Test driving the special broadband on trial in Muswell Hill

Muswell Hill BT broadband trialI want it!

I went to see first hand the extra benefits local businesses and residents can enjoy this autumn as BT exclusively trials its super-fast broadband in the Muswell Hill area.

BT have actually selected two areas – yes Muswell Hill and somewhere in Wales – to pilot this new super-fast highway. Andrew Campling, BT’s general manager for London, showed me how fast the download actually is. Whoooooooosh and it’s done. Given I occasionally use unparliamentary language as I wait and wait for downloads (and uploads for that matter) I want it.

I got to see how fast the 100 meg broadband could download and upload files, as well as stream films and video conferences. Muswell Hill residents will get to test the new technology during the autumn and will be able to use the super fast broadband for free. The only drawback is the need for yet another bit of clutter on our streets – in the form of another BT box. Don’t see a way round that though.

Lots of local people work from home and once they have seen how fast this new super duper broadband works – they will feel benefit if they have to go back to their old speeds!

Coming out of a recession is all about finding new solutions, and hopefully innovations like these will help both local residents and businesses get the best possible service in the future – so long as the price is right.

'Politician of the Year' nomination for MP Lynne Featherstone

Local MP Lynne Featherstone has been nominated for the award of ‘Politician of the Year’ by Stonewall, the national lesbian and gay rights lobby group.

Lynne has been a champion of gay rights in Parliament and outspoken critic of the Government’s Equality Bill, which fails to explicitly outlaw harassment of young people in schools because of their sexuality – gay bullying. She has also fought for greater protection against discrimination for transgendered people in the new law.

The awards ceremony with take place on Thursday, 5th November at the V&A and celebrate “the range of positive contributions being made by the individuals and organisation to the lives of lesbian and gay people in Britain today”.  The judges are Sue Perkins and Evan Davis.

Lynne Featherstone is the Liberal Democrat spokesperson for Youth & Equalities.

Commenting, Lynne says:

“I feel greatly honoured to be nominated for an award by such a prestigious and respected organisation.

“Whilst great steps have been made in gay rights; gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgendered people still face discrimination in their everyday lives. Whether I win or not I will continue fighting for a fairer society.”

Happy birthday!

Happy birthday to me! Happy birthday to me! I know today is the anniversary of my first blog – but I’m damned if I can remember how many years I’ve been writing – maybe six or seven?

Memory’s going obviously … will have to go look at the archives!

Where is the British Obama?

Earlier this month I gave the Heather Larkin Annual Lecture in Yate:

I am really pleased to be here tonight – yes it is a long trek here and back but worth it to pay tribute to Steve Webb. Steve is a great MP, a great campaigner, a great innovator on the internet – and a great intellectual force. The fact that we often agree on policy may have something to do with that!

But one of the highlights of Parliament is listening to thoughtful and powerful speeches from which you learn and which help shape your own views. Steve’s speeches are just that – with the bonus of at times being very funny. That combination of intellectual rigour and humour has earned him respect on all sides in Parliament.

So – I was delighted when he invited me here to give the Heather Larkin Annual Lecture.

It is tragic when a local activist dies – and I remember the sadness of my own first election victory, remembering how one of our stalwart activists through the years hadn’t quite lived to see our first election victory. I think what you have done – by having this annual lecture and using the proceeds to pay for a young person to go to Conference each year – celebrates Heather Larkin’s life and work as a teacher and Lib Dem councillor and activist in the most appropriate way. It’s lovely.

And in a way – it is the opportunities that knock on your door and the experiences that you have – that open eyes and hearts to the possibility of what we can do with our lives. There were many people on Obama’s journey – who lent a helping hand or opened a door to this young black man. Perhaps the young person who will benefit from this evening by going to conference for the first time will find an unexpected stirring in them.

So – where is the British Obama? Good question! But which Obama are we talking about?

For that is the secret of Obama. He isn’t one thing. He is multi-faceted. Multi-talented. Multi-racial. Charismatic beyond belief – and not bad looking either!

