parents have a right to withdraw children from religious observance on grounds of conscience. “However, where a parent chooses a Catholic school for their child’s education, they choose to be part of the school community and to opt in to the school’s ethos and practice which is imbued with religious faith and religious observance. If a parent was concerned about this they would surely choose a school which does not have a faith character.”

f. One Christian mother contacted the Scottish Secular Society after opting her children out at their request because they said they no longer believed. She claims the school told her that if she went ahead they would be excluded. The Humanist Society Scotland’s Gary McLelland blasted: “If a parent is being forced to remove their child from a school then the rules are not being followed. That would be horrific.” Next week, The Humanist Society and the Church of Scotland will urge religious observance in schools be changed to “time for reflection” to make it more inclusive. Scottish Government spokesman said current legislation and guidance around religious observance is “appropriate” and is not persuaded a move to an opt-in system would be helpful.

g. Mum’s battle to opt out The decision to pull her children out of religious observance sparked a three month battle with their school for one mother. The woman, who asked not to be named to protect her children, informed the Catholic school she was exercising her right to opt out but the message failed to get through to the teachers. She said: “It was a battle and at one point my daughter’s guidance teacher was saying to her if you carry on down this road you will be excluded. “People say to me why don’t you pull them out, but they are settled in all other aspects, such as their friends, and you don’t know what views your teenagers are going to have years down the line when you are choosing schools for them. “I’m a Christian but my son is an atheist and the school needs to respect that. I’ve wondered if there is so much resistance because they know they’d have a staffing nightmare if more people chose to opt out.”

13. August 2014; A peaceful protest, (approximately 1000 attended) at BBC Scotland HQ in Glasgow. (BBC reported 350)

a. Outraged that the, “Yes” Scotland campaign should organise such a demo Labour MP Jim Murphy went on-line to, one of the pro-independence blogs and made mischief, Stirring the proverbial s*** he wrote; “they lost the plot”. “They were angry and divisive”. “Their attempts to bully broadcasters and boycott businesses is the last thing the independence debate needs”. “Their angry and divisive campaign is a turn-off”. “They are frustrated”. “They are losing the big arguments and losing the plot in a big way”. “The reason for the nationalists’ frustration is clear: after 80 years of campaigning to break up the UK and with just 80 days to go, patriotic Scots are still saying no thanks to their political project”. “Now we are seeing real-world attempts to bully a broadcaster.” But square the foregoing with an extract from a recent speech, (setting out his belief in democracy) by the same Jim Murphy; “Nations which suppress the rights of their people to take advantage of civil society, democratic expression or the rule of law can no longer be considered stable nation states” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WTens0SZlno

14. September 2014; Jim Murphy appeals to ‘scunnered’ Scottish Labour voters

a. Jim Murphy addresses the Labour party conference in September the word of the moment, on a wet autumn afternoon in the East Renfrewshire constituency of Jim Murphy, the top . contender to lead Scottish Labour, is “scunnered”. The Westminster MP uses the Scots word for annoyed disgust to explain how his party can prevail in Scotland next May’s general election, despite opinion polls suggesting it faces a near wipeout that could kill Labour hopes of government. The prospect of a crushing defeat north of the border will do little to help the mood of a party where several senior figures, it was reported yesterday, have little confidence in Ed Miliband, Labour leader.

b. Scottish voters are feeling “scunnered with the status quo”, Mr Murphy, a former secretary of state for Scotland, says over pizza and Irn Bru at the Busby Hotel. But he believes Labour can still win if it offers a credible hope of change from a UK government led by the highly unpopular Conservative party. Among some formerly loyal voters in Scotland, however, it is the Labour party itself that arouses disgust. Just up the road in Busby, barber Robert Little, 51, says Labour could once depend on his backing. “That’s the way I was brought up by my dad,” he says. But Mr Little feels the modern Labour party is in thrall to corporate interests, citing what he sees as its failure to defend consumers from unhealthy processed food. In September he voted for Scotland to break away from the UK and the sight of Labour sharing anti-independence platforms with Conservative and Liberal Democrat politicians really put him off. “That scunnered me,” Mr Little says. ““We’re not the other guy” is not the basis of an appealing party.” http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/43d77872-6694-11e4-9c0c-00144feabdc0.html

15. October 2014: Murphy to Lead Labour in Scotland

a. In Jim Murphy, some believe that the party has found its super-sub. After his, “100 towns in 100 days” speaking tour made him a Unionist hero during the referendum campaign, the shadow international development secretary is regarded as having the stature necessary to first halt and then reverse the forward march of the SNP. “He looks like a leader,” a supporter declared. A teetotal vegetarian (his one vice is Irn-Bru) who finished first among MPs in the 2013 London Marathon and the author of a well-received recent book on football, even his enemies concede that few politicians can equal his energy.

b. But those same figures argue that his personality, ideology and Westminster background make him ill-equipped for the task at hand. “He’s the Marmite-plus candidate,” one Labour MP told me, noting that his, “fraught relationship” with Douglas Alexander had, “got worse” during the referendum campaign. “Jim Murphy’s the last person you would want to heal the wounds of a divided party.”

c. The Labour MSP Malcolm Chisholm, meanwhile, warned that electing an MP as leader would, “turn a crisis into a catastrophe”. Under the party’s rules, Murphy is required to seek election to Holyrood by 5 May 2016 (the date of the next devolved contest) at the latest. While unlikely to trigger a stand-alone by-election, several sources have suggested that he would aim to secure a seat in time for the general election, giving him a year to take on Nicola Sturgeon in the Holyrood chamber.

d. No Scottish Labour politician draws more opprobrium from nationalists than Murphy. To some in the party, this is proof that he is the one they fear the most. However, SNP sources deride this as wishful thinking. “He’s pro-[tuition] fees, pro-Iraq [war], pro-Trident, which are three of the things now embedded as part of the SNP’s moral and political identity,” one told me. “All of the worst aspects of Labour politics from an SNP perspective are wrapped up and embodied in Murphy. His election would hand the party a gift on a plate.”

e. The prospect of the trade unions – and Unite in particular (whose recent animus towards Murphy dates from the Falkirk affair) – opening fire on him during the campaign is one that they relish. “Unless Ed can do a deal with them, the unions will cause problems for Jim,” one Labour figure warned.

f. As will the insurgent SNP and the wider nationalist movement. Under Sturgeon’s leadership, the party will move to the left, partly out of conviction (unlike Salmond, she is an unambiguous social democrat) and partly out of necessity. The 60,000 people who have joined the SNP since the referendum demand nothing less. In the new Scotland, where a young generation of writers, thinkers and activists define themselves by their constitutional radicalism, Labour faces forces that it can no longer control.

g. For now, the party draws consolation from the enduring unpopularity of the Tories in Scotland, as demonstrated during the referendum campaign. By framing the general election as a choice between a Conservative government or a Labour government, it hopes to prevent critical losses to the nationalists. First, Labour needs to win the right to be heard again. After the public bloodletting of the past weeks, the contrast between the ineptitude of Scottish Labour and the ruthless competence of the SNP has never been greater. The electorate could yet respond by inflicting even greater harm on Labour. http://www.newstatesman.com/politics/2014/10/fall-reluctant-leader-inside-story-scottish-labours-crisis

16. October 2014; Labour Party faces meltdown. Neil Findlay

a. Neil Findlay, MSP and left-wing candidate for Lothian was stumped for an answer when asked, “What do you think of this poll then?” after an astonishing survey put the SNP on 54 seats and Labour on 4 after the next general election. “We need to get our act together very quickly. We need to get a new leader in place, and most crucially get policies in place to sell to the electorate.” In a three-horse race, Findlay is, all about traditional Labour values. In his view the failure to push these values is why Scottish Labour has performed badly “over the last 10 years or so”, he said. “Just look at the electoral results, certainly at a Scottish parliament level, to see we haven’t been effective.

b. Findlay said the referendum, in which Labour campaigned shoulder-to-shoulder with the Conservatives, had badly damaged his party. “I was no huge enthusiast for the Better Together campaign,” he said. “It gave an easy opportunity for the Yes side to fire bullets at us and say we were allied with certain political parties. It was an easy attack for them, particularly when they were trying to peel away Labour voters.” Another candidate, Labour MP Jim Murphy, had a starring role in the referendum campaign but Findlay stressed that policies not personalities would decide the outcome of the next election. Referring to the visit to Scotland of Labour leader, in the final weeks of campaigning. Was this an own goal? “Presentational it might not have been the cleverest way to do things, he said.”

c. Ed Miliband is a touchy subject in Scottish Labour at the moment. Labour MP Ian Davidson claimed Lamont had been the victim of a “Blairite coup” led by the London-based leadership. Findlay refused to comment on those allegations, but said there has to be more power for the Scottish party, and less interference from the UK-wide party. “It would be naive to say there are no problems, clearly there were,” Findlay said. “It’s critical that we have further devolution of policy in the Scottish party. If Scottish Labour policy is different to UK policy, then so be it, that’s what the devolution policy in Scotland is all about.”

d. On devolution, he said “a range of powers” should be devolved to the Scottish parliament. When pressed on what this actually meant, he said: “The whole issue of taxation is key. There is an argument for the 100% devolution of tax, but there are also arguments against that.” So that clears that up. He said the referendum should be “once in a lifetime”, and that Nicola Sturgeon’s suggestion that every individual UK country should have to vote Yes in an EU referendum for it to be legally binding is “absurd”. Findlay is not the favourite in the Scottish Labour leader race, and even if he wins, polling suggests life as Scottish Labour leader will be very, very difficult. “A poll is a poll is a poll,” he said. “We’ve seen them come and go in the past. We have to be prepared, we have to get our act together very quickly, and that will be the focus of any leader when they’re elected in December.” http://www.buzzfeed.com/jamieross/we-told-a-scottish-labour-leader-candidate-his-party-faces-m

17. October 2014; Jim Murphy’s Campaign Team Looks A Lot Like The Better Together Campaign Team

a. The campaign director of Better Together has been confirmed as an advisor to Jim Murphy MP as he campaigns for Scottish Labour leadership. Blair McDougall, who led the campaign for Scotland to remain in the UK, will take up an advisory role, Murphy’s team has confirmed. Meanwhile, Rob Shorthouse, Better Together director of communications, helped set up Murphy’s campaign this week but will not be formally involved in the campaign in the weeks to come. Day-to-day running of the campaign is to be led by James Kelly MSP and Jenny Marra MSP.

b. The involvement of the Better Together team could prove to be controversial. Some in Scottish Labour have said the pro-union campaign damaged the party. Labour support in Scotland has collapsed according to recent polls, and some within the party believe campaigning alongside the Conservatives as part of Better Together is responsible. Fellow leadership candidate, Neil Findlay MSP, said he was “no huge enthusiast” for Better Together and it gave the Yes side “an easy opportunity … to fire bullets at us and say we were allied with certain political parties.” More formal appointments to the team will made over the weekend as the Murphy leadership campaign officially launches with a rally in Edinburgh on Saturday. http://www.buzzfeed.com/jamieross/jim-murphys-campaign-team-looks-a-lot-like-the-better-togeth

18. November 2014; Ed Miliband tried to persuade Gordon Brown to stand for the Scottish Labour leadership

a. Ed Miliband tried to persuade Gordon Brown to stand for the Scottish Labour leadership, according to a senior party source. Miliband sent a member of the Shadow Cabinet to ask the former prime minister to stand before nominations closed last week, the Independent on Sunday reports. The source added: “Gordon showed good sense in turning it down.” Miliband is understood not to be a fan of Scottish leadership favourite Jim Murphy, a Blairite who stood down as Labour’s international development spokesperson this month. Miliband is thought to get on badly with Murphy, whom he demoted from defence spokesperson last year as Miliband’s aides branded him, “Disloyal”.
http://www.express.co.uk/news/uk/533476/Ed-Miliband-snubbed-by-Gordon-Brown

19. November 2014; Jim Murphy Will Stand For Holyrood Even If He Loses The Scottish Labour Leadership Election

a. Jim Murphy will leave Westminster and stand for the Scottish parliament even if he loses the Scottish Labour leadership election. Murphy, the MP for East Renfrewshire, is still favourite to become leader, but Neil Findlay MSP, the candidate backed by the majority of Scotland’s trade unions, has closed the gap to just 6%, according to polling seen by BBC Scotland. However, Murphy said he would stand for a seat in the Scottish parliament even if it meant taking a relatively unimportant role in Findlay’s Scottish Labour party. “Win, lose, or draw, that’s my plan,” he said, although he is not yet concerned about losing the increasingly tight leadership battle. “I’m never complacent, but I’m not worried. We’re having a contest, not a coronation, and I’m happy with how the campaign is going so far.”

b. Murphy spoke shortly after delivering a speech backing the full devolution of income tax to Scotland – a measure that he opposed only three weeks ago. “What’s changed for me is that the Barnett formula is now protected,” he said. “The worry we had was that [if] you devolve income tax but you don’t maintain the Barnett formula, that would be a bad deal for Scotland. We can now support the full devolution of income tax.” Labour officially supports sharing income tax between the Scottish and UK parliaments, but Murphy is bullish about being able to stamp his authority on a Scottish Labour party that ex-leader Johann Lamont said was treated as a “branch office” by “dinosaurs” in the UK party.

c. He said: “Ed Miliband, Ed Balls, I get on well with them, but they can read about my policies in the newspapers like everyone else. I’m big enough and ugly enough, I won’t be pushed around by anyone.” That, according to Murphy, includes the leader of the Unite union, Len McCluskey, who wrote a stinging attack on him, saying his election as leader would be “a death sentence” for Labour in Scotland. “Len has the right to say what he fancies, and Scotland has the right to say that he’s wrong,” said Murphy. “I grew up in a Glasgow housing scheme – I’m chilled out about it.” Murphy “admires the energy” of the SNP and thinks he would work well with first minister Nicola Sturgeon as “she loves Scotland as much as I do”, but was critical of the performance of his own party in Scotland. “We’ve not been good enough, and we’ve not been Scottish enough,” he said. “We have to change, and that’s what I’m trying to do.” The new Scottish Labour leader will be announced on 13 December. http://www.buzzfeed.com/jamieross/jim-murphy-will-stand-for-holyrood-even-if-he-loses-the-scot

20. November 2014; Senior Union official states – Trade unions want to stop Jim Murphy MP from becoming Scottish Labour leader because he’s a career politician

a. Gordon McKay, the Labour link chair of Unison, said his union chose to back Neil Findlay MSP’s bid rather than Murphy’s because Findlay “doesn’t come from a political elite”, and “didn’t start off with his career in politics”. “Neil Findlay is capable of getting our message out,” said McKay. “He’s been a brick layer, a teacher, a local Councillor before he got into Holyrood. He knows exactly what issues affect working people and their families.” Murphy, meanwhile, went straight from president of the National Union of Students to an official role with the Scottish Labour Party in 1996.

b. Union members have a third of the vote to decide who becomes the new leader, and proved to be decisive in the last Labour leadership election when they backed Ed Miliband. McKay hopes their influence will be enough to lift their man into leadership this time too. “We’ll be writing to our members to let them know our recommendation, we will be reminding people what Neil has done for our members, how he continually speaks up to defend our members,” said McKay. “We’ll be reminding people what the individual candidates are saying, and I would hope, after that, people will vote for Neil Findlay.”

c. McKay added that although Murphy’s “core values” are roughly the same as those of Unison members, “the main thing is winning the election, and he has more faith that ex-brickie Findlay would connect with voters and bring victory over the SNP and the Conservatives. People seem to believe the opposition to Labour in Scotland is the Tories, but it isn’t, it’s the SNP,” said McKay. We need to defeat them to make sure we don’t get a Tory government in Westminster. Neil ticks all the boxes that we’re looking for as a candidate to be leader of Scottish Labour. As far as I’m concerned, this election is absolutely up for grabs.” http://www.buzzfeed.com/jamieross/scotlands-biggest-trade-union-wants-to-stop-jim-murphy-from

21. November 2014; We didn’t listen” – Jim Murphy launches campaign with apology to the Scottish people

a. Jim Murphy will officially launch his campaign for the Scottish Labour leadership with a speech in Edinburgh today. He will focus on the Party’s failure to listen to the public, leading to subsequent defeats in 2007 and 2011. Murphy will use the experiences from his 100 towns tour, where he spent 100 days going around Scotland holding street meetings to campaign for a No vote this summer, to talk about the appetite for change around the country. “I want to apologise because twice Scots have said they didn’t think we were good enough to govern in Scotland – in 2007 and 2011. “We didn’t listen to them. That has to change.”

b. However, the contender does not go so far as to lay the blame with previous Scottish Labour leaders, praising them as “proud and passionate servants of our party and our country.” And he highlights that, despite poor performances in Holyrood election, Scottish Labour have continued to perform well in both Westminster and local elections (although recent polling shows that may be changing). It is not Labour ideals that have been rejected, he says, “it’s our vision for Scotland – or more truthfully our lack of vision.”

c. Murphy’s campaign has kicked off with a high media profile, with a positive profile in yesterday’s Guardian and several television interviews, and is the bookies’ favourite to win the contest. Today, he becomes the first candidate to make a major speech on the campaign. Neil Findlay, meanwhile, became the first candidate to win a trade union endorsement yesterday, with ASLEF throwing their support behind him.

d. Unite union have said they would like to hear more policy from Murphy. Pat Rafferty, the Scottish Secretary of the union, said: “Mr Murphy needs to put away his Irn Bru crate and start setting out what he stands for. This is an election about who can best deliver for working and community Scotland. We sincerely hope it will not be much longer before Jim Murphy tells us what policies he is promoting. Unite’s members want to know what he will do to reverse falling wages, attack poverty and defend our services. What matters is, whoever succeeds, what they do in power. Unite’s representative members will soon decide who to nominate on behalf of our union. On the basis of this speech, it is extremely difficult for them to find much to find hope that Jim Murphy is offering the genuine, positive change in Scottish Labour they seek. We urge him to use the coming days and weeks to give Labour voters much more substance to go on.”

22. November 2014; Jim Murphy: I’ll repeal SNP’s anti-sectarian football law

a. The legislation, passed in 2012, gave police and prosecutors extra powers to crack down on sectarian songs and abuse at football matches. It has met with opposition from fans’ groups, who believe they have been singled out unfairly, and some eminent legal figures. Dundee Sheriff Richard Davidson said it was “horribly drafted” and “mince”. Mr Murphy, MP for Eastwood, said: “If I am elected Scottish Labour Party leader and First Minister I will scrap the Football Act right away. “The law was an attempt to chase headlines rather than actually fix a complex problem. Sectarianism and intolerance goes far beyond 90 minutes on a Saturday or 140 characters in a tweet. “Instead of fixing the problem, they have created a pointless culture of mistrust between football fans and the police. The way to tackle intolerance and bigotry is every day in our classrooms and communities not with gimmick legislation. “Only when sectarianism in Scotland is seen by future generations to be just as unacceptable as racism and homophobia will we get rid of this stain on Scottish society for good. “The Football Act isn’t helping us towards the fair and tolerant Scotland we all want to live in. It has to go.”

b. Comment; The stain of sectarianism, primarily in the West of Scotland has been there since 1850 and will exist for many generations to come. Until reason within is commonplace there will remain a need for legislation such as introduced by the SNP government at the behest of the nation.

23. November 2014; A Vote for Jim Murphy In the Scottish Labour Leadership Election Is a Vote for a Tory Government In 2015

a. When it comes to the three candidates fighting it out for the leadership of the Scottish Labour Party – Jim Murphy, Sarah Boyack, and Neil Findlay – if the Tories in Scotland and the SNP could cast a vote between November 17, when the ballot commences, and December 13, when the new leader is announced, you can be sure it would be for Jim Murphy. Why? Because with Murphy as leader the likelihood of a Tory government at Westminster in 2015 increases to the point of being guaranteed, and likewise the continued dominance of the SNP in Scotland, bringing with it renewed danger of the break-up of the United Kingdom.

b. This is the reason it is no exaggeration to state that the upcoming election of the next leader of Scottish Labour is the most important internal election in the party’s history, not only in Scotland but UK-wide. For on the result hinges not just the future of Scottish Labour but also the outcome of the 2015 general election and, even more importantly, the very future of the United Kingdom.

c. On 18 September 3.6 million people in Scotland cast a vote in a referendum on Scottish independence. The prospect of the break-up of a more than 300 year old political union was real. In their droves people voted Yes – 1.6 million to be exact – even though the programme for independence put forward by the Scottish National Party, the dominant force within the wider Yes campaign, rather than a significant departure from the status quo had status quo stamped all over it. Yet regardless 1.6 million people voted for independence, of which, according to a Lord Ashcroft poll after the referendum, 37% had voted Labour at the 2011 Holyrood elections.

d. When it comes to the main issues that drove support for Yes, the same poll identified 54% whose priority was concern over the future of the NHS and 74% who cited disaffection with Westminster politics. The truth is that the unemployed, people from low income communities, and those alienated from the status quo were more likely to have voted Yes, while the obverse was the case when it came to voting No. Four out of 32 local authorities voted Yes, with three of those – Glasgow, North Lanarkshire, and West Dunbartonshire – for decades impregnable Labour strongholds.

e. Only those in denial or suffering a severe case of myopia could fail to arrive at the conclusion that the referendum provided clear evidence of the deep political and ideological malaise that has gripped Scottish Labour, responsible for it shedding support to the SNP and one step away from its political grave. The sixty thousand new members that the SNP has attracted post referendum has bolstered not only the finances of the Scottish nationalists but more significantly their confidence. Compare this to the desultory 13,500 current membership of the Scottish Labour Party and the scale of the challenge facing the next leader of the party is considerable. Indeed in many parts of Scotland, Labour is every bit as reviled as the Tories, with the appellation Red Tories gaining currency.

f. An even more alarming poll when it comes to the crisis facing Scottish Labour was conducted by Ipsos Mori for Scottish Television. Its findings revealed that Labour in Scotland faces electoral wipeout at next year’s general election, on course to retain just four of its current 41 seats at Westminster.

g. Thus, not only Scottish Labour’s future success its very survival depends on the party electing a leader who understands the need to return to the founding values and principles upon which Labour came into being. It requires a political reorientation of the party towards the needs of ordinary working people, whose need for social and economic justice is non negotiable after four years of one of the most extreme Tory governments we have seen, engaged in the peddling of human despair under the aegis of austerity.

h. Jim Murphy is a politician wedded to Westminster and the ideals of Blairism; in other words the very policies that saw Labour shed five million votes between 1997 and 2010. An unapologetic supporter of the war in Iraq – indeed during a recent interview with the Fabian Society, when it came to Iraq, Murphy opined that, “It’s not Tony Blair’s fault.” – and still a supporter of the concept of British military intervention overseas regardless of the series of disasters that have resulted as a consequence in recent years, Murphy is also a supporter of the kind of cuts to public spending that have wrought so much damage to low income communities and the economy overall. During a 2011 interview with the Spectator magazine, for example, the former secretary of state for Scotland said that “the job for all of us now in the shadow cabinet is to work through our portfolios on just where we could make the savings, where would we make the cuts”.

i. A passion for cutting public spending, regardless of the damage to the economy and in particular the lives of working people and the poor, describes a mistaken understanding of economics as a morality play. For too long the emphasis has been on society serving the needs of the economy rather than an economy which serves the needs of society. Jim Murphy, as we have seen, is an adherent of the former and not the latter. In fact his credibility as a potential leader of the Labour Party in Scotland is largely derived from his willingness to stand on an Irn Bru crate in towns and cities throughout Scotland during the referendum campaign being abused by the general public. But if a talent for enduring public flagellation is the main criteria for the leadership of the party founded by Keir Hardie to address the needs of working people, Jesus Christ would be in the running. Ultimately, Mr Murphy stands proudly in this election as the candidate for New Labour at a time when Scotland is crying out for real Labour. Surely it is only those who have just awoken from a long slumber who would suggest otherwise. http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/john-wight/jim-murphy-labour-leader_b_6137822.html

24. November 2014; Labour leadership front-runner Jim Murphy set to back full income tax-raising powers for Holyrood

a. Scottish Labour leadership frontrunner Jim Murphy is backing full income tax-raising powers for Holyrood. He wants the party to agree with SNP and Tory representations to the Smith Commission on plans to devolve income tax. But his stance puts him at odds with senior party figures including former chancellors Gordon Brown and Alistair Darling. In a speech today, the East Renfrewshire MP will throw his weight behind full income tax powers for the Scottish Parliament. Murphy will say: “If a Scottish Government wants to spend more, it will have to raise more. The buck will stop in Scotland.” He will use the speech to outflank main leadership rival Neil Findlay MSP.

25. November 2014; Labour’s Jim Murphy–at least he is honest about appealing to religious voters

a. The best that can be said about the appeal by Scottish Labour leadership contender Jim Murphy to religious voters is that, at least he is honest and transparent. Few other elected Scottish politicians openly profess their religious faith and their role in shoring up religious privileges in Scottish society. Most prefer not to make a public issue of the role of religion in politics for fear of upsetting influential religious minorities. They remain silent and assent to religious divisions in schooling, religious voting nominees on education committees, enforced religious observance in schools, and additional Scottish Government financial subsidies to religious organisations which already benefit from taxation relief because of their charitable status. Even the much vaunted democratic assembly that is the Scottish Parliament recoils from open public debate about these matters – suppressing attempts to have a public discussion of these and other religious privileges. http://edinburghsecularsociety.com/tag/jim-murphy/

26. December 2014; Jim Murphy Fury at Secular Society chief’s ‘sectarian, anti-Catholic’ slur

a. Scottish Labour leadership hopeful Jim Murphy has hit back at remarks from a leading secular society figure accusing him of being “a catholic fanatic”, “a Pope Benedict fan” and “a religious fanatic”. The comments, made by Scottish Secular Society Founder Gary Otton on Facebook, have been dubbed “disturbing” and are “worryingly close to anti-Catholic sectarianism”, according to one of Scotland’s leading religious figures. The next Free Church of Scotland Moderator, Rev David Robertson, said the East Renfrewshire MP has been targeted by opponents because of his catholic faith. http://www.newsrt.co.uk/news/fury-at-secular-society-chief-s-sectarian-anti-catholic-slur-on-scottish-labour-leadership-hopeful-jim-murphy-2828196.html

27. December 2014; Scottish Labour leadership: Curran backs Murphy

a. In a sign all might not be going well for Jim Murphy, Shadow Scottish Secretary Margaret Curran says the Renfrewshire MP can reach out to Scots who ‘thought Labour had left them behind.’ Polling closes on Wednesday in the race to replace Johann Lamont, with Holyrood health spokesman Neil Findlay and former Scottish Government transport minister Sarah Boyack also in the running. Mrs Curran, the Glasgow East MP, says in an email to Labour members today that she wasn’t ‘planning to publicly back a candidate’ in the Scottish Labour party leadership election. But she said; “As this campaign has progressed it’s become increasingly clear how important this decision is for the future of the Scottish Labour Party.”

b. She added, “We won Glasgow East with drive, determination and by reaching out to the people who thought that Labour had left them behind. They’re the same qualities we need to put Scottish Labour back in the lead, and that’s what I’ve seen from Jim during this campaign. We need someone with ideas for how we can take Scotland forward and that’s exactly what he’s been talking about for the past five weeks.” She added that Mr Murphy, the former Scottish Secretary, showed he is ready to take the fight to the SNP with his 100 days tour during the referendum which drew organised picketing from hardline Nationalists. Mr Murphy said: “I am delighted to have Margaret Curran’s support for Scottish Labour leader. Having served in both the Scottish and UK Parliaments, and as a Scottish Government minister, she knows what Scottish Labour needs to succeed. I look forward to working closely with Margaret if I am elected leader.” http://www.scotsman.com/news/uk/scottish-labour-leadership-curran-backs-murphy-1-3628538#

28. December 2014; Scottish Secular Society Founder Gary Otton accuses Murphy of being “a catholic fanatic”, “a Pope Benedict fan” and “a religious fanatic”.

a. Otton posted four different Facebook threads about Murphy in the space of two days, all making reference to Murphy’s religion and support for denominational schools. Robertson described some of the comments as “disturbing”. He said, “the Scottish Secular Society have posted several stories about ‘Catholic fanatic/extremist/Pope Benedict fan’ Jim Murphy over the past few days. I find it particularly disturbing this constant referral to Jim Murphy as Roman Catholic – what does that have to do with anything? It comes worryingly close to the kind of anti-Catholic sectarianism that plagued the West of Scotland – perhaps it still does. It is of no relevance or interest to me that a particular political candidate is Roman Catholic or not. Mr Murphy should be judged on his political views and abilities, not what church he belongs to. It is ironic that of all groups the Scottish Secular Society continues to highlight religious affiliation as though this were somehow a disqualifying factor.”

b. But Otton defended his remarks. saying, “The Scottish Secular Society have no problem with Mr Murphy’s beliefs, but a very great problem with the way in which we fear they will influence his political decisions. In particular, we don’t approve of support for the idea that bishops can be put in charge of sex education in Catholic schools. We are also concerned that he will defend privileges for organised religion, segregating children on the basis of their parents’ religion in denominational schools with separate staff rooms and entrances. We are utterly opposed to sectarianism in any shape or form. There is also general agreement amongst secularists that unelected religious representatives, both Catholic and Church of Scotland, voting on how Councils should deploy their limited education budgets is absurd. Murphy has been reported in the press praising the US because religion has a bigger role in politics. That is not a scenario the Scottish Secular Society would welcome in Scotland. Opinions on Facebook’s Secular Scotland are personal and social media is the appropriate place to express them. The Scottish Secular Society is the appropriate organisation to challenge the religious privileges.”
http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/politics/fury-secular-society-chiefs-sectarian-4775349

29. December 2014; Jim Murphy on patriotism, socialism and Labour’s future

a. Jim Murphy loves Scotland. I know this because he assures me of it at least a dozen times in a half-hour interview. Scotland is his country. He’s proud of it. He intends to do well by it. Asked why he wants to lead Scottish Labour, the first thing he says is, “It sounds trite, but I love my country.” This expression of national pride is jarring because the SNP has so comprehensively co-opted the language of patriotism. That Murphy is comfortable talking about his love of country sets him apart from so many Scottish Labour politicians in recent years. That’s not all that makes him different. He loves his Irn-Bru and his Celtic – some sort of football club popular in the West of Scotland, m’lud — and for a politician he seems remarkably, well, normal. He’s the only vegetarian I’ve ever spent more than three minutes with and not wanted to punch. He has a sense of humour, doesn’t take himself too seriously, and though he speaks with evident passion about creating a fairer society, it is clear that politics is not his life. “I’ve never been a favourite in an election but I’ve never come second,” he points out, before chewing it over and adding: “There’s three candidates in this race so maybe I’ll come third this time and keep that record.”

b. He’s the sort of bloke you could have a pint with. Except he’s teetotal. (An abstemious vegetarian? Applying to lead Scottish Labour? At a time like this? If he wins, I give it six months before he gets tanked on half a Bacardi Breezer and challenges Len McCluskey to a square go in a Nando’s car park.)

c. In the Scottish Labour leadership election, Murphy stands out as the only MP contesting for the top job. A former president of the National Union of Students (where he made himself a power of enemies by reversing the NUS’s opposition to scrapping grants), he pulled off a surprise win in the safe Tory seat of Eastwood in 1997. He has retained the seat, now known as East Renfrewshire, ever since and despite the best efforts of the Conservatives to win back the prosperous suburban constituency.

d. Although often branded a Blairite, his political star came into the ascendancy when Gordon Brown took over at Number Ten and Murphy was appointed Europe minister and later Secretary of State for Scotland, a position from which he masterminded Labour’s successful 2010 election in Scotland.

e. His 100 Towns in 100 Days tour of Scotland during the independence referendum was seen as both a welcome energy boost for the Better Together campaign and a brazen pitch to replace the ineffective Johann Lamont as Scottish Labour leader. (It was also a tactic blatantly nicked from Neil Kinnock – coincidentally, a recent Murphy backer – who figured out early on that the 1983 general election was lost and drove round the country with a megaphone denouncing Thatcherism and positioning himself to succeed Michael Foot.) Murphy infamously attracted Nationalist hecklers to his soapbox speeches, their roiling anger – and flying dairy produce – betraying the threat they deemed him to pose.

f. If Labour’s electoral college of MPs, MSPs, members, and unions award him the job, Nationalists think Murphy’s 17-year record at Westminster will provide them with endless lines of attack:- His support for tuition fees; his vote for military action in Iraq; his parliamentary expenses.

g. The problem is that anyone who won’t vote Labour because Jim Murphy supported the overthrow of Saddam Hussein stopped voting Labour a long time ago and probably never will again. Murphy himself recognises the need to move on from New Labour, while careful to pay the necessary obeisance to that project and the leader who brought Labour back out of the wilderness.

h. He explains: “New Labour is a way of thinking and of designing your politics that was of the moment in the mid-90s. It’s 20 years of age and it’s time to do things a bit differently. I’m not fascinated by whether people are left-wing or right-wing, New or Old Labour, I want us to be winning Labour.”

i. The time has come, he reckons, to step beyond the party’s most successful leader: “I think we need a post-Tony Blair Labour Party that’s patriotic, that’s radical. The Labour Party’s had six leaders since Tony Blair: two UK leaders and four Scottish leaders. It’s time for us to move on. Tony Blair was the right answer to the questions of his era. He’s a long time gone so it’s time to move on and be more confident about our future rather than continually harking on and looking in our rear-view mirror about our past.”

k. Murphy is not the candidate to bring disaffected lefties back into the fold. They have gone to the fringes or to the SNP, socialist Scotland’s favourite neoliberal party. His appeal is to the mainstream Labour voter, including those who have become more comfortable voting SNP in recent years. But as he argued during the Scotland Tonight leadership hustings, his pitch reaches further than that. “I don’t think we can just talk to Labour voters,” he said. “There aren’t enough of them.”

l. That means driving Labour’s tanks onto the SNP’s lawns just as brazenly as Alex Salmond did to Labour over the last decade. For the most committed SNP supporters, independence is everything but amongst the Nationalists’ impressive electoral coalition there are many, including Yes voters, who have other priorities.

m. Cast your mind back, if you can, to a time before the referendum campaign, when we had entire conversations and even parliamentary debates about things other than the constitution. Murphy’s task is to return the political debate to education, health, and the economy – and to offer voters bold alternatives to the SNP. His Blairite credentials might even come in handy here.

