How should the President of the World Bank be selected?

The World Bank President site has picked up on my exchange in Parliament with Labour minister Hilary Benn on this topic. Given the huge powers that the World Bank has, it’s President should be appointed in an open-way – and based on the merits of the candidates. It’s too important a job to dish out on buggins turn regardless of who could do it best.

Tony Blair's farewell

So – Tony’s begun the final stretch of his long goodbye. Shed a tear and forgive him for he only did what he thought was right seems to be his message. I guess – in the end – that’s the get out of jail free card he wants to play – but I am not sure that Iraq, above all other issues, can be put away so easily.

Of course, it’s better waging war if you think it’s the right thing to do than waging war if you think it’s wrong – but that’s not really the issue. So – why did we go to war in Iraq? We can never crawl into his head to find out for sure, but my guess would be a mix of the following:

  • the difficulties of getting armed intervention working in the former Yugoslavia made him (wrongly) see the US as being the only effective international force for intervention
  • he believed disagreeing with George W Bush wouldn’t stop him, but agreeing with him would give the UK some influence and control over what happened (largely wrong again I think)
  • he genuinely thought it was the right thing to do – and it became almost a crusade for him (though the religious overtones of that word shouldn’t be latched on to too much – after all armed intervention in the former Yugoslavia was largely on behalf of Muslims to protect them)
  • he judged that Saddam’s fall would bring peace and stability to Iraq

And as for weapons of mass destruction – did he really believe Iraq had them and sincerely convinced himself of the case? Or did he deliberately set out to make a case, exaggeration and distorting it knowingly in order to get the votes in Parliament and the support outside? Plenty of ink has already been spilled on that question and I don’t think today’s speech will have changed people’s views one way or the other.

Anyway, I digress. Of course – all the media focus is was he good or was he bad. Ten years of Prime Ministership has to deliver both good and bad. Northern Ireland – good. Iraq – bad. The obvious is easy.

My own main beef with Tony (outside of illegal wars) is that he went a step further than Thatcher. Thatcher is the reason I went into politics. I couldn’t stand the selfishness she created by promoting and encouraging a grasping ‘me’ society – and negating the common good. Blair has gone further down the road by delivering permission to dodge and spin to get what you want. Truth doesn’t matter – only getting what you yourself wants matters. It’s a sad old world – ain’t it?

Shingles, revisited

I’ve previously blogged about my support for efforts to raise awareness of Shingles and improve treatment, so sad to say I’m now experiencing the issue first hand as it were – having been diagnosed with Shingles this week.

Recruiting new leaflet deliverers

Out in force in Hornsey door knocking for deliverers this morning. One of the keys to our success in Haringey to date has been being engaged with local people and it is our Focus leaflets, newspapers, letters and surveys that enable this to happen on the ground. But in order to cover the constituency – obviously – we need loads and loads of local volunteers willing to deliver their street.

We had a good morning and found ten new deliverers which is fantastic – not just for getting our leaflets out but also for helping to maintain our real roots in the local community, which means it’s not just our information flowing out but also feedback and concerns from residents flowing the other way too. That two-way dialogue is crucial.

So thank you to the ten who agreed to start delivering today – and thanks too to all the hundreds of other deliverers.

Happy birthday Susan

I don’t often post anything personal – but last night I went to the 40th birthday party of Cllr Susie Oatway (Lib Dem, Alexandra ward). And I just wanted to pay a little public tribute to the work that Susie has put into Haringey over the last decade and still does.

I was handing out leaflets at Bounds Green Station during the ’97 election when I first ran for Parliament. A young women took a leaflet and went on into the station – reappearing a moment or two later to say that she had been active in the Lib Dems at college and was thinking about contacting her local Lib Dems. So I took her number – and the rest, as they say, is history.

I am not sure whether people (outside politics) generally realise the amount of sheer hard work that goes on in terms of year in year out campaigning, socials, fund-raising etc – and so I just wanted to sing Susie’s praises for working so tirelessly year in year out – and playing a large part in the fact that I am the MP today and that we have gone from 0 Lib Dem councillors in Haringey in 1997 to 27 today. It is the team – not the individual. A very happy birthday Susie!

Two years as an MP

Houses of ParliamentSo – two years ago this weekend I was elected to Parliament. Thank you, thank you – to the voters of Hornsey & Wood Green. It has been and is the most phenomenal honour to serve. It’s a crazy job. There’s no time off virtually – but fighting for the things that matter to local people is where I started and where I still am. It is an extraordinary thing to be able to stand on the floor of the chamber of the House of Commons and have a voice in the debates and issues of our times (when and if Mr Speaker’s eye falls on me!).

But this job isn’t just about Parliament. It’s about what comes through my surgery door, what people write (or email, or ring, or fax…) to me about, what people say on my visits and meetings round the constituency – and above all what people’s experiences are at the coalface of where legislation and regulation meet real people and real lives.