Through his two books – Dreams of my Father and the Audacity to Hope – we get a rare and well–written glimpse of the man who is now the most powerful on earth.

A black man – well half-black –succeeding in a country to which we often believe ourselves to be superior in terms of integration and erroneously less guilty than America of our culpability in slavery. Their sin took place at home, our sin took place on the high seas and in overseas plantations.

An intellectual – in a reality show dominated, dumbed-down world where intellect has its popular appeal – is not top of the list of requirements for political success – yet Obama’s intellect is key to his approach and climb.

Family man – a seemingly genuinely loving husband and father – but not a saint.

A committed Christian – but not of the ram it down your throat variety – and of Muslim parents who attended a Catholic school.

Charismatic – well that helps whatever you are going for. Long-time readers of my blog may recall my scepticism of the speech that made his national – and international – name in 2004. As I wrote then, “to me – a non-American – there was something very insular, even insulting, in his claim that – after recounting how he came from a poor immigrant family that came together from across the world – ‘that in no other country on Earth is my story even possible’. Nonsense – there are examples of similar moving, amazing stories from many, many other countries.”

But it showed his ability to conjure a potent mix of rhetoric, hopes, dreams and myths into a powerful message. A message delivered with a voice and a half. For it is not only what Obama says – but it is the voice with which he says it. I have no doubt – ask me to give one of his speeches and it would be as much of a let down as me singing one of Madonna’s songs – there’s much more to it than just getting the words right!

But perhaps most relevant for us tonight – he is an ambitious man who understands the power of campaigning and how to do it to the max. (Or perhaps I should say was – because his campaigning touch seems to have faltered since winning the election – a warning lesson for us all!).

As a candidate though he was superb at spreading the word, channelling support, generating enthusiasm – and turning it in to action, donations and votes.

So when we ask the question “Where is the British Obama?” there are really two questions: can a non-white make it to Prime Minister? And can a UK politician generate that level of interest in and enthusiasm for the electoral process?

Taking that first question first – Britain has a very different political system from the US. Our Prime Minister is not chosen by the people directly. Party candidates are chosen by the parties, not the public. And – although this is changing – the key marginal seats at general election time have been so overwhelmingly white that non-white voters have had a much muted electoral impact.

So to be a British Obama – you have to be involved in politics, to work your way up and to make people look beyond traditional electoral battlegrounds. Predicting the future when it comes to party leaders is tough – not many would have bet on the only female PM – so far! – being a Conservative.

Open primaries, which the Tories have introduced as pilots, would perhaps open up the possibility of an Obama who can appeal beyond party limits – but you still have to get through the selections for those primaries.

As for our own party, we have the additional burden that for us success so often only comes on the back of repeated local work by someone who firms establishes themselves as local – which further curtails the field of people with chances of getting elected.

But if we look this white election after election, we will simply look like a political party that advocates what others should do – but that we don’t do it ourselves.

There is a lot of work going on to encourage a more diverse set of members to join and go forward – but the feed through is slow. With a fair wind we won’t be left as an all white parliamentary party after the next election – but there is no certainty that will happen. And whether or not it does, we have to find a way to crack the problem of so many of our ethnic minority candidates standing just the once in a constituency. Of course thepolitical barriers could come tumbling down if we were to change the electoral system altogether. The advent of Single Transferrable Vote would, at a stroke, change the composition of candidates in all parties.

That wasn’t an issue Obama had to worry about! One part of his achievement is one though that we should worry about too.

Obama wasn’t just some poor black kid. Obama not only had bright parents keenly ambitious for him – but he himself was exceptionally clever.

Obama’s election showed how education can transform life chances and not only that – it is where the inspiration – the audacity to hope – springs from. Obama got a scholarship to an exclusive prep school, went to private college and then to a private Ivy League University. He went to Harvard Law school – and in this institution his dreams of high office began to form.