n. Scottish politics needs a substantial opposition figure other than Tory leader Ruth Davidson who is willing to think the unthinkable in order to reform education, improve the NHS, and create jobs. There is real scope to take on some of the SNP’s sacred cows, particularly their hostility to the non-state sectors, and offer parents, patients, businesspeople, public sector workers, and taxpayers policies driven by outcomes rather than the SNP’s uneasy mixture of populism and ideology.

o. How bold Murphy is willing or inclined to be remains to be seen, but he is determined to reach out to everyone necessary to win, including Yes voters. He maintains: “You have to move beyond the referendum. You don’t win people’s affections by telling them they were wrong… It’s about reaching out to these folk and making a patriotic case that we believe in similar things; we just disagree about how to achieve them. On the basis that we’ve now decided the constitutional arrangements of Scotland for a generation, as we were told, then let’s work together.

p. “If ever there’s a referendum again, we’ll be on different sides of that probably, but let’s work together in the meantime and try to create a better society. The challenge for the Labour Party is to be a party again that people can see a cause of social justice in. For example, I want to put income tax up to 50% as part that.”

q. That left tilt is perfectly balanced by a pitch to the middle ground. “In terms of aspirational voters, it’s about guaranteeing that if you go to work you’ll be better off in work than if you are on benefit. Now that parts of the welfare state are going to be devolved to Scotland, that’s important. It’s also about saying to people they deserve a decent home and it they want to own their home, I’m happy about that. I’m in favour of more people owning their home.” He wouldn’t reinstate the Right to Buy but wants to ensure there are enough houses, council, social, and private, to end homelessness. Murphy insists he is a socialist, a claim that his critics and even some of his supporters would scoff at. The MP for East Renfrewshire is not someone you’d mistake for a Morning Star seller standing outside a boarded-up Woolworth’s on a drizzly Saturday morning. But Comrade Murphy has his own definition:

r. “Everyone who’s comfortable with that title had a different definition. For me it means it doesn’t matter where you’re born or the family you’re born into, you should have a fair chance. And you should get a second and third chance in life. Strident, right-wing Conservatism has a sense of you being on your own; it’s like advanced social Darwinism – the survival of the fittest. I think every human being is created equal and people should have an equal chance. “It’s up to people what you do with your chance but my politics are that you should get a first chance, a second chance, a third chance. But you only get one shot at life and a politician’s job is to help you make the most of your life. If you don’t take your chances, there’s nothing I can do about that, but I’m a patient person and I’d like to give people multiple chances and choices. That’s my socialism. Others have their own definition.”

t. I don’t buy Murphy’s definition for a second but it is obvious that justice in one form or another is the nucleus of his political philosophy. While most Labour politicians learn about injustice from The Road to Wigan Pier or The Soul of Man under Socialism, Murphy lived it first hand during his early years in South Africa. His parents were driven there in search of work and better opportunities for their family. What greeted the 12-year-old Jim was the moral obscenity of apartheid. He describes a thread of segregation that ran through every aspect of public and private life. It is the only point during the interview that he’s subdued and his voice takes on a sadness that seems to come from another time and place. He recounts: “It was a bizarre nightmare of a society, where the only thing that mattered was the colour of your skin. In a country where almost 90% of the country were black Africans, you could easily go weeks without coming into contact with anyone other than someone of the same skin colour. You would stand at a Whites Only bus stop to go to a Whites Only school. You would travel on Whites Only buses. It was an unforgivable type of politics but the remarkable thing is that so many South Africans have forgiven.”

u. He adds: “I had to go to a Whites Only school where you had to learn Afrikaans, you had to be bilingual. Every Thursday you had to turn up to school in your cadet uniform and march up and down the rugby field to prepare to go and serve two years in the South African army. The society was structured around the maintenance of a minority politics. The media was controlled by the state, the curriculum was influenced by the state’s racism, sport was used to bolster a white supremacy. Then, like the Berlin Wall, it all just fell over.”

v. He paints a harrowing picture of a society that practised totalitarianism over the human spirit. It is, however, where he felt the first stirrings of political radicalism. He recalls: “Nelson Mandela’s name was banned — and his photograph. You weren’t allowed to say his name and the newspapers weren’t allowed to print his name or his photograph or they would have been shut down. It’s a remarkable experience to have your political consciousness forged in a place where democratic politics wasn’t tolerated and the biggest decisions you’ve got to make are daily ones about the way in which you live your life. “Do you buy into the casual, all-encompassing racism that dominated your education and dominated the culture of the country? I chose to opt out of that in all sorts of different ways. You find a social circle that wants nothing to do with it. You find ways of arguing against it. Then when it comes to the big decision about whether you’re going to serve in the South African army, I left the country.”

w. The move, he interjects, was not motivated by pacifism or cowardice. “I wasn’t going to spend two years of my life propping up the vile beast that was apartheid.” Instead he went to Glasgow, to study at Strathclyde University, and it was years before he saw the family he had left behind in Cape Town again. There’s that sadness again, but his tone quickly turns upbeat when he remembers that the experience, and the British Government’s stance on apartheid, drove him to political activism. “Mrs Thatcher got me to join the Labour Party,” he announces with pride. The late Conservative Prime Minister had opposed international sanctions against South Africa and deemed the African National Congress a terrorist outfit rather than a liberation movement. “I had just returned from that country and couldn’t understand it at all.” Now, a quarter of a century on, Murphy wants to lead his party, or at least its Scottish “branch office”. He could hardly have picked a worse time, given the party’s continuing opposition at Holyrood, dreadful poll numbers, and an SNP surging towards 100,000 members and a possible break though at Westminster next May.

x. The real obstacle to his political ambitions is the new First Minister. Nicola Sturgeon is a social democrat’s dream come true, a politician so perfectly attuned to the ideals and impulses of north European progressivism that she could almost have walked off the set of her favourite TV programme Borgen. Quite how that fits with a party that campaigns for corporate tax cuts and a services-slashing council tax freeze is a dynamic yet to play itself out. But as personal polling numbers show, this contradiction does not weigh on the minds of the electorate, who consistently rate the First Minister above any other politician in trust and effectiveness.

y. Ask Murphy if the SNP is a “left-of-centre” party and I’ve barely reached the question mark before he rejects the idea. Surely, I push, Nicola Sturgeon’s politics are more clearly aligned with Labour voters than Alex Salmond’s ever were. “We’ll see what Nicola Sturgeon is, we’ve yet to see what she really is. I think she’s effective, I think she’s formidable. Nicola Sturgeon will be what she needs to be to build a coalition to get independence. The SNP are unencumbered by an economic anchor; they will drift wherever they need to go to build a coalition that gets them to 50% plus one of the votes in any future referendum.”

z. Outside Glasgow and the west, he assures me, many of the SNP’s supporters are not left-wing and lend their vote to the Nationalists as the “anyone but Labour” party. However, in Labour’s traditional working-class heartlands, he recognises how much work has to be done. He concedes: “In terms of the central belt, the Labour Party hasn’t been good enough. That’ll change. We haven’t been strong enough, we haven’t been proud enough, we haven’t been radical enough.” That radicalism need not mean ideological policies, he argues, and should include overlooked and unpopular issues like mental health and prison reform. But he is convinced that Labour alone is the platform on which a progressive politics can be built.

30. “Radical social reform in our country comes from the Labour Party, when it comes to things like ending discrimination based on people’s sexuality, driving out discrimination based on gender, the Equal Pay Act, the Sex Discrimination Act, all the great social reforms in our country – the national minimum wage, devolution, freedom of information – all of these supported – such as the minimum pricing of alcohol – there’s a lot more that can be done.” Still, if Murphy wins — and that’s not guaranteed; Labour’s trade union money men aren’t keen on him — he faces a monumental challenge. He will be leading a party that has lost the votes, the patience, and frankly the goodwill of the people of Scotland. Murphy talks a good game but that will matter for little if the voters no longer want to listen.

31. But he has skill and wit and charm. He sounds like a leader and looks like a First Minister. He also has necessity on his side. He is spoken of by his supporters as the only candidate who can make Scottish Labour electable again. That is for Labour members and trade unionist voters to decide. The bigger decision for this party is whether it should continue to be relevant to the political life of Scotland. Political parties that dominate electoral systems, as Labour has done in Scotland for half a century, come to confuse their dominance for permanence. But nations change and parties that fail to change with them are left behind. Consider the fate of Canada’s Progressive Conservative Party, the Democrat Party in the American South, or closer to home and a century back the Liberal Party. There is no law in heaven or earth that says the Scottish Labour Party must endure. Labour responded to its defeat in 2007 by going into denial. In the wake of its 2011 drubbing, it gave the impression of a party that had still not come to terms with its electoral reversal and had lost the will to fight back. The opinion polls for next May’s general election and the 2016 Scottish Parliament vote hint at results ranging from dire to apocalyptic.

32. Murphy seems acutely aware of the odds stacked against his party at the moment. “The Scottish Labour Party is the underdog. Scottish Labour is used to being the champion of the underdog; it hasn’t often found itself to be the underdog.” Under his leadership, the party will “get out of the recently acquired habit of losing”. What would a Murphy-run, non-losing Scottish Labour look like? “We would have a much more professional party, a better-funded party, a much more confident party that takes its chin off its chest and stands up for itself. That says our cause is as great as the Nationalists’, if not greater. The sense of solidarity in our country and beyond and the knowledge that a boundary or a border has never put food in the tummy of any kid anywhere in the world. It’s about energy, optimism, and a sense of self-belief. “We win, we hold what we have in 2015 and we go into a two-horse race against the Nats in 2016 where I think we can build a coalition of people, some of whom have always voted Labour and some of whom have never voted Labour. And in a two-horse race, I’m pretty confident we’ll win.” It can’t be easy to summon up that kind of optimism at these times but the positivity seems genuine. It shouldn’t be allowed to lapse into complacency. Scottish Labour is a party fast running out of chances. Jim Murphy will be hoping members see him as one of those chances — and grab it while they can. http://news.stv.tv/scotland-decides/analysis/302206-stephen-daisley-interviews-labour-leadership-candidate-jim-murphy/

33. December 2014; Scotland and Trident: two words Ed Miliband can’t afford to ignore

a. Unless Ed Miliband changes course on Trident replacement, Labour risks losing not only the general election, but losing its Scottish heartland for good. No matter how much Westminster politicians may wish to put Trident on the back burner for the general election, the reality is that’s not going to happen. Our friends north of the border – where up to 75 per cent oppose Trident irrespective of their position on independence – will make sure of that. The leader with the biggest headache over this is currently Ed Miliband: the question of Labour policy on Britain’s possession of nuclear weapons – currently located in Scotland – can make or break a Labour victory and a future Labour government.

b. Currently the very future of Labour – as a major player in Scotland’s politics – is at stake. Since the referendum, the parties that backed the No vote have taken a nose dive, as thousands have flocked to the parties of the Yes camp, from SNP through Greens, and SSP. Scottish civil society has taken on a whole new look, with widespread popular engagement at an all-time high. Labour is particularly badly hit and opinion polls suggest that it could lose as many as 31 Westminster seats in May’s general election. Reports from within the party suggest high levels of anger and dissatisfaction – about what the party now stands for and who decides where it is going. Johann Lamont’s resignation as leader seemed to sum up much of the problem as she accused Westminster Labour colleagues of trying to run Scotland “like a branch office of London”.

c. It may be that there is no way back in the current context – especially when Gordon Brown’s last ditch promises of vote-winning ‘devo-max’ aren’t being honoured and Nicola Sturgeon offers a more left-wing variant of SNP politics that is potentially attractive to Labour voters. So any hope of a Labour recovery, however marginal, surely hinges now on the outcome of the current Scottish Labour leadership contest where once again Trident is a big factor. A new leader can have a significant impact on where the party is situated politically.

d. Labour’s leadership is backing the pro-Trident former shadow Defence Secretary Jim Murphy. But it’s hard to see how Murphy will be able to win support back to Labour on that basis, particularly when significant working class communities in Glasgow and Dundee were lost so recently to the Yes camp.

e. Of course Jim Murphy isn’t the only option presented to Scottish Labour. Neil Findlay, the most strongly anti-Trident of the other candidates, also presents a policy platform which could help win back voters across a range of current economic and social concerns; areas where traditionally Labour has won strong support but Westminster Labour policies are no longer where Scottish voters are at. These include raising the minimum wage, the reintroduction of council house building and the reduction of private sector involvement in the NHS. If he wins the Scottish leadership on 13 December, Findlay’s active anti-nuclear stance will no doubt win Labour votes – and will force Ed Miliband to look again at Trident replacement.

f. That imperative may well come from other Scottish sources too. In the event that the SNP takes a significantly increased number of Westminster seats – some estimates are as high as 47 it’s possible that it may hold the balance of power in a hung parliament, in the same way that the Liberal Democrats did in 2010. Nicola Sturgeon has already said that she won’t make a Conservative government possible but she’s already named her price for SNP support for a minority Labour government: Trident has to be removed from Scotland. One way or another, Ed Miliband is having to confront the Trident issue. And whether he likes it or not, it has to be tackled, as these developments show. Kicking it into the long grass of internal party policy debates is just not adequate. The Scots may have forced the issue up the political agenda, but Trident – and whether to replace it – is a crucial issue for us all. http://www.newstatesman.com/politics/2014/12/scotland-and-trident-two-words-ed-miliband-can-t-afford-ignore

34. Annual Cost Travel, Accomodation, Subsistence, Office Rental & Running Costs – 2110-2014

a. 2010-2011

Accomodation £11,513 (6 Months Rent of Flat, Hotel Accomodation, Rates, Council Tax)

Constituency £9,456 (Office Rental, Rates, Services. Telephones, Insurances)

General Admin £8,960 (£1,300 Cellphone Rental, £1,900 Stationery, £2,256 Telephone System Rental, £1,239 Photocopy rental & charges, £470 Surveyor Costs, £2000 Staff contingency)

Travel £14,837 (travel by air, car, rail, taxi)

Staffing £21397 (Pooled staff professional fees)

Total £68215

b. 2011-2012

Accomodation £11,948 (Rent of Flat 8 months)

Constituency £20,679 (6 months Office Rental & Rates, £1500 Stationery/Adv, £1400 Photocopier Rental, £10,000 Shared Office Costs)

General Admin £1,456 (Telephone Rental, Mobile Phone Rental, Stationery)

Travel £25,528 (£23,500 MP Travel by Air, Car, Rail, Taxi + £2,500 Staff Travel & Accomodation Costs)

Staffing £21,035 (Pooled staff Professional fees)

Total £95,550

c. 2012-2013

Accomodation £22,554 (14 Months Rent of flat London + ancillary costs)

Constituency £18,240 (£8,377 Office Rent/Rates, £1,806 Telephone Rental, £1790 Stationery, £1,300 Insurances/Trg/Professional Fees, £4120 Shared Office Costs)

Staffing £35,939 (Pooled staff Professional fees)

Travel £18,938 (£14,989 MP Travel by Air, Car, Rail, Taxi + £2,200 Staff Travel & Accomodation Costs)

Total £80,767

d. 2013-2014

Accomodation £19,953 (Rent of Flat London 12 months + Ancillary Costs)

Constituency £22,195 (£10,384 Office Rent/Rates/Ins, £2653 Stationery, £2,150 Photocopier Rental, £1,100 Prof Fees, £1,784 Office Running Costs)

Travel £16,553 (£15,353 (MP Travel by Air, Car, Rail, Taxi + £1,200 Staff Travel & Accomodation Costs)

Staffing £138,268

Total £196,969

Barry Black – Labour Party – To Stand For West Aberdeenshire and Kincardine – Needs To Learn To Engage His Brain Before His Mouth – Not This Time Barry

 

 

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Barry Black – Aspiring politician.

Education: Robert Gordon University studying for a BA (Hons) Applied Social Science (4 year course 2013-2017).

Work: March 2013 – June 2014 (part time?) Marks and Spencer

Volunteer Work: Restless Development, June 2014– on-going

 

 

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October 2010; Barry Black, (silly boy) pronounces on the release of Al Megrahi

Scottish SNP Justice Minister Kenny MacAskill, said in August 20, 2009, “For these reasons (stage 4 cancer) – and these reasons alone – it is my decision that Mr Abdelbaset Ali Mohmed Al Megrahi, convicted in 2001 for the Lockerbie bombing, now terminally ill with prostate cancer, be released on compassionate grounds and allowed to return to Libya to die.”

‘Call Me Dave’ Cameron was in Washington this week meeting Barack and held a joint press conference where they were on first name terms and spoke of their respect for each other. A posh white Etonite and a middle class black man? I get it. Anyway, a US media hackette asked our ‘beloved’ PM whether or not his government would hold an inquiry into MacAskill’s decision. His succinct reply stated that it wasn’t up to his government, that it was Scotland’s *cough* SNP’s *cough* decision. He called for all relevant papers to be published, including medical reports and a report of Mr MacAskill’s ‘suspicious’ meeting with the terrorist himself. And so they should be.

Kenny MacAskill has since denied any deal between Scotland and Libya. The First Minister has also denied that BP influenced the decision. Fair enough, but why has former UK Justice Minister Jack Straw been quoted as saying the decision was based on trade? Hmm..

Kenny, you mentioned that you were upholding Scottish values of caring, compassion and decency, that you were making the decision on behalf of the Scottish people. I’m Scottish and I would have let the scumbag rot in jail.

Where’s the compassion for the victims, Kenny? Were they allowed to go home to be surrounded by their loved ones? No, they’re in graves now and according to you, by now, so should Megrahi.

Didn’t it make every one of you sick, when Megrahi left the aircraft and Libyans were waving Scottish flags in celebration of his return?

MacAskill has declined the opportunity to go to the USA to give evidence to support his decision. Why did he decline? Because he cannot support it – or because it was a corrupt decision? Will we ever know? So Kenny, a year on – why?

http://aberdeenvoice.com/2010/07/caring-compassion-and-decency/#more-798

 

 

 

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September 2011: UK Labour Government ‘lied about Lockerbie bomber’

Young Barry should eat his words since it was the direct involvement of his beloved labour party and it’s leader Tony Blair that brought about the release of al Megrahi. Who was completely innocent of the charges brought against him by the illegal activities of the secret services of the US and UK

Secret documents reportedly show the UK lied about the reasons behind the Lockerbie bomber’s release from prison. Britain’s Mail On Sunday newspaper made the claims against the former Labour government yesterday, citing secret documents it had obtained.

Abdel Baset al Megrahi was released from a Scottish prison in 2009 after he was diagnosed with prostate cancer and given three months to live. Megrahi was convicted in connection with the 1988 bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland, which killed 270 people, many of them Americans. He had been sentenced to life imprisonment.

After his arrival in Libya, Megrahi was given a feted welcome by Muammar Gaddafi’s government, actions which drew protests from around the world.

At the time of his release, the Scottish executive, which heads Scotland’s devolved parliament, said it had made the decision to free Megrahi on compassionate grounds.

Since then, the Labour Party has consistently denied that it had interfered and said it was the Scottish ministers’ responsibility. But according to The Mail On Sunday, the confidential documents showed that the UK Government gave in to pressure from Gaddafi after he threatened to start a “holy war” if Megrahi died in prison.

The papers, found on the floor of the British ambassador’s abandoned residence in the Libyan capital Tripoli, reportedly revealed Gaddafi warned there would be “dire consequences”.

The threat led officials to fear British nationals would be harassed “or worse”, UK energy contracts in the country would be revoked and there would be an end to counter-terrorism assistance.

Alastair Darling, Britain’s finance minister from 2007 to 2010, admitted that the Labour administration was trying to keep Gaddafi onside, but dismissed the idea that their pressure had in fact managed to secured Megrahi’s release, AFP reported. “We wanted to bring Gaddafi in from the cold because at that time it was thought that that was going to be possible,” he told the BBC. “It’s true to say that the British Government wanted Megrahi out. “There was no other way to try and bring Gaddafi under control… It didn’t work and he now looks pretty nigh finished.”
adelaidenow.com.au/news/world/uk-lied-about-lockerbie-bomber/story-e6frea8l-1226129388926?nk=49b745617f8734ab2a05cec34bafe5b3

Comment:  Better to engage brain before mouth Barry. Don’t believe all you read in the papers or view on BBC News. They follow the UK government agenda which was  bent on discrediting the Scottish government

 

 

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June 2012:  Aberdeen Youth Council (AYC) condemns Barney Crockett led Labour Party Controlled Local District Primary 1 Class Size proposals

* The Aberdeen City Youth Council (AYC) condemned proposals by the Education Culture Sport committee to increase the class size of P1 in a city school to 25.  Speaking on behalf of the AYC, Barry Black,  a pupil in S6 at St Machar Academy, said:

“Most experts and political leaders agree that the early years are vital in a person’s educational development. These plans to nothing to help that and I fear that this may have a negative effect upon the future of hundreds of young people in our city.”

* The AYT also took issue with the lack of foresight displayed by the Labour controlled Education Committee. Barry said:

“The report outlined investigating the over-capacity in March 2011. That’s over a year since the last meeting and little has been done. it is shocking behaviour and shows complete disregard for primary school children. It’s inevitable that this increase will put immense strain on teachers and other learners, who have already felt the blow of savage cuts and pay freezes.” We should be looking at ways to invest in the early years, not tiptoe around the problem by bringing in a measure like this.”

* The AYC also condemned the City’s Labour controlled council proposals to move around adult learning classrooms. Barry said:

“Adult learning is vital in society, whether helping in employment or filling in skills gaps, and removing these rooms to make way for classrooms does not help the bigger picture. In Milltimber, there are plans for a temporary classroom. This is no substitute for a real learning environment and is too short-term.”

 

http://www.acyc.info/index.php/youth-council-condemns-primary-1-proposals-press-release/ Barney Crockett not at all pleased about the criticism but Barry got a result.

Comment: Well done barry. Wonder what your Labour colleagues thought of your publically expressed views.

 

 

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November 2012; Youth Council Speaks Out On Drug Problem

Chair of Aberdeen City Youth Council Barry Black MSYP has recommended the Education, Culture & Sport Committee on Aberdeen City Council approves the creation of a Drugs Youth Worker role. Barry told Aberdeen Voice:

“Our sister group, GRADE A (Get Real About Drugs Action Aberdeen), has worked tirelessly to improve drugs education in the city and has benefited immensely from the support of our youth worker.

An additional Drugs Action worker would make a huge contribution to the already excellent work being done on drugs education in the city.

We recommend the committee approve the funding for the position on the grounds of the benefit to young people.

We have a significant substance misuse issue with young people in the city and this is an issue that needs to be addressed.

We are above the UK average for substance misuse statistics and a full-time drugs education worker would help to contribute to the fight against drugs abuse in the city.”    http://aberdeenvoice.com/2012/11/youth-council-speaks-out-on-drug-problem-2/

Comment: But Barry believes strongly that:  The, “Prohibition of cannabis legislation should be the subject of a parliamentary debate.

Legalisation and decriminalisation must form part of that debate’ http://barryblackformsyp.yolasite.com/

 

 

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October 2013: Youth Councillors Back Calls For Ban On Religion On Education Committees

Two city youth Councillors, Barry Black and Kenneth Watt, have backed a Scottish Parliament motion calling for legislation making compulsory the membership of three religious figures on local authorities’ education committees necessary to be abandoned.

Instead of the religious committee members, Black and Watt believe that the three positions should be filled by young people, taken from democratically elected bodies such as the Scottish Youth Parliament or the Aberdeen City Youth Council. Watt said:

“It is not correct in 2013 to have religious figureheads – who nobody elected and many disagree with – to be making decisions about school children. I firmly believe that multiculturalism should be a key part of religion in faith in school, however, this in no way makes it appropriate to have unelected people deciding the budget and crucial decisions for schools.

The majority of young people have no affiliation to religion and by only selecting religious representatives from a faith with a ‘place of worship,’ minority faith groups and those who do not follow religion are not represented.”

Black said: “We have officially recognised youth groups at both national and local level – it would be a much better idea to utilise an elected young person to give input in to their education. Young people should be empowered to make decisions about what matters to them.” http://aberdeenvoice.com/tag/barry-black/

Comment: Church members would take a differing position.

 

 

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June 2014: Barry Black to contest West Aberdeenshire and Kincardine for Scottish Labour in 2015.

At a meeting last Thursday night, members voted in favour of Mr Black to be their candidate in the General Election.  Aberdeenshire Labour Group Leader, Councillor Alison Evison, said: “We are delighted to have Barry Black as our candidate for West Aberdeenshire and Kincardine in the Westminster elections 2015.  These are exciting times for Scottish Labour in Aberdeenshire as we continue to build on the successes of recent years.”

Comment: Not a lot of evidence of success.

 

 

 

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Braden (I Worked At Macdonalds) Davy – Young Northumbrian Nationalist Seeking Gordon Seat – Braden Not All Citizens Of Gordon Consider Themselves To Be Britizens

 

 

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About Braden- By Himself

I was born in 1991 in Bishop Auckland in County Durham and used to live in Spennymoor until I moved to Ashington when I was in first school. I moved around, but never lived outside the North-East of England.

Over the past two years I have recently spent time in youth politics around the UK and local youth politics in Northumberland. My hopes are that I will continue to do well enough in school and that I will get the grades I want for my AS levels while enjoying myself.

My fears are that this recession will bite and affect me and my family as well as people I know.  I get angry when people talk at me, or when people don’t listen to what I have to say and ignore my opinions.

This is particularly true when politicians don’t answer the question which was asked. I am opinionated, logical, ambitious.

 

 

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I couldn’t live without the Internet. I use it for my school work, socialising, keeping in contact with friends and organising.

I rely on the Internet for everything.   I am proud to gain amongst the best GCSE results in my school year.

My ambitions are to do well in my A levels and go on to a red brick university to study economics. I would also like to move back up north after university and become a local councillor.

I would make the world fairer. Wipe out starvation and death from easily preventable disease. Also I would stop the exploitation of the planet and protect our natural environments.

I bite my nails and write so badly I can’t read it later on.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/tyne/content/articles/2009/02/24/100lives_braden_davy_feature.shtml

 

 

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Work Experience

Aug 2007 – Sep 2011: Northumberland Young Leader: He said: “I take my responsibilities as Young Leader very seriously. I strongly believe that children and young people have to be listened to.”

Oct 2010 – Nov 2011:  HMS Calliope, Gateshead – Officer Cadet – Royal Navy: Carrying out all necessary duties on board and on shore.

Jan 2011 – May 2011: Events Coordinator, Durham: I was a local organiser for the Yes to Fairer Votes campaign. On May 5, 2011 the public decided not to change the first past the post election system.

Mar 2011 – May 2012: Northumberland – Big Northumberland – Worked with others on a social enterprise funded scheme aimed at increasing the economic opportunities of young people.

Jan 2012 – May 2012: Mid-Formartine, Aberdeenshire – Local government candidate – Scottish Labour Party in Mid Formartine.  Finished fourth in the preference vote. Not elected. http://www.aberdeenshire.gov.uk/elections/local/detail.asp?wardID=8

Apr 2012 – Sep 2012:  Trainee – McDonald’s Corporation. Training programme for external applicants to McDonald’s.

Sep 2012 – Feb 2013:  McDonald’s Corporation. Lead a team delivering services to the public

Feb 2013 – May 2015: London, United Kingdom – Parliamentary Assistant – Work as a Special Advisor for Dame Anne Begg MP.Commons

 

 

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September 2014; Braden Davy is a wee bit disorientated – Mind you he’s only just arrived in the field of Scottish politics

According to Braden he voted YES in the Referendum, but will not be joining the SNP. Fair enough……. But wait…it looks to me like Braden might have actually voted NO, and being an agent for the NO campaign had authorisation to enter polling stations wearing his NO rosette.

I might be wrong of course. Maybe there is more than one Braden Davy in Aberdeen who is politically motivated. And maybe they all have the same picture on their twitter accounts. Or maybe this is just a big set up to fool us all. Never let it be said I don’t consider all the possibilities.

Most interesting I thought was the posters disgust for the professionalism of politics. Odd for Mr Braden then to publicise that kind of thinking seeing as he is a youth Councillor in Aberdeen and so we can assume is a would be real Councillor as soon as ever he can. Making him a potential career politician with no grounding in real life other than a stint on JSA and housing benefit when he was 20.

What is clear is his hatred for the Tories, although not clearly a patch on his distaste for the SNP otherwise why did he vote “No” and condemn Scotland to having a Tory government two thirds of the time!

http://munguinsrepublic.blogspot.co.uk/2014/09/this-is-little-odd.html

 

 

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11 Dec 2014: Braden Davy’s Twitter Profile:

Labour puppet for Gordon. Standing to become the first adolescent MP. Fighting to stop any meaningful change in Westminster. Big fan of kleptocracy. A post to his followers in Gordon. “Good morning fellow northern Britizens. How are we all today?”   Answers: None as yet.

 

 

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Dec 2014: My Manifesto

I have lived in the Aberdeen area for a year and a half.  I want to see young people thrive and prosper. The best way this can happen is by ensuring that all young people have a bright future, that young people have opportunities and that people have enough money to make ends meet.

Everyone should earn a decent wage. Currently the minimum wage for a 16 year old is £3.68 an hour. This is shockingly low, some argue that this is fine since they live at home. Yet, for those over 18, it is just over £5, and for those over 21 still only £6 an hour. This is not acceptable. People who work hard should be paid for their hard work. The least everyone can expect is a fair wage, for a fair days work. All those in work should receive the living wage of £7.45 per hour for someone to support their family, afford to pay rent and live comfortably.

This is what I want to see happen, and will work with all organisations, (except the SNP, Labour Party policy) to campaign for this. Everyone should have access to apprenticeships and training. Aberdeen is the oil capital of Europe.

 

 

 

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Jim (Cookie Jar) McGovern Labour MP Dundee West Information of Interest to the Public

McGovern

1. Jim Cookie Jar) McGovern MP For Dundee West

a. James McGovern is a Scottish Labour Party pMP. He was born in Glasgow but moved to Dundee at the age of 9. He was educated at the Catholic Lawside Academy. He left school at the age of 15 and at the age of 16 began an apprenticeship as a glazier. In 1987, after being made redundant, he worked as a glazier for Dundee City Council. Whilst working for the council he was active within the GMB union. In 1997 he began working full-time for the union as Trade Union Organiser.

b. He was first elected to the British House of Commons at the 2005 general election for Dundee West, following the retirement of the sitting Labour MP Ernie Ross. Since 2005 he has served on the Scottish Affairs Committee. Between 2007 and 2008 he served as the Parliamentary Private Secretary to Pat McFadden, the Minister of State at the Department for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform. He was re-elected in 2010.

