Andy Reed's Personal Blog
I set out my personal thoughts on these pages on the major (and very minor) news events of the week in Parliament & politics. The idea is to get behind the newspaper headlines and the spin to see what is really happening and what a typical week is really like in Parliament.
I am also active on Twitter and Facebook so why not join me there too. I update my pages on a regular basis throughout the day, posting details of meetings and events in Parliament.
Clearly there was both delight and despair amongst the sides represented in the town on the failure of County Hall to get their BSF bid supported by the independent Partnership for Schools.
This week the bitter battle continues as opponents remove posts on websites posted by supporters of Limehurst. People supporting closure of the Outstanding school at Limehurst complain the other side did the same on Facebook. This is very sad.
How did it come to splitting our town and its parents in this way? A bid for £80m to rebuild our ageing schools should have been a time to get us all working together in partnership.
Last year after we all overwhelmingly agreed a vision that we wanted to move towards a OneThroughSchool concept County Hall must have set about working out how to realise that ambition. They set up Project Boards and lines of communication. But then sadly they did not use them. Instead they appear to have retreated to County Hall and designed a scheme which upset lots of parents when it was finally revealed in January