There isn’t time tonight to delve into the education policies of the Liberal Democrats that might offer more journeys out of poverty – poverty of finance and poverty of ambition. There isn’t time to examine the part our woeful lack of social mobility plays in keeping people in their place – but remember, if you are born poor now you are more likely to die poor than you were 30 years ago. Inequality is growing – not diminishing. Obama has shown how important giving those life chances are to people – and who knows what marvels may lie untapped unless we do.

Key to turning Obama’s vision and aspiration into actual political success and power was his success at campaigning – the like of which we have never seen.

Now, LibDems are good campaigners. I’m here because I am a campaigner who overturned a 26,000+ Labour lead – and with a Tory in-between. And Steve Webb is here because he is a campaigner extraordinaire.

But there are plenty lessons about campaigning that we can learn from Obama and use them locally here.

The national message and the candidate are clearly very important – but they are beyond our immediate control. There is plenty though that is under our immediate local control and influence. Things we can go away and do something about. Personally. Tomorrow. Each one of you. Each day. Regardless of what is being said or done nationally.

We need to talk about the issues that are at the forefront of peoples’ minds – and we need to reflect their values in how we try to persuade them of our liberal beliefs.

Look at Sarah Palin – well perhaps not! – but her brief success was all about the politics of identity – sharing the values of voters and understanding their concerns.

Compare her folksy language with our local councillor world of strategies, streetscenes, fiscal challenges, benchmarking, step change in capacity building.

Get my point? Obviously – the fact she was a complete idiot with value system right of Attila the Hun was eventually too much of a problem to overcome. But the very fact that for a brief while even she was so popular demonstrates the power of the politics of identity. The public want politicians who can understand them, relate to them, are like them – not out of touch politicians from on high.

On then to the mechanics of campaigning – what can we learn from Obama of those? Some are familiar:

1. Recruit helpers.
2. Raise money.
3. Win support.

Sounds obvious doesn’t it? But let me ask for a show of hands: how many people have delivered 500 leaflets or more in the last year? And how many of you have have recruited 5 members/deliverers or more in the last year?

OK – my point is about building the team, building the machine. We often spend so much time trying to do everything ourselves that we spend hardly any time on recruiting new people, building up the organisation.

Obama’s approach was to build the machine from way out before the election. And build and build and build.

Often we would rather deliver leaflets until the cows come home than knock on someone’s door and ask them to become a member or join the party.

It doesn’t have to be that way.

Where I hail from in little old Hornsey & Wood Green in 8 years membership went from 150 to 400; the delivery network from 0% to 85% coverage.

I’m probably teaching my grandma to suck eggs in this constituency but it is the key. And whist Steve has a majority that I can only dream of – you know you can never have too big a majority. And you can never have too big a campaign organisation.

A Liberal Democrat activist who went to help in Obama’s campaign said:

Every supporter was asked to volunteer.

Every volunteer was asked to recruit more volunteers.

Even when there were more volunteers than we knew what to do with, we recruited more.

But imagine what would happen if I were to ring one of you up tomorrow and say, “I’ve just joined the party. Have you got anything I can do to help tomorrow morning?” Almost certainly the answer would be – actually no, not got anything you can go and do right now. Might have some leaflets for you at some point in the future – and if you’re lucky we’ll ask them to deliver you somewhere near where you live. There may even be an event in a few weeks. But unless I strike it very lucky – the answer to “Can you give me something to do right now?” is “No. Come back later.”

If I’m lucky, the person I talk to will dress it up in all sorts of nice language and keep in touch – but at heart we are often structured and organised on the basis that we don’t catch initial waves of enthusiasm for people.

Obama’s campaign was very good at avoiding this. There were always stocks of leaflets ready to go. There were always phone operations to join in. And there were regular events for people to come, meet and mingle.

They were also sociable events – not campaigning in the form of “go away and do something on your own” but campaigning that brings people together, adds fun to the process and builds up camaraderie. People joined a joint enterprise of like-minded people.