2. June 2009: A view of McGovern’s Expense Claims

a. Having trawled through Jim McGoverns expenses I spotted some belters:

i. £658 for a computer desk.

ii. £4360 to set up his 10 page website: The website was later classified as a Labour Party front. Did he refund the public purse? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pw5ySbK_NlY

iii. £123 for a trouser press.

iv. £950 for a sofa bed.

v. Everything from cushions to bath screens and £2 for a knife.

vi. Office expenditure is equally bizarre with items as petty as 32p for a pair of scissors and 22p for drawing pins.

vii. Just about every month he was listing £400 for food (one month he tried for £500 and was knocked back), £250 for petty cash. How can you claim 32p for items in your office then £250 for petty cash, what the hell was the petty cash for?

viii. Most amusing though was routinely forking out £1K for leaflets then contracting companies at a cost of £4K to deliver them. Kind of shows the state of the Labour party membership in the city if they have to pay for leaflets to be delivered!

b. Given expenses refunded covered; council tax, rent/mortgage, food, household goods, phone bills etc. The question, answer oustanding is? what is his salary for?

c. But hang on a mo’, “what are expenses meant to encompass?”. Well they are supposed to be essentials needed to be an MP. I don’t think cushions are essential. I don’t think a computer desk needs to cost over £600 and I am baffled as to why an MP from Dundee can claim for an overnight stay in a hotel in South Wales. Was that when he was visiting parliament or his constituency? http://agraham.org/blog/2009/06/20/jim-mcgovern-snout-in-the-trough/

3. July 2009; Labour MP Questioned on 10p tax rate compensation vote

a. Labour MP Jim McGovern has come under fire after the Government voted down a compensation package for people who lost out when they scrapped the 10p tax rate. The Dundee West MP voted along party lines to defeat Labour MP Frank Field’s bill for compensation at Westminster although many Labour MPs had reportedly said they supported measures to help those who had suffered as a consequence of the lowest tax band being abolished. The 10p rate was abolished in the 2007 budget,it was Gordon Brown’s last as Chancellor. A humiliating defeat looked to be on the cards for the Government when the vote was taken earlier this month, but a backbench rebellion failed to get enough support for the compensation package to be approved. It is estimated that 500,000 Scottish households will lose out as a consequence of the move.

b. Dundee SNP Councillor Jim Barrie, who is standing against Mr McGovern in the General Election, said, “Scrapping the 10p tax rate hit people who could least afford it with a huge tax hike. Tax for the lowest-paid workers was doubled overnight. Local people will be shocked that Jim McGovern has now voted against a modest compensation package and failed to stand up for his constituents. He did not stand up to be counted with the Labour rebels, the SNP and Plaid Cymru behind Labour MP Frank Field’s compensation Bill. He will need to explain why to the electors of Dundee West. The SNP is doing everything in its power to help people through these tough economic times: freezing council tax, phasing out prescription charges and scrapping bridge tolls as well as driving down business rates for small businesses. Meanwhile, the Labour UK Government is inflicting shameful tax hikes on low paid workers and pensioners and is wasting billions of pounds on a new nuclear weapons system instead of investing in public services. There is no doubt thousands of people on low incomes are worse off since the 10p tax rate was abolished. The Government’s clumsy attempts to compensate for their blunder by introducing larger personal tax allowances do not go far enough. These people should be taken out of the income tax tier altogether. They cannot afford to shoulder the burden, especially in these difficult economic times. The vote to reject Labour MP Frank Field’s compensation bill simply compounds the damage which the government has done.” http://dundeesnp.scot/labour-mp-questioned-on-10p-tax-rate-compensation-vote/

4. October 2009; Is Jim McGovern toast?

a. It seems unlikely that the opposing concept of ‘civic nationalism’ holds much sway with Labour’s Dundee West MP Jim McGovern. Responding to last week’s controversial appearance by British National Party leader Nick Griffin on the BBC’s Question Time, the Courier reports that Mr McGovern has played down the possibility of a rise in BNP support in Dundee. He’s quoted as saying: I don’t think there is a great deal of appetite for nationalism – either Scottish or British – in Dundee. I’m always minded of a quote from Charles de Gaulle. He said, “Patriotism is when love of your own people comes first; nationalism, when hate for people other than your own comes first.”

b. Leaving aside the alluded conflation of BNP and SNP nationalism, Mr McGovern seems to have forgotten that Dundee’s recent appetite for the latter has seen Stewart Hosie take the Dundee East Westminster seat from Labour in 2005, the election of SNP MSPs in both the city’s constituencies in the 2007 Holyrood elections and the advent of an SNP-controlled city council administration earlier this year. So much for a lack of appetite. Indeed, presumably Mr McGovern is a little worried that this hunger for Scottish Nationalism will result in him losing his seat in the forthcoming Westminster contest.

c. And on the subject of appetites, Mr McGovern has come in for some stick locally over his expenses claim at Westminster, having disputed auditor Sir Thomas Legg’s order to repay £5,224, but with eyebrows particularly raised over the MP’s claim for the purchase of a £106 toaster. A correspondent to the Evening Telegraph asks, “But how would one grace such toast? Butter made from unicorn milk? Scrambled dodo eggs? Or maybe just humble old caviar.” Clearly Jim McGovern doesn’t make it into the uber-trougher league, but could his breakfast time culinary excess mean the difference between holding Dundee West and ending up toast? http://planet-politics.blogspot.co.uk/2009/10/is-jim-mcgovern-toast.html

5. March 2010; Jim McGovern claims the credit….Joe Fitzpatrick does the work

a. From the pages of the Dundee Courier’s Political Round-up comes this heartening tale of hard work rewarded. That hard work is, according to Labour, the work of Dundee’s sole flyer of the red flag, Dundee West MP Jim McGovern. The Courier reports that Jim claims to have put in a huge amount of effort to secure Dundee a £100 million taxpayer boost for the high tech gaming industry in which the city excels. It is suggested that Jim has been slogging away night and day by all possible means to secure that huge (and it is huge so I will say it again) £100 million…..and, I suppose, to help secure his lonely outpost of ex-Labour domination on the Tay.

b. But wait a minute…this is a Labour MP we are talking about. The sort that likes to take all the credit, but do very little for it. So imagine Jim’s ire when some busybody sent in an FOI request to the Scotland Office to actually see all the communications on this subject between our Jim and them. How dare they not take Honest Jim at his word, the blackguards! Just out of interest, how many communications where there, I hear you all ask? Well the answer given from the Scotland Office was…..one, and that was a letter sent to Dundee West MSP, Joe Fitzpatrick, Jim’s SNP counterpart in the Scottish Parliament. Oh dear! Hardly value for money is Jim, the ninth most expensive MP at Westminster with a whopping claim for £171,989. It seems that ‘well done Joe’ should really be the order of the day. http://munguinsrepublic.blogspot.co.uk/2010/03/jim-mcgovern-claims-creditjoe.html Comments:

c. Tris: The Labour Party spin machine is awesome. McGovern didn’t even have one letter and yet the Scotland Office could spin it into his triumph. Joe Fitzpatrick has been a great MP for Dundee West.

d. Munguin: I think that Jim is desperate to hold on to the great state that Dundee was when Labour was in charge. But he could at least do something to justify his claims. Anything! It really would be better for them to think about these things before acting. This is a problem that seems to be inherent in Scottish labour at all levels. The “don’t think before you act” syndrome.

e. Munguin: That Jim thinks that it is okay for him to sit around on his doup doing nothing except claiming expenses to the tune of the 9th most expensive in the UK (and drags Dundee West onto the role of shame that is topped by Jim Devine) is quite beyond belief. Must be another instance of thinking they would not get found out. Hey Jim look out the window: everything you see was once Labour, but now it’s not: try doing a bit of work

f. Sophia Pangloss: The problem may lie, as in McGovern’s case, in a party bein’ so dominant, for so long, in an district or toun. There’s nae democracy there. Ah think ordinary folk hae a natural distrust o’ any organisation that likes power, like the Labour pairty or the masons or the nuns. Ah wis watchin’ the pope oan the telly last night an’ ah thocht he looked awfy like the Emperor Palpatine.

g. Sophia Pangloss: That wisnae very well thocht oot ah’m sorry. Ah shouldnae type an’ talk at the same time. Ah’ve no got ma brain switched oan th’ day.

h. Munguin: Thats ok Sophia, but I have no idea what emperor Palpatine looks like. The only emperor I have ever seen is an emperor penguin. They are not so very dominant here now what with both MSPs being SNP, Dundee east MP being SNP and the council being SNP an all. I guess Mr McGovern can feel the cold finger of fate on his collar and so has to try to justify himself. By in this case pretending to do a whole lot of work that he never did. Mr McGovern clearly feels that he has one foot in the grave and the other on a banana skin.

i. Dean MacKinnon-Thomson: Labour has very little value left. And, just as Tory domination of the Tay, and wider Scotland eventually evaporated between 1951-1997, so we shall also see this trend infect Labour. Unthinking Labour voters grow old and die..just like my Party’s core vote did. Over the next 20 years what matters is appeal to my generation – and frankly Labour has very little of any of that. Those of us who have grown up under Labour shall never ever vote Labour so long as we live.

McGovern2

6. November 2012; Jim McGovern, Labour MP refuses to withdraw comment accusing SNP of tuition fees “racism”

a. McGovern made the claim during a public meeting at Abertay University to discuss the future of post-16 education in Tayside. The SNP Government is to allow universities to charge fees of up to £9,000 a year for students coming to Scotland from the rest of the UK. Both Dundee and Abertay universities are planning to charge fees to English, Welsh and Northern Irish students from next year. Education Secretary Mike Russell insists the move is required to secure the financial future of the university sector and maintain free education for Scots.

b. But McGovern, MP for Dundee West, told the meeting he fears the policy is inspired by a Scottish nationalist ”hatred” of England. He said, “I’ve got serious concerns about the Scottish Executive saying that they will not charge Scottish students to go to university, but they will charge English students, you know, for me, that does not smack of patriotism — that smacks of racism.” He later clarified that he was not branding individual SNP politicians racist, adding, “What came to mind was that Charles de Gaulle once said that while patriotism is a love for one’s own country, nationalism, generally, is hatred of other countries and unfortunately, this is what the SNP confirm by their policies — that that’s what they see.”

c. The remarks were condemned as “disgraceful slurs” by the SNP’s Dundee City West MSP Joe FitzPatrick, who was also on the panel at the public meeting on Friday night. He said, “It is deeply, deeply disappointing that a senior Labour politician should resort to such disgraceful slurs, the SNP’s commitment to keep university education free for Scottish domiciled students was a key part of our manifesto which was overwhelmingly backed by the people of Scotland. To describe it as racist is insulting to every person in Dundee and across Scotland who gave their support to the SNP in May. Robust political debate is one thing but making unfounded claims of this magnitude is quite another.” He also called on Labour leader Ed Miliband to take action over McGovern’s remarks saying, “This disgraceful slur raises further questions about the conduct of Labour MPs, coming so soon after his colleague (Glasgow South West MP) Ian Davidson called SNP MPs ‘neo-fascists’.”

d. Mr Russell also demanded that Mr McGovern withdraw the “offensive” comment. He told the Courier, “‘The Scottish Government would much rather not charge anyone fees. However, this has been forced upon us because of the actions of successive UK Governments. Scottish students and their parents have long had the reassurance of knowing that undergraduate education in Scotland will remain free. To maintain opportunities for our students, and to protect our world-leading universities’ reputation and competitiveness, we had no choice but to respond to the increase in tuition fees to £9,000 south of the border.” He added that it is thought the average fee will only be £6,841, reduced to around £6,375 by packages of bursaries and fee waivers.

e. But Mr McGovern is standing by his remarks, insisting the SNP is an “anti-England” organisation. He told The Courier on Sunday, “The latest strategy by the separatists would seem to be to pick up on a word or expression from a Labour politician then throw their hands up in horror and say that they feel threatened, intimidated or offended. If some members of the SNP cannot live with the robust nature of the rough and tumble of everyday Scottish politics then perhaps they should consider whether or not they are in the right job.” http://www.thecourier.co.uk/news/politics/jim-mcgovern-refuses-to-withdraw-comment-accusing-snp-of-tuition-fees-racism-1.33049 http://www.newsnetscotland.scot/index.php/scottish-news/3614-scottish-labour-mp-refuses-to-apologise-for-offensive-racism-slurs.html

7. November 2012; Shona Robison says Jim McGovern’s racism claim is ‘gutter politics’

a. Dundee City East MSP Shona Robison has accused the Labour Party of descending into “gutter politics” over a claim that charging English students tuition fees could be construed as racist. Although the Scottish Government has said it will not charge Scottish students tuition fees, anyone coming from elsewhere in the UK to study at a Scottish university will have to pay. This does not affect students coming to Scotland from elsewhere within the EU, as they are exempt. Ms Robison said, “Jim McGovern claims that such language is the, rough and tumble of everyday politics. It is not. This type of language and behaviour drags Scottish politics into the gutter. People expect better of their politicians, who should be focused on the important things like dealing with the current economic challenges.

b. Ms Robison, who was born in England, said she was personally offended by Mr McGovern’s remarks saying, “I have spent a lifetime in politics fighting racism and deeply resent this language being so easily bandied about. I was born in England with an English mother, with many of my family still living down south. furthermore, as for the tuition fee policy being racist, it was the last Labour-Liberal coalition in Scotland which first introduced tuition fees for students from the rest of the UK, which Jim McGovern should be aware of. I have no doubt that Jim McGovern will not have the decency to apologise for his disgraceful outburst. The question for the Labour Party is, therefore, whether they stand by him or are they prepared to reject this type of politics? We cannot allow politics in Scotland to descend to such a level and I urge all politicians to agree to work together to ensure this does not happen.”

c. Scottish Labour accused the SNP of trying to talk up the row — but also said it does not condone the language Mr McGovern used. A spokesman said, “It is clear the SNP are desperate to try to blow Jim McGovern’s comments out of all proportion in an attempt to score cheap political points. As Jim McGovern has made clear, his comments were not directed at any individual but in relation to the SNP government’s higher education policy, that he believes to be discriminatory, whereby European and Scottish students get free university education in Scotland while students from the rest of the UK will be force to cough up to £36,000 for a degree — the most expensive degrees in the whole of the United Kingdom. The SNP are the last people who should be complaining about how they are described by their political opponents. Anyone who dares to question or criticise them is immediately under attack. Mr McGovern’s remarks were made by him, speaking in a personal capacity. The Scottish Labour party is always willing to engage the SNP in spirited debate about their separation policies but does not condone the use of such language.” http://www.thecourier.co.uk/news/politics/shona-robison-says-jim-mcgovern-s-racism-claim-is-gutter-politics-1.33121 Comments:

d. Boris; McGovern’s tirade reminded me of the, “Salem Witchunt Scandal” A wee lassie said, “she’s a witch, without foundation, many were tried convicted and executed without cause or proof. He should be more moderate in his utterings. He should also discuss the fees’ issue with his colleague Jim Murphy MP since it was he, as the Chairman of the National Union of Students that instituted the UK policy of charging fees to Students. This was Murphy’s ticket to success given his assurance of a career in politics as a Labour MP. Students in England Wales and Northern Ireland are still charged University fees, a policy fully supported by McGovern and his party. Bit like the two headed dog on this one. He would be best advised to engage brain before mouth methinks.

e. Roin Tilbrook; There is an old lawyer’s courtroom joke that if your case is strong on the law then bang on about the law; if your case is strong on the facts then bang on about the facts; but if the case isn’t strong on either the facts or the law then bang on the table. Labour’s less amusing version, whenever it struggles to make a case, is always to cry ‘RACISM’. Here is a report about the latest example – for once not directed at an Englishman! Needless to say when counterattacked Jim McGovern MP limply blustered that his comments merely represented ‘the rough and tumble of everyday Scottish politics.’ Labour must be getting really desperate!
http://robintilbrook.blogspot.co.uk/2011/11/labour-mp-smears-snp-as-racist.html

f. Chris Beverley; The use of the racist tag is indeed a low trick and one that the Labour Party and their ilk are always ready to use. Such misuse of language is a key tactic employed by the adherents of political correctness, that most evil of ideologies. Thank goodness our party takes a tough stance against this treasonous poison. I spoke about this in a recent speech to Bridlington English Democrats which can be read here: http://morleypatriot.blogspot.com/2011/10/my-bridlington-speech.html

8. April 2013; Taxpayers landed with £27,000 legal bill for MP’s £23.90 expenses claim

a. Jim McGovern tried to claim the fare from his Dundee West seat to a Labour party meeting in Glasgow by saying it was the first leg of a two-part trip to Westminster. But the Independent Parliamentary Standards Authority (IPSA) rejected his expenses claim, arguing the detour was unconnected to McGovern’s official work as an MP.

b. Last month, in the first case of its kind since new legislation was brought in after the 2009 expenses scandal, McGovern appealed IPSA’s decision to a tribunal and lost. IPSA has now revealed its bill for defending McGovern’s appeal was £27,000 – which ultimately falls on the taxpayer. McGovern’s costs were met by his union, the GMB. IPSA said each side in the appeal had to pay its own costs, and it would not pursue McGovern for its £27,000 bill. The SNP last night called for McGovern to reimburse IPSA for its legal bill. The watchdog said it hadn’t wanted a tribunal but was glad to have won the test case. IPSA has now changed its rules on diverted journeys, capping the amount MPs can claim to the standard fare between the start and end points of each journey.

c. McGovern claimed £23.90 for a single rail fare from Dundee to Glasgow in September 2011 to attend a Labour Party meeting. He then claimed £249.45 for a business class flight on to Heathrow to fulfil his parliamentary role. McGovern charged both journeys to a card supplied by IPSA, but the watchdog refused to cover the cost of either leg of the trip. McGovern asked for a review of the decision from IPSA’s compliance officer, who agreed the MP should be covered for the cost of the flight, but not the train fare. McGovern then appealed against the compliance officer’s decision to a First Tier Tax Tribunal. However, tribunal judge Roger Berner flatly rejected McGovern’s case.

d. At the tribunal, held in London on March 14, McGovern’s counsel admitted that the Dundee-Glasgow leg of the trip could be characterised as not “wholly, exclusively and necessarily in the performance” of the MP’s parliamentary function, as the expenses rules require. However, he said the rules do not dictate that MPs must take the most direct or cheapest route from their seat to Westminster, and it was a fundamental principle that MPs should be financially supported to carry out their work.

e. Judge Berner said the tribunal did not accept that argument, and it was vital to consider the separate purpose of each leg of the trip. He said: “In general there can be no duality of purpose – Having found that the travel from Dundee to Glasgow was a separate journey, the only conclusion we can reach is that, as Mr McGovern has agreed, the purpose of that journey was to enable Mr McGovern to attend the Labour Party meeting. “The expense of that journey was accordingly not necessarily incurred in (or for) the performance of Mr McGovern’s parliamentary duties, and cannot be claimed.” McGovern, 56, has been the MP for Dundee West since 2005 and is a member of the Scottish Affairs Select Committee. He has until the end of May to decide whether to appeal the tribunal ruling.

f. North East Scotland SNP MSP Mark McDonald said: “At a time when many households are struggling to make ends meet, it is unbelievable that Mr McGovern has run up this enormous bill. “Mr McGovern should reimburse these legal costs himself.” And North East Conservative MSP Alex Johnstone called McGovern’s case “extraordinary”. He said: “An MP should know the difference between what is a legitimate expense and what is not. I’m disappointed that was not as obvious to Mr McGovern as it is you and me.” An IPSA spokesman said: “We would rather this hadn’t gone to a tribunal, but Mr McGovern made the decision to take it there. “We believe the finding upholds the integrity of IPSA rules in what seems to be a test case.” The Scottish Parliament said MSPs were not allowed to submit a claim “which relates to party political activity”.

g. McGovern said the GMB union was covering his costs, but he did not know how much they were. “To be honest, I doubt very much if I could afford it. I imagine it would be expensive. IPSA are using public money. I don’t use any public money for representation.” Despite bringing the appeal, he blamed IPSA for “digging its heels in” over the fare.
He later said his lawyer had advised him to appeal, and described the SNP’s call to repay IPSA as “ridiculous”. He said: “The SNP trying to make cheap political capital out of this does not bear scrutiny.” http://www.heraldscotland.com/politics/political-news/taxpayers-landed-with-27000-legal-bill-for-mps-2390-expenses-claim.20788554 Comments from the public:

h. Andrew R M Craik; I fail to see how this can be describded as “cheap” political capital. I would say that it is pretty expensive. What annoys me is the way the populace can be treated as though they are idiots.

i. Lawrence Maclean; More Labour sleaze. How many more Labour MP’s are going to get away with making false expense claims and not get the jail? If this was a member of the public who lost a case then that person would be liable for costs. The sooner Scotland is rid of corruption the better.

j. Les Barrie; Why is a well paid MP getting legal expenses when he made an illegal expenses claim and instead of accepting his “mistake” he challenged the ruling and lost,the hypocritical double standards of our politicians is breathtaking.

k. Andrew McMillan; The snouts of the greedy remain deep in the trough.

l. James Findlay; £65k salary plus £200K expenses. Why can these people not pay for anything, if his case was thrown out. Why do they not reclaim the court expenses from him or his union that backed him,he says he could not afford it then why go to court for a paltry sum of £24.I hope the people of Dundee West question this MP’s actions and remember him at the next election if I was in his constituency I would be all for getting him out.

m. John Souter; Another benefit fraudster seeks sanctuary in the establishment trough.

n. Alun Llewelyn; We know this ludicrous case has cost the taxpayers £27k but how much has it cost the GMB? Why are ordinary union members being made to cover the costs of greedy Scottish Labour MPs?

o. Rab Dickson; A Scottish Labour MP has landed taxpayers with a £27,000 legal bill after a Commons expenses dispute over a £24 train ticket. Very labour.

p. Stewart Murdoch; Why does any MP think it is OK to try to claim absolutely everything and then say, “rules do not dictate that MPs must take the most direct or cheapest route from their seat to Westminster, strikes me that he is a lousy representative for the people if he can’t tell the difference between morally responsible and administratively ambiguous. Hope he resigns . Stupidly optimistic I guess!

r. Stephen Read; He said his lawyer had advised him to appeal”…How pathetic…he’s an MP but appears to have no mind of his own….Please sir, the lawyer made me do it. Why should the taxpayer pay a penny towards supporting this man’s twisted view of what he should be able to claim. Isn’t falsely claiming public monies fraud?

s. John Collatin; The sooner we consign these neanderthals to the rubbish bin of history the better..A moral bankrupt, just like most of his Scottish Labour colleagues. We the public are no longer laughing at your arrogant inept stupidity..we are getting pretty cheesed off now..These people actually think that the laws and morals that the rest of us try to live by do not apply to them because they are politicians. Come next September I pray that they’ll all be signing on or doing Workfare in a Poundland in Croyden. A complete and utter waste of money grubbing space, the lot of them.

t. Peter Piper, Ayrshire; Despite bringing the appeal, he blamed IPSA for “digging its heels in” over the fare. He didn’t just bring the appeal he lost it. So is he saying that the IPSA were wrong to, “dig their heels in” when they were proven or judged to be in the right? And these MPs are the people supposed to be setting a moral example to the rest of us? What’s clearly needed is for MPs – and other elected political officials – to have a compulsory course on ethics, morality – and the Law before taking office. What is also wrong is that the Tribunal should have awarded costs against McGovern – there was already a ruling and it was being challenged. That, as I understand it, is the position if I were to contest a ruling in Court, so why should it be any different from an MP – representing us? I think this issue raises a lot more questions than it answers, and should be debated in the HoC. MPs, Ministers and Prime Minsters need to be called to account for how they spend our money. “McGovern, is a member of the Scottish Affairs Select Committee.” Indeed, and a very strongly Unionist one at that. And we’re supposed to trust his judgement.

9. May 2013; MP Jim McGovern barred from sharing NCR meeting details

a. Dundee West MP Jim McGovern has stormed out of a meeting with NCR management — after being warned repeating anything he was told could be detrimental to the firm’s future in the city. The American cash machine manufacturers announced last week it is to cut 70 jobs from its research and development plant in Dundee, which employs around 400 people. The cuts, the latest in a series that have seen hundreds of staff lose their jobs in recent years, have prompted many to fear that NCR may soon leave Dundee for good. Mr McGovern visited NCR’s premises in Dundee on Tuesday to discuss the job cuts but left after being told he could not repeat anything he would be told to workers or constituents. He said, “I asked a couple of questions and I think they answered them reasonably honestly but just kept saying the same thing about the realignment of global resources.” However, Mr McGovern claims that when he pressed for more information, he was warned repeating anything he would be told could be detrimental to NCR’s long-term future in Dundee.

b. “Their position is that the workforce should be informed first but my position is constituents have been phoning me with their concerns and I should be able to answer them,” he said. The MP added that he was disappointed to find no union representatives were invited to the meeting. “When I walked out, I asked to meet the union representatives but still haven’t been given their contact details,” he said. “However, I have spoken to Ian Ewing, regional officer for Unite, and he completely supported my decision. “To me it seems ridiculous that with such a large number of people potentially being made redundant that union representation was not present at the meeting to discuss the future of the Dundee workforce. “After two or three questions put by me to management they made it clear that due to ‘commercial confidentiality’ I could not let the constituents who had contacted me over the weekend know what had been said at the meeting. “I, therefore, said I could see no purpose in continuing this meeting and left.”

c. Dundee City West MSP Joe FitzPatrick visited the factory on Monday and said he has been told NCR’s future in Dundee is secure. He said: “In Dundee this will impact on both hardware and software engineering, although I was assured that Dundee remains integral to NCR’s global business. “I have already spoken with John Swinney, Cabinet Secretary for Finance, Employment and Sustainable Growth, who has assured me that the Scottish Government will work with the company to help those affected and maintain as many jobs in Dundee as possible.” A spokesman for NCR declined to comment. “We wouldn’t want to add to what we’ve said before,” said the spokesman. http://www.thecourier.co.uk/news/local/dundee/mp-jim-mcgovern-barred-from-sharing-ncr-meeting-details-1.95353

10. June 2013; Efforts to save NCR jobs in Dundee

a. Scottish Enterprise’s most senior official will try to stave off the threat to Dundee jobs at NCR during a meeting in the US. Dr Lena Wilson is due to meet the global cash machine and electronics giant’s corporate management in New York, when the future of the local workforce will be raised. NCR moved to axe around 70 jobs at its research and development operation at the city’s Gourdie Industrial Estate last month. A 30-day consultation period over the redundancies will finish next week. All staff at the hardware and software design operation hub — around 400 in total — were called to a mass meeting where they were appraised of the situation by managers. NCR has confirmed that jobs are going as part of a wider “alignment” of operations but has thus far refused to comment on specific questions posed about the redundancies and whether it remains committed to Dundee in the long term. The cuts, the latest in a series that have seen hundreds of staff lose their jobs in recent years, have prompted many to fear that NCR may soon leave the city for good.

b. SNP MSP Joe FitzPatrick welcomed news of the US meeting going ahead. In a letter to the member for Dundee City West, senior executive Adrian Gillespie confirmed that Scottish Enterprise’s chief executive Dr Wilson is to meet NCR management. Mr Gillespie stated the purpose of this meeting is: “To understand further the rationale behind this announcement and more importantly to explore how Scottish Enterprise can help to maximise ongoing long-term investment in the Dundee ?operation with key US decision-makers.”

c. Mr FitzPatrick said: “Following my recent meeting with NCR’s local management last month, I raised this issue at the highest level with the Scottish Government’s enterprise agency and also directly with the Finance Secretary John Swinney. “I am reassured that the Scottish Government’s most senior official from Scottish Enterprise is meeting with NCR in the United States in an effort to secure jobs and continued investment at the Dundee site. “This will be a difficult time for the employees and their families, though I remain hopeful that NCR will endeavour to avoid redundancies and I welcome the knowledge that action is being taken by the Scottish Government’s agency to assist them in doing so.”

d. At a meeting with local management, Mr FitzPatrick was advised that potential job losses are part of an international realignment and are not a reflection of the skills and experience of the city workforce. The company set up in Dundee to make cash registers in 1946 and once employed more than 6,500 people in the city. However, hundreds of jobs were cut in 2007 and NCR finally shut down its cash machine assembly operations in 2009. That factory has now been razed and is being replaced by an Asda supermarket.

e. Dundee West Labour MP Jim McGovern walked out of a meeting with senior management after claiming that a gagging order was being put on him with regards to the discussion’s contents. He said he was told during a visit to NCR’s premises to discuss the job cuts that he could not repeat anything he would be told to workers or constituents. http://www.thecourier.co.uk/news/local/dundee/efforts-to-save-ncr-jobs-in-dundee-1.102071

f. Comment. Headline seeking, chest beating and public airing of difficulties being McGovern’s contribution to discussions was pretty negative. Quiet diplomacy, (undertaken by Government officers) is the best way forward in the 30 day consultation period required by law since it is for the company to decide staffing requirements and future policy.

11. November 2014; Smith Commission Report

a.Jim McGovern said: “Since the Smith Commission was first announced, the SNP and their members kept claiming that the timetable and the vow set out during the referendum campaign would never be fulfilled, but the publication of the report shows that this has been a promise that has been kept and an agreement that has been delivered. There was immediate action the day after the referendum, the publication of the command paper took place two weeks before schedule, and the Smith Commission’s report has been delivered days ahead of its intended date of St Andrew’s Day. Lord Smith took on board the views of the Scottish people and the resulting report produced as a result of this consultation meets the demand of extensive new powers for the Scottish Parliament, delivering what the Scottish people decisively voted for. A strong Scotland with greater powers inside a strong United Kingdom.” http://www.dundeewestlabour.org.uk/jimmcgovern.htm

b. Comment; Noting the number of submissions there is no way in which Lord Smith would have been able to read over, study or review very many of the thousands of documents sent to his office. I myself compiled a 40 page effort which my office secretary carefully read in 6 hours, (spread over 8 hours). It is also the case that the “Heads of Agreement” report was delivered in the late morning of the deadline since the report was still in draft form on the morning of the day of submission. My understanding is that the Cabinet Office, in London, ( Sir Jeremy Heywood) and senior advisors of the Labour, Conservative and Lib/Dem Parties were still insisting upon and making major changes to the report, removing many, (agreed with Scottish political representatives) proposals for change, content agreed, that is in what they had understood was Lord Smith’s final submission. So what was delvered? A poisoned chalice containing so called powers which if adopted would bring about the destruction of the Scottish parliamentary system. The great con. Scotland would be well advised to reject it.

12. October 2014; Jim McGovern Response to Nicola Sturgeon’s comments on the Labour Party

a. Speaking on Nicola Sturgeon’s comments that the Labour Party “is obsessed with the SNP and has lost its purpose”, Jim McGovern, MP for Dundee West said, “I think it’s quite rich of Nicola Sturgeon to say that Labour is obsessed with the SNP when the SNP themselves are fanatically obsessed with gaining independence, despite decisively losing the ‘once in a lifetime’ referendum. After losing the deputy leadership contest I don’t expect Keith Brown to start his own ‘45’ campaign, nor do I think that he will stop trying to help the people of Scotland, although we may differ on how we think it best to help them. But this is exactly what the SNP are doing. Rather than using the powers they have to tackle poverty, deliver social justice and provide secure work for Scottish people, they pretend their decisive defeat never happened and press for another referendum even though Scotland said no. The claim that Labour has lost its purpose is just as ridiculous, and we are not some one-trick party that fights for the Union and does nothing else. We are a party with a purpose that we have never lost sight of, a purpose to deliver for the many instead of the few, to tackle rising poverty and inequality, to deliver secure and well-paid jobs, to abolish the bedroom tax, to end the crippling cost of living, and above all, a purpose to deliver a better future for Scotland and the United Kingdom.”

b. Comment; McGovern is confused: It is important to establish a distinction between the SNP Party and the Scottish government. As a government the performance of SNP MSP’s has been exemplary. The limited powers and meagre finance delegated to the Scottish government very much restricts the assistance that can be provided. Despite this the level of social justice provided by the Scottish government to needy Scot’s greatly exceeds that meted out to the poor, infirm, sick and elderly in England, Wales and Northern Ireland much negating the excesses of the controlling and brutal Lib/Dem government.

c. Noting McGovern’s claim that the Labour Party has not lost it’s purpose. Well. Well. Poverty levels under the New Labour govenments in power from 1997-2010 increased markedly. At the time Tony Blair and new labour took power in 1997 there was 1 registered billionaire resident in the UK. When they left office there were over 1000 registered billionaires, (mainly non-doms) in the UK. Tell that to the masses. Under Labour Poverty rose, inequality spread like wildfire, The job market died, the cost of living soared and many Scot’s were left with no future. What a cynical bunch New Labour party is/was?

d. As for the ambitions of the SNP membership, the party will never give up the right to take Scotland away from a system of government that is bloated, corrupt and dying. Scotland is a nation state and should be governed accordingly. Scot’s should not be made to beg for scraps at the feet of the high heid yin’s and gentry of another country.

e. The need for independence is unarguable. One example. The unelected chamber, that is the, “House of Lords” will rise in number to over 1000. The chamber it’self was built to hold around 200 sitting at a time and they are actively seeking to move away from Westminster to a new build large enough to seat them all. Cost £15-20B. Add this to the repairs cost of Westminster £20-25B and you have a measure of the extraordinary amount of finance scheduled to be taken away from Scotland over the next 10 years.

f. Add to the foregoing the £1M cost, (travel, accommodation, subsistence and appearance fees) to the taxpayer for each Scottish Lord attending parliament on a routine basis. (Approximately £60M full parliament) Further add the £1.2M cost to Scotland sending and maintaining MP’s at Westminster, (£72M full parliament) Total full parliament cost MP’s and Lords £232m. This is not funny. An independent Scotland would be able to allocate the finance to the support of Scot’s in need not to a small group of people better able to look after themselves.

13. December 2014; Scottish nationalists accused of Nazi-style book burning

a.Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon condemns the, ‘unacceptable behavior’ of three SNP Councillors after they were filmed torching a report calling for more devolution. The First Minister took swift action as she faced the first major challenge of her leadership after Councillors Brian Lawson, Will Mylet and Mags MacLaren burned the cross-party Smith Commission document, telling viewers, ‘This is what we think about it.’ Miss Sturgeon said, ‘My clear view is that setting fire to something you don’t agree with is not acceptable behavior.’

b. Labour MP Jim McGovern compared the Councillors’ actions to the Nazis burning books before the war. Speaking at the Commons Scottish Affairs Committee, the Dundee West MP said: ‘I have quite often read books and followed documentaries about pre-war Germany, and one of them was where … the National Socialist Party, which became obviously the Nazis, burned the books. ‘Yesterday, apparently, SNP elected members filmed themselves burning copies of the Smith Commission report.’

c. Yesterday SNP National Secretary Patrick Grady said he had made a complaint against four Councillors and they ‘will be suspended from the party until that complaint is heard’. They could be expelled from the SNP as a result of their actions. But Social Justice Minister Alex Neil downplayed the incident in a newspaper interview, claiming it was a ‘silly prank’ and ‘not a hanging offence’. http://sheffieldinnews.com/scottish-nationalists-accused-of-nazi-style-book-burning/

Michael McCann – Rejected by Voters of South Lanarkshire Still Hankers After Power Over the Electorate – But the Labour Party is a Busted Flush in Scotland – Voters Have Sussed them at Long last

 

dsc_0586-finalMichael McCann

 

1.Union Official then on to finer things

a. Michael McCann is a British Labour Party politician who has been the Member of Parliament (MP) for East Kilbride, Strathaven and Lesmahagow since 2010. He is married to Tracy Anne McCann (nee Thomson), who is employed by him, on a salary of £35,000 as his office manager.

c. 1992–98. Scottish Officer, Civil and Public Services Association (CPSA). 1998–2008 Scottish Officer, Public and Commercial Services Union (PCS). 1999–2010 Elected Member, Labour Party, South Lanarkshire Council. 1999–2003 (Vice-Chair: E Kilbride Area Committee. 2003–07 Social Work Resources. 2007–10 Depute Leader, South Lanarkshire Council.

 

 

_52375353_-26Michael McCann

 

 

2. December 2010; Press Complaints Commission

a. Mr Michael McCann MP complained to the Press Complaints Commission that a letter headlined “A claim too far from our MP”, published in the East Kilbride News on 8 December, was inaccurate and misleading in breach of Clause 1 (Accuracy) and represented harassment in breach of Clause 4 (Harassment) of the Editors’ Code.

b. The anonymous letter – attributed to an “East Kilbride taxpayer” – criticised the complainant on the topic of his latest expenses, stating that his “first few months in office have cost the taxpayer more than almost every other MP in Scotland”.

c. The complainant said that this claim was incorrect and had been presented as fact. He also said that the criticism had appeared in the same edition of the newspaper as its own report on the issue, making much the same points. He said that the letter appeared to have been written in response to the article, and did not believe that the letter had been sent independently by a member of the public.

d. The newspaper said that the letter had been received by email on 3 December, and provided a redacted copy of it. The writer of the letter had asked for their name to be withheld.

e. A number of the points raised by the author had been previously highlighted in the public domain, and it had not been in touch with the individual before publication. It had chosen not to censor the opinion of the letter writer, which had been clearly presented.

Adjudication: Not Upheld

f. The Commission was not in a position to determine the provenance of the letter, which had been submitted by email. It accepted that the letter had echoed many of the points in the report, but noted that the IPSA figures had been made publicly available on 2 December, and the overall amount of the complainant’s claims (and individual claims such as a £2 parking charge) had been discussed in other newspapers.

g. Overall, the Commission was satisfied that readers would have recognised that the letter represented a reader’s appraisal of the figures which had been released. No inaccuracy could be established on this point and there was no breach of Clause 1.

i. In addition, the Commission had previously ruled that Clause 4 “relates to physical harassment of individuals by journalists and/or photographers in the news gathering process”. A letter of criticism about a local MP published by the newspaper would not raise an issue under this Clause of the Code. http://www.pcc.org.uk/cases/adjudicated.html?article=NjkzMQ==

 

 

21724442Michael McCann

 

 

3. February 2011; Labour MP’s friendship prompts council planning concern

a.There has been a demand for a criminal investigation into the planning process of one of Scotland’s biggest councils after a BBC investigation revealed relationships between a millionaire developer and senior politicians.

b. The investigation reveals allegations that Michael McCann, the new Labour MP for East Kilbride, Strathhaven and Lesmahagow, has had an undeclared relationship with local property tycoon and Labour donor James Kean.

c. Mr McCann did not declare a relationship whilst he was a councillor, serving on the planning and estates committees in South Lanarkshire. During Mr McCann’s tenure numerous applications related to Mr Kean came before committee.

d. The BBC also learned that as an MP, Mr McCann vigorously intervened in a supermarket planning dispute, from which Mr Kean could end up making millions of pounds. The MP wrote a letter detailing some 33 questions.

e. This follows a BBC investigation last year which revealed that Mr Kean was godfather to local Labour councillor Jim Docherty’s child. Mr Docherty, an influential member of the planning and estates committee, has never declared this relationship, despite supporting dozens of Mr Kean’s proposals at committee.