It’s still about fighting for better health services – from Hornsey Hospital to the Government’s top-slicing of the budgets for Primary Care Trusts – which here means family planning and sexual health clinics cut. It means local campaigns supporting local campaigners and – at Parliament – it’s about tackling Patricia Hewitt to get money for Hornsey Hospital.

It’s about fighting against the unwanted planning applications – such as from London Concrete Factory for Cranford Way – succeeding with local campaigners at the first stage, but losing the appeal to Her Majesty’s Planning Inspector. Hence, my speech in Parliament and writings about the need to revise the planning system so that it is fairer to both sides and better rooted in what the local impact of a decision really will be.

Crime continues to be a major issue from Wood Green to Highgate – so it’s about continuing to argue for the full Safer Neighbourhood Teams (having fought for years to get the teams) and the preservation of our local police station presence and front counters. At Parliament it’s me asking the Leader of the House in Business Questions for a full debate on gang culture and gun and knife crime. Here in the constituency, it is me going into Woodside School to spend the morning with police and an acting troupe to engage with the young people on knife crime.

On the environment – and climate change in particular – locally it include my Liberal Democrat colleagues and I campaigning for business recycling. Whilst we (thanks to years of local campaigning) are now able mostly to be green with our doorstep collections (except blimey they’ve just stopped collecting our plastic cartons – why?) – but at Parliament it was about being able to stand up and speak in the Climate Change debate to demand that the Government bring forward a Climate Change Bill.

All these and many, many more issues. And then there are the visits to events all over the constituency. I have visited every secondary school, some more than once and many of the primary schools, community visits, visits to local businesses to encourage and congratulate, job centres, libraries, sporting events, awards, a couple of dinners, celebrating green flag events, fun runs and street parties and on and on. All a delight.

And then there are the meetings – with council staff, with the Health Trust, with the Chief Executive of the local hospital, the police, the Council Leader etc and my work with the local Lib Dem councillors who are all fighting on the ground for their ward constituents against the mess Labour so often makes of running Haringey Council – running still run roughshod over local people with consultations which are often meaningless.

And then there is surgery – when people come to see me in person (or I visit them in their homes if they can’t get to me), so often with heart-rending stories that remind me continually how much there is to fight for and how motivated I am to fight for those who need help against the great machines of bureaucracy, forms and rules.

I could go on, and on, and on – but just wanted to try and illustrate how it all links up and how I try and represent what comes at me (at the rate of about 50 people a day – usually by letter, email or in person), whether that means taking up the issue at Westminster, in the constituency or indeed anywhere else where it can be helped or solved. And then there are all the other things MPs doing involving scrutinising legislation, holding ministers to account and so on…

Litvinenko House: survey to go ahead at last

Catching up on the situation with the Litvinenko house (where the victim of radiation poisoning, Alexander Litvinenko lived) – the father of a near neighbour of the Litvinenko house called me on Friday to say that Haringey Council have rung his daughter and are coming to meet with her in the afternoon – and he would like me to attend too.

So I arrive and just afterwards so does a Haringey Council officer and Labour councillor Nilgun Canver. There is a little kafuffle whilst they say that they don’t want me at the meeting. I say to the father that I am happy to go if they really are saying that the meeting falls if I attend but in the end they decide they won’t press their objection to me being there.

The family had prepared their list of concerns and went through them. There is a mix of issues here in my view, many of which are interlinked. These include: how safe is it for people in the surrounding area? How safe is it in the house? How safe is it if contents of the house are taken outside the house (a flag has already been stolen from the house)? Will the house be properly secured to stop people going in and taking items out (stealing them)? Why does the Council seem to be saying contradictory things about the safety of the site?

The answers to some of these are better (and more reassuring) than others, but it all adds up to a lot of worry and concern for many residents in the area. The contrast with the other sites that suffered from radioactive contamination is particularly galling for neighbours – they got cleaned up promptly (e.g. the sushi bar and the hotel) but the house here hasn’t been cleaned up yet.

The big stumbling block to actually getting things cleaned up is that a further survey of the site is required (to establish exactly what cleaning is required) and Haringey Council won’t pay for this “characterisation survey”. They want the house owner to pay for it, but in turns the Council and the lawyers for the owner have told me that the other side hasn’t been talking to them properly. The Council’s account of events given at this meeting doesn’t seem to tally with what the lawyers on the other side had told me previously.

The breakthrough at this meeting is that after persistent questioning from the father, Nilgun Canver relented and agreed that Haringey Council will now pay for this survey. They family then tried to pin down the Council to a time-frame for both the survey and then the follow up work, but without success. But they have promised that on Tuesday a firm will be contacted about doing the survey.

Finding a good home for your old computer

That’s Maxitech gives your old computer a good homethe topic of my latest article (for the Highgate Handbook):

As this is (hopefully) an era where we know that we shouldn’t just throw an old computer away and as I was sure that with a bit of work (new hard disk etc) it could be of use to someone – what should I do with it? Well – one of my recent constituency engagements provided the answer (almost)…

Continued on my website.