People were given a wide range of different actions they could take – not just leaflets or canvassing, but letters to the press, petition flyers to neighbours, commenting online and so on. That breadth of activities – all planned with the question “how do we get more people involved?” in mind – is something we should emulate.

And, boy, were people trained. Trained and trained and trained. Our party is pretty good at training some key groups – such as constituency organisers – but very few local parties do training for their bedrock members.

The Obama campaign though had a very intensive training program, from 5 minutes for anyone walking through the door through to weekend camps – training the equivalent of our deliverers and ward organisers, not just those higher up the organisational chain.

One particular part of the campaign organisation that was steadily built up over a long period of time was the data: the email lists, records of voting intention and so on. Although we often think of the internet as a fast moving arena, in fact success more usually lies with the tortoise rather than the hare – the tortoise who builds up lists and data persistently over time, that is.

Email is a fantastic tool for getting out messages quickly and cheaply. But to do that really well, you have to have spent the time collecting peoples’ emails and getting their permission to use them.

And when you have the email addresses – you have to actually use them and send out messages!

Some statistics from Obama’s campaign to illustrate the point:

  • 10.3 million email addresses
  • 1.2 billion emails sent out
  • 7,000 different messages

I think that makes the point about the potential for email – though one other statistic sheds important light on the issue of fundraising.

Blue State Digital (the people who did Obama’s emails) estimate that for a 9 month US campaign, they’d expect typically to raise on average in total between £3.50 and £5.00 per email address on any opt-in list. That is a pretty low figure – the huge sums come from having huge lists – which takes us back to the importance of accumulating data.

We can’t do everything Obama did – especially as some figures put together by the party’s previous Head of Innovation, Mark Pack, illustrate the scale of finance he had. The Obama campaign spent four times the total Liberal / SDP / Lib Dem spend in all the general elections since 1945 put together. That’s a lot of money!

But there is much we can – and should – do:

  • Recruit members and helpers
  • Give people fun things to do – immediately
  • Train, train, train
  • Make campaigning more than leafleting
  • Collect – and keep – data
  • Use technology – especially text messaging which was one of Obama’s big areas of success

Don’t unthinkingly believe all the hype – and don’t think you have to be able to copy everything. But do believe in your own power to make things happen.

Obama’s success and trajectory may seem a far away tale of brilliance, removed from our own lives. But break it down into the details – and there is much you can do, right here, each and every day.

So where is the British Obama? I hope we will see the candidate Obama one day soon. But the campaigning Obama – look around you. Any and all of you can be the Obama in your own area.

Cross-posted from Liberal Democrat Voice

Lynne Featherstone MP commenting on the Crouch End Lap Dancing application

Commenting on the news that the Music Palace’s application for a lap dancing club was rejected on Friday, Lynne Featherstone MP says:

“This is brilliant news and such a huge relief after months and months of campaigning with the ‘lapoff’ team, local residents and councillors.

“It’s been inspirational to see local residents come together and fight the proposal tooth and nail, and what a result we got in the end!

“This was simply the wrong place for a lap dancing club – and should the Music Palace come back with a new application, we’ll be prepared!”

A double dose of interviews

Two interviews today! First up was by Yoosk – a site where you can ask MPs questions – any questions you like. Usually I answer by email – but this time they came to film the answers to six new questions. Yoosk does more than just post questions and answers – people get to rate your answers for things like honesty, clarity and so on

Second interview was with Victoria Hollingsworth – both to for her thesis but probably also for Woman’s Hour or such – about the provision of mental health services for young people. There is much to be said – but the key issue is there is a black hole that young people fall into between 18 and 25, when they are so very vulnerable – and provision and transition just stop. The Government keeps saying it is increasing this and providing that – but the facts on the ground don’t match the rhetoric. Anyway – hopefully it will air on the radio – as it is a really important issue and not one that gets nearly enough airtime.

Royal Mail delivery issues in Crouch End

Outside of the current industrial action on post – I have recently been raising issues around delivery problems with the Royal Mail, following a piece of casework from a resident of Crouch End.