 

 

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f. SNP MSP Alex Neil has called for a criminal investigation into South Lanarkshire’s planning process. He said: “Very clearly there are legitimate questions to be asked and answered, and my view is, there is enough information made available by the BBC that there is a strong case for a criminal investigation, to establish whether anything untoward has actually happened. “I’m not saying there has or hasn’t, but I think to clear the air and make sure the system is above board in South Lanarkshire, there needs to be a criminal investigation to establish facts.” Very clearly there are legitimate questions to be asked and answered, and my view is, there is enough information made available by the BBC that there is a strong case for a criminal investigation, to establish whether anything untoward has actually happened”

g. Mr Kean owns large tranches of land in South Lanarkshire, mainly in East Kilbride. He is a longstanding Labour supporter, and has made, alongside his brother, donations totalling more than £5,000 to the East Kilbride Labour branch and to the Scottish Labour party.

h. The BBC understands he has been an associate of Mr McCann’s for at least six years. Mr McCann won a bitterly fought election campaign in May last year.

i. The BBC understands he held his late night election victory party at Legends Bar, in East Kilbride village, a building owned by Mr Kean.

j. The BBC has also learned that Mr McCann’s daughter stables her horse on Mr Kean’s farm. BBC Scotland asked Mr McCann what the financial arrangements for the stabling of the horse were, but he declined to answer.

k. There is no mention of it on his parliamentary register of member’s interests. As a councillor, Mr McCann supported numerous applications from Mr Kean’s companies as they came through committee, never declaring an interest.

l. Eddie McAvoy, leader of the council, has confirmed to the BBC that Mr Kean and Mr McCann go “back a long time” but said it was up to an individual councillor to decide whether a relationship should be declared.

 

 

baillie2

 

 

m. Mr McCann’s interest in applications involving Mr Kean didn’t stop when he left his job as a councillor. Under Freedom of Information, the BBC has obtained a copy of a letter he wrote to Scottish Enterprise (SE) in September last year. It indicates a forensic interest in SE’s proposal to sell a piece of industrial land at West Mains Road, East Kilbride, to Asda, who want to build a supermarket.

n. SE’s proposal is going head-to-head with another supermarket application, involving Tesco, who wanted to build on nearby Peel Park, much of which is owned by Mr Kean. If successful, the land owned by Mr Kean and other companies linked to him could be worth up to £20m.

o. The Kean-related bid was granted planning permission in October 2010. The developer behind the Asda bid, Dawn Developments, has taken the matter to judicial review, alleging the Tesco bid was given an unfair advantage by South Lanarkshire Council.

p. Mr Neil said: “Given the apparent relationship over a number of years between Mr McCann and Mr Kean, I think there is a case for the Parliamentary Standard’s Commissioner in London investigating this case as to why Mr McCann is pursuing this matter. “There might be perfectly legitimate reasons for him doing so, but I think there is a case for investigation to establish whether he is doing so in his role as a member of parliament, using that role and the powers it gives you legitimately, or whether he is abusing his power.”

q. Mr McCann refused to speak to his local newspaper, the East Kilbride News, which, during a tense election campaign, published questions from opponents about his relationship with Mr Kean.

r. Mr McCann does, however, write a column for the rival free-sheet, the EK Mail, which rents its office space from Mr Kean. Mr Kean is one of the paper’s significant shareholders.

s. Mr McCann accused the BBC of peddling “outrageous smears”. In a statement, he said: “This is a rehash of a smear story that appeared during the general election campaign and is simply untrue. “BBC Scotland has made several unsubstantiated and false allegations, some of which originate from a Tory political opponent and journalist I defeated at the general election.

t. McCann’s daughter stables her horse on Mr Kean’s farm “Others are linked to an ongoing court case on a planning matter with which I have no involvement, but I am therefore prevented from discussing these outrageous smears in public until the legal process has ended.

u. During my time as an elected member of South Lanarkshire Council’s planning committee, I never once voted against a recommendation made by officers, I complied at all times with rules rightly imposed upon councillors and I therefore reject any allegation of impropriety whatsoever. “[The BBC’s] claim that I have a relationship with Mr Kean is wildly exaggerated.”

v. Mr Kean’s lawyer said his client “vigorously denies any wrongdoing in connection with securing any planning permission from any planning authority”. He also pointed to a report commissioned by Mr Kean and carried out by Mackay Planning, which analysed 50 of his planning applications and concluded that all had been “dealt following the correct procedures and there is no indication of any preferential treatment or maladministration.

w.  A spokesman for South Lanarkshire Council said: “If the BBC is in possession of evidence that shows that any member of the council or employee acted in a way that was illegal, the council asks that this is provided to it as soon as possible, or, if appropriate, to the police. “All decisions on applications for planning consent must be taken solely on planning merits, and councillors who sit on the planning committee have received appropriate training in this aspect.” http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-12559916 http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/10478359

 

 

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4. February 2011; Investigation by BBC Newsnight – murky goings on in East Kilbride Labour Party. U-Tube video

a. Nothing surprising to anyone who has lived in the West of Scotland. You only have to look around at the strange amount of developments that have appeared on what was supposed to be green belt land. I’m sure that a young, hungry journalist could uncover many, many cases of corruption involving planning applications and brown envelopes stuffed with cash changing hands.  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H1kwgkDaSsk

 

 

10440962_439401019558112_4569774495807503261_nJohn Prescott

 

 

5. February 2011; Labour split deepens as Michael McCann blasts Lamont’s bid to devolve tax powers

a. Scottish Labour divisions on more tax powers for Holyrood have deepened after it emerged that the next chairman of the party’s MPs blasted the plans as “weak” and “not serious politics Michael McCann also said MPs “weren’t consulted” about the devolution commission proposal to give the Scottish Parliament control of income tax and insisted there were “serious questions” about how policy is made in Scotland.
http://www.heraldscotland.com/politics/referendum-news/labour-split-deepens-as-mp-blasts-lamonts-bid-to-devolve-tax-powers.23643212

 

 

murphy

 

 

6. November 2012; Waging War on Corruption – Inside the Movement Fighting the Abuse of Power

a. Michael McCann is well respected member of the right wing Henry Jackson Society. and organises presentation and discussion meetings in Westminster. He invited Frank Vogl, co-founder of Transparency International and a distinguished journalist and financial advisor to outline the main thesis of his new book, arguing that it is time to convert discussion about the prospects of curbing graft and bribery from one of skepticism to one of cautious optimism and hope. http://henryjacksonsociety.org/2012/11/21/waging-war-on-corruption-inside-the-movement-fighting-the-abuse-of-power/

 

 

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7. January 2013:  Israel’s advocates – and critical friends. Groups and individuals who are countering messages of hatred and delegitimisation.

a. A debate was held in the House of Commons to discuss how best to promote renewed negotiations and a two state solution. This was jointly organised by Labour Friends of Israel and We Believe in Israel. The debate was chaired by LFI Vice Chair Michael McCann MP, a member of the International Development Select Committee.

b. Concluding the debate, Michael McCann spoke of his “heartening” experience meeting with schoolchildren in southern Israel during a 2011 LFI delegation. He said that the desire of the children for peace with their neighbours, despite living under the perpetual threat of rocket fire, gave real “hope for the future”. http://hurryupharry.org/2013/01/18/israels-advocates-and-critical-friends/

 

 

Bx5_3kkIIAI3GzR

 

 

8. February 2013; How Scottish MPs Voted on Same Sex Marriage

a. The House of Commons yesterday voted by 400 to 175 in favour of the Marriage (Same Sex Couples) Bill at its second reading. Michael McCann voted against the motion. http://blog.scottishelections.org.uk/2013/02/how-scottish-mps-voted-on-same-sex.html

b. He said: “Whilst civil partnership legislation unequivocally broke the back of unlawful discrimination this Bill doesn’t end any discrimination whatsoever and has the potential to open up a can of worms of Olympian magnitude. http://www.pinknews.co.uk/2013/02/05/stephen-timms-mp-criticised-for-saying-marriage-was-primarily-for-procreation/

 

 

liebour

 

 

9. May 2013: Labour Friends of Israel (LFI) Vice Chair Michael McCann MP calls on the EU to proscribe Hezbollah as a terrorist organisation

a. Michael McCann MP led an important House of Commons debate calling for Hezbollah to be designated as a terrorist organisation by the EU, a policy which is supported by both Shadow Foreign Secretary Rt Hon Douglas Alexander MP and Foreign Secretary William Hague.
http://www.lfi.org.uk/lfi-vice-chair-michael-mccann-mp-calls-on-the-eu-to-proscribe-hezbollah-as-a-terrorist-organisation/
http://powerbase.info/index.php/Labour_Friends_of_Israel

 

 

What is the point of the Labour party

 

 

10. January 2014: Michael McCann, Labour MP invites PM Cameron – not elected by Scots – to attack FM elected by Scots- U-Tube video

a. McCann talks nonsense – the native language of Scottish Labour MPs – on sterling, White Paper and Bank of England. Who can blame him – he’s facing redundancy in 2016, and worried that there won’t be a stampede of those offering alternative employment. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EAWxRJWEOZE

 

 

Bx_bII5IAAE2s-z.jpg large

 

 

11. April 2014; Michael McCann verbally attacks audience. U-Tube video

a. Shame of Michael McCann MP who verbally attacked a woman in the audience at East Kilbride STUC hustings
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jdqA1Vw4h-k

 

 

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12. September 2014; Independence referendum intimidation tactics anger East Kilbride MP and MSP

a. East Kilbride’s MP and MSP have this week condemned intimidation on both sides of the debate in the lead up to the independence referendum.

b. Both Michael McCann and Linda Fabiani have been subjected to offensive, and sometimes personal, abuse both in public and on social media. Better Together campaigner Mr McCann described the indy debate as “gutter” level and lambasted the “scandalous” personal attacks against him.

c. McCann added that in his 32-year career as a politician and trade union official, he has never experienced such levels of intimidation. He said: “There are always moments in campaigns when people can get a bit upset because they believe passionately in their views but I’ve never seen a debate descend into the gutter like this one.

d. People are making comments on social media that have nothing to do with the debate and some of those comments have been about my family. It’s nothing short of scandalous. “There has even been a prominent member of the East Kilbride Yes campaign following the No campaign around and videoing us. I must ask the question, why?”

e. Fabiani said: “I too have received annoying, and on occasion offensive, messages on social media. I refuse to engage with such correspondents, and have many times noted my abhorrence of such behaviour on either side of the debate. “I note the charge of intimidation by Yes campaigners. This is not something I have either witnessed or had relayed to me by any No activists.

f. A spokesman for Yes East Kilbride said: “Contrary to Mr McCann’s complacency, local Yes volunteers were so outraged at the actions of a prominent No campaigner that, in July, they lodged a formal complaint with Better Together. Further concerns about the actions of this same No campaigner were highlighted within the past week.

g. Perhaps Mr McCann should reflect on whether, as a senior elected representative, his own actions and language helped achieve this.” http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/ContentwatchIn/ContentwatchIn_News/independence-referendum-intimidation-tactics-anger-4163935

 

 

backstabbers

 

 

13. September 2014; Labour’s business manager in South Lanarkshire Jim Docherty condemned for tweets branding SNP supporters “rats”

a. Residents in East Kilbride call for councillor to stand down after accusing him of tweeting “offensive” remarks following No’s referendum victory Tweets by Labour Councillor Jim Docherty describing Yes campaigners as “rats” has sparked outrage.

b. The tweets on the East Kilbride South councillor’s private Twitter account following Thursday’s independence referendum have led to calls for his resignation.

c. This is not the first time Councillor Docherty has come under fire over tweets – two years ago he posted a derogatory comment about Health Minister Alex Neil.

d. In one tweet, posted on Monday morning, he said: “Do not feel any sympathy for any Separatist they tried to break our great nation and least we forget Salmond is a Rat.” And, shockingly, Docherty, Labour’s business manager in South Lanarkshire, re-tweeted a picture of Alex Salmond sitting in front of a computer screen with a picture of a noose and a stool.

e. In another tweet he says No are willing to reconcile but Yes are not. He goes on: “Because they are bitter and will try again to be vigilant watch their every move.”  The councillor also tweeted: “Scotland is British now and forever you SNP and other rats.”

f. Docherty also re-tweeted tweets from the founder of the English Defence League – Tommy Robinson. An angry East Kilbride resident told the News: “Irrespective of your political views, any fair-minded person would surely agree that his position is untenable as a result and he should resign from his position immediately.”

g. In relation to the picture of Alex Salmond, which Docherty re-tweeted, another angry resident, John P Anderson – not the SNP councillor – said: “I was disgusted to see a member of South Lanarkshire Council’s executive saw fit to be posting pictures on Twitter that sought to make light of suicide.

h. I am sure that there are many families in East Kilbride that have been impacted by suicide and I am sure they find it no laughing matter. “This behaviour from a supposedly senior councillor can’t be allowed and I call for the local council and the local Labour Party to take disciplinary action against him.” http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/local-news/east-kilbride-councillor-jim-docherty-4320686
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/10478359

 

 

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14. October 2014: Labour MP Michael McCann charged over Yes schoolboy leaflet row

a. McCann is facing a breach of the peace charge over an alleged altercation with a schoolboy leafletting for the Yes campaign before last month’s Scottish independence referendum. Michael McCann, 50, allegedly confronted a 17-year-old boy and his friend as the pair campaigned for Yes Scotland in his East Kilbride constituency.

b. It is believed that the schoolboy’s father made a complaint to the police after the incident. Mr McCann, who said he was “absolutely delighted” with the result of the referendum last month, is said to have made counter allegations against his accusers. Mr McCann is the chairman of the group of Scottish Labour MPs at Westminster. A police spokesman said a 50-year-old man had been reported to the Procurator Fiscal. http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/local-news/east-kilbride-mp-michael-mccann-4400390

 

 

 

After the Scottish referendum.

 

 

15. November 2014; Backbench Business: Devolution and the Union

a. Back benchers discussion time in Westminster addressing the impact on the UK after the referendum Michael McCann said, “We have much to celebrate about the constitutional decision made by the Scottish people, but I also remember the acrimony of the debate.

b. I remember being abused every single day of the campaign by people who did not support my view. I know that families are divided and friendships have been broken and we must remember that that happens in constitutional debates.

c. Frankly, the levels of intimidation were unprecedented. But despite the SNP’s yes campaign having every conceivable advantage, including the serendipity of two SNP supporters winning the Euro millions it was still defeated by the Scottish people who rejected the idea of separation because they believed in their vast numbers that a stable system of governance enables us to absorb difficult economic times more easily than we would if we were component parts within a divided United Kingdom.” http://www.theyworkforyou.com/mp/24717/michael_mccann/east_kilbride,_strathaven_and_lesmahagow

 

 

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16. November 2014; Action 4 Equality Scotland Not impressed with Labour Party MP’s Time to Clear out the deadwood

a. Westminster remains the last redoubt where the old Conservative v Labour politics holds sway and Scotland’s interests after the next general election would be better served by a Popular Front of ‘independent minded’ MPs.

b. As opposed to the present Labour contingent who have shown over equal pay, for example, to have all the backbone of a jellyfish when it comes to standing up for the interests of their local constituents.

c. Consider for a moment the behaviour of Labour MPs in North Lanarkshire where a fierce fight over equal pay has been raging for the past 10 years. What have any of them had to say to support the position of low paid workers such as Home Carers?

d. In neighbouring South Lanarkshire Council the same thing happened even while the Labour-run Council was dragged all the way to the UK Supreme Court before being forced to publish details of the huge pay gap between traditional male and female jobs.

b. And what did all the Labour MPs in South Lanarkshire Council have to say about the scandal? Nothing. One of their number, Michael McCann MP, happens to be the former deputy leader of South Lanarkshire Council and he must have known what was going on, yet decided not to stand up and be counted.

c. So I think it would be great if these Labour MPs were driven out of Westminster and replaced by people who are committed to doing the right thing without fear or favour – and without pulling their punches. http://action4equalityscotland.blogspot.co.uk/2014/11/clear-deadwood.html

 

 

blair_for_president.1

 

 

17. November 2014; Radical Is The New Normal: Radical Independence Campaign Conference 2014

a. There was reference to the recent intemperate comments of Labour’s Michael McCann, MP for East Kilbride, Strathaven and Lesmahagow, who in his Twitter feed labelled the delegates at RIC 2014 as “Trots, extremists, infiltrators” and dismissed the entire event as “aka Trot convention” (sic).

b. McLaughlan also pointed out that McCann will shortly be going to court over his alleged attack on a teenage Yes activist during the referendum campaign, so perhaps McCann’s more virulent comments should be welcomed given that he stopped short of actual physical violence.

c. Walking around the vast main hall of Clyde Auditorium you would be hard-pressed to find many people fitting the description of “radical”, or any of McCann’s more scathing adjectives. A typical cross-section of the massive crowd: placid middle-aged women; bespectacled middle-class gents taking notes; young, friendly people chatting animatedly with each other; babies and young children roaming around; thoughtful pensioners slowly taking their place in the packed rows of seats; fashionable young Asian women and ordinary working blokes in crew cuts and Super dry shirts.

d. Appearances may deceive, but if the 3,000 people in the hall could be described as radicals, then there must be a cadre of ultra-radicals somewhere else, wearing camo and plotting revolution. http://markdawes2014.wordpress.com/2014/11/23/radical-is-the-new-normal-radical-independence-campaign-conference-2014/

 

 

article-2270948-1541BC71000005DC-446_308x425

 

 

18. Running Costs:2011/2012

Office Costs:£15,408.42. Computer/purchase, Advertising, Rent/Accn, Tel/Rent & Use , Mobile Tel/Ren & Use, Stationery
General Admin:£1,036.25. Stationery/Furniture/Mobile/Printer – Purchase & Rental.
Misc Expenses:£481.72. Office Relocation costs
Constituency Rental:£130.06. Tel/Rental
Payroll:£106,953.26. Includes Wife’s Salary £30-35K
Accommodation:£21,754.17. London Rent £19606, Council Charges £1500, Electricity/Gas £600, Service Charges 1560, Water £160.
Travel and Subs:£21,997.02. MP travel by car to and from London and within the constituency. Travel by air from Scotland to London & return
Loans Advances:£4,000.00.
Accn Deposit:£2,040.00.
Basic Salary:£65,738.00.
Total:£239,538.90.

 

 

Scottish-Referendum43

 

 

19. Running Costs:2012/2013

Office Costs:£17500,00 Computer/purchase, Advertising, Rent/Accn, Tel/Rent & Use, Mobile Tel/Ren & Use , Stationery
Accommodation:£21,754.17 London Rent £19500, Electricity/Gas £160,
Travel and Subs:£18892.15 MP & staff travel by car to and from London and within the constituency. Travel by air from Scotland to London & return
Total:

 

Above from left: MP Michael McCann, Adam Ingram, former MP for East Kilbride, developer and Labour donor James Kean

MP Michael McCann, Adam Ingram, former MP for East Kilbride, developer and Labour donor James Kean

 

 

 

20. Running Costs:2013/2014

Office Costs:£16,584.00 Computer/purchase, Advertising, Rent/Accn, Tel/Rent & Use , Mobile Tel/Ren & Use, Stationery
Payroll:£132,424.00 Includes Wife’s Salary £30-35K
Accommodation:£19,207.00 London Rent £18192, Council Charges £750, Electricity £265,
Travel and Subs:£21,340.00 MP travel by car to and from London and within the constituency. Travel by air from Scotland to London & return
Basic Salary:£67,000.00
Total:£256,555.00

Note: over a 5 year government McCann would be expected to cost the taxpayer around £ 250,000 each year. Total over 5 years £1,250,000

 

 

 

 

 

 

21. 15 March 2015: Labour donor accused by a local authority chief executive of threatening to coerce his council into selling a lucrative piece of land.

Developer James Kean allegedly told South Lanarkshire council officials that, unless the site was sold to his charity, he would use information he had to ensure that “people were not re-elected”.

The charity’s legal representative described the claims as “preposterous” and asked the council to withdraw the allegation.

Kean is an East Kilbride-based businessman whose firms have made donations to the Labour party. In 2011, his association with local Labour MP Michael McCann was the subject of a BBC Scotland investigation. It was alleged that McCann, when serving on South Lanarkshire Council, did not declare his ties with Kean when dealing with planning issues relating to the tycoon. Both McCann and Keane denied any wrongdoing.

Kean is at the centre of another controversy with the Labour-controlled council, this time involving the East Kilbride Community Trust (EKCT), of which he is a trustee and major funder. It was revealed  in 2014 that the EKCT wanted to buy council land in the Langlands area of the town for £175,000 in order to build a sports arena. McCann offered the “magnificent project” his support but the council declined due to the offer being below market rate.

Emails, volunteered to this newspaper by the Trust, reveal an extraordinary row between the charity’s legal representative Stuart Chalmers and council chief executive Lindsay Freeland on the land talks. Kean and Chalmers met senior council officers about the issue in June last year, a meeting the local authority’s head of administration and legal services Geraldine McCann also attended.

Ms McCann also serves as the council’s Monitoring Officer, whose job is to raise issues of concern with the chief executive. Eight days after the meeting, the council chief executive emailed Chalmers:

“As you know, the Council’s Monitoring Officer was in attendance at the meeting and she has provided me with an update of the meeting and raised some concerns regarding statements made during the meeting.

“I understand that your client referred to a ‘trump card which he had up his sleeve’ information which he held and was prepared to use if the Council did not agree to sell the land to him.”

Freeland continued: “This could be interpreted to be a threat to coerce the Council to undertake a particular course of action. I note that your client did not provide any detail of the nature of this information other than that he was ‘prepared to use it to ensure that people were not re-elected’.”

“If your client is implying that any officer or elected member has acted with impropriety, then I would be obliged if you would provide me with more detail of the nature of the alleged information to allow me to take the appropriate action.”

Chalmers responded: “The Trustees…have asked me to convey their deepest concern about the language of your second paragraph.

“The suggestion that any words said by Mr Kean ‘could be interpreted as a threat to coerce the Council to undertake a particular course of action’ is an extremely serious one. In view of the nature of this comment the Trustees require that it is withdrawn. The Trustees also require a copy of the note of the meeting taken by the Monitoring Officer.

“Mr Kean also wishes to put on record that he did not use the phrase ‘prepared to use it to ensure that people were not re-elected’. He did make a reference to the next Council election and it is his recollection that the words used were quite clearly stating his wish that his dealings with the Council would hopefully improve if a new batch of Councillors were to be elected at that time.”

However, the chief executive supported the Monitoring Officer in another email to Chalmers:

“I note your interpretation of the comments made by Mr Kean at the meeting. However, having discussed the matter with the Council’s Monitoring Officer, she has confirmed, to me, her interpretation and I am therefore not prepared to withdraw the comments to which you object to in the second paragraph of your email.

“The Council’s Monitoring Officer has confirmed to me that the statement was made, and in her opinion, could be interpreted in the way set out in my email of 24 June 2014.”

“The Council’s Monitoring Officer prepared a note of the meeting. The note is confidential and I am unable to provide you with a copy.”

Chalmers responded by again disputing the “preposterous” claim:

“Apart from the quantum leap required to attribute anything threatening to those particular words, how can a “Council” (a non person), feel threatened?”

“The Trustees reiterate their request that you withdraw your suggestion of a threat or a perceived threat to the Council.”

He added: “The Council’s shortcomings in its dealings with the Trust constitute a disgrace which the people of East Kilbride deserve to know about, and no doubt they will soon enough.”

The land deal was not agreed, but the council voted to enter negotiations about granting the charity a right of access through the Langlands site to develop other land under the EKCT’s control.

It is understood the dispute regarding Kean’s alleged statements remains unresolved.

A spokesperson for the council: “It would not be appropriate to discuss conversations in meetings that are commercially sensitive.”

Asked to comment on the row, Chalmers said: “It’s all in the emails. It’s there for you to see, and we are quite happy for these to be quoted, as long as they are quoted fairly.”

An SNP spokesperson said: “There is no absolutely place for threats in Scottish politics – Labour must confirm that any donations given by Mr Kean for the general election campaign have been returned immediately while this matter is fully investigated.”

Sc��ottish Conservative MSP Alex Johnstone said: “This is typical of the murky world of Lanarkshire Labour. You’d think lessons had been learned after the Falkirk fiasco, but Labour is a party that never learns.”

http://www.heraldscotland.com/news/13205763.Council_chief_executive_accused_Labour_donor_of_land_sale__threat_/

 

 

 

 

 

18th March 2015: Labour’s ‘dirty tricks’ campaign – rotten to its core

Just a few weeks ago, East Kilbride SNP called for a change to the political culture in East Kilbride.  Last week, Michael McCann MP gave a definitive answer – it is business as usual for Labour, with lies, deception and false accusations the order of the day.

The local Labour Party, which at one time sought to represent the people of East Kilbride, has become a sad shadow of its former self. Far from being a mass party, it has become a number of small factions haggling over the interests of close associates.

The Sunday Herald of 15 March carried two news stories about East Kilbride Labour.

The first story highlighted complaints of intimidation from senior members of the local Labour Party. The Herald revealed that the details of the allegations and the findings of an investigation into them are not to be made public. It seems the people of East Kilbride are not allowed to know the kind of people Labour offers to represent them.

http://www.heraldscotland.com/news/13205783.Senior_Labour_figures_complained_of__intimidation__in_East_Kilbride_Labour/

The paper also revealed that the Chief Executive of South Lanarkshire Council expressed concern at threats allegedly issued against Councillors who failed to approve a land transaction pursued by a prominent Labour supporter who is closely linked to Michael McCann. http://www.heraldscotland.com/news/13205763.Council_chief_executive_accused_Labour_donor_of_land_sale__threat_/

 

In an attempt to deflect attention from these issues, McCann resorted to the age-old tactic of throwing accusations at opponents. We have been here before. During last year’s referendum campaign McCann accused Yes campaigners of indulging in threats and intimidation, but without a shred of evidence emerging to support his allegations. Of course, McCann himself ended up facing a charge of Breach of the Peace following a  clash with a couple of teenagers during that campaign.

On 12 March, East Kilbride SNP held a very positive – and a very transparent – ‘Meet the Candidate’ event in the Murray Lounge. Linda Fabiani MSP introduced Dr Lisa Cameron who talked of the coming campaign and responded to questions. As the photographs show, it was a hugely positive event, attended by a wide range of people.

MURRAY LOUNGE collage
The next day, Michael McCann put up on his website a comment on the event, which those present have described as a tissue of lies and innuendo and ‘like a different meeting’. He makes clear that his comments are based on the presence in the meeting of one of his (very few) activists, masquerading as an SNP supporter.

In reviewing photographs of the event, an eagle-eyed SNP member picked out a face he had previously seen on social media working alongside Michael McCann and his election agent, Graham Scott.

Graham Scott and activist McCann team at Murray Owen Centre

And, here he is, without sunglasses.

Murray Lounge photo 1

His companion for the evening was apparently very pleased with his performance – overheard, as they departed, congratulating him on ‘having played his part well’. When the credentials given by the Labour activist and his companion were checked, it turned out they had provided false details, laying a trail to the door of an innocent local couple. Nice people!

The irony of using such deception to accuse your opponents of running a dirty tricks campaign seems lost on Michael McCann and his ever-diminishing campaign team. These are the kind of tactics discussed by student activists in the bar on a Friday night, but which never see the light of day once sobriety returns. They are signs of a growing desperation in East Kilbride Labour, of an MP devoid of ethics; this is a campaign rotten to its core.

In his press release about the fantasy event he created, McCann says he wants to talk about the challenges of our time. Perhaps he could start by explaining Labour’s record over the five years since he was elected, and what ‘Voting Labour to beat the Tories’ in 2010 achieved for East Kilbride.

 

• Labour failed to challenge the Tories on austerity. When provided with opportunities to defeat the Coalition Government, Ed Miliband let Labour MPs abstain from voting, ensuring the government would win crucial votes.

http://www.snp.org/media-centre/news/2013/nov/margaret-curran-called-clarify-bedroom-tax

 

• In January, Labour backed the coalition’s planned fiscal strategy for beyond the General Election, including a further £30billion of cuts above those already planned by George Osborne.

http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/local-news/msp-fabiani-slams-mp-voting-5017702

 

• Labour leaders are defying their own members to back spending on a new generation Trident nuclear missile system. This will undermine efforts to curb the spread of nuclear weapons and divert up to £100billion from vital public services, including conventional defence, in the years ahead.

http://labourlist.org/2015/03/75-of-labour-ppcs-want-trident-gone-poll-finds/

 

• At a local level, Labour let East Kilbride down over the closure of Rolls Royce. Instead of building a consensus to take the town forward, they chose to work only with the Tories in a secretive and ineffective Task Force. Future generations of the town’s job seekers will pay the price for that politically-motivated decision.

http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/local-news/linda-fabiani-msp-claims-council-5310566

 

The event in the Murray Lounge was just one of a number of opportunities for Lisa Cameron to lay out the positive vision the SNP is campaigning for in this election. It is noteworthy that Michael McCann sees no need for such an event. His is a campaign devoid of vision , just as he has been an MP devoid of connection to the ordinary lives of the people of East Kilbride.  https://eksnp.scot/2015/03/18/528/

 

 

 

 

 

 

21st March 2015: Call for Murphy to act on ‘canker on the body politic’ of East Kilbride

Cllr Gladys Miller, Convener of East Kilbride SNP has written to Jim Murphy MP, Leader of Scottish Labour calling for an inquiry into the local branch of the Labour Party and action against those who regularly attract bad publicity for both East Kilbride and Scottish Labour.

Cllr Miller’s letter follows an extraordinary week of revelations about East Kilbride Labour:

  • The Chief Executive of South Lanarkshire Council expressed concern that an East Kilbride Labour supporter may have threatened to use damaging information against elected members unless they acted in a particular way on a disposal of Council land.
  • Scottish Labour refused to release details of an investigation into complaints by prominent Labour members about a culture of intimidation within East Kilbride Labour.
  • Michael McCann MP attacked the SNP, apparently  based on the account of a Labour activist and a female companion who provided false details when they attended an SNP campaign briefing.  Other attendees have condemned Mr McCann’s description of the meeting as a ’tissue of lies and innuendo’.

The text of Councillor Miller’s letter is below. We will post an update when we receive a response from Scottish Labour.

Letter text
Dear Mr Murphy

I understand that the current state of the opinion polls has resulted in some Scottish Labour MPs and candidates realising, perhaps for the first time, that they face a prospect of defeat in the General Election on 7 May.

For some candidates, this prospect will act as a spur to fight for their seat by engaging with their electors, listening to local concerns, and responding in a way that recognises the legitimacy of political accountability. Unfortunately, there will be other candidates who take a different approach, who lash out at those they perceive as threatening their power base, or their livelihood, or any other benefit to which they feel entitled, simply by being lucky enough to be selected for (what used to be) a safe Labour seat. Unfortunately, in Michael McCann MP, East Kilbride, has an MP pre-eminently in the second camp.

Just a few weeks ago, East Kilbride SNP called for a change to the political culture in East Kilbride. Last week, Mr McCann gave us a definitive answer – it is to be business as usual, with lies, deception and false accusations the order of the day.

You will be aware that concern about East Kilbride Labour is of long-standing, with Councillors, including Mr McCann when in that post, failing to declare interests when others would have done so, and internal feuding. The Sunday Herald of 15 March carried two news stories about East Kilbride Labour. The first related to complaints of intimidation from senior members. The second related to concerns expressed by the Chief Executive of South Lanarkshire Council at threats allegedly issued against Councillors who failed to approve a land transaction pursued by a prominent Labour supporter who is closely linked to Mr McCann.

Being aware that these stories were due to surface, Mr McCann resorted to a diversion – using the attendance of one of his activists at an SNP event, under a false name, as the basis for unfounded allegations against members of East Kilbride SNP, including Linda Fabiani MSP. I understand that he has gone so far as to write to Nicola Sturgeon repeating these allegations.

Mr McCann has form in this kind of tactic. During last year’s referendum he accused local Yes campaigners of threats and intimidation, without a shred of evidence emerging to support his allegations. Embarrassingly, Mr McCann ended up facing a charge of Breach of the Peace following a street confrontation with a couple of teenagers. People in East Kilbride are amazed that he has been left in the post of Chair of the Scottish Group of Labour MPs after receiving this charge, which suggests a tolerance of his aggressive style. I look forward to hearing why he has been left in this post, contrary to previous practice when an elected member is charged with an offence.

On 12 March, East Kilbride SNP held a very transparent ‘Meet the Candidate’ event, in which Linda Fabiani introduced Dr Lisa Cameron, who talked of the coming campaign and responded to questions. This was a hugely positive event, attended by a wide range of people. The next day, Michael McCann put up on his website and issued to the press a comment on the event, described by those present as a tissue of lies and innuendo and ‘like a different meeting’. Having reviewed photographs of the event, SNP members identified that one of the attendees had been seen on social media working alongside Mr McCann and his election agent,Graham Scott.

The Labour activist was accompanied to our meeting by a female companion. At the end of the evening, she was overheard congratulating him on ‘having played his part well’. When the credentials given by the couple were checked, it turned out they had provided false details, laying a trail to the door of an innocent local couple. If SNP activists in East Kilbride were anything like the fantasy creatures of Michael McCann’s imagination, this could have had very serious consequences.

I don’t know what monitoring Scottish Labour carries out of the integrity of its local branches. However, the number of times East Kilbride Labour has featured in the press spotlight (for the wrong reasons) suggest something seriously wrong with the culture of that organisation.

Its members, including elected members, have been reported as indulging in behaviour that may be unethical, misogynistic, mendacious and intimidatory, yet the same small group of people continue to occupy its senior posts year after year and nothing is done to tackle this pattern of unacceptable behaviour.

As a newly elected leader of Scottish Labour who has promised to change the organisation for the better, I am asking you to tackle the canker on the body politic that is East Kilbride Labour. Please initiate an early investigation into the issues that have been running through the history of that organisation and deal with those who drag the name of East Kilbride and of Scottish Labour into disrepute.

I attach for your interest a photograph of the McCann campaign activist who attended our meeting, and his companion on the night. This may help you identify the source of the misinformation currently being broadcast by Mr McCann about our event on 12th March.

