Finance and ballet

Monday was first day back at Parliament – and outside of the Chancellor’s statement on the economic mess – not much else happening.

Darling’s ‘statement’ did nothing to calm nerves as far as I could see. He didn’t move to secure all savings. He didn’t move to encourage interest rates to drop and he didn’t move to re-capitalise the banks. So – no wonder the next morning the stock market plummeted. All he could muster was – we will do whatever it takes. Well Alistair – better to be pro-active than re-active. Has he not seen what damage dither causes? As the 60% of savings in this country held by 2% of the population begins to seek safer havens – Ireland, Greece, Denmark, Germany and Spain is on the way – talking about the need for a cohesive policy for Europe is bit horse and stable door.

Given there was no vote last night – I actually managed to go to something I was invited to – the launch of the new season at the Royal Opera House: four ‘tasters’ from the coming season danced and sang for us – up close and personal. First were a couple dancing from a newly choreographed ballet – absolutely stunning; followed by a virtuoso violinist; followed by the two principals of the Royal Ballet doing the pas de deux from the Swan Lake and concluding with a magnificent tenor singing two arias. Right in front of my nose. It was magic.

Tony Hall – the Chief Executive, then spoke to us briefly about the work the Royal Opera House is doing to bring people in who have never been there before and who might believe that the barriers that prevent them are immovable. But with their clever partnership with the Sun newspaper, their new training, their lower prices – they are doing a good job at changing the mindset – that opera and ballet are not for the likes of us!

They are – and they are uplifting and wonderful. How lucky am I?

Parliamentary season kicks off again

Back to The Westminster Hour last night – and the gang is all there. They are kicking off for the new Parliamentary season with the three of us – me, Ed Vaizey and Emily Thornberry.

Before that it was a busy day campaigning for Nigel Scott in the Alexandra Ward by-election which takes place on Thursday (Yom Kippur). In fact, I have referred Haringey’s refusal to change to avoid the clash to the Equality and Human Rights Commission as religious Jews are actually forbidden to make a mark during their holy day. Of course – that doesn’t change the date but maybe it will help concentrate Haringey Council’s mind in the future – councils have a choice over which day to pick for by-elections, and that choice should be used with more care and thought.

Sarah Ludford (MEP) took a team in the morning delivering – in the pouring rain! Thanks Sarah.

Much of the political news is still dominated by Peter Mandelson’s return. The Conservatives’ line on it is that ‘Labour must be desperate’. Desperate they may be – but this was a political finesse I really didn’t think Gordon capable of. However – it now looks more and more as if Tony Blair ‘told’ him to go and help. Oh what an ironic twist that one old foe of Gordon’s told him to bring back another old foe to try to save his skin!

The return of Peter Mandelson

Blimey – who ever would have thought that Gordon had the balls to bring back Peter Mandelson? In my view – a master stroke – unless M messes up again. Which is a gamble – though still as he said on the news clips – third time lucky. But in terms of keeping your enemies close and your friends even closer – bringing in Mandelson (who manages to be both enemy and friend) that close is to undermine the Blairite underminers of Gordon and bring in someone who is clever and regarded as experienced in trade and industry. Hmmmmmm – it will probably end in tears – but it is derring-do!

Ian Blair's departure

Blimey – he’s gone! It’s always a bit of a shock when someone leaves like that – even when you have thought they should go. Ian Blair has been clinging on for dear life virtually since he started. It is to his great credit that despite the errors of judgement he made – and his mistakes have been very big and very public – that he has actually achieved progress in some areas – like neighbourhood policing and diversifying the make-up of our police.

His flaws? Too clever by half for one. I think (and I was a member of the Met Police Authority for five years alongside Ian Blair) that he had progressive intentions hampered by a belief that he could handle the media – sort of Blair (Tony) and Alistair Campbell rolled into one. But he wasn’t good at it. Or perhaps it is just not the way the Met Police Commissioner needs to play his hand. Appearing on Question Time just after the shooting was an appalling error of judgement.