This issue is about receiving notification of a parcel delivery – i.e. a card through the door saying ‘you were out when we called’ – when in fact the resident was inside the house. The Royal Mail response to me on this is that these cards are a last resort in the delivery process and that my constituent should in turn appreciate that the incentive is to find someone in – so that they deliver as many parcels as possible, making their load lighter and reducing paper work.

I have come down from upstairs on occasion to find a delivery notice through my letterbox and wanted to scream. So – maybe I am deaf – or maybe the post person only gave one ring. Who knows? But given that we would all be happier if this could be solved or improved the next bit of their response is a bit better.

The Delivery Officer says: “Obviously I am keen to ensure that procedures are being followed and have re-trained and counselled the Delivery Staff on this very important procedure”.

So – that’s a good move forward on this – but one to keep an eye on. Do let me know your own experiences from now on (preferably with details of time, place etc.), whether in Crouch End or elsewhere.

(My constituent just left a message on my answerphone without a name or number – so if he or she is reading this can they also let me know their details as Guy Onions, the Delivery Office Manager has said he is happy to discuss this matter directly with my constituent to “ensure that it is satisfactorily resolved” and asks that they contact him at their earliest convenience and gives a direct phone number. So if you get in touch with me – I can give you the number.)

The future of Wood Green police station

There has been a flutter of speculation about the future of Wood Green police station. I have asked our local commander – Dave Grant – to give a horse’s mouth briefing of what he understands to be the case. Rumours have included the police station not being rebuilt; the front counter moving down the road; no police station there, etc etc.

This is what Dave Grant says is the case following enquiries he has made. He has asked the Metropolitan Police Service (MPS) about what steps are being taken. The only activity at the moment is between Local Authority officers and MPS staff from Property Services Department about the format of the plans. Commander Grant says he knows that nothing has been agreed and that there are meetings scheduled to discuss the content of the plan.

The MPS uses a company to undertake the formal public consultation process and Mr Grant knows that they are drawing up a list of individuals and groups, with the help of his staff, who must be consulted. This would include me and councillors amongst others. He says he is more than happy to share that list with me when it is complete – and of course I will be checking to see that local people are the key consultees.

At some stage in the autumn a formal planning application will be made, which will then trigger the consultation process. As soon as the process begins, Commander Grant will be personally involved and intends to help with the key briefings.

So – as ever – it is down to whether this will be a real consultation – i.e. whether our responses to the consultation can affect outcome. I will post any news I get as this proceeds.

Lynne Featherstone MP commenting on opening of Hornsey Neighbourhood Health Centre

Commenting on the grand opening of Hornsey Neighbourhood Health Centre, Lynne Featherstone MP said:

“It’s been a long journey and a long campaign together with local people, but today we are finally standing here in this brilliant new facility for the west of the borough.

“This will bring wonderful health services to the community for many years to come, and is what local residents need and deserve. Hats off to all who made this come true- it was worth the wait.”

Crouch End lap-dancing application rejected

Thank goodness! Councillors turned down the lap-dancing club application in Crouch End. It’s been a very long and hard fought campaign – so congratulations to Alison Lillystone and all of the local people who worked so hard to present such a brilliant case. My LibDem colleague Cllr Dave Winskill has been working with the campaign group every step of the way – and I have done whatever whenever I could to help.

The report says the applicants may go to the courts and appeal the decision – but I hope they don’t. The new laws coming into effect soon change the status of the license that lap-dancing clubs need. Currently they only need the same license as a club or pub – but under the new laws they are classified as ‘sex-encounter establishments’ and will need a different license – one in which the location plays an even stronger determinant than currently.

So – as they have lost at this point, the chances of them getting a license under the new laws are even less. And they may be considering trying to get in before the law change – but in the Commons I pushed the Minister to state quite clearly that even if they were to succeed and get a license now – they would still have to apply for a new license as soon as the laws come in.

In the end – this is about location. That has always been the point and the reason for upset for local people. This was just the wrong place.