I look forward to an end to Mr McCann’s unprincipled attacks on the integrity of members of East Kilbride SNP and to hearing of your proposals for further action. Yours for Scotland: Councillor Gladys Miller: Convener, East Kilbride SNP: https://eksnp.scot/2015/03/21/call-for-murphy-to-act-on-canker-on-the-body-politic-of-east-kilbride/

 

 

scottish labour party photo: brown cartoon GordonVoodooScotland.jpg

 

 

 

 

 

21st March 2015: Fury as McCann mishandles data notices

Michael McCann has angered constituents by raising concerns over his handling of voters’ personal information if he is not re-elected. A number of constituents contacted East Kilbride SNP about a letter Mr McCann has distributed at taxpayers’ expense. Despite being very badly written, the letter clearly implies that if he doesn’t hear from the recipient before the election he will destroy any personal information he holds on them ‘immediately’ if he loses his seat.

McCann ICO letter
Appalled at the terms of the letter, we went in search of guidance on what Mr McCann should tell constituents. Not surprisingly, the guidance, published by the ICO and the UK Parliament, bears no resemblance to the letter that has dropped through doors all over East Kilbride.

The summary guidance from the ICO is

“GOOD PRACTICE TIP: Explain to constituents clearly what you intend
to do with their information whenever opportunity offers.”

The guidance confirms that personal information can be ‘processed’ for up to four days after the election; it therefore need not be destroyed ‘immediately’. So, there was no need for Mr McCann to cause distress to elderly and vulnerable constituents. The guidance suggests the use of a user-friendly form outlining the options available to constituents. This includes having their personal information returned, an option not even mentioned in Mr McCann’s letter.

ICO - UKParl guidance on handling personal information

The letter singularly fails to do its job, unless Mr McCann really means that if he is not re-elected he will act in the outrageous manner it describes.

One experienced Westminster case worker described this exercise as primarily for getting McCann’s name dropping through constituents’ letter boxes courtesy of Royal Mail and House of Commons expenses.

In his column for the East Kilbride News on 18 March, Mr McCann claimed to have worked with up to 6,000 constituents. If even a quarter of them received this notice, the cost will run into thousands of pounds. This badly executed publicity stunt further damages Mr McCann’s credibility and raises serious doubts about his competence and that of the team around him. We are calling on Michael McCann to write to his constituents again – this time using his campaign funds – clarifying that they do not need to contact him until after May 7th and giving them the full range of options for what he will do with their personal information.

 

A pattern of abuse

After this blog went up on-line, people got in contact from across Scotland, reporting Labour MPs sending similar letters to constituents. Some, amazingly, were even worse than Michael Mc Cann’s. We heard tell of similar letters from Jimmy Hood in Lanark and Hamilton East, Tom Greatrex in Rutherglen & Hamilton West, and this one from Jim McGovern, in Dundee West.

Letter to constituents from Jim McGovernIt seems there is a general decision by Scottish Labour MPs – or a directive from head office – that they should make one more call on House of Commons expenses to send out letters that are little more than badly designed personal promotion. Come 8th of May, there will undoubtedly be a call for more public funds for another round of letters, hopefully this time telling constituents the real options for dealing with their personal data.

https://eksnp.scot/2015/03/21/fury-as-mccann-mishandles-data-notices/

 

 

 

 

 

30th March 2015: An open letter to Michael McCann     From: Duncan McLean, Secretary, East Kilbride SNP

Dear Mr McCann

I understand from the East Kilbride News of of 26 March that you hold what you assert to be a transcript of a ‘Meet the Candidate’ event held by East Kilbride SNP in the Murray Lounge on Thursday 12 March. This recording was made without my knowledge as organiser of the event and, if such a recording exists, I have been recorded without my approval.

Please note that I assert ownership of any of my personal data contained within that unauthorised recording, and in any transcript or re-recording of that event. I am issuing you with notice under Section 10 of the Data Protection Act that you should cease processing my personal data and should not pass to others any further personal data of mine, or data that you assert to be my personal data obtained without my consent.

According to the Act, I must provide you with a reason for serving this notice. My reason for issuing this notice is as follows:

My objection to your processing or transmitting my personal data is that it is being used as the basis for false and misleading statements about East Kilbride SNP, and the SNP Candidate for East Kilbride, Strathaven and Lesmahagow in the General Election, Dr Lisa Cameron.

As an example, your statement “SNP activists have infiltrated local schools in a bid to brainwash pupils into supporting their political brand.” has no basis in reality, and certainly not in any statement made at this meeting.

The only SNP supporters who have ‘infiltrated’ schools are pupils required to attend by law, or have stayed on beyond the leaving age to advance their education. Your attack on them as ‘infiltrators’ is bizarre from someone who claims to be a serious politician. It is even more bizarre from someone who regularly attends local schools and young persons’ voluntary groups in a political capacity.

That you continued to make these visits after being charged with Breach of the Peace for a confrontation involving a school pupil raises serious questions. If the charge is no longer outstanding, your constituents are entitled to know the basis on which it has been discharged.

On their website, Scottish Labour Students say, “We are active on our university and college campuses, in our schools and in our local communities, helping to take Labour’s message to wider society and spread Labour values wherever we go.” (my emphasis) I look forward to receiving by return your condemnation of this infiltrationist, brainwashing organisation, or a retraction of your ludicrous allegations against East Kilbride SNP.

The Herald newspaper has already carried a response to your claims “Jim Gilhooly, executive director of Education Resources at South Lanarkshire Council, said: “It is worth noting that these allegations are anonymous, so must be treated with caution. Furthermore, our secondary schools have all confirmed that there are no such political meetings organised within school premises at lunchtime or any other part of the school day.””

Had you taken the allegations seriously, you would have made immediate contact with Mr Gilhooly or with local schools before making such outrageous statements. Your misrepresentation of decent SNP members and associated attack on Lisa Cameron’s character are unwarranted and intolerable, and you do not have my consent to hold my personal data and to use it in this way.

The use to which you have already put selected extracts from the transcript of this event you say you hold may well be a breach of Section 106 of the Representation of the People Act, the terms of which you can find online.

A defence to the charge of making a false statement is that you show you “had reasonable grounds for believing, and did believe, that statement to be true”. EK NewsYou say that you made your statements based on a transcript presented to you by Andy MacMillan. It is reasonable to expect that you would have satisfied yourself as to his character and suitability to be your sole witness for these allegations, and therefore a key plank in your campaign against East Kilbride SNP and its candidate. Your comments in the EK News reveal how little you knew about Mr MacMillan and the nature of his business.

Whilst selling ‘Clubwear’ is a perfectly defensible business, another strand of the company’s business – the sale of dresses for strippers – was made clear by the company’s Twitter account. This account was closed down as soon as attention was focused on it by your allegations. However, the ‘pinned tweet’ shown in the EK News article, posted almost a year ago, linked this Twitter account to the world of online pornography. There was no discernible warning on the home page of the account that this was the case. The voters of East Kilbride, Strathaven and Lesmahagow will be amazed that you are continuing to link your campaign to such activity.

You claim that your record is ‘transparent and unblemished’. It is certainly transparent, but to call it ‘unblemished’ while dragging your campaign into the gutter in this way and with an unresolved charge of Breach of the Peace in the public domain is a serious error of judgement.

I insist that you stop associating my name and what you allege to be my personal data with your sleazy and underhand campaign.

Please note that you are required to respond to this request to stop using my personal data within 21 calendar days. I reserve the right to make public that this notice has been served and your response, or failure to respond, to it.

This notice is served without prejudice to any other rights or remedies I, or any other party, may have.

https://eksnp.scot/2015/03/30/an-open-letter-to-michael-mccann/

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 6th April 2015: Controversy over Council’s sweetheart deal for McCann

On 30th March, the 2010 to 2015 UK Parliament was dissolved, and Michael McCann ceased to be Labour MP for East Kilbride, Strathaven and Lesmahagow and became just another candidate.

Before dissolution, his campaign had already begun to plumb the depths. After the dissolution, the McCann campaign launched its biggest attack yet on the norms of political campaigning. Overnight, it turned South Lanarkshire Council’s operational HQ in East Kilbride, the Civic Centre, into its campaign headquarters.

As staff entered the Civic Centre the next morning, and every morning since, they have had to troop past a bank of posters promoting the Labour candidate’s campaign. Many of the staff know Mr McCann of old; not only did he have his parliamentary office in the building, he is also a former Deputy Leader of the Council, which has a dire track record of dealing with equal pay claims by its female employees. Although there have been reports of rifts between close associates of Mr McCann and the Council, and of former colleagues refusing to campaign for him, these don’t seem to get in the way of the Council doing what it can to aid his re-election.

A-gift-to-Labour-from-South-Lanarkshire-Council

As the challenges from political opponents and voters mounted, the Council stalled, dithered, and delayed answering the question, “Why has this been allowed?”.  Only when they were safely off for their long Easter weekend did the Council slide out a carefully worded response to an enquiry from the media, “The Council rents accommodation to Michael McCann in the same way that it has at times rented accommodation to politicians of different political parties.”

Mr McCann has run his constituency operation from the Civic Centre since 2011. Before that, it was the base for East Kilbride’s former Labour MSP, Andy Kerr. When the SNP’s Linda Fabiani defeated Andy Kerr, she asked about moving into the Civic Centre. The Council rebuffed Ms Fabiani’s approach, allowing Mr McCann to move in instead. This decision will have cost taxpayers thousands of pounds in wasted IT and telecoms costs and alterations to signage for the Civic Centre.

Since 2011, the Council has resisted attempts by the SNP to find out the terms of its lease with Mr McCann. While citing the spurious grounds of ‘commercial confidentiality’ (a favourite tactic of SLC), it now seems that the over-riding concern has been to conceal the advantageous location Mr McCann’s campaign would enjoy at this General Election.

The Council’s attempt to cover its tracks on this sweetheart deal has extended to asking the wrong question about its legal obligations and reassuring everyone it had done nothing wrong: Its press statement said, “After discussions with the Electoral Commission our legal advice is that the Council is not in breach of electoral law as a result of these posters being displayed.” (our emphasis)

The question the council should have asked, to which it may very well have received a different answer, is, “Are we in breach of Local Government law?”, to which the answer would probably have been ‘Yes, you are’.

Local Government Act 1986 - summaryFor the avoidance of doubt, the fact that it was Mr McCann’s team that put the posters up inside the Civic Centre is no defence. The act is absolutely clear “A local authority shall not give financial or other assistance to a person for the publication of material which the authority are prohibited by this section from publishing themselves.”

We know that the Council believes the publication of this material on the Civic Centre could be construed as their endorsement of a political position. We know this, because they very vigorously advocated and defended this view during the independence referendum.

Yes sign on the grass outside the Civic CentreWithin minutes of the above ‘Yes’ sign appearing on the grass outside the Civic Centre, the Council swung into action. Senior staff from its Hamilton Head Office contacted the Civic Centre and instructed removal of the ‘offending’ sign. To provide backup, a Council lorry was dispatched, with two operatives, to ensure it was removed. The following email from a senior council employee makes clear that the Civic Centre, even the grass outside it, should not be used for campaigning,

“For future reference, I would advise you that campaign materials are not permitted at the East Kilbride Civic Centre or other such operational buildings of the Council … The landscaped area you refer to is part of the Civic Centre complex and therefore falls within the above guidance.” (our emphasis)

If a Yes sign resting on an area of public open space is not permitted because it could give the appearance of Council endorsement, this is true in spades of two large banks of posters on the Civic Centre itself. Despite demanding urgent removal of Yes signs from the grass outside the Civic Centre, the Council’s current defence appears to be that, three years earlier, it had entered into a lease that allows Mr McCann to convert his MP’s office into the headquarters for his election campaign and to use the building as a very high profile poster site.

This is an indefensible position and the Council Leader and its Chief Executive, who also happens to be the Returning Officer for the Council area, need to take action. Having permitted Mr McCann a week’s publicity at the expense of its reputation, when the Council resumes normal business after the Easter break, they must address this outrageous demonstration of political bias.

If Mr McCann refuses to remove the posters, it can not be beyond the wit of the Council to find a means of concealing the posters from general view.   https://eksnp.scot/2015/04/06/controversy-over-councils-sweetheart-deal-for-mccann/

 

 

 

 

 

30 April 2015: East Kilbride Labour candidate demands probe after learning breach charge is dropped via social media

Michael McCann, Labour candidate for East Kilbride, says he is considering civil action against his accusers amidst claims that he was the victim of a politically-motivated attack designed to ruin his reputation. He was charged with breach of the peace after an incident involving young Yes campaigners in the run-up to the referendum.Mr McCann, who is campaigning to be re-elected as MP for East Kilbride, was arrested after a 17-year-old schoolboy’s father reportedly made a complaint to police.A counter allegation was made to officers about Mr McCann’s accusers.

Prosecutors said last week no proceedings are to be taken against either alleged victim. But a furious Michael McCann has now formally complained to the Crown Office claiming the charge against him was mishandled. He says, while the charge against him was dropped in February, the Fiscal’s office did not inform him of their decision. Instead, he learned about it via social media. He is now demanding an internal probe into procedures at the Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal’s Office.

Claiming he was the victim of a politically-motivated attack, Mr McCann says he is now taking legal advice about raising a civil action against his accusers. He told the News: “I was the victim of a malicious crime and I want justice. “I want the Crown Office and Fiscal Service to pursue the individuals who wasted police time, CO&PFS time and tax payers’ money. “I am awaiting an opinion from my solicitor about what action I can take against these people. “At the same time I am completely dissatisfied with the way the authorities dealt with this case. “I was forced to undergo the trauma and humiliation of being questioned by police and arrested in full view of my family, while knowing that I had done absolutely nothing wrong. “I had to fork out for legal advice then wait for months on end to find out my fate. “Then, when the Procurator Fiscal made the correct decision to drop the proceedings, they didn’t have the decency to inform me.

Mr McCann added: “Charging people and then not informing them that those charges have been dropped does not best serve the cause of Scottish justice. “The system has to change. At the moment it is illogical and insulting. “Without pre-judging their response, I would be astonished if the Crown Office and Fiscal Service could find a way of justifying their behaviour in this instance.” Comments about the incident, on September 9, appeared on Facebook before the involvement of officers.

The youth and a young female friend are understood to have been leafleting in the constituency for the Yes campaign at the time. Mr McCann says he was charged after he told a youth to stop defacing a “No” campaign advertising board during the lead-up to the referendum. He said: “I have been a victim of a malicious crime designed to ruin my reputation. “The accusation caused great personal damage to me and a great deal of distress to my family. “The case made the front page of the East Kilbride News and has been repeatedly referred to on social media by political opponents, with ridiculous exaggerated allegations that I had assaulted a schoolchild.

A spokesman for the Crown Office said: “The Procurator Fiscal received reports relating to an incident involving a 50-year-old man and a 17-year-old man, said to have occurred in East Kilbride on September 9, 2014. “After full and careful consideration of the facts and circumstances of the cases, the Procurator Fiscal decided that there was insufficient evidence available for prosecution. “The Procurator Fiscal instructed no proceedings after a thorough investigation into the allegation. Intimation of the decision was dealt with in the normal manner in accordance with our procedures and practices.”  http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/local-news/east-kilbride-labour-candidate-demands-5601753

 

 

 

 

5th May 2015: Press attack on young activists sees McCann branded ‘not fit to be an MP

In October 2014, Michael McCann MP was charged with Breach of the Peace following an incident in which it has been alleged Mr McCann verbally abused two young Yes campaigners. Last week, it was revealed no further proceedings were to be taken against him.

The young Yes activists, Jordan Lindsay (aged 17 at the time of the incident) and Eryn Semple (aged 19) have lodged a statement with the East Kilbride News describing the incident and its aftermath. They have issued a challenge to Mr McCann to do the same.

After hearing that the charges have been dropped, Mr McCann used the opportunity to launch an astonishing press attack on Jordan and Eryn. In the East Kilbride News, he claimed to be the victim of a ‘malicious crime’ and accused them of wasting police time. He also said he was taking legal advice about suing both young people.

These are serious charges and threats, and were carried on the front page of the EK News. Jordan and Eryn, both of whom are well known through social media as having been involved in the incident, were given no right to reply when these accusations were carried. The EK News has refused to carry the response by Jordan and Eryn in this week’s paper. Clearly, Michael McCann’s bullying behaviour pays off.

Jordan and Eryn are furious at this decision. Both families fully support their version of events, and have hit back at Mr McCann, branding him unfit to be an MP.

Jordan Lindsay said:

“Eryn and I were making our way home after a leafleting session for the Yes campaign when a car u-turned and pulled up beside us. The driver, who I recognised as Michael McCann, accused us of defacing a poster and said he would deface us. I asked him to repeat his statement, which he refused to do. “His allegation that we had defaced a billboard was untrue, it is so high off the ground we would have needed a ladder to reach it. His behaviour was very aggressive.

Eryn Semple said:

“When a car u-turned and stopped beside us, I was concerned at where this was going.  When I realised the person shouting at us was Michael McCann, I was shocked at his behaviour.”

Below is a picture of Jordan and Eryn at the billboard they were accused of defacing, now being used by Michael McCann as part of his campaign. As can be seen from the photo, even Jordan, at six feet two, can’t reach the bottom of the billboard from the highest point on the ground.

Jordan trying to reach for the billboard
Jordan spoke to his father, Steven Lindsay, about the incident. Mr Lindsay, who was not involved in the Yes campaign, and is not an SNP member, was shocked at such behaviour from someone in Mr McCann’s position. He told Jordan he should report the matter to the Police or he would go and speak to Mr McCann. Jordan reported the incident to the Police.

Hearing about Michael McCann’s allegation that the complaint was politically motivated and a waste of Police time, Jordan and Eryn’s parents were furious. Steven Lindsay said: “Michael McCann’s allegation that the complaint to the police was politically motivated is a fantasy of his own invention. Jordan was clearly shocked at Mr McCann’s behaviour, both in making a false allegation of vandalism and his aggressive attitude. It was because of my insistence that Mr McCann be spoken to about his behaviour that Jordan reported the matter to the Police. “Someone who is let off a charge of Breach of the Peace and responds by slandering a couple of young people is not fit to be an MP. That is not a matter of politics, it is a matter of character.”

Aamer Anwar, Jordan Lindsay’s solicitor said “Jordan has protested his innocence from the start, and whilst relieved the Crown have dropped charges against him, he is disappointed that there are no further proceedings against Mr  McCann. The last few months have been a tremendous strain for a young man who had every right to campaign, without being bullied and intimidated. Despite Mr McCann’s recent assertions that he is seeking legal advice, there are no proceedings against Jordan, who would of course welcome his day in court to let everyone know what happened that night”

Duncan McLean, Secretary of East Kilbride SNP, said: “Within minutes of this incident occurring, my attention was drawn to Jordan’s post on Facebook, giving a clear statement of the event, from which neither he nor Eryn have wavered. That account, and their subsequent behaviour has the ring of truth. “The contrast between their behaviour and that of Michael McCann couldn’t be more stark. Making serious allegations against young people, but failing to give them the opportunity to respond is the kind of moral failure Michael McCann has displayed throughout his political career. “His decision to make a counter-complaint, backed up by two unidentified witnesses, and now his wild accusations of criminal behaviour, are the mark of a politician not in control of his decisions. He is a liability to his constituents and to his party.”

 

SUMMARY OF EVENTS OF 9 SEPTEMBER BY JORDAN LINDSAY AND ERYN SEMPLE –
AS SUPPLIED TO THE EK NEWS

We had been campaigning in the Jackton area with Yes East Kilbride. We left our colleagues at Hairmyres Station and set out for Westwood along Eaglesham Road. As we walked away from the bus stop located near the entrance to Windward Road, we became aware of a car behind us performing a U-turn and accelerating back towards us. At this time, we had no idea of the identity of the occupant.

The car pulled to a halt beside us, the window on the front passenger side was pulled down, and the driver shouted at us. Jordan heard the driver say that we had defaced a No poster and he would deface us. He bent down, looked into the vehicle, and recognised Michael McCann. There was no one else visible in the vehicle. He and Michael McCann conducted a brief conversation but Mr McCann refused to repeat what he had said when he first drew up. Having also realised who the driver was, and in an effort to calm things down Eryn jokingly said “Just Vote Yes”. Mr McCann muttered “Typical Yes supporters.” and drove off. Mr McCann remained in his car for the whole conversation, which lasted approximately two minutes, therefore the words he used could have been heard by no one other than the participants in the incident.

Jordan posted a description of the incident on his Facebook page as soon as he got home and this was being read and shared by his Facebook friends within minutes of the event. Eryn texted her mother immediately after the incident and discussed it with her when she got home.

That evening, Jordan discussed the incident with his father and made clear that he felt threatened by Mr McCann’s approach and his language. Jordan’s father said someone needed to speak to Mr McCann about his inappropriate behaviour, and either he would do it or the Police should. The following morning, Jordan reported the incident to the Police. Thereafter, statements were taken from both Jordan and Eryn.

In early October, Police Officers attended Jordan’s home, they confirmed that Michael McCann had been charged with an offence in response to the report he had submitted. The Police Officers advised Jordan that Mr McCann had brought forward two witnesses and, on the basis of  statements they made in support of Mr McCann, Jordan was also to be charged with an offence.

As the incident largely consisted of a conversation between Jordan Lindsay standing at the side of Eaglesham Road, speaking to Michael McCann through the passenger side window of a car in which Mr McCann appeared to be the sole occupant, it is not clear what understanding of the incident these witnesses would have had. https://eksnp.scot/2015/05/05/press-attack-on-young-activists-sees-mccann-branded-not-fit-to-be-an-mp/

 

Labour Party Women

 

 

 

 

 

29th June 2015: Council still in lockdown over Civic Centre scandal

East Kilbride SNP has grave concerns about the way South Lanarkshire Council discharges, or fails to discharge, its statutory obligation to remain politically neutral. In recent months, the Council has given the impression that it handed decision-making over East Kilbride Civic Centre to East Kilbride Labour Party to do with as it wishes.

We have challenged the Council to come clean over its arrangement with the Labour Party, but it has refused to do so, instead indulging in delaying tactics and dubious legal challenges to requests for information.

Voters who asked for information about the Council’s sweetheart deal with Labour have received lengthy emails asking them to justify the release of ‘personal data’, despite the fact none of the information requested is sensitive personal data.

For the record, it has long been established that the release of personal data may be justified if there is a legitimate public interest. Certainly, as regards the misuse of the Civic Centre by Labour, even if personal data is to be disclosed, this is entirely justified.

Office premises in EK Civic Centre were made available to Adam Ingram, Andy Kerr, and Michael McCann only because of the office to which they had been elected. At least, that has been the reason given by South Lanarkshire Council; maybe the reluctance to provide information indicates that no such policy has ever been approved by the Council.

Could it be the case that they only got access to the Civic Centre because they carry the right party card? Certainly, the address given for ex Labour MP Jimmy Hood‘s Constituency Office suggests East Kilbride is not the only town in which South Lanarkshire Council has proven a willing landlord for a Labour MP; but it has been strangely unable to provide space in any of its operational premises for an MP, MSP, or MEP of a different political party.

Jimmy Hood picture and address

If there is a clear policy covering all-party access to Council premises by elected members, why is the Council so unwilling to disclose how it has been implemented?

All of the elected members, particularly Michael McCann, a former Deputy Leader of the Council, should have been aware that a lease with the Council would be subject to Freedom of Information disclosure. Indeed, if their use of the premises have been funded by either the Scottish or UK Parliaments, information will be available from these bodies as well.

The statement below, which is from a decision of the Information Commissioner in respect of Caerphilly Council in Wales is clear:

 “When considering what information third parties should expect to have disclosed about them, the Commissioner considers that a distinction should be drawn as to whether the information relates to the third party’s public or private life.

“The Commissioner’s view is that information which relates to an individual’s private life (i.e. their home, family, social life or finances) will deserve more protection than information about them acting in an official or work capacity (i.e. their public life).”

If the Council was unaware of this Caerphilly case and many others like it, they certainly have been aware of guidance, issued by the Scottish Information Commissioner. We know that, because, the Council drew attention to the guidance in the email sent out to inquirers as part of the process of delaying making information available.

 “In an Information Rights Tribunal decision which looked at the disclosure of details of MPs’ expenses the Tribunal considered that there were clear legitimate public interests at stake.

These included the general principle of freedom of information, public scrutiny of the use of public funds, encouraging MPs to make better value for money choices, assessing politicians’ probity, enhancing public confidence in Parliament and informing public debate on reforms of the allowance system.

The legitimacy of these interests was enhanced by a history of mistakes and misuse of the expense system, …(our emphasis)”

These two statements point very clearly to South Lanarkshire Council releasing the information requested without further delay. Here is why:

  • The information requested relates to the tenants operating in their public capacity – this includes the period spent by Mr McCann winding up his MP’s office if he insists on doing so within the Civic Centre to the detriment of his successor’s ability to serve the voters.
  • As the landlord is a local authority and the tenant the current or immediate past holder of a public office and funded from the public purse there should be a presumption in favour of freedom of information.
  • The public is entitled to examine how the Council implements its policy of making an office available to elected members of the Scottish, UK, and European Parliaments.
  • The history of South Lanarkshire Council’s apparent political bias adds legitimacy to the public’s interest in these matters, not least because the Civic Centre was turned into a political poster site for two weeks, almost certainly a breach of the Council’s statutory obligations.

So, what is the Council achieving by withholding the information requested, apart from further damage to its reputation? It is of course buying time to cover its tracks, and to hope that attention moves on to other matters, letting it return to ‘business as usual’.

It is time for the Council to bring its cover up and stalling tactics to an end, and stop using a spurious ‘data protection’ defence that has long since lost any credibility. They must release the information requested, in full, and as quickly as possible.

https://eksnp.scot/2015/06/29/council-still-in-lockdown-over-civic-centre-scandal/

 

 

 

 

 

Rejected by the voters of Renfrewshire for Westminster – Jim Sheridan Eye’s Up a Local Councillor Job in Ward 10 – Houston – Crosslee – Linwood – Renfrewshire North – Check his record Before You Vote

 

 

 

 

_47893950_-4James Sheridan

 

 

James Sheridan MP for Paisley & Renfrewshire North – lives in Erskine, Renfrewshire with his wife Jean. They have a son and daughter. Daughter works for him (salary paid by the taxpayer) full time.

He is a Labour Party politician who has been Member of Parliament (MP) for Paisley & Renfrewshire North since 2005. He was previously MP for Renfrewshire West from 2001 to 2005. He was born in Glasgow and attended St Sixtus Primary School and St Pius Secondary School in Drumchapel. He also served on Renfrewshire Council from 1999 representing Erskine Central.

Before entering politics he worked in shipyards from 1970 to 1978, then as a printer for the Paisley Daily Express from 1978 to 1984, then for Thales Optronics (formerly Barr and Stroud before 2001) on Linthouse Road in Glasgow, where he was a trade union convenor for the TGWU from 1984 to 2000.

 

 

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Voicing concerns over the use of UK airports like Prestwick to refuel US aircraft travelling to Israel the 52-year-old said many of his Labour colleagues believed the government’s policy was flawed.

He also said he believed the Palestinian situation had been put on the back burner. “The reason I am resigning is the current conflict in the Middle East,” he said. “I don’t expect my resignation will have any significant impact on the prime minister’s objectives in the Middle East, which I genuinely believe to be honourable on his part, but I don’t believe they reflect the core values of the Labour Party or indeed the country.”

In a letter to Tony Blair, he said that he did not believe that America or the UK were serious about bringing about an early end to the conflict. He added that the decision to allow US flights to Israel to stop off in the UK did not sit comfortably with the International Convention on Human Rights.

There have been protests after planes carrying “hazardous” cargo refuelled at Prestwick Airport in Ayrshire. He said: “I can no longer support the government’s position of calling for restraint on both sides of the current conflict in Lebanon whilst, in my view, facilitating the refuelling of aircraft in our country that are carrying real weapons of mass destruction, as seen on our television screens.” http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/4777677.stm

Bit of a smokescreen this one. The flights were “rendition” in purpose transferring prisoners to nominated countries for interrogation.

 

 

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November 2008: Sheridan backs a UK Soccer side

Sheridan, (who recently voted in favour of transferring to Olympic funds £175k of lottery money allocated to good causes in Scotland) tabled a Commons early day motion backing a Great Britain football team at the 2012 Olympics, saying football “should not be any different from other competing sports and our young talent should be allowed to show their skills on the world stage”. The football governing bodies of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland are all opposed to a Great Britain team, fearing it would stop them competing as individual nations in future tournaments.

 

 

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March 2009: Jim Sheridan claimed for plasma TV and leather bed

Benefitting from a very generous second home allowance he rented a flat in London’s  Dolphin Square, designating the property as his second home,  reclaiming rent of about £13,200 p/a.

In the 2005/06 financial year, he used this second homes allowance to pay a £991.95 bill for a Memory foam mattress and “ivory leather bed”.

A further £500 he spent on furniture and household accessories that year was also claimed on his expenses.

Between January and April 2006, he reclaimed £699 for a three-seater sofa, £829 for a two-seater sofa bed, £219 for a coffee table and £199 for a lamp table.

In 2006/07, he bought a flat in London, designated it as his second home and started reclaiming the monthly mortgage interest of around £924.

A further £359 was claimed on his expenses for a wardrobe in August 2006, along with £299 for a chest of drawers, £159 for a bedside cabinet and £109 for a mirror.

In July that year, Mr Sheridan charged the taxpayer £1,200 for painting the ceilings, walls and woodwork in his second home.

The MP then claimed £1,280 to supply and fit a new shower, although the fees office initially threatened to withhold payment because of a lack of proper receipts. However, Mr Sheridan provided an invoice and the money was paid.

The same month, February 2007, he claimed the £595 cost of supplying and fitting three sets of blinds.

In October last year, Mr Sheridan claimed the £699.99 cost of a 42-inch plasma television, just under the £750 limit imposed by the Commons fees office. He also claimed £219.99 for a four-year warranty.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/mps-expenses/9940855/Flashback-how-the-Telegraph-revealed-Jim-Sheridans-expenses.html
http://richardwilsonauthor.wordpress.com/2009/05/17/the-98-mps-who-tried-to-cover-up-their-expense-claims-by-exempting-themselves-from-the-freedom-of-information-act/

 

 

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May 2010: Labour MP Jim Sheridan claims new expenses system ‘vindictive’ and ‘discriminatory’ against poorer MPs, (IPSA was set up by Labour!)

When you say the words ‘expenses’ and ‘Westminster’ it is very hard to generate any sympathy for MPs because of what has transpired.

The new Commons expenses system is “cumbersome and vindictive”, this is the verdict of Labour MP Jim Sheridan.

He claims politicians will be left out of pocket and may have to “sack staff” because of new measures brought in by the Independent Parliamentary Standards Authority (Ipsa).

Poor politicians he says will be discriminated against because they will have to pay money upfront and claim it back which could take three to four weeks.

Sheridan said; “I didn’t enter politics to make money but neither did I enter politics to subsidise my job and I should not be asked to pay upfront money that I then have to wait three, four weeks to get back.”

Expenses in my opinion should be split, MPs’ personal expenses and office costs should be handled as separate issues.

The Independent Parliamentary Standards Authority (Ipsa) is a knee jerk Labour creation which begs the question why he didn’t speak out effectively before?

It is run by Sir Ian Kennedy, described by Alistair Campbell as (Labour) ‘party people’.

MPs should be issued with two Government credit cards which all expenses incurred during the course of their tenure are put through. One for the running of their office and another for personal expenses, on top of that any staff should be directly paid by the House of Commons.

It seems that the new fairytale of the Independent Parliamentary Standards Authority (Ipsa) needs to put back on the drawing board. Yet again, another Labour creation which is a complete mess, they clowns can’t get anything right.

I don’t think Sheridan will move the public by his tale of woe.

http://glasgowunihumanrights.blogspot.co.uk/2010/05/labour-mp-jim-sheridan-claims-new.html

 

 

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May 2011: Jim Sheridan snubs Holyrood fight for holiday flight

Scottish Labour MPs are demanding that one of their colleagues should be barred from standing for the party again after he decided to take a three-week holiday abroad instead of campaigning during the Holyrood election.

The Scotsman has been told that Paisley and Renfrewshire North MP Jim Sheridan told colleagues that the result was “in the bag”.

He added he would not be needed to help in campaigning during the election, which instead led to the SNP winning a historic majority.

Among the Nationalist gains on the dramatic night was the Paisley Scottish Parliament seat, until recently held by former Scottish Labour leader Wendy Alexander, which overlaps Mr Sheridan’s constituency.

Mr Sheridan’s decision to take a holiday rather than help fight the Nationalist surge has become symbolic of a growing divide between many of the Scottish Labour MPs elected to Westminster last year and their colleagues who came in before.

MPs from the 2010 intake have privately complained about the “disdain” many of the veteran MPs have for the Scottish Parliament.

One MP said: “It was noticeable that several of the older group didn’t bother to campaign much. “The fact one of them decided to go on holiday pretty well sums it up.”We really have to end this total disdain for Holyrood and various people need to start treating it seriously or we will never fight back against the Nats.”

Another added: “It’s totally outrageous that while activists and colleagues were flogging themselves around streets to try to save the campaign one of us should go on holiday.”

A third said: “I hope when the boundaries are redrawn and there are less seats to fight this is remembered and Mr Sheridan is not chosen as a candidate. He has let everybody down.” Mr Sheridan was not available to comment.

http://www.scotsman.com/news/labour-mp-snubs-holyrood-fight-for-holiday-flight-1-1631147

 

 

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February 2012: Alex Salmond’s Invitation by BBC (Scotland) to add half time match comment withdrawn at the last minute on instruction of BBC London. Jim Sheridan gets involved.

Rugby fans will be aware that at the weekend Scotland and England faced each other at Murrayfield. However, behind the scenes another showdown was taking place.

Alex Salmond, due to comment at half time as a pundit, was at the last minute denied participation on instructions of BBC (London) quoting English concerns his appearance would impinge BBC’s rules intended to ensure political neutrality. The move angered the First Minister  who expressed disappointment that in taking sides they had become involved in politics.  http://www.labourhame.com/author/jim-sheridan/

 

 

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Comments;

There were 118 recorded responses to the aforementioned article. The vast bulk were highly critical of Sheridan’s negativity which revealed the motivation that drives him to do what he does. A very sad person who is blinded by an all consuming hatred of Alex Salmond.