It is so interesting when I look back. If I juxtapose two vignettes of Ian Blair – perhaps this might give you a taste of the man himself. When the Macpherson report was published on the events around the murder of Stephen Lawrence – it was recommended that the police start to use stop forms. This meant that if a police officer stopped anyone – they were required to give that person a copy of the ‘stop’ form which would state why they were stopped and also describe the person ethnically etc. It took quite a time to fill out and, whilst absolutely right in intent, took out time from patrol. Now hopefully, they are moving to an abbreviated form done electronically – which will keep the good points but cut the delays and bureaucracy.

As for Ian Blair’s role. Well – at an event on stop and search that was put on by the Met, with actors playing situations, groups from all over London came to discuss the issues around stop and search, knife crime and relations with communities. I remember, crystal clear, Ian Blair when he gave his speech saying that he thought the form was obstructive, unnecessary and would stop police doing their job. It was clear to me that he thought this a waste of time and nothing to do with good policing.

Jump forward about five years and Ian Blair has become Commissioner. Addressing senior officers from across London and Borough Commanders in his first major speech to his men and women – he made clear that diversity was a huge issue and that how stop and search was handled was paramount in community relations and that the stop form was an absolute necessity.

Had he changed? No – not in his core belief but you see – I think the key to Ian was that he saw what was needed, and if that wasn’t where he had positioned himself, he shifted to wherever necessary to conquer and move forward with the agenda.

He was far too political – but then it is political position. I thought he stepped way out of line when he backed ID cards during the election period. Also when commanders were encouraged to encourage their MPs to vote the ‘right’ way on extending detention without charge. This is not OK – but Ian was a player and would not hold back from political activity to push forward the government / his desire.

He lived pretty dangerously and as he said in his resignation statement – it wasn’t the pressures, the mistakes or the stories that got to him in the end. It was clear that Boris had basically said he wouldn’t work with him. Whatever I think of Ian Blair – that was the absolute wrong reason for him to go. There were myriad reasons for him to leave his high office – from Stockwell to race divisions in the Met – but being forced out by Boris was the wrong reason.

Ten most popular blog postings (3rd quarter, 2008)

In reverse order, here is my now traditional listing of the ten postings which have proved the most popular over the last three months:

10. A nine-word summary of what is wrong with so much of our tabloid journalism – I don’t always like what I read in the papers!

9. How lottery money is being spent in Muswell Hill – good news for the area.

8. How not to fight terrorismmore Big Brother control freakery from Labour.

7. Jerry Springer: The Opera DVD – a blast from the past, this post is from 2005 – just goes to show some stories never die!

6. Iris Robinson, again – appalling anti-gay comments from one of Northern Ireland’s most prominent politicians (see also no.3).

5. Ten most popular blog postings (2nd quarter, 2008) – nice to see these round-ups are worth doing!

4. New dentist practice in Haringey – surprised this posting came out so popular – but I guess it shows just how hard it is to find a good local dentist – and so any news about new dentists is of interest.

3. Iris Robinson – more about her and bigotry.

2. My top ten political blogs – all getting a bit self-referential here! But find out whose blogs I like to read…

1. Polling day should not be on Yom Kippur – re. Alexandra ward by-election, where given a choice of dates, Haringey Council chose to put polling day on Yom Kippur.

David Cameron's speech

Happy Birthday to me. Happy Birthday to me! Well – actually – it’s Happy Birthday to my blog – five years old today.

And I’ve just finished listening to David Cameron’s speech. Long – very very long. But as with most things – it’s not always the size that counts. Strong on image creation, short on tangibles – even in this time of crisis it seems DC cannot come up with the goods. Perhaps once a PR man always a PR man.

‘Fresh answers to the challenges we face’ he said – but none of the ‘fresh answers’ were available for critique. He seems to believe that appearing to be something is enough. The rest of it was rather ‘back to basics’ but without using the actual words. Mending the broken society by sticking it together with platitudes and £6.00 to stay married doesn’t really do it for me.

I guess he is impotent at the present. He doesn’t have the track record of someone like Vince Cable – who actually understands the economy and warned about the debt bubble that was bound to burst (for years). It’s all very well for DC to come now to the table and say how irresponsible this has all been. It’s his mates in the City who took the risks to get their ridiculous bonuses. Dave didn’t utter a word over the last ten years to warn of this – and now he is all too pleased to blame Gordon (who is undoubtedly to blame) but as the Her Majesty’s Opposition – all we got was a deafening silence as Tory types took the money – leaving us the taxpayers to pick up the bill.

Anyway – as you will gather – I didn’t rate the speech. The last thing we need now is more vacuous image style politics. And – he did my pet hate thing of bringing his wife on stage at the end. Those who know me are well aware of my aversion to this – and he kissed her about four times in the space of one minute. Afraid that the snappers didn’t get the photo first time round. Cynical – you bet!

What the journalists missed

Just watching the news. Oh my God! What an idea the Conservatives have come up with – a high speed rail link from London to the North! But hey – wasn’t that something the Liberal Democrats announced ages ago? Another one bites the dust. What really cheeses me off isn’t the Conservatives nicking our ideas – they clearly need them – but the lack of any credit for it. Strangely enough none of the broadcast news I saw mentioned the fact that the Liberal Democrats have been beating this drum for some time.

So the question is not – how can we stop Tories nicking our ideas – because we can’t. The question is how can we get broadcasters to mention the fact that this was a Liberal Democrat idea at the same time they break the news about the Conservatives now adopting it? Now – that’s a bit of fairness that fails to materialise regularly. So Mr and Ms Journalist – next time, how about it?

Alexandra Palace: what next?

Alexandra PalaceLast week Nigel Scott (Liberal Democrat by-election candidate in the Alexandra by-election) published his plan for the future of Alexandra Palace:

  • Establish a new board with independent, expert trustees representative of local and national interests, with an independent Chair.
  • Ensure proper consultation with residents about the Palace’s future.
  • Refurbish the ice rink, make the Victorian theatre fully usable and multi-purpose, make the historic TV studios an educational visitor attraction and support the organ society’s restoration work.
  • Protect the CUFOS community centre and its valued activities.
  • Make getting to the site via public transport easier (such as Oyster at Alexandra Palace rail station).
  • Provide the trading company with the room and encouragement to thrive, so that expanded charitable activities can be fully-funded.
  • Actively seek funding sources appropriate to the charitable status of the Trust.
  • Clarify the financial contribution of Haringey Council by an annual grant to the charity to cover the costs of maintaining the public road and park.
  • Retain ultimate public control in the interests of public benefit.
  • Fully recognise the increasingly unique value – as London gets ever denser – of Alexandra Palace and Park to local people and Londoners.

A good plan! Alexandra Palace is a cultural and historical icon that needs to be raised above the quagmire of Haringey Labour’s financial and political bungling. As Nigel said:

“Alexandra Palace is a community treasure. Labour’s shady and incompetent dealings with the Palace’s have been fully exposed this week. This must now stop.

“We need a plan that will really engage with the people of Haringey, a plan that will provide independence from Labour’s incompetent meddling with strong independent leadership. We need a restored building that cherishes the Palace’s historic uniqueness and protects the good work carried out by CUFOS.”

KFC adverts in Crouch End (UPDATED)

I’ve written to the Managing Director of KFC:

I am writing to ask for your personal intervention over a local dispute regarding lamppost banners advertising a KFC.

KFC Crouch End is situated in the heart of a Victorian parade and many residents feel strongly that the design and frequency of the KFC banners attached to streetlights are too obtrusive for the unique Victorian street scene.

Sadly, pleas to Haringey Council to remove the banners have fallen on deaf ears. Officials cite binding contract with yourselves as reason why these inappropriate ads cannot be withdrawn. I therefore am appealing to you directly to respond to the concerns of local residents and to withdraw the ads. Even if campaign has been initiated by a local franchise, as the brand owner I am sure you will be able to bring considerable influence to bear to resolve this matter.

I would be more than happy to make vigorous representations on your behalf to receive a full refund to recuperate the cost of the remaining term of the contract and ensure you do not suffer any penalties.

I would very much hope that KFC is committed to working with our community to preserve its special character. I have little doubt that such a magnanimous gesture will reap benefits in terms of positive publicity and goodwill with your customers.

Update: good news! The banners are to come down this week.