I presume Ed Miliband and his new friends Cameron and Clegg won’t be appearing on TV during the Olympics then. What utter tripe. And don’t forget the (Labour) First Minister of Wales took part in the coverage of the Ryder Cup and the Rugby World Cup last year. You need to get over your obsessive hatred of the SNP and start thinking about how to make Labour relevant to the people of Scotland again, before your support disappears completely. We miss you. Honest we do.

We shouldnt be supporting or praising the undemocratic actions of the bbc just because they are nat bashing, it is unhealthy for scotland to have a politicaly biased media , and in the long term it will only become an achilles heal for the labour party. Also the strategy of using the word separatist instead of independence only weakens the point you are trying to make and is well past its sell by date.

Jim Sheridan has a reputation for making false allegations and refusing to retract or apologise for such allegations, examples:

Claiming that Scottish government ministers were involved in the nomination of a knighthood to Brian Soutar. – FALSE.

Claiming that the Scottish FA officials were biased and bigotted. – FALSE.

On both occasions despite efforts by both Scottish government and football officials Mr Sheridan refused to retract those patently false allegations

Perhaps if Mr Sheridan dealt with the rising levels of poverty in his constituency due to Coalition and Labour cuts instead of mixing politics and sport he would be seen by his constituents as doing the job he is being paid to do.

The facts are that a London BBC political editor made a decision about a BBC Scotland sporting event without first discussing the matter with the people at BBC Scotland.

 

 

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Alex Salmond had given the editors at BBC Sport Scotland his assurance that he would not use the time on the programme to speak about politics and he does have a very extensive knowledge of Scottish rugby, so would have been a very good commentator for the game and would be someone who any most people in the UK (like him or not) would have found his take on the match interesting.

Sheridan supports the London BBC overriding decisions made by BBC Scotland, without them even having the decency to inform the editor at BBC Scotland, so if anyone had doubt that the labour Party in Scotland suffers from an internal cringe that allows themselves to be treated with complete contempt by London and yet continue to ‘suck it up’ only have to read this article to find out the truth.

Pathetic really, but this kind of person will soon be swept out of Scottish politics and we will look back at these articles one day and marvel that Quislings and traitors had so much power in our nation and done so little the people who elected them (have you been to Paisley).

Not knowing anything much about sport, I have no problem with this new policy of the beeb’s so long as it is applied consistently. We shall, of course, be watching very closely. I do occasionally chance upon radio football programmes with pundits who seem to have some definite views about politics, I feel a reciprocal rule should be in place. If politicians cannot talk about sport, sport’s pundits shouldn’t talk about politicians.

Here’s a tip for Jim Sheridan. Go onto the House of Commons website. Type the word “gauleiter” into the search engine and hit return. It will bring up 31 results from Hansard and minutes of committee meetings.

The Labour party are keen on Nazis/fascists, what with Tom Harris’s hilarous downfall vid: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2087378/Labour-MP-compared-Alex-Salmond-Hitler-Downfall-spoof-sacked-partys-new-media-advisor.html

And how could we forget good old Ian Davidsons outburst: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-13879737

 

 

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March 2013: Jim Sheridan, noblest parliamentarian of this or any era deplores “the parasitical elements of the press”.

less than 24 hours after the Commons noisily congratulated itself on regulating the press, he called for Parliament to exclude journalists. Not all journalists, to be clear. Just those he called “the parasitical elements”.

He complained to fellow MPs, “they abuse their position in here” by  “hiding behind their pen and calling people names”. In light of this insolence, continued the Labour member for Paisley & Renfrewshire North, “I don’t understand why they’re allowed to come into this place.” The Royal Charter, he concluded grimly, “won’t stop them behaving the way they do. But hopefully it’ll bring some kind of decency into them.”

Sheridan, has form since he called for sketchwriters to be banned before; in 2009, he demanded they be flung out of Westminster for poking fun at his friend Michael Martin, the Speaker who so sadly resigned after criticism of his handling of the expenses scandal.

Among the sketchwriters’ many outrages they referred to Mr Martin as “Gorbals Mick”, an appellation his fellow Glaswegian decried as “racist”.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/politics/9941077/Sketch-Jim-Sheridan-noblest-parliamentarian-of-this-or-any-era.html

 

 

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Residents of his Paisley and Renfrewshire North constituency gathered outside Sheridan’s offices, yesterday venting their anger at his attack on press freedom.

Glyn Clements, 50, said: “If politicians are saying and doing things that are bad, the public have a right to know. “A free and strong press is important.”

Unemployed Edward Gronan, 51, said: “Newspapers tell it how it is and you read about corrupt politicians all the time. “Reporters shouldn’t be prevented from telling the public about this.”

Hairdresser Kirsty Schuler, 22, said: “Any kind of censorship of the press is a bad thing. “I don’t trust politicians so we need someone to keep an eye on them.”

Retired William Harkess said: “MPs should be doing their jobs but when they don’t newspapers help hold them to account.”

Debbie Knight, 21, said  “People have a right to know what the people they elect are doing.”

Jean Finnigan, 62, said: “If anyone else wasn’t doing their job right they’d be held to account. Why should politicians be different?”

Trying to defuse the row, Sheridan released a brief  statement that he had been attacking sketch writers who had lampooned him and his friend Michael Martin, the former Speaker.  Eating humble pie he said “It is not a question of banning the press from Westminster since it could not function properly without the press. If the press weren’t here we’d be talking among ourselves.” http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/politics/mp-jim-sheridan-blasted-over-1775577

Sheridan later gave the game away in an interview on Radio 4 when Quentin Letts of the Daily Mail made reference to his expenses, among them an expensive plasma screen for which the people of Paisley had been charged £1000. Spluttering with fury, the MP started blustering about “bullying” that should be “unacceptable in this day and age”. It’s worth repeating this just so that we’re all clear; charging the taxpayer a thousand quid for a telly is acceptable, but mentioning it on the radio is not.

It is clear what Sheridan’s agenda is, and clear that for many of his fellow members of the Commons – rightly exposed as cheats and thieves after years of press silence – this is their chance for revenge. Well, I say that state control of our press (including this website – Ed.) – however “light touch”, or “hands-off” is what should really be “unacceptable in this day and age”.

I’d rather live with the anarchy of a messy, feral and occasionally lawless press than the dictatorship of oafs and cretins like Jim Sheridan. Paisley can keep him. http://www.thinkscotland.org/todays-thinking/articles.html?read_full=12037

 

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July 2013: Sheridan denies he plotted with union to unseat colleague in Paisley

Sheridan yesterday was forced to deny he plotted with union bosses to unseat Douglas Alexander in a constituency coup. Sheridan, who chairs the group of Labour MPs sponsored by the Unite union, had faced a potential battle with the Shadow Foreign ­Secretary for a seat at the next ­general election under proposed boundary changes.

According to reports ­ yesterday, there was an attempt by Unite to help Sheridan secure the seat by recruiting union members to the party.

Sheridan denied the claims amid the escalating row between Labour and Unite, that has seen the party’s internal report into the Falkirk ­selection ­process being handed over to police.

The union are accused of ­packing the local party with ­members to ensure their candidate Karie Murphy was ­chosen to fight the seat when Eric Joyce MP stands down at the next election.

Sheridan admitted Unite had attempted to recruit more of their members to Labour in Paisley, but denied there was an orchestrated attempt to remove Alexander. http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/politics/labours-jim-sheridan-denies-plotted-2034757

 

 

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July 2013: The Paisley Slagometer High score condemns Jim Sheridan

20% of local politicians hog 80% of the Paisley Daily Express newspaper daily limelight. and use it to slag off the opposition. Media manipulation is rife even in the local press http://www.ktbh.co.uk/sheridan.htm

 

 

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July 2013: Jim Sheridan Gave Parliamentary passes to political lobbyists for Unite, allowing free access to the House of Commons to promote the trade union’s agenda to MPs.

Steve Hart, Unite’s political director, has been leading efforts to install the union’s favourites as Labour candidates for Parliament in 41 constituencies, including Falkirk, where police have been called to investigate vote-rigging claims.

Mr Hart is one of four of the union’s political officers who have been given Commons security passes by Labour MPs. According to the latest official register, Nick Parrott, another political officer for the union, was given a pass by Jon Cruddas, the senior MP who is directing Labour policy review.

Unite said it would be “expected” that Mr Hart had access to the Palace of Westminster in order to fulfil his duties as the union’s political director. Mr Cruddas said Mr Parrott had been his researcher “for many years”.

There is no suggestion of wrongdoing by either the union officials or the MPs who arranged parliamentary passes for them. However, the disclosures underlined the extent of the close working cooperation between Unite and Labour at a highly sensitive time for the party.

Lord Reid, the Blairite former Home Secretary, warned Mr Miliband that he is locked in a “struggle” for the future of the party in the wake of the Falkirk controversy.

He claimed that Unite, which is Labour’s biggest financial backer, was attempting to take the party back to the 1970s, a course that would lead to electoral “oblivion”.

Labour has referred the case of Falkirk to the police after claims were made that Unite sought to ensure that its first choice won the nomination by packing the local party with its members. Unite denies any wrongdoing and has accused Labour of “smearing” the union.

A leaked union document last week disclosed that Mr Hart had drawn up plans to ensure that the Union’s favoured candidates were successful in 40 other constituencies across the country.

According to parliamentary records, he was given a security pass for Parliament on the sponsorship of the Labour MP, Jim Sheridan.

Mr Sheridan is the chair of the Unite Parliamentary Group, which the union says consists of about 100 Labour MPs. Unite provides the group with briefings on the impact of legislation passing through the Commons on union members.

A Unite document produced shortly after the last election highlighted the union’s “strong level of influence” on Labour MPs and peers, as well as the Shadow Cabinet.

Mr Hart is in the process of handing back his pass because he is leaving the union to take up another role at a think-tank, according to a spokesman for Unite.

Mr Parrott and the other two Unite pass-holders have already handed back their passes, the spokesman said. “Jim Sheridan is chair of the Unite group of MPs and as such we will give him support in running that group,” the Unite spokesman said. “It is all completely open and above board.”

Mr Sheridan and Unite have both denied claims they plotted to unseat Douglas Alexander, the shadow foreign secretary and a leading Blairite MP.

The Unite leader Len McCluskey has criticised Mr Alexander in the past. On Sunday, Labour’s deputy leader, Harriet Harman, said the party would impose strict spending limits on candidates campaigning to become prospective Labour MPs in an effort to prevent a repeat of the Falkirk scandal.

The party is also due to publish a new code of conduct for candidates seeking to stand for Parliament. However, Mr Miliband ruled out breaking Labour’s historic links with the unions.

Grant Shapps, Conservative Party Chairman, said the fact that Labour had given parliamentary passes to lobbyists for the party’s biggest union donor “raises very serious questions”.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/politics/labour/10165573/Labour-MPs-gave-Commons-passes-to-lobbyists-for-Unite.html
http://order-order.com/2013/07/08/how-labour-mps-give-parliamentary-passes-to-unite-lobbyists/

 

 

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September 2013: Unite parliamentary chair lambasts Labour diehard over energy plan attack

Jim Sheridan has launched a broadside at “out-of-touch” Lord Mandelson following the anti-union peer’s public attack on the party’s plans to take on profiteering power firms.

Paisley and Renfrewshire North MP Mr Sheridan hit out after Mr Mandelson condemned Labour leader Ed Miliband’s plans to enforce a 18-month freeze on bills, saying the party was “in danger of being taken backwards.” Mr Sheridan – also chair of the Unite union parliamentary group – lambasted the Labour peer’s decision to attack his own party as an example of “all that is wrong with the Lords.” “The only thing going backwards is people’s standard of living,” the MP said.

“Our party stands up for ordinary people – those who are struggling to pay soaring energy bills – but all he seems interested in is protecting his financial portfolio in the energy companies.”

Lord Mandelson was a member of ex-PM Tony Blair’s inner circle and once pronounced that he was “intensely relaxed about people getting filthy rich.” He is also on the books of global consultancy firm Global Counsel. It counts energy as one of its areas of business, although it says it is not linked to big firms in the sector in Britain. The peer also has a number of other ties to energy firms, including as chairman of investment bank Lazard International.

Mr Sheridan said: “Mandelson’s attack just typifies how out of touch he is on this.

“Like many in the Lords he has become part of the establishment and is using his links within the Labour Party as an extension of his outside earnings. “These people have made a good living out of the Labour Party but have left those who supported them behind.”

Mandelson has been among right-wing Labour figures linked to the Progress faction – funded by billionaire Lord Sainsbury – who have hit out at union involvement in the party.

He told a Progress conference in May that trade unions wielded a “disgraceful” influence. The faction once ruled the party with an iron fist but fears that it is being pushed out of its position of power under Mr Miliband’s leadership.

 

 

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October 2013: Jim Sheridans Claims rejected

The latest round of MP expenses is, as ever, most illuminating. However, Jim didn’t fare terribly well with all of his claims as nine claims totalling £1,226.45 were rejected.

Those expenses included hotel accommodation in Europe and first class flights to Cyprus as befits a man of the people. Gaun yersel, Jim, boy. Perhaps Jim should be referred to from now on as Jim Sheridan, MP for Cyprus?

http://labanach.blogspot.co.uk/2013/10/jim-sheridan-mp-2.html

 

 

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April 2014: Running costs Jim Sheridan MP

This MP provides verifiable information, pertaining to his claims for financial support. http://www.jimsheridanmp.org.uk/allowances.htm

 

 

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18. July 2014; Jim Sheridan, Labour MP asks PM to get businesses to bully their workers into No vote

A contemptible spectacle – a Scottish Labour MP attempting to enlist his Tory Better Together boss Cameron into persuading Scottish business bosses to intimidate their workers – for that’s what it would be, given power relationship – into voting against the independence of their country.

Cameron convened meetings with chief executives of large businesses putting  in place measures designed to spread alarm and despondency amongst workers in Scotland.  Cameron and Sheridan lying through their teeth. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nia1myib8CQ#t=34 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9lH9WwT5ZB8

 

 

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October 2014: European matters under discussion – Jim Sheridan’s contribution

The Bruges Group ranks MP’s according to their voting record in Westminster since the 2010 General Election. It is possible to check how they voted on key EU related issues that came before them indicating the genuine Eurosceptics and those that are Europhiles.

b. Sheridan avoids voting on just about anything. Hardly acceptable practice. http://www.brugesgroup.co.uk/mp/division.php?mp=441

 

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James Hood – Labour Party Candidate For South Lanarkshire – Inputs Minimal -Outputs Loadsa Money For Jim – The Electorate Are Onto You Old Boy – Time To Retire

 

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April 2014: This is Jimmy Hood

James “Jimmy” Hood (born 16 May 1948) is a British Labour Party politician, who has been the Member of Parliament (MP) for Lanark and Hamilton East since 2005. He was first elected in 1987, as MP for Clydesdale. He has remained a backbencher throughout his parliamentary career, serving on various select committees, including Defence 1997-2001.

Educated at Lesmahagow High School,  Motherwell Technical College and the University of Nottingham he worked with the NCB for 23 years, as a mining engineer. He became a NUM trade union official in 1973. During the Miners’ Strike of 1984-5 he led the striking Nottinghamshire miners.

He has been married to Marion McCleary since 1967, they have a son and a daughter and two grandchildren. He suffered a heart attack in 1998.

 

 

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November 2008: Hood supports UK national football team

Hood was one of 18 MPs who signed a Commons motion backing a Team GB football team at the 2012 Olympics, saying football “should not be any different from other competing sports and our young talent should be allowed to show their skills on the world stage”. The football governing bodies of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland are all opposed to a Great Britain team, fearing it would stop them competing as individual nations in future tournaments.

 

 

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February 2014: Hood places self interest before his constituents

It was Lanark’s very own Jim Hood that sparked the controversy which ignited fury across social networks; as my constituency MP, I found his words particularly alarming.

It can easily be viewed on YouTube for anyone who wants evidence of Jim Hood’s words, which can easily be interpreted as against his constituents.

He said  “If the Scottish People are to be better off economically, I’d still be against Scottish Independence, and I’d still vote no.”

Not only do Jim Hood’s words declare that he values his personal interests higher than the interests of the Scottish people, but that he values his personal interests higher than the interests of his constituents – the very people who put a tick next to his name at the ballot box to ensure his big salary.

The people of Lanark through to Larkhall have elected this man for nearly 30 years, and for him to make a statement which indicates that he cares not for the economic prosperity of his own people I interpret as downright shameful – no wonder turnouts are so low at elections when MPs like Jim Hood appear so self interested, and careerist.

I believe that the problem doesn’t just lie with Jim Hood, but with the a large portion of the Labour Party at Westminster, who only reflect self-interest and a lust for power at Westminster. http://www.yesclydesdale.org/featured/inplaceofjimhood.html

Video: Hood said he would vote against independence even if it meant the Scottish people would be better off economically. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yuj1bKFldlc

 

 

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November 2009: Refuge supporting homeless ex-soldiers threatened with closure by Jim Hood MP

About 6 minutes into the video, Griffin explains that ex-soldiers are at the bottom of the housing queue, below everyone, including illegal immigrants and asylum seekers many of whom are bogus. Earlier a local ‘Labour’ MP, Jim Hood, said he would close the charity because BNP members donated. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TKn5OUrgBY4

 

 

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May 2009: MPs’ expenses: Jimmy Hood claimed up to £1,000 per month on second homes allowance

He designated a London property as his second home for expenses purposes, entitling him to reclaim the cost of its upkeep.

Before April 2008, MPs did not have to provide receipts for some categories of maintenance work if each type of claim totalled under £250 per month.

He used the allowance to claim back £200 per month for cleaning his second home, and up to £200 per month on “repairs, insurance and security”.

He also occasionally claimed money for “service and maintenance”. All but four of this type of claims, submitted over a four-year period, were less than £250, and therefore did not require receipts.

He also claimed £400 per month for food, the maximum allowed without receipts.

Altogether, he was able to use his second homes allowance to claim up to £1,000 per month without receipts or a precise description of work carried out.

In the 2004/05 financial year, he claimed £400 per month for food for 11 months and £200 in August 2004, even when the Commons was in recess.

He also claimed £200 per month for repairs, insurance and security, and four claims for service and maintenance.

A similar pattern of claims was made in the following three financial years.

He was recompensed between £600 and £1,000 per month across the four categories of expense without receipts, except on infrequent occasions where the £250 limit was exceeded for service and maintenance.

Three of these claims were successful because he provided an invoice, but one, for £360.52 in November 2005, was not, because no receipt was submitted.

The £250 limit remained until April 2008, when the threshold for receipts was lowered.

His monthly claims also included mortgage interest on his designated second home, the amount of which varied from £728.68 at the end of 2004 to £445.14 at the start of 2007/08.

He also made a series of expenses claims for furnishings and household goods for his designated second home in London.

In March 2006, he claimed £1,500 for furniture, including a bed and headboard, and £1,400 for carpets.

The following July, he claimed more than £1,000 for household goods bought at the electrical shop, Comet, including £489.95 for a 26-in LCD television, a cooler and humidifier (£89.99) and a deep fat fryer (£39.99).

Asked about the maintenance charges, he said, “they were permissible under the old expenses system.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/mps-expenses/5357249/Jimmy-Hood-claimed-up-to-1000-per-month-on-second-homes-allowance.html

 

 

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November 2013: Jim Hood and nine other Scottish Labour MPs didn’t bother to vote for the Labour motion against the Bedroom Tax

That this House regrets the pernicious effect on vulnerable and in many cases disabled people of deductions being made from housing benefit paid to working age tenants in the social housing sector deemed to have an excess number of bedrooms in their homes.

Calls on the Government to end these deductions with immediate effect.

Furthermore calls for any cost of ending them to be covered by reversing tax cuts which will benefit the wealthiest and promote avoidance, and addressing the tax loss from disguised employment in construction.

And further calls on the Government to use the funding set aside for discretionary housing payments to deal with under – occupation by funding local authorities so that they are better able to help people with the cost of moving to suitable accommodation.

Result; Government won 252 – 226 (26 votes). A total of 41 Labour MP’s either didn’t vote or abstained.

http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:d4xHo3sQPaYJ:forargyll.com/2013/11/10-scottish-labour-mps-dont-bother-to-vote-for-the-labour-motion-against-the-bedroom-tax/+&cd=91&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=uk&client=firefox-a

 

 

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February 2010: In the wake of the House of Commons expenses scandal, 29 Scottish MPS were ordered to repay some of what they received.

James Hood:  Overpaid mortgage interest, food. Repayment recommended: £5413.49. Repayment received: £5413.49. Balance: Zero.

http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/politics/house-of-commons-expenses-scandal-what-1049791

 

 

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March 2008: Bob Doris MSP condemns Glasgow Labour MPs on Iraq vote

Bob Doris MSP condemned outright the actions of Scottish Labour MPs, (including Jim Hood) who last night voted against holding an enquiry into the Iraq war.

Speaking in Glasgow Mr Doris said: “Yet again, Labour MPs have failed to represent their constituents. “Last week they voted to close Post Offices, this week they have voted to cover up the lies that lead Scotsmen and women to their deaths in Iraq. “Scot’s have constantly condemned the Labour Governments actions in taking us into an illegal war based on a pack of lies.

Yet their so called representatives in London have ignored them and voted to throw a blanket over the whole shameful episode. “They constantly tell us that the war was just.

Well why don’t they tell that to the families of the hundreds of thousands who dies innocent, helpless deaths. “But even if they are convinced – what have they to hide from an enquiry? “Surely in their world, an enquiry would absolve them?

“It is another disgraceful episode from people who put career before principle and party before Scotland. “Perhaps they could get a ticket back to Scotland and explain to their constituents why they have let them down again.” The Chilcott Inquiry, cost to date £9million is yet to report.
http://www.glasgowsnp.org/MSPs/Bob_Doris_MSP/Bob_Doris_MSP_condemns_Glasgow_Labour_MPs_on_Iraq_vote/

 

 

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March 2014: The 30 Scottish Labour MPs That Voted For Osborne’s Welfare Cap

As a service to you, here is the list of those ‘weekend socialists’ who voted with the Tories to cap the level of spending allocated to helping the poorest in our community. http://petewishart.wordpress.com/2014/03/26/the-30-weekend-socialists/

 

 

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July 2009: Scottish MP gets money for nothing as ‘second job’ pay revealed

Jim Hood, the Scots Labour MP, admitted pocketing £625 a month – in addition to his MP’s salary of £64,766 – as a consultant for Scottish Coal.

This adds up to a £7,500 a year boost to the income of the veteran politician, an MP since 1987 and leader of the Nottinghamshire miners during the strikes of the 1980s.

His task, “to advise on parliamentary matters as they pertain to the coal industry” on behalf of Scottish Coal. When asked, under new Commons rules on disclosure, how many hours he spent on the consultancy in return for the latest monthly payment, Mr Hood replied, “Nil.”

http://www.scotsman.com/news/politics/top-stories/scottish-mp-gets-money-for-nothing-as-second-job-pay-revealed-1-759796

 

 

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Comment from a constituent; I once asked for an appointment with Jimmy Hood. I asked him to bring to Parliament the question of allowing the continuation of free postage for our Troops in Iraq. He said he would consider it, but also reminded me that life can be made very difficult for the lives of Troops on the front line if families at home meddled with the Politics of War. I doubt his Secretary included that little threat into her shorthand!

He recently wrote to me inviting me to display his ‘little red card’ in my window if I wished to participate in his local Constituency walkabout. If your reading this Jim, ‘I’ll leave what I have to say to you at a more public gathering than have you contaminate my doorstep!

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1211481/MPs-earn-50-times-constituents–just-jobs-side.html

 

 

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January 2010: Mainshill Solidarity Campaign against open-cast mining in South Lanarkshire

Jimmy Hood, MP for Lanark and Hamilton East, has a £7,500 a year contract with Scottish Coal to “advise on parliamentary matters as they pertain to the coal industry”.

But the veteran politician, a former mining engineer, admitted yesterday he could not remember exactly when he last did any work for the company. “I advise Scottish Coal on anything to do with legislation, although they haven’t asked me anything for some time,” he said.

“It is so long since I advised them on anything, the last thing was probably the floods at Longannet.” Scotland’s last deep coal mine at Longannet in Fife was closed down after an underground dam burst in 2002, with the loss of 500 jobs.

 

 

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Last night, the SNP questioned whether Mr Hood was also more interested in pursuing “lucrative” consultancy work than his constituents’ interests And Scottish Green party leader Patrick Harvie MSP claimed the arrangement, “smacks of an ongoing pay-off” to ignore environmental concerns about opencast coal mining in his area.

The MP, who was leader of the Nottinghamshire miners during the 1980s strikes, said he began his consultancy work with Scottish Coal in 2001, replacing former Midlothian Labour MP Eric Clarke. The precise arrangements only came to light when new rules were introduced last July, forcing MPs to declare their income from second jobs on the Commons Register of Interests. Last week, Mr Hood made an identical entry on the register for the ninth consecutive month: “£625 received. Hours: nil.” The money he is paid for doing nothing comes on top of his £65,000 MP’s salary.

By contrast, voters in his constituency, a former mining area that is one of Labour’s safest seats in Scotland, have an average hourly pay of just £9.37.

 

 

What is the point of the Labour partyed and jim

 

 

A spokeswoman for the SNP said: “Jimmy Hood seems to have struck gold with his coal mine consultancy. “But after the disturbing lobbying revelations about his Labour colleagues in London, Jimmy Hood’s constituents may be left wondering whether their MP is also more interested in lucrative consultancies rather than constituent concerns.”

Mr Harvie said: “Jimmy Hood has notoriously failed to assist or represent those people whose lives are being blighted by opencast coal mines in his constituency and local area. “The fact that he has been pocketing large amounts of cash from Scottish Coal for years, for essentially doing nothing for them, nor against them, smacks of an ongoing pay-off from the company to allow it to continue polluting unchecked.”

During Mr Hood’s recent months of inaction, Scottish Coal was given planning permission to open a hugely controversial opencast coal mine just outside his own constituency.

Protesters spent seven months holed up in trees and tunnels at Mainshill Woods, near Douglas in South Lanarkshire, before being evicted by police in January.

 

 

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Regardless of the debate on open cast mining, what is true is that Jimmy Hood needs put out to pasture – I turned in my Labour party membership after twenty years because of shiftless, lazy career politicians like him.  He is a classic example of the class traitors Labour MPS, MSPs and councillors have become. They and their blinkered supporters wave “opencast – jobs” around without the temerity to imagine what new nature reserves, new forestry and nature reserve jobs could be created.

From the inception of opencast coal mining in this area, there has been no more than a handful of jobs available for local people. It is time the propaganda was exposed for what it is and put to bed. The landowner, the Earl of Home, wrote  ‘When we were talking to Scottish Coal we did ask them to employ as many locals as possible and they do employ a handful. The problem is that equipment used on site is now very sophisticated and in many instances specialists are needed, who are not available locally, even with training. The huge earth moving equipment used nowadays, result that surprisingly few people are needed on site at all.”

Jimmy Hood MP said ‘the nonsense about opencast bringing jobs into the area is a myth and has long been exposed as such.  Anyone who thinks that opencast mining brings long term and quality jobs into our area is stretching the realms of reality to its limit.”

There is a spirit of sad resignation rather than sheer anger in the Douglas Valley this week as Scottish Coal asked to be released from ALL limits on the time it can operate its controversial Mainshill opencast mine each day. Because of the mine’s close proximity to the Lady Home Hospital and the village of Douglas, an eight hours a day limit was agreed when the company was given the go-ahead to mine there over two years ago by South Lanarkshire Council and the Scottish Government. But as feared at the time the Mainshill workforce have been asked by Scottish Coal bosses to co-operate with their plans to expand the working day by a third, from eight to twelve hours daily.

 

 

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Videos covering events at Mainshill Open-cast site just south of Douglas.

Mainshill Open-cast. Disgusting Behaviour of South Lanarkshire Politicians.

Mainshill resistance to open-cast coal mining in Scotland.

Stopping Work at Mainshill – Solidarity Camp Gathering.

The True Spirit of Black Douglas Lives at Mainshill Solidarity Camp.

Exposure of the open-cast expansion in the West of Scotland.
https://shawotis.wordpress.com/tag/mainshill-solidarity-camp-climate-change-global-warming-carbon-footprint-scottish-coal-south-lanarkshire-council-mainshill-forest-happendon-woods-coal-action-scotland-msp-karen-gillon-wind-p/

Local newspapers.
http://www.douglascommunitycouncil.info/news.asp?intent=viewstory&newsid=41718
http://www.carlukegazette.co.uk/news/local-headlines/scottish-coal-wants-to-mine-24-hours-a-day-at-mainshill-opencast-1-2064631

Loadsa information exposing the destruction of communities and open land.
http://coalactionscotland.org.uk/

Interactive map of lanarkshire showing potential open cast sites.
https://www.google.com/maps/d/viewer?mid=zc1TlXvVVT9U.kapV8nJIvGgc&hl=en&ie=UTF8&t=h&msa=0&ll=55.580673,-3.841267&spn=0.065302,0.222988&z=13

Adverse effects on locals.

Click to access coalhealthstudy_v20_lite.pdf

 

 

Cash_682_1383604aPensioners-in-Scotland

 

 

Total Running Cost 2013-14

Office Costs £18,860.95  The cost of renting, equipping and running an MP’s office and surgeries

Staffing £104,484.72  Includes Marion Stewart Hood, P.A. Salary £20,000.00 and £24,999.99.

Travel £20,553.15

Accommodation £10,932.00

Miscellaneous Expenses £390.00

Basic salary £66,396.00

Other salary £14,727.96  additional salary for serving as a chair on a parliamentary committee or panel.

Total cost for year £236,344.78

 

 

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Total Running Cost 2012-13

Office Costs £17,716.97  The cost of renting, equipping and running an MP’s office and surgeries

Staffing £102,096.25  Includes Marion Stewart Hood, P.A. Salary £20,000.00 and £24,999.99.

Travel £11,736.10

Accommodation £6,322.44

Basic salary £65,738.00

Other salary £14,582.04  additional salary for serving as a chair on a parliamentary committee or panel.

Total cost for year £232,164.37

 

 

murphy20070628

 

 

Total Running Cost 2011-12

Office Costs £16,311.53  The cost of renting, equipping and running an MP’s office and surgeries

Staffing £97,642.70  Includes Marion Stewart Hood, P.A. Salary £20,000.00 and £24,999.99.

Travel £14,760.01

Accommodation £3,473.91

Basic salary £65,738.00

Other salary £14,582.04  additional salary for serving as a chair on a parliamentary committee or panel.

Total cost for year £212508.19

 

 

 

Scottish-Referendum42Scottish-Referendum43Scottish-referendum46

 

 

 

 

Frank Roy – Ex MP For Motherwell & Wishaw – Member of the Infamous Labour Party Lanarkshire Mafia – Potted History of His Time In the Service of the Public is Appalling

 

 

 

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November 2014:  Frank Roy British Labour Party politician

He is a British Labour Party politician, who has been Member of Parliament (MP) for Motherwell and Wishaw since 1997. He was educated at Our Lady’s (RC) High School, Motherwell, and later at Motherwell College (1992) and Glasgow Caledonian University in Consumer and Management Studies (1994). Like many others in the area, he was a steelworker until he was made redundant in 1991 when Ravenscraig Steelworks closed. He worked as a parliamentary assistant to Helen Liddell MP, for a short time before becoming MP for Motherwell and Wishaw.

 

 

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Dec 2000: MP censured over speaker bets

Frank Roy was singled out by the Commons standards and privileges committee, which declared “Betting by members on the outcome of any parliamentary business brings discredit on the House.” The committee backed a decision by Parliamentary Standards Commissioner Elizabeth Filkin to uphold a complaint against Mr Roy by a member of the public. No action was taken against Roy, however, in a letter to Ms Filkin he expressed “sincere regret” for failing to anticipate the controversy that news of his betting would cause. (BBC News)

 

 

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February 2001: Unveiling of Carfin memorial to the Irish potato famine deceased.

Roy resigned as parliamentary private secretary to Helen Liddell in the wake of the cancellation of a visit to Carfin Grotto by Irish Taoiseach Bertie Ahern. He was widely criticised for writing to the Taoiseach warning his visit on the day of an Old Firm clash might cause security problems by raising sectarian tensions. In his letter of resignation he wrote “I am certain that if I had not highlighted my concerns about the timing of the visit, I would not have been fulfilling my duty to the people who elected me.” Critics said, “the Labour Lanarkshire mafia have dragged Scotland’s political reputation into the gutter and caused severe embarrassment to our country.” ( BBC News)

 

 

 

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March 2002: William Gage jailed for 20 years for killing of gangster Justin McAlroy

On the 3rd of March 2002 Justin McAlroy co-hosted a charity fund raising dinner for the Labour Party. The event was one of the now infamous “Red Rose Dinners”, which raised funds for the now Lord McConnell and other Labour election campaigns from businessmen, including the building firm run by Tommy McAlroy. Justin McAlroy was in the company of his friend Frank Roy, who is the Labour MP for Wishaw. Also present was Jack McConnell the First Minister for Scotland and John Reid the (then) Secretary of State for Northern Ireland together with various Special Branch bodyguards, senior police officers and a surveillance team from the Scottish Drugs Enforcement Agency (SDEA) who had Justin Justin McAlroy under surveillance for the previous four years.

The SDEA had recently tailed Justin McAlroy to and from Europe, at the time he travelled to Estonia where he met some men who were then arrested while trying to smuggle a multi-million pound consignment of heroin back into Scotland. McIlroy had been openly boasting about various meetings between himself and senior figures within the Russian Mafia. He further claimed that he had previously travelled out to meet them and had also entertained them in a Glasgow hotel.

The police “forgot” to detain Mcilroy, but arrested two other men. Four days after the charity dinner Justin MciLroy stepped out of his Mercedes jeep outside his house and was shot dead. The SDEA, asked why they had not witnessed nor filmed the incident said that (after four years of surveillance and despite Justin MciLroy’s serious criminal activities and associates) they had decided that MciLroy was no longer a person of interest and removed the surveillance.

Jack McConnell and Frank Roy were probably embarrassed by the later revelation that Justin Justin McAlroy had slipped more than ten thousand pounds into the Labour party coffers during the charity dinner. It was a serious business that their friend Justin Justin McAlroy had been a suspected gangster and heroin importer with links to the Russian Mafia but now they had over ten thousand pounds that they had not declared to anyone. In an amazing twist the secretary who worked in the Wishaw office (shared by Jack McConnell and Frank Roy) was subsequently jailed for misappropriating the money!  Frank Roy and Jack McConnell were never interviewed.

While it is clear that major heroin barons do amass millions of pounds, that money comes from ten-pound deals. Every tenner comes from someone finding their house burgled or some poor pensioner being kicked to death for her meagre pension money. On the 2nd of May 2002, two full months after Justin McAlroy murder (it was alleged by solicitor Bob Kerr) that the MP for Wishaw Frank Roy had been contacted by a person connected to Justin McAlroy.

Kerr claimed that one of the police officers involved in the murder enquiry told him that the MP for Wishaw Frank Roy had contacted a senior officer in charge of the murder enquiry and somehow put pressure on the officer to make a bogus arrest in order that Justin McAlroy case would be closed quickly. The very next morning an innocent man called William Gage was arrested and charged with the murder.

 

 

Frank-Roy-MP-001Frank Roy

 

 

 

 

Follow up: Gage was tried and convicted of the murder of McAlroy and sentenced to 20 year’s without remission He is still in Shotts Prison. He has consistently denied the offence but despite two appeals he remains in jail.  Full story: 

https://innocent.org.uk/2016/04/08/man-kept-in-prison-due-to-spurious-immuendo-2006/  

http://paulviking.websitetoolbox.com/post/police-are-creating-an-us-and-them-environment-1523749

http://s11.invisionfree.com/Creativewriters/ar/t2291.htm

http://shirleymckie.myfastforum.org/ftopic420-0-asc-200.php

 

 

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After-note:

The McAvoy Link to Estonia was later confirmed with a vengeance when it was revealed that Tommy McAlroy, 52, Secretly visited the country, to meet with two businessmen, friends of his late son Justin and himself.

Robert Wright and Les Brown, (millionaire criminals) fought but lost a long legal fight against extradition to Estonia, where they were each jailed in 2005 for 4 years and seven months (but were allowed home immediately because of the time they spent behind bars before the court case) for trafficking £2.4million worth of heroin destined for Scotland which was seized in the capital, Tallinn.

The pair, whose front firms included security and catering businesses were accused of using every trick in the book to delay the extradition process and stay in Scotland.  Brown was once one of Scotland’s top house-breakers but quickly realised the profits to be made from the drugs trade.

 

 

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13 Feb 2011: Robert Wright – Convicted Heroin Trafficker and Dealer is Allowed to Sell £610k Mansion Despite Drugs Plot

A major heroin smuggler is free to flog his £610,000 mansion … as it wasn’t targeted under proceeds of crime laws. Security firm boss Robert Wright, 45, has put sprawling home Ten Acres on the market. The house has six bedrooms, snooker room, cinema and is set in 10 acres of land. Buyers are told the driveway is big enough to park a fleet of 20 cars. At one time Wright owned his own Formula One racing car and a fleet of other expensive motors. Wright’s wife Gillian paid £275,000 for the property in the village of Westfield, near Bathgate, West Lothian, 12 years ago. (The Record)

 

 

 

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May 2008: Human Fertilisation and Embryology Bill

In the abortion amendments to the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Bill (now Act), Frank Roy voted for the abortion time limit to be lowered to 12 weeks against scientific and medical consensus which is currently 24 weeks.

After four separate parliamentary votes on varying time limits, the majority of MPs voted to keep the abortion time limit at 24 weeks, in keeping with scientific and medical consensus, hence no abortion amendments were added to the bill.

he also voted for Nadine Dorries’s amendment to the Health and Social Care Bill on 7 September 2011, which was ultimately defeated by 368 to 118 votes.

This amendment would have stopped BPAS and Marie Stopes from providing counselling for women with unwanted pregnancies and allowed ‘independent’ counselling including that provided by faith-based organisations.

He voted first against the Marriage (Same Sex Couples) Bill at its Second Reading in February 2013, and then for the bill at its Third Reading in May 2013.

 

 

 

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5 Dec 2010: MPs cash in on ‘Third Home’ ploy: Despite strict new expenses rules some are now £1,000 a month better off

The Independent Parliamentary Standards Authority (IPSA) was set up to curb cheating MPs. But after a tip from MPs outraged at alleged continuing abuses it has been established that, several MPs have used a loophole in rules phasing out second-home mortgage expenses to move into a third subsidised home.

Some now claim more for new rented third homes than they did when their second homes were bankrolled by voters. By using a second loophole, they can avoid a penalty clause intended to recoup profits made from any rise in property prices. Instead, they can pocket every penny of any gain, even though taxpayers have footed most of their monthly home loan bills.

Before the 2010 Election, Motherwell Labour MP Frank Roy claimed £885 a month expenses for the second-home mortgage on his £500,000 flat in County Hall, the former GLC building across the Thames from Parliament.

He now claims £1,430 per month rent and declares in the Commons register a, “residential flat in London from which rental income is received”. It is understood to be his Southwark flat, which has an estimated monthly rental value of up to £1,750.

Assuming that former steelworker Mr Roy’s mortgage still costs him £885, it means he is now nearly £1,000 better off every month than he was under the old system. Meanwhile, the cost to the taxpayer of supplying him with a London home has increased by £545 a month. (Daily Mail)

 

 

 

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11 Jul 2012: The Hall of Shame – The 117 Labour and Tory MP’s Who Voted Against Lords Reform

Last night, 91 Conservative and 26 Labour MPs (including Frank Roy) voted against the manifestos on which they were elected, voting against the second reading of the House of Lords Reform

But the Labour 2010 manifesto was explicit: “We need fundamental reform of our politics to make it more accountable. “We will let the people decide how to reform our institutions and our politics,  changing the voting system and electing a second chamber to replace the House of Lords.”

The Tory manifesto supported Labour’s position. It said::“We will work to build a consensus for a mainly elected second chamber to replace the current House of Lords, recognising that an efficient and effective second chamber should play an important role in our democracy and requires both legitimacy and public confidence.”

The Liberal Democrats are understandably furious at what they see as a Tory betrayal of the coalition agreement, having delivered the votes on tuition fees, health reform and other policies many in their party loathe.

David Cameron pledged to get his party back onside by the autumn, though there are real fears he will fail, with some Conservatives, like Peter Bone MP, openly advocating for minority government, feeling they’ve nothing to lose, with no desire to please Nick Clegg.   (Leftfootforward)

 

 

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Feb 2014: Heated Independence debate in Motherwell

Labour MP Frank Roy experienced two of the more torrid hours of his political career

The MP was putting forward the argument for maintaining the Union in a debate organised by the Lanarkshire Forum for Independence. During his introduction at what was a lively evening, he admitted to the 300-strong capacity audience that his wife had warned him beforehand he’d “get a doing” at the event and the warm reception this prescient prediction received from the largely pro-independence crowd proved to be as good as it got for the long-serving MP.

Indeed, his misery was compounded towards the end of the evening when one of the audience – an Englishman to boot – took the mic and criticised the elected member for his, “unconvincing arguments” declaring the debate had persuaded him to change his previously unshakeable No stance to Yes.   (Daily Record)

 

 

 

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Mar 2014:  30 Scottish Labour MPs That Voted For Osborne’s Welfare Cap

Frank Roy and 29 other labour MP’s voted with the Tories limiting the financial level of support able to be provided to those in most in need in the community

 

The List of shame:

Margaret Curran – Glasgow East – Tom Greatrex – Rutherglen & Hamilton West – Ian Murray – Edinburgh South – Willie Bain – Glasgow North East – Gordon Banks – Ochil & Perth 

Tom Clarke – Coatbridge, Chryston & Bellshill – Dame Anne Begg – Aberdeen South – Alistair Darling – Edinburgh South West – Ian Davidson – Glasgow South West

Thomas Docherty –  Dunfermline & West Fife – Frank Doran – Aberdeen North – Gemma Doyle – West Dunbartonshire – Sheila Gilmore – Edinburgh East – David Hamilton – Midlothian

Tom Harris – Glasgow South – Jimmy Hood – Lanark & Hamilton East – Cathy Jamieson – Kilmarnock & Loudon – Mark Lazarowicz  – Edinburgh North & Leith –

Gregg McClymont – Cumbernauld, Kilsyth & Kirkintilloch East – Anne McGuire – Stirling – Anne McKechin – Glasgow North – Iain McKenzie – Greenock & Inverclyde –

Grahame Morris – Livingston – Jim Murphy – East Renfrewshire – Pamela Nash – Airdrie & Shotts – Sandra Osborne – Ayr, Carrick & Cumnock – John Robertson – Glasgow N. West  

Frank Roy – Motherwell &  Wishaw – Lindsay Roy – Glenrothes – Anas Sarwar – Glasgow Central        (petewishart.wordpress)

 

 

 

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28 April 2014: Frank Roy will provide some light relief for the Yes campaign

Frankie boy was at one time an official of the Ancient Order of Hibernians, a kind of Catholic Orange Order. In his teens he was a flautist member of the Muirhouse Division of the AOH and the St Francis Xavier Flute Band, Carfin.He will provide plenty of spark between the patrician Darling and the real Scottish Labour party and don’t forget how hated John Reid is by the Brownites who in turn can’t stand Darling. (This is Labour, remember). I see even the mainstream have stopped pretending that Darling and Brown have buried the hatchet. They haven’t and won’t.

What we are now seeing is jostling egos as the campaign enters the panic zone. Frank may be an ace card in one way. He at least knows the core vote and relates to them in a way far beyond Darling’s capability. It is shoring up those waverers in the West that holds the key to success. Clearly they have deduced that Johann can’t do it – and her figures are truly mind-boggling – so it’s Frank’s turn. It may work, if he can stay out of trouble but it’s hard to think something wont turn up to add to the disastrous decision-making by Darling and McDougall. (Derek Bateman)

 

 

 

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13 July 2014: Better Together – Frank Roy wants fewer egos involved in campaign

When Better Together needed someone to whip the operation into shape they turned to Roy. One senior Labour figure said: “You’ve got Douglas Alexander poking himself in where he’s not wanted, Gordon Brown and Alastair Darling competing for attention and the Labour party careering around the country in a big red bus with the words Vote No plastered along the side like something even Ian Paisley at his height would have deemed over the top.

Now working alongside the Tories and Lib Dems in Better Together headquarters. Frank said, “Back in the ’80s I worked with people from other parties in the fight to save Ravenscraig. “I disagreed with Tories on nearly everything except this issue. Once the campaign is over I will get back to normal campaigning to kick the Tories out of Downing Street and the nationalists out of Bute House.”

Evelyn McCulloch commented:

“Well, well, well, You did a great job with Ravenscraig working alongside the other parties! I wish you the all the same success!”  (Sunday Post)

 

 

 

Dr-John-Reidmandelson

 

 

 

 

 

6 Mar 2016: Scottish Labour general secretary Brian Roy and father, ex-MP Frank Roy, in party cash row

Kezia Dugdale’s top official is at the centre of a cash row that has split one of Labour’s most marginal seats.

Scottish Labour general secretary Brian Roy is facing questions over how his dad Frank Roy spent around £1400 owed to Scottish Labour HQ on his own re-election campaign. The money represented two years of affiliation fees owed to Labour HQ by Frank Roy’s constituency Labour party (CLP) in Motherwell & Wishaw.

First elected an MP in 1997, Frank Roy stood again in the seat again last May. At the time, Brian Roy had newly taken over as Scottish general secretary and treasurer. However a leaked internal audit shows the Motherwell & Wishaw CLP hadn’t paid its annual subscription to Labour HQ since 2013, despite having funds to do so.

The report states: “No Labour affiliation fees have been paid since 2013 despite having a balance of £8737.70 in the CLP account in 2013. This leaves the CLP in debt of around £2000. The balance of the CLP account on 28/9/15 was £109.48.”

Although failing to pay the fees to HQ didn’t disqualify Frank Roy from standing, it did leave more in the CLP account to spend on the election. The fall-out from the audit is now dividing the CLP and the Labour administration on North Lanarkshire Council, with many members furious at Frank Roy’s election agent Paul Kelly, who has been accused of failing to explain the state of the CLP’s finances.

Kelly, last week elected the council’s deputy leader, was CLP chair during the election. The audit report says that in early 2014, the CLP’s general purpose bank account of around £3200 was merged with a previously separate election account of £2800. “There are no minutes recording that this change of policy was agreed by the CLP,” it says.

The resulting single account was then cleaned out in the election – again without any minutes of the CLP agreeing to it – as Roy defended his 16,800-vote majority. The report states: “There are no minutes of the CLP agreeing to the level of expenditure to be used on the General Election.” Roy’s campaign cost £13,701, compared to £6,852 for the SNP’s Marion Fellows, who nevertheless won by 11,900 votes.

Roy got £4703 worth of staff support from Scottish Labour HQ, but the bulk of his campaign money, around £8600, came from draining the CLP account. The total outlay was twice that of the 2010 election, when Roy’s campaign cost £6766. The political co-ordinator of Better Together, Roy is now campaign director of the Scottish arm of Britain Stronger in Europe.

The failure to pay affiliation fees emerged last week after an audit into Motherwell & Wishaw CLP, which found “total unknown deposits” of £4474 were paid into its bank account last year without explanation, and “total unknown expenditure” of £2108 left it. The auditor noted: “These matters were raised by CLP members on several occasions from July 2015 and as far as I am aware the issues have not been properly addressed.”

A senior Labour source said the draining of the CLP account in election, including affiliation fees, had left the local party struggling going into the Holyrood election, when Labour MSP John Pentland is defending a 587-vote majority in Motherwell & Wishaw. The insider said: “There are very unhappy people here. The council Labour group is very fractious. We can’t even pay our bills far less run an election campaign.”

Kelly did not returns calls. Frank Roy could not be contacted. A Scottish Labour spokesman said: “The Labour party is working with this CLP to address any outstanding issues, including payment of affiliation fees.” (The Herald Scotland)

 

 

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And How Much Did Franks Westminster day’s Cost the Good People of Motherwell & Wishaw??

Total Running Cost (2011-2012)

Constituency and Staffing Costs

Office Costs office rental – stationery – mobile phone rental/use – web site cost – accountancy charges
£8,960.05

General Admin new boiler £1500
£1,769.92

Staffing Expenses
£192.69

Constituency Rental 1 month only
£1,220.70

Payroll staffing costs
£102,799.68

Direct Parliamentary Expenses

Accommodation rental £1430 monthly = ancillary costs
£18,754.80

Travel and Subsistence personal travel by air Scotland London – car use home (Motherwell to airport) – Food drink in parliament parking charges London
£16,490.08

Total
£150,187.92 grand total for year; £252,987.60

 

 

29405-royalty-free-cartoon-clip-art-of-a-stack-of-gold-coins-near-a-pot-of-leprechauns-gold-by-andy-nortnik

 

Total Running Cost (2012-2013)

Constituency and Staffing Costs

Office Costs office rental – stationery – mobile phone rental/use – web site cost – accountancy charges
£19,754.36

General Admin
£1,769.92

Staffing Expenses
£3657.34

Constituency Rental
£1,220.70

Payroll staffing costs
£106,804.93

Total £166,636.90

Direct Parliamentary Expenses

Accommodation rental £1430 monthly = ancillary costs
£19,739.20

Travel and Subsistence personal travel by air Scotland London – car use home (Motherwell to airport) – Food drink in parliament parking charges London
£16,681.07

Salary
£65,738.00

Total £102,158.27 Grand Total for year; £268,795.17

 

 

29405-royalty-free-cartoon-clip-art-of-a-stack-of-gold-coins-near-a-pot-of-leprechauns-gold-by-andy-nortnik

 

 

Total Running Cost (2013-2014)

Constituency and Staffing Costs

Office Costs office rental – stationery – mobile phone rental/use – web site cost – accountancy charges
£14,548.92

Staffing Expenses
£120,820.37

Total £135,369.29

Direct Parliamentary Expenses

Accommodation rental £1560 monthly = ancillary costs
£14,826.65

Travel and Subsistence personal travel by air Scotland London – car use home (Motherwell to airport) – Food drink in parliament parking charges London
£20,100.00

Salary
£66,396.00

Total £101,302.69 Grand Total for year; £236,671.98

Approximate full 5 year parliament cost £1,250,000

 

 

 

29405-royalty-free-cartoon-clip-art-of-a-stack-of-gold-coins-near-a-pot-of-leprechauns-gold-by-andy-nortnik

John Robertson – Labour Candidate For Glasgow North West – Constituents Are Not Fooled By A Photo Opportunist Who Has Delivered Little for The Region – Early Retirement John Methinks

 

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Who is John Robertson?

John Webster Robertson is a British Labour Party politician, who has been the Member of Parliament (MP) for Glasgow North West since 2000.He left Shawlands Academy Secondary School and started work for the GPO (P.O. then British Telecom then BT). In December 1991, he was promoted to management where he stayed until he was granted Voluntary Release in September 2000 at the time he was elected to Westminster. He joined the Labour Party in 1984 and was first elected to parliament in 2000, at a by-election on 23 November following the death of Donald Dewar, the First Minister of Scotland. He was re-elected at the 2001 election, and after constituency boundaries were redrawn for the 2005 election, he was returned for the larger constituency of Glasgow North West.

 

 

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He spends a great deal of his time at Westminster and is currently:

* Chair of the All Party Parliamentary Nuclear Energy Group. (1) (It appears he is pretty useless as chair. See the write off of a 22bn contract.)

* Chair of the all-party Parliamentary group on Communications (apComms).

* Chair of All Party Parliamentary Music Groups.

* Chair All Party Parliamentary Group on Nigeria and Angola.

 

 

NMP had a 17-year deal to clean up waste from Sellafield yellow-barrels-nuclear-waste-orbit-earth-17453954

 

 

(1) January 2015: The Unknown scandal of Confetti money

Last week the consortium holding a 22bn contract to clean up the Sellafield nuclear site was sacked. But this is just the end of a long and scandalous tale of corporate profit at UK taxpayers expense, and the active collusion of ministers and senior officials in fighting off Parliamentary scrutiny.

“It’s an appalling waste of public money. It’s like scattering confetti. Time extends and extends. I have looked at this two or three times now and every time I look at it the cost goes up – not in hundreds of millions, but in billions.” Margaret Hodge MP, chair of Parliamentary Public Accounts committee

Top civil servants and nuclear administrators colluded to prevent MPs from challenging a massive sweetener to a private business taking over the running of Sellafield, internal documents in the hands of  The Independent on Sunday reveal.

The documents, obtained through the Freedom of Information Act, also disclose that the Government pushed through the handover at breakneck speed because it feared that the “unstable management arrangements” of the controversial Cumbrian nuclear complex risked its safety.  http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/ios-investigation-officials-plotted-sellafield-coverup-1224473.html

 

 

63808268__466227cSir Nicholas Macphersonindex

 

On the day the big U-turn was announced,  by chance Treasury Permanent Secretary,  Sir Nicholas Macpherson, appeared before the Parliamentary Public Administration Select Committee inquiry on ‘Whitehall: capacity to address future challenges’, to be challenged by committee member Paul Flynn,  asking:  “Just as a general principle, are you happy for the public purse to take all the risk, as I pointed out as clearly as possible in 2008, and for the private company, a foreign company, to take any profit that will come out?  Is that an abiding effort for the Treasury?”

 

 

osborne2George Osbornep2 Heywood and Macpherson 450Sir Jeremey Heywood

 

 

Sir Nicholas Macpherson answered: “Put in those terms, I would never be happy with any contract like that. Ensuring that risk is borne in the right place is one of the biggest lessons of the financial crisis.  I do not want to get into this individual issue, because I am not sufficiently informed about it.”  http://data.parliament.uk/writtenevidence/committeeevidence.svc/evidencedocument/public-administration-committee/whitehall-capacity-to-address-future-challenges/oral/17510.html

 

 

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Radio 4 Profile of – Sir Nicholas Macpherson

Largely unknown outside Whitehall, Sir Nicholas Macpherson, gained notiriety through his unprecedented written advice, in breach of the “Civil Service Code of Conduct” to the Chancellor  denying Scotland the “bank of last resort” facility in the event of independence. As head of the Treasury since 2005,  he was at the centre of Britain’s response to the global financial crisis. Chris Bowlby explains why he’s so influential, and how his involvement in the Scottish debate is informed by personal links as well as policy considerations. http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b04f8fbg 

 

 

YOU WILLNuclear_waste_by_tinling

 

 

January 2015: Owners of sacked Sellafield contractor pocketed £145m

NMP had a 17-year deal to clean up waste from Sellafield but the consortium has been dumped from its contract to clean up Europe’s most hazardous nuclear waste site paid £145m in dividends despite criticism for wasting taxpayers’ money.

Energy secretary Ed Davey told Nuclear Management Partners (NMP), a venture between British engineer Amec, Areva of France and America’s URS, that it was being prematurely ditched from its 17-year deal to decommission Sellafield in Cumbria.

NMP was awarded the £22bn turnover deal in 2008 by the Nuclear Decommissioning Authority (NDA), the state-owned body responsible for dealing with decades of nuclear waste.

But it came under attack from the Public Accounts Committee as it emerged that most of its big projects were behind schedule, and NMP was relying on expensive contractors. It was also embroiled in an expenses scandal, most memorably a £715 taxi for an executive  and a cat.  http://www.thesundaytimes.co.uk/sto/business/Industry/article1508118.ece

 

 

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Meanwhile, John Robertson MP, Labour chair of the All Party Nuclear Power Group (a nuclear cheerleader set-up) said on 16 January 2015, three days after Sellafield management were sacked:  “The industry really has turned Parliament around. We do now have a political House singing from the same hymn sheet on nuclear power. We need to work hard to keep it that way!”  In so saying, he revealed just how out of touch he and the pro-nuclear cheer-leaders in Parliament really are.  http://paulflynnmp.typepad.com/my_weblog/2015/01/the-unknown-scandal-of-confetti-money.html

 

 

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MPs Expenses Scandal: John Robertson was requested to pay back £2975 for excessive expenses claims including £1750 in petty cash. According to current records, he has not paid anything back.He also claimed £350 for a sat nav from Currys.  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Robertson_%28Glasgow_politician%29

 

 

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December 2000: MP stands by daughter accused of selling drugs in a nightclub.

John Robertson, 48, who became the MP for Glasgow Anniesland two weeks ago following the death of Donald Dewar, said 18-year-old Laura had offered to co-operate with a police inquiry.

In a statement released by the Labour Party, he added that he never imagined he would find himself in this situation and now understood what other families were going through.

Miss Robertson, a marketing assistant, allegedly sold two ecstasy tablets to a newspaper reporter at Bonkers nightclub in Glasgow.

The Glasgow Evening Times reported yesterday that the teenager said “no problem” when asked if she could supply drugs and held up five fingers to indicate the price of each tablet. Moments later she handed over two light brown tablets and change from a £20 note.

Its story added that when she was approached on Tuesday at a railway station a short distance from her family’s semi-detached home in Drumchapel, she said she could supply more ecstasy and admitted taking LSD.

Mr Roberston, who did not deny the story, said: “My daughter is an adult. She has taken legal advice and her lawyer has been in touch with the police offering to co-operate with any investigation.

As a father my first duty is to my daughter. I shall support her through this. We are a close family and will face this together.”
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/1377307/MP-stands-by-daughter-accused-of-selling-drugs.html

Would you believe it? He employs his daughter, Laura Robertson, as Secretary/Caseworker as detailed in:  http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm/cmregmem/911/part2.htm Register of Members’ Financial Interests

 

 

 

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November 2011: MP calls on Parliament to remember 5th November

A Labour MP has started a campaign to commemorate better the failed gunpowder plot by Guy Fawkes. According to the BBC, Labour MP for Glasgow North West, John Robertson,believes the current plaque honouring the date is insufficient because it is hidden from public view in a car park near a bike shed.

There is reasoning to the plaque’s location however; as it is located at the closest spot to the cellar, where Guy Fawkes’ 36 barrels of gunpowder were found 406 years ago.   But Robertson wants Guy Fawkes’ foiled plot to blow up the House of Commons to be made visible to the general public. http://www.londonlovesbusiness.com/mp-calls-on-parliament-to-remember-5th-november/954.article

comment: What the hell has this to do with his constituency?

 

 

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April 2010: John Robertson – I  pulled the votes with bread & butter issues

John Robertson believes his message of bread-and-butter issues to the people of Glasgow North West saw him returned as the constituency’s MP.  “We went everywhere. We took our message with us, put out our leaflets, we were in every polling station and we knocked on as many door as we could. ___ if you treat the electorate with contempt don’t be surprised if they bite you back.”  http://www.localnewsglasgow.co.uk/tag/john-robertson/

 

 

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April 2014: MP John Robertson Voted in favour of and defended the Con/Dem benefits cap

Critics argued the move to limit what working families, pensioners, and those on disability benefits can receive from the government would plunge hard-up families from some of the most impoverished areas of Scotland further into poverty.  http://johnhilley.blogspot.co.uk/2014/03/welfare-betrayal-and-labouring-under.html   (Another view of the nonsense)

But on Monday Robertson insisted nobody who was entitled to benefits would be left out and added that the new measures would hold the government accountable for their actions. He said: “You can’t stop people getting benefits.  you only qualify only if you are entitled. That’s the rules. http://www.clydebankpost.co.uk/news/roundup/articles/2014/04/09/494391-mp-john-robertson-defends-benefits-cap-vote/

Maria Muir was scathing (on her blog) about the conduct of Robertson and his fellow Labour MP’s.  Commenting Eilidh Whiteford (SNP)  MP said:  “The SNP voted against the welfare cap today because it piles yet more pain onto our poorest pensioners, carers, disabled people and low-income families. This cap is just a crude, blunt, instrument. It is shocking that so many Scottish Labour MPs have backed the Tories.”  https://mariamuir.com/meet-32-scottish-labour-mps-voted-tory-welfare-cap/

 

 

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March 2013: The Workfare Bill

The House of Commons passed the Jobseekers (Back to Work Schemes) Bill, which included a clause that retroactively changed the law to prevent back payment of approximately £130 million worth of benefits that had been found by a court decision to have been wrongly withheld.
The undernoted Scottish MP’s voted against the Bill in the belief that monies owed to claimants should be made since to do so would constitute an illegal act. John Robertson’s name is not on the list. He and many of his Labour party colleagues let the poorest members of society down badly. Note the SNP  were 100% in favour of payments being made.

6 of 6 (100%) of SNP MPs: Stewart Hosie (Dundee East), Angus MacNeil (Na h-Eileanan an Iar), Angus Robertson (Moray), Mike Weir (Angus), Eilidh Whiteford (Banff and Buchan), Pete Wishart (Perth and North Perthshire

7 of 40 (18%) Labour MPs: Katy Clark (North Ayrshire and Arran),  Michael Connarty (Linlithgow and East Falkirk), Ian Davidson (Glasgow South West),  Mark Lazarowicz (Edinburgh North and Leith),  Jim McGovern (Dundee West), Sandra Osborne (Ayr, Carrick and Cumnock)
Jim Sheridan (Paisley and Renfrewshire North)

http://blog.scottishelections.org.uk/2013/03/how-scottish-mps-voted-on-workfare-bill.html

 

 

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June 2014: John Robertson MP provided 99 reasons to say no to independence. http://www.redkelvin.org/972/99-reasons-to-say-no-thanks/

It is important to counter John Robertson’s spurious claims and this can be best achieved through the challenging arguments of his own colleagues. The guy needs locked up, gagged and put in a straight jacket! He is making an utter fool of himself and our nation! ” http://www.labourforindy.com/99_reasons

 

 

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May 2007: John Roberston, Labour colleagues and Tory MP’s vote to put Westminster outside the law of the land

Today’s Third Reading debate on David Maclean’s Freedom of Information Amendment Bill has  concluded with a vote in favour from a total of 78 Labour MPs and 18 Tories.

“Liberty” said; If they allow this Bill to pass into law, there are fears that parliamentarians wouldbe sending out a clear signal that they consider themselves to be above the law. Thiswould undermine the culture of open and transparent government which the Act was designed to create and severely damage the already eroding public trust andconfidence in the democratic process as a whole.  http://www.taxpayersalliance.com/the_list_of_shame

Richard Wilson not best pleased with Robertson asserting he was simply seeking to find ways of preventing expenses claims information being released to the public. https://richardwilsonauthor.wordpress.com/2009/05/17/the-98-mps-who-tried-to-cover-up-their-expense-claims-by-exempting-themselves-from-the-freedom-of-information-act/

 

 

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John Robertson MP rebelled against the Government most notably on one of the Amendment votes (Division No. 117) prior to the main Declaration of War – Iraq vote (Division No.118). This Amendment said: This House “believes that the case for war against Iraq has not yet been established, especially given the absence of specific United Nations authorisation; but, in the event that hostilities do commence, pledges its total support for the British forces”.

However, though he supported the view that the case for war had not been established and lacked UN authorisation, in the main vote which sought to authorise that the “United Kingdom should use all means necessary to ensure the disarmament of Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction”, in effect the vote which gave authorisation for war against Iraq, John Robertson voted Aye.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Robertson_%28Glasgow_politician%29  (see edit)

 

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April 2015:  A Landmark poll has suggested Labour MP Robertson will be shown the exit door at the forthcoming general election.

A spokesman for the 62-year-old Robertson told the Post: “Our position is very simple — it’s not a good poll for us. But by the same token, we’ve seen things in the last few weeks starting to move in our direction. We’ve got a big challenge ahead of us and we’re not taking any vote for granted, we never have taken any vote for granted.  “We’re going to fight till 10pm on May 7 to make sure we can put across the message that only Labour can get rid of the Bedroom Tax, reduce energy prices and deliver the change we need to see.   http://www.clydebankpost.co.uk/news/roundup/articles/2015/02/11/524133-labour-mps-to-fight-back-against-nationalist-polling-gains/

Comment: So that’s it!!  The one specific offer for change is getting rid of the Bedroom Tax. Someone needs to tell Labour the Tax does not apply in Scotland since the SNP government took action, (not long after it was introduced) rendering it inapplicable in Scotland.

 

 

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Tom Harris – Modern Day Churchill – Scottish Labour Party Leader in Waiting – “By 2016, Scottish Labour will either have re-established itself as the party of aspiration, or it will be an irrelevance.”

 

 

 

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16 March 2016: Former Labour MP Tom Harris to lead Vote Leave campaign in Scotland

Tom Harris, who represented Glasgow South until losing his seat in last year’s general election, said he will serve as the director of Vote Leave north of the border. He insisted the move “isn’t about being anti-European” but said instead “it is about putting our own country, our own economy, our own people, first”. Writing in the Daily Record, he said: “I’m proud to announce that I have been asked to serve as the campaign’s director in Scotland.  “It’s true that most Labour MPs will be voting for the UK to remain part of the EU. But Labour voters themselves are not as convinced.

“And who can blame them? Every week the UK sends £350 million to the EU. Scotland’s share is roughly a tenth of that – more than £1.5 billion a year.  “Just think what that money could buy here in Scotland – on schools, on our health service, repairing our roads – if it wasn’t being sent into the black hole that is EU spending.

https://www.thecourier.co.uk/news/politics/120597/former-labour-mp-tom-harris-to-lead-vote-leave-campaign-in-scotland/

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Hush puppy or Rottweiler?

Tom Harris was born in Ayrshire and was brought up in Beith. He attended Garnock Academy, Kilbirnie and Napier College, Edinburgh where he was awarded an HND in Journalism in 1986. He worked as a trainee newspaper journalist with the East Kilbride News in 1986 before joining the Paisley Daily Express in 1988.

He was appointed as a press officer with the Scottish Labour Party in 1990, moving to the same position with Strathclyde Regional Council in 1992.

He was briefly the senior media officer with the City of Glasgow Council in 1996 before joining East Ayrshire Council later in the same year as a public relations manager.

In 1998 he became the chief of public relations at the Strathclyde Passenger Executive, where he remained until his election to the Parliament of the United Kingdom.

 

 

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He joined the Labour Party in 1984 and was active in the Edinburgh South Constituency. He was elected as the chairman of the Glasgow Cathcart Constituency Labour Party for two years in 1998. He was then elected to the House of Commons at the 2001 General Election for the Glasgow seat of Cathcart following the retirement of the Labour MP John Maxton.

He held the seat with a majority of 10,816 and has remained an MP since. He made his maiden speech on 27 June 2001. His seat was abolished following the creation of the Scottish Parliament at Holyrood and the subsequent reduction of Scottish seats at Westminster. He has represented the new seat of Glasgow South since the 2005 General Election.

 

 

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He served on the Science and Technology Select Committee for two years from 2001, and was appointed as the Parliamentary Private Secretary (PPS) to the Minister of State for Northern Ireland John Spellar in 2003, and from 2005 was PPS to the Secretary of State for Health Patricia Hewitt.

As of 7 September 2006 he replaced Derek Twigg as Parliamentary Under Secretary at the Department for Transport. However, in October 2008, Harris announced on his blog that he had telephoned the Prime Minister to inform him that he would be returning to the back benches.

 

 

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He is a committed trade unionist and was a member of the National Union of Journalists from 1984 until he joined UNISON in 1997, and he is now a member of Unite the Union. He introduced a bill in 2005 for tougher sentences for e-criminals.

Also in 2005 he was involved in an argument over the funding of a housing charity which had called for direct action following the eviction and deportation to Albania of an Kosovan family seeking asylum from a flat in Drumchapel.  He is a member of, “Labour Friends of Israel”.

 

 

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Having been vocal about uncapped EU migration to the UK, he made controversial statements on 3 August 2013, via online media about Daniel Pelka’s parents, immigrants from Poland convicted of the abuse and murder of their child, suggesting they be tortured.

In statements made on Twitter, Harris wrote: “That we have not killed them horribly says a great deal in our favour.” He also stated that he was, “certainly in favour of disinfecting our country by deporting them at the end of their sentence.” http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tom_Harris_British_politician

 

 

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November 27 2005: Harsh exchanges over asylum row tactics

Tom Harris, Glasgow South Labour MP has drawn a furious response from a group campaigning for asylum seekers after he called for its funding to be reviewed. He said Positive Action in Housing (PAH) went too far in urging direct action to stop failed asylum seekers being removed.

He has called on the Scottish Executive to look at the anti-racism body’s future funding. That provoked a furious response from director Robina Qureshi. Positive Action in Housing has been vocal in condemning dawn raids on the homes of failed asylum seekers – an issue which came to a head when the Vucaj family were removed from their flat in Drumchapel in September and subsequently deported.

The Scottish Executive and Home Office have been involved in long-running controversy over the reserved issue, with Communities Minister Malcolm Chisholm speaking out in condemnation of “heavy-handed” tactics. They accused the Home Office, for instance, of furthering the aims of the far right, they call on Strathclyde Police to arrest immigration officials.

Last week First Minister Jack McConnell met with Immigration Minister Tony McNulty in what was seen as an effort to present a united front.

Speaking on the BBC’s Politics Show, Mr Harris said: “First of all I want to make it clear that I have absolutely no problem at all and I think it’s absolutely right that charitable organizations should campaign and there’s nothing wrong in anyone campaigning on a particular policy. “My problem with Positive Action in Housing is the kind of language that they use. “They accused the Home Office, for instance, of furthering the aims of the far right, they call on Strathclyde Police to arrest immigration officials as they carry out their legal duties and this kind of language does nothing to ameliorate the situation, all it does is heighten tensions.” Ms Qureshi said PAH has a wide remit in helping the victims of inequality in Scottish society. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/4476332.stm

 

 

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October 30 2008: Concerned about an ever increasing number of attacks on individual freedoms by the government, the Devils Kitchen Blog sent a free copy of Orwells 1984 to all Westminster MP’s – Tom Harris was not impressed.

Tom Harris posted to his blog. “An oddity arrived today at the office: an Amazon package containing a brand new copy of Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell. It’s not the book itself that is odd – I read it for the first time nearly 30 years ago and it’s a rollicking good yarn, with a great plot and a very dramatic ending. An Orwellian nightmare? Oh, wake up!”

Devil’s Kitchen, posted a reply: “Harris just doesn’t get 1984. One of the distinctive traits of the labour Party is their eagerness to rewrite history, and we all know that Harris is very adept at that, do we not? Now, having received his copy of 1984 and dismissive of it’s content. His comment, an Orwellian nightmare? Oh, wake up! and that, of course, is all that Harris took from it: the appreciation of a book that described, very well, the state of Stalin’s Russia — before it became so fucking obvious that even (most of) the Labour Party had to acknowledge what was going on, has been lost on this moron Why, thank you, Tom, for your patronizing comment:

Also, there seems to be an awful lot of people out there – perhaps dozens of them – who seem to get strangely exercised at the prospect of a “police state”. “Well, first of all, how about the arrogance of anyone referring to anyone else as anyone’s, “masters”?”

In a democracy, as you proudly boast that this country still is, who is master and who is servant? It’s a no-brainer isn’t it? Call it employer if you like but it doesn’t change anything and there is nothing arrogant about reminding the Labour party (or any of the other MPs) that this is the case. You all seem to have completely forgotten.

Your blithe dismissal of this, “gift” is stunning in its lack of understanding of how strongly many people feel about how the minutiae of their lives are being constantly interfered with. This isn’t Jim Baxter’s cherry-picked instances we are talking about, this is wholesale destruction of everyday life.… and a new restriction is brought out EVERY day. Today it was: Prospective MPs not required to give addresses any-more (yet contrast this with Section 50 of the Police Reform Act 2002 where it is an offense for a member of the public to refuse to give their name and address to the Police when asked, whether they have committed an offense, or even been suspected of one, or not – your lot brought that one in).

I could list one of these EVERY day if you like but I have a business to run and I would expect someone whose business is Government to know these things and to recognise when civil liberties are being cut out. You don’t seem to think there is anything wrong! It’s not all about CCTV, it’s about tiny things that add to a whole that is unacceptable and should be stopped. YOUR party have encouraged this and should be ashamed of yourselves. OK. Here’s a list of the recent ones that have staggered me and which your party should be thoroughly ashamed:

Separate queues for buying alcohol in supermarkets so buyers “will be subjected to scrutiny of fellow shoppers”. What? Why?

Smokers being banned from fostering children when there is a shortage of 2,000 foster homes. What?? Why??

History & Geography being scrapped from schools in favour of ‘Healthy Lifestyles’ and ‘Multi-Culturalism’. What? Really?

Compulsory … note, not available for veto by parents … compulsory sex education for 5 year old’s. (I haven’t mentioned the finger-printing, that’s so last month isn’t it?)

 

 

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Bans on fast food outlets opening within 500 metres of schools. Funny, I don’t remember voting on that particular issue in this wonderful democracy that you seem to think exists, much as I didn’t vote on the idea of a blanket smoking ban but DID vote on a partial ban and a manifesto pledge of a referendum on the Lisbon Treaty.

That is just the past couple of days. Your copy of 1984 is richly deserved after reading your blog post. Read it again and take note of how your party have passed so many laws that are so very similar to those mentioned in the book. Here’s an example – a guy accosted in Middlesbrough for taking pictures on his mobile phone, the reason for being stopped for doing something legal? Anti-Terrorism laws. His crime? Nothing. The Police officer’s reasoning as to why he may have been committing an offence? He may have been a voyeur. Is the officer examining the man’s thoughts? Is this a ‘Thought Crime’?

My local paper (today) has the story of a 15 year old on a Geography field trip being accosted by PCSOs and made to sign forms under the Terrorism Act. His details were to be stored on a database as a potential terrorist for 6 years. Fortunately he has a Dad who is educated and can get it erased.

Your lot talk about social justice, can you imagine the son of a builder living on a council estate getting the same result? YOUR laws Tom. Labour is rotten. Orwellian nightmare under Labour? Absolutely. Quite. But, Tom being a party political animal, can’t resist getting such a dig in.

We live in a democracy, and just because those – including my anonymous benefactor – who get excited about such things are unhappy that Labour is in power, that does not make us anything other than a democracy.

http://www.devilskitchen.me.uk/2008/10/tom-harris-just-doesnt-get-1984.html

 

 

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March 1 2009: Tom Harris – Another Strawman

Jack Straw, responding to increasing criticism of the labour government’s ever increasing restrictions to the individual liberties of UK citizens. “Those who cast myself and my colleagues as Orwellian drones engaged in some awful conspiracy planned in Whitehall basements not only overlook all this government’s achievements, they cheapen the important debate about getting the balance right so that a very important freedom, that to live without fear in an atmosphere of tolerance and respect, is nurtured and protected.”

Longrider commented. “Anyone who genuinely believes this is delusional. Labour has introduced over 3,000 new offences. Reducing individual liberty does not protect or increase liberty.

Tom Harris, like other labour MPs defends the government’s legacy on liberty. He, like other Labour MPs believes that black is white, up is down and slavery is freedom. And, like other members of the supercilious righteous political elite, regards those who disagree with his opinion as green ink tinfoil hatters.”

http://www.longrider.co.uk/blog/2009/03/01/tom-harris-another-strawman/

 

 

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April 5 2009: The return of morality.  The army of teenage mothers living off the state is a national catastrophe

When my wife Carolyn was in hospital, having just delivered us of wee Reggie, a very young girl in the bed opposite was also celebrating the arrival of her newborn. As was her proud father, who made great play to anyone who might have been listening (me) of how proud he was of his daughter.

She was, I guess, about 16. I don’t think he should have been ashamed and it’s great that this young girl had such a loving dad to support her. But proud? Proud that his teenage daughter was not only sexually active but was now a mother? Proud that any chance of a decent education, followed by a decent job, was now remote at best? Proud that she was, in all likelihood, about to embark on a lifetime of depending on benefit handouts for her and her child?

I’m a Labour MP, so some will undoubtedly be surprised, and shocked that I’m writing this. But I can no longer pretend that the army of teenage mothers living off the state is anything other than a national catastrophe.

http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2009/mar/05/welfare-children

 

 

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April 12 2009: The McBride/Draper smear scandal – “We can’t spin our way out of this. My party has screwed up big time.”

Tom Harris adding fuel to the fire at the time of the exposure of Damien McBride as Gordon Brown’s Rottweiler stated it was important that Labour people made clear that the whole McBride/Draper episode (must we call it “Smeargate”?) is as inexcusable to the Labour Party as it is to the rest of the world. There is absolutely no point in anyone in the party trying to spin such an odious sequence of events, in trying to suggest that it’s less serious than the media are trying to make out.

A reader commented:  “Such behaviour used to be inexcusable, but that was in the days of “Old Labour”. The arrival of Tony Blair coincided with the arrival of spin and smear. A new type of nasty politics emerged. This rather embarrassing but obvious fact that cannot be missed. Over the past decade, quite a few “nasties” have been appointed to senior positions in New Labour governments.

New Labour heralded not only a change in policies and a change in personnel, but also a change in ethics and morality within the party. Once the cat has been let out of the bag it becomes difficult to reign it in. A good period in opposition is what the Labour Party needs to purge itself of the type of person who now predominates at the higher levels in the party.

New Labour is a rather distasteful party, deeply divided, with little or no idealism and little or no vision. It has been too long in power and now the pursuit of power is its only objective. Great Britain needs a strong party of the left, but New Labour, in its present form and with its present personnel, is certainly not that party.

http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2009/apr/12/labour-conservatives

 

 

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June 9 2009: Tom Harris MP confirms his disloyalty – calls for PM Gordon Brown to resign

A Glasgow MP has become the first Scottish Labour MP to suggest Gordon Brown should stand down as prime minister. Tom Harris said he did not think Mr Brown should lead the party into the next general election. Speaking at a Parliamentary Labour Party meeting, Mr Harris added that he felt compelled to express his views.

The group’s chairman, Tony Lloyd, said he was convinced there was no serious threat to Gordon Brown’s leadership after he was backed by most MPs.

Writing on his blog, Mr Harris said he told the meeting: “If there’s one thing that unites this PLP, it’s a determination to win the next election. “And those of us who have come to the conclusion, by an entirely objective and logical process, that you cannot lead Labour to victory, would be doing a disservice to our country and to our party by staying silent.”

 

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August 20 2009: The high pay commission won’t work – the proposal has ‘securing Labour’s core vote’ written all over it – and the effect on our economy would be negligible

The left-wing pressure group, aligned with the Labour Party, “Compass” proposing establishment of a high pay commission said that pay disparity in the UK was the result of greed. The salaries of those at the top had raced away while the median wage stagnated. Inequality had grown, and an economic crisis ensued.

The unjust rewards of a few hundred, “masters of the universe” exacerbated the risks we were all exposed to many times over. Banking and executive remuneration packages reached excessive levels and we believe now is the time for government to take decisive action.

We need a, “High Pay Commission” to launch a wide-ranging review of pay at the top. It should consider proposals to restrict excessive remuneration such as maximum wage ratios and bonus taxation to provide the just society and sustainable economy we all want.

Tom Harris commented. The proposal has, “securing Labour’s core vote” written all over it – and the effect on our economy would be negligible.

A reader commented:  The minimum wage was introduced with all the enthusiasm of someone clearing up the cat’s honk. Once established, it was more or less ignored, with annual increments in the region of 10-20 pence/hour, if that, and an enforcement set-up so undermanned as to be useless. It was easy for UK’s vast sweatshop brigade to work around it.

Clearly Mr Harris, the scourge of pregnant teenagers on benefits, needs to earn more as his claim for a cot and bottle sterilizer for his London home was turned down by the House of Commons expenses office. £64766 pa (plus expenses) is simply not enough when you have this sort of heavy expenditure.

http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2009/aug/20/high-pay-commission-labour

Http://liberalconspiracy.org/2009/08/20/tom-harris-sucking-up-to-the-rich/

 

 

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April 10 2010: Tom is a blogger with a taste for the direct, sardonic and serious

Tom Harris in discussion. Talking about twitter, the value of blogs in politics, rushing legislation through Parliament in ‘wash up’, Votes at 16, hung parliaments, why Tom Harris went into politics and his enthusiasm for the years ahead, the issue of whether Scots MPs should vote on purely Scots matters and even find time to discuss independence for Scotland – briefly.

http://www.insitelawmagazine.com/20minuteswithomharris.mp3

 

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November 16 2010: A significant moment in the British political blogosphere is Closing down

Tom Harris’s blog, “And another thing” was once one of the must read Westminster blogs, regularly ruffling feathers and making news, and consistently being voted one of the best political blogs. Now, with similarities to Tony Blair’s long goodbye – and Sinatra like – Harris announced he is shutting up shop.

In a blog entitled, ‘A Blessed Relief’ he writes that he is calling it a day. “I love blogging because I love writing. I love politics, I love the Labour Party, I love writing about Labour Party politics. But the blog has become a burden.

It’s taking up too much time (though not as much as some might think – I am a very fast writer), it’s getting me into too many squabbles with people I have never met and are likely never to meet. And increasingly I’ve felt like I’m adopting stances simply for the sake of being confrontational and provoking a row”.

Most of us who have a profile on the blogosphere can relate to these last comments, and he concludes. “Basically, the bottom line. blogging is having a negative effect on my personal, family and political life for reasons too many and complicated to recount.”

 

 

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Gerry Hassan, Research Fellow in cultural policy at the University of the West of Scotland wrote; ‘I don’t like Tom Harris’s politics one bit. I regard them as symptomatic of the changing style of politics which is part of the problem. He is a defender of the status quo.

The wider currents of our politics which have taken us to this unfortunate position. He is an unapologetic defender of parliamentary privilege and tradition – in particular venting his anger on the new IPSA regime at length – and he is a strident, voice who enjoys the politics of condemning and attacking, finding opponents almost everywhere.

He has grown tired of the world he has created around himself, of hectoring, abusive non-debate, populated by enemies, and a lack of real exchange. I cant help feeling that Harris, dislikeable as he is in style and content, is merely a manifestation of a wider set of currents of confusions and changes.

What is the point of being a politician today? If one is not a careerist, or more accurately a failed careerist, what is the point of your existence?

Harris tried to provide an answer to this through his entertaining and often controversial blog, but it is a question we still need to ask. What is it that we expect of modern politicians? Of backbench MPs? What is the role of the majority of MPs who don’t sit as part of the government payroll vote or opposition equivalent?

https://www.opendemocracy.net/ourkingdom/gerry-hassan/revolution-in-blogosphere-tom-harris-and-eric-joyce-in-controversy

http://blogs.spectator.co.uk/alex-massie/2010/11/au-revoir-tom-harris/

http://charlescrawford.biz/2012/01/16/tom-harris-mp-social-media-ex-tsar/

 

 

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January 17 2011: Dear Ed, remember that party members are not normal

Providing written advice to the leader of the labour party Harris compiled a characteristically entertaining piece, he instructed Ed Miliband to remember that Labour members “are not normal”. In other words, he should be prepared to ignore the politics of the membership because, in Toms opinion, it is so far to the left of the general population.

Yet what is most illuminating about the piece, is not what it says about the general public but what it says about Labour members. Like many of the Labour elite, he appears to see the Labour Party as more of a supporters club than a party. Those at the top of Labour have long seen party members as canvassing fodder rather than partners in a collaborative political project and Harris makes this explicit like nobody else.

Activists he notes, will come out on a Saturday morning to, “shove leaflets through people’s doors”, and, “Thank goodness they do” he says. “Neither you or I [Ed] would be MPs if it weren’t for our volunteer army of activists, they’re what keeps the party machines – and democracy itself – going.

But as a source of reliable strategic political advice, they’re at best a bit hit and miss. And the problem with too many party activists is that they spend far too much time talking about politics. Full stop”.

http://labour-uncut.co.uk/2011/01/17/dear-ed-remember-that-party-members-are-not-normal/

http://thethirdestate.net/2010/03/tom-harris-fails-to-get-how-democracy-works-objects-to-vocal-disagreement/

 

 

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June 8 2011: A Glasgow MP has been criticised after accusing Dundee University of “dumbing down” by pioneering a postgraduate degree in comic book studies.

Harris posted a sarcastic twitter comment on Monday night stating, “Dundee University is launching a degree in comic books. That’ll show those who say degrees are being dumbed down!”

Several other Twitter users challenged Mr Harris and he responded by posting, “Wait for the cries of outrage when people realize that a MA in the Dandy is considered less valuable than PPE from Oxford.” He later added he was “looking forward to Sheffield University doing a degree in forks.” The dispute rumbled on throughout the day and Mr Harris continued posting comments disparaging the course.

One post in the afternoon stated, “Coming soon to a university near you: a BSc in Battlestar Galactica — comparisons of the original v the reboot. One of Harris’ constituents, former Dundee man Dave Lunan, said, “He seems to have his priorities all wrong. “I would like to know why my well-paid elected representative is spending so much time arguing on Twitter when he should be concerned with the real issues facing his constituency and the country”.

http://www.thecourier.co.uk/news/education/tom-harris-causes-twitter-storm-by-accusing-dundee-university-of-dumbing-down-with-comic-studies-degree-1.44582

 

 

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 July 18 2011: A media abuse inquiry highlighted the need for more transparency in contacts between the Press and politicians

Tom Harris twittered. In an ideal world, of course, there would be nothing wrong in registering every conversation we have with journalists; “transparency” is the new “progressive”, dontcha know? But politics is about more than transparency.

It is about deals, it is about secrets. For myself, I shall continue to have lunches, dinners, coffees and beers with any journalist I like (provided s/he pays for them, of course – parliamentary expenses don’t stretch far these days). Our conversations will continue to be private, and unless they describe their source as “an unidentified, tall, Scottish ex- minister, ex-blogger MP representing a Glasgow seat”, then I will be content.

Twitter response was swift. This is another depressingly typical entry in Tom Harris’ knee-jerk salvo’s against even the most minor political reform. First off he makes the classic mistake that ‘politics in Britain= only politics going on in the world.’ Plenty of countries have robust transparency rules in their politics, and work better than Britain as a result.

http://labour-uncut.co.uk/2011/07/18/%E2%80%9Ctransparent%E2%80%9D-is-the-new-%E2%80%9Cprogressive%E2%80%9D-oh-goody/

 

 

backstabbers

 

 

 July 25 2011: The dangerously ignorant Tom Harris – added uninformed twitter comment on the mass murders in Oslo by Breivik

What happened in Oslo was horrific beyond belief. On that, there is agreement across all the political divides. However, when it comes to the cause and the consequences, there is little agreement. For many, Tom Harris MP has epitomised the crassness of the right-wing response to the tragedy.

As the events unfolded, he waded in with a silly tweet assuming that the perpetrators were Al-Qaeda. He is unable to face down the complicity of his own politics for the events which led to that brutal murder and in doing so, he is showing himself to be a dangerous, hypocritical demagogue whose own politics need facing down and defeating if we are to avoid such tragedies.

http://www.leftfutures.org/2011/07/the-dangerously-ignorant-tom-harris/

http://labour-uncut.co.uk/2011/07/25/white-christian-and-right-wing-a-terrorist-liberals-can-hate-with-impunity/

http://thoughcowardsflinch.com/2011/07/25/a-final-word-on-tom-harris-mp/

 

 

trident

 

 

August 26 2011: Tom Harris the twitter king of Westminster

The correlation between large amounts of tweeting and a below-average attendance in Parliamentary votes is well established. Tom Harris, Labour MP, has published over 22,000 tweets but made it to Parliament to vote 51% of the time, well below average.

http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2011/08/26/tweeting-mps-vote-less-th_n_938098.html

 

 

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September 12 2011: Harris Ready for Salmond

Confirming he will be a candidate to succeed Iain Gray as leader of Labour in Scotland the controversial Glasgow South MP made the announcement as the party’s Scottish Executive Committee agreed major changes to its constitution, including allowing MPs and MEPs, as well as MSPs, to stand in the contest.

The committee also agreed that the new leader would lead the whole Scottish Labour Party instead of leader of Labour’s MSPs at Holyrood.

http://www.tomharris.org.uk/Tom_Harris_MP/News/Entries/2011/910_HARRIS_READY_TO_EXPOSE_SALMONDS_BLUSTER.html

 

 

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September 12 2011: Way to up your book sales, Tom Harris

A reader commented:  For all I criticize the SNP, to accuse them of not being patriotic, or not caring about Scotland, isn’t fair – and I really can’t stand bringing that sort of language into the political arena. However, Tom’s going the same way as Jim Murphy did as Secretary of State. “Above all, we need a leader who will always put Scotland ahead of their own party.

I can’t see a Labour Party led by Harris ever co-operating on anything, or discussing anything in other than sound-bite fashion. But of course, book deals don’t appear overnight and when teased about his leadership being a way to promote his book, he replied, “In my defence, the deal was agreed when it seemed like Labour might win at Holyrood”!

Extra sales resulting from his leadership bid will, of course, be a happy coincidence.

http://caronlindsay.wordpress.com/2011/09/12/way-to-up-your-book-sales-tom-harris/

https://www.bitebackpublishing.com/authors/tom-harris

 

 

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October 29 2011: Tom Harris warns Scottish Labour could become an, “irrelevance”

Three contenders battling for control of Scottish Labour held their first leadership debate yesterday, amid warnings that the party could be an, “irrelevance” by 2016 unless it got its act together.

Tom Harris, the only MP standing in the contest, issued the warning when he appeared on a hustings platform with his rivals. Harris, the MP for Glasgow South, stumbled on his lines as he spoke without notes, but he told delegates at a conference in Glasgow that Labour must re-invent itself as the party of aspiration. “I love my country, I love my party and I hate being in opposition,” Harris said, “By 2016, Scottish Labour will either have re-established itself as the party of aspiration, or it will be an irrelevance.”

http://www.scotsman.com/news/politics/top-stories/tom-harris-warns-scottish-labour-could-become-an-irrelevance-1-1938193

 

 

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 November 11 2011: Tom Harris is a Liar – Wings over Scotland adds criticism

When Harris isn’t trying to imply racism with cheap sophistry, he resorts instead to evasion, sarcasm and condescension, and quite often just infantile jibes (e.g. suggesting all online SNP supporters still live with their mothers). Rev Stuart Campbell takes his twittering apart.

http://wingsoverscotland.com/tom-harris-is-a-liar/

 

After the Scottish referendum.

 

 

November 13 2011: Tom Harris’ launches an unsuccessful campaign to be Labour’s candidate for first minister of Scotland

“Nearly four months after our dreadful result in May, there still had been precious little debate about the future direction of our party and how we could restore our electoral fortunes.

There had been precious little debate, either, about the challenge of nationalism and the threat posed to Scotland through the break-up of the United Kingdom.”

“So, in the absence of virtually anyone else making the case for Labour or against the nationalists, I stepped forward. Since then, I have led the debate on the future of our party and our nation.

http://labour-uncut.co.uk/2011/11/03/tom-harris-speech-launching-his-campaign-to-be-labours-candidate-for-first-minister/#more-11501″

 

 

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 January 16 2012: Labour MP Tom Harris forced to resign as social media Tsar

On 16th January, 2012, he was forced to stand down from his role as Internet Adviser after posting a video on youtube depicting First Minister Alex Salmond as Adolf Hitler. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-scotland-politics-16576255

The Twitter expert had posted the, “Downfall” parody video likening Alex Salmond to Hitler. Harris, who stood for election as Scottish party leader last year, apologized and said his “actions were an unhelpful distraction” which damaged his party’s attempts to make better use of social media.

The Scottish National party (SNP) commented, “It is silly, negative nonsense like this that helps explain why Labour are in the doldrums in Scotland,”.

http://vimeo.com/35059090

http://www.theguardian.com/uk/2012/jan/16/labour-mp-tom-harris-resign

 

 

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March 12 2012: The thin line between confidence and arrogance – The Scottish Referendum.

Tom Harris wrote. “Of course, the SNP have more cause for optimism than Labour these days; their overwhelming victory in last year’s Holyrood elections changed the political landscape in this part of the country and made life extremely uncomfortable for the Labour Party.

The same is true of that bigger electoral contest: the independence referendum. It’s actually very difficult to find an SNP activist on Twitter who might concede that defeat for the nationalist cause in autumn 2014 is even a remote possibility.

This is despite the fact that all the polling evidence shows that, one or two recent polls aside, pro-unionist sympathy still dominates in Scotland. The fact is the nationalists might win. I hope they don’t, but they might. We might win. We might not, but we might. Such doubt is strangely absent from the nationalist camp. And I don’t think it’s all show or propaganda.

They seem to need to believe in the inevitability of their victory. They need to believe that the odds against them are simply the context of the Hollywood drama that will one day be made about their historic struggle and victory. But the public, whose support in both the local elections and the separation referendum is taken entirely for granted, still have the final say.”

A reader commented: !Expanding globalization and associated global systemic financial and economic crises are pushing the ruling parties of the UK state into feats of austerity and assaults on the public which can only serve the interests of the Scottish National Party, or so it would appear, as these phenomena form a catalyst for disintegration of the multi-national state.

That being the case, it is difficult not to be confident that the central objective of the Scottish National Party will be achieved. Rapid progress towards independence might not be ideal, and it is to be believed that this is understood and shared by a substantial proportion of the electorate, whose common sense and caution have always seemed to me to be rather well respected by the SNP.

There is merit in having faith in and respect for the people, a faith which the Labour Party in Scotland, not only appears to have lost but seems to be incapable of regaining.

http://www.labourhame.com/the-thin-line-between-confidence-and-arrogance/#more-3068

 

 

turncoats

 

 

September 2 2012: Democracy: what a pain in the backside

Tom Harris wrote. “Any country where it can be lazily assumed that X or Y party will take power no matter what, is a badly run one. The harder it is to win the votes of the electorate, the more determined will the winning party be to make their term in office a success. And in any modern democracy, no party should assume they will retain power ad infinitum; however healthy any living thing, it must die eventually, and the same should go for governments.

The principle that governments govern better when they’re held to account by strong oppositions is more than a sound-bite. And a strong opposition is one that stands a realistic chance of being the government next time round.

A reader commented: ” The thing is real participative democracy doesn’t happen and there is this huge power gap. Most potential voters feel powerless to effect change so switch off. Then politics becomes the almost exclusive territory of professional politicians and political pundits while the rest of us at best contribute with our vote every 4 or 5 years.

Every potential reform of the system to open it up and refresh democracy is resisted tooth and nail by the political classes of all parties at Westminster. From AV to Lords reform. As for accountability. MP’s expenses would still be shrouded in secrecy if it hadn’t been for whistle-blowers and brave journalists.

Much of the appeal of the Nationalist cause is arguably about this aspiration for more democracy and there is something politically enlivening about the process of challenging and taking back from the concentration of power at the centre. It is really satisfying to watch the FM take on the PM and send him back to London with a flea in his ear.

If it’s not Nationalism that rocks your boat then what is your democratic vision for the future of Scotland ?

http://www.labourhame.com/democracy-what-a-pain-in-the-backside/

 

 

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September 23 2012: The Scottish obsession with the constitution has not served Scotland well

Tom Harris insisted Scottish Labour has an advantage over it’s nationalist opponents. For most Scot’s, devolution was never an end in itself. Donald Dewar’s dream was of a fully devolved Scotland, firmly within the UK but developing unique and radical policies that might even inspire the rest of the country once they were seen to succeed in Scotland. devolution as nothing more than a vehicle through which better policy solutions could be delivered.

Nationalists, on the other hand, however much they will deny it, see, “independence” as the end result of their struggle. A bad decision made in Edinburgh is, they believe, better than a good decision made on our behalf by Westminster.

A reader commented: “If Labour have big ideas to add to the post-constitutional referendum debate or even to enliven the debate process itself then we should hear them. We have been waiting a long time. A recall of some missed opportunities.

Before the Labour victory of 1997 we had Labour promises on all sorts of constitutional reform like Charter 88 which would have rebalanced the power of the citizen viz a vis the state. Then there are constitutional developments, up to and including independence, which have the potential to free up the way we think about public services and service delivery in modern Scotland and within a Scottish context.

The current institutional inertia in Scotland has been in large part cultivated by the Labour Party and has served it well until now. Constitutional reform does not need to be a barrier to new political and institutional thinking, indeed it could well be a catalyst, releasing new creative energy and freeing some of Scotland’s vested interests from institutional capture. Which is why Scottish Labour policy is limiting since ultimately it takes a limited, narrow and politically conservative view of constitutional reform.

 

 

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 October 22 2012 Scottish Fishermen’s Federation attacks shadow Fisheries Minister Tom Harris for failing to understand his brief

The Scottish Fishermen’s Federation has launched a scathing attack on Shadow Fisheries Minister Tom Harris for his complete failure to understand the numerous problems currently facing the Scottish fishing industry.

The criticism of the minister comes in the wake of his contention that fishermen should be treated like ‘drug dealers’ in reference to the pelagic sector following prosecutions brought against them for incidents that occurred many years ago.

http://www.sff.co.uk/node/603

 

 

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April 1 2013: Tom Harris’ Taxpayer-Funded Game of Thrones Session – The I-Pad saga

Apple addict and Doctor Who fanatic Tom Harris, the likeable if slightly geeky Labour MP, got into a bit of bother when it was revealed he successively claimed for three iPads on expenses, insisting that they were for his staff and, according to the rules, that they were needed, “wholly, exclusively, and necessarily in the performance of their parliamentary duties”.

When queried about the use of iPads by staff versus cheaper computers with keyboards on which to type letters to constituents, Tom gave assurance that it wasn’t just him upgrading to the latest models. They were all at it.

http://order-order.com/2013/04/01/tom-harris-taxpayer-funded-game-of-thrones-session/

 

 

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June 12 2013: Glasgow MP Tom Harris leaves Labour front bench for family

Labour MP Tom Harris has quit the front-bench – saying he was unable to juggle the responsibility with his family life. The MP for Glasgow South was appointed shadow environment, food and rural affairs minister in May last year. But he told party leader Ed Miliband that combining that extra role with his responsibilities as a husband and father had proved, “beyond me”.

In his resignation letter, the former minister who sought the leadership of the party in Scotland, said he had been “delighted” to return to the front-bench. But he added: “You and the party need frontbenchers who can fully commit to holding the coalition to account and to doing the hard work necessary to move into government in two years. “I am faced with the uncomfortable truth that my talents, such as they are, do not extend to being an effective front bencher as well as a good husband and father.”

http://www.heraldscotland.com/news/home-news/glasgow-mp-tom-harris-quits-labour-front-bench-for-family.1371042225

 

 

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July 18 2013: The tenth best MP on Twitter

Harris is a fully qualified journalist. Fluent in shorthand he has long been required reading on Twitter. The Scottish Labour MP is funny, eloquent, honest, steely and impatient. He can be tough. His mockery of his attackers on Twitter shows a man who resembles a columnist as much as he does an MP.

Nevertheless he is to be commended for standing up for his profession, in numerous tweets and blog posts, against a public which often associates being a member of parliament with being a criminal. “Just had some idiot on Twitter telling me I should be “MP-ing” instead of watching the tennis. “good grief” he wrote recently.

His Commons commentary is also golden. “Dear front bencher’s – when you throw your head back ostentatiously to ‘laugh’ derisively, you look like an idiot.” Harris is the opposite of those fake, positive Twitter accounts most MPs manage in a desperate bid never to cause offense.

In actual fact, Harris really isn’t nice at all. He’s a political attack dog with a side-serving of Doctor Who trivia. Firm, workmanlike and delivered from the trenches: this is beefy stuff.

http://www.politics.co.uk/comment-analysis/2013/07/18/the-best-mps-on-twitter-ten-tom-harris

http://www.nctj.com/latest-news/alumni/Tom-Harris-MP

 

 

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September 26 2013: Why I Wouldn’t Support Votes for Sixteen and Seventeen-Year-Olds

Ed Miliband supports the campaign to lower the voting age which is being promoted by the vaguely left wing political classes and there seems to be plenty, or at least, vocal, support for the measure.

It’s just a pity that among the age group affected, demand for change doesn’t go beyond that tiny unrepresentative minority of teenagers who are already politically engaged.

http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/tom-harris/ed-miliband-speech_b_3994380.html

 

 

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October 25  2013: Tom Harris Gets involved in the 2016 London Mayor election

Elected office is now too often something that can be attempted according to the convenience of the aspiring politician. Shouldn’t one’s calling, one’s conviction, come first? If the cause you espouse is so important, if the solutions you offer so vital to the well-being of your future electorate, surely such trifles as personal career, even family, must take a second place in your priorities?

http://www.wolmarforlondon.co.uk/tom_harris_endorses_christian_and_tells_other_candidates_to_declare

 

 

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December 14 2013: Voting Record — Tom Harris MP, Glasgow South (2001-2013)

Wonder why he remains a member of the Labour Party. He regularly rebels against Labour in the Commons.
http://www.publicwhip.org.uk/mp.php?id=uk.org.publicwhip/member/40276

 

 

Gordon-Browns-Cabinet-001

 

 

December 23 2013: Labour MP: Tom Harris twittered angrily in support of Denis MacShane

Denis McShane, former Labour Party minister was sentenced to six months in prison after claiming more than £13,000 in fraudulent expense claims. The Taxpayers’ Alliance commented, “justice has been done”. “He routinely forged receipts to take taxpayers’ money” and that it was not up to the taxpayer to fund MacShane’s trips around Europe.

“This is an awful day, the jailing of my friend and ex-colleague Denis MacShane for making bogus expense claims was not justice”, said his former Labour colleague Tom Harris.

http://www.itv.com/news/story/2013-12-23/ex-mp-jailed-for-six-months-over-false-expense-claims/

 

 

500

 

 

Annual Cost Travel, Accommodation, Subsistence, Office Rental & Running Costs – 2110-2014

2010-2011

Accommodation £12,542 (7 months rent and ancillary costs only)

Constituency £5,378 (6 months office rental)

General Admin £7,655 (£1,906 cellphones, telephones, mobile broadband, £3,699 computer hardware purchase + incidentals)

Travel £14,075 (£10,028 MP travel by air, car, rail, taxi Remainder staff and dependent travel costs)

Total £39,951

 

republicandarling

 

2011-2012

Accommodation £21,637 (rent of flat London £1,447 monthly (£1,950 from February)+ ancillary costs)

Constituency £21,079 (£11,150 office rental 1 year. computer hardware purchase £2,140 Cellphone, mobile broadband and other costs)

General Admin £240

Travel £17,132 (£11,362 MP travel by air, car, rail, taxi + £5,500 staff and dependent travel & accommodation costs)

Total £60,086

 

 

LiveLeak-dot-com-b5e93c264aa8-186159211broken_britain

 

 

2012-2013

Accommodation £20,301 (rent of flat London £1,950 for 5 months then change of accommodation £8,580 + ancillary costs)

Constituency £23,740 (£11,150 office rental 1 year. computer hardware purchase £2,140 Cellphone, mobile broadband and other costs + rewiring and office redecoration)

General Admin £240

Travel £19,389 (£14,989 MP travel by air, car, rail, taxi + £4,400 staff and dependent travel & accomodation costs)

Total £64,217

 

 

blair_for_president.1

 

 

2013-2014

Accommodation £18,790 (rent of flat London £1,430 for 12 months + ancillary costs)

Constituency £21,492 (£11,150 office rental 1 year. computer leasing £1556, stationery £3,106 + Cellphone, mobile broadband and other costs)

Travel £14,769 (£11,769 MP travel by air, car, rail, taxi + £3,000 staff and dependent travel & accommodation costs)

Staffing £132,693

Total £187,745

 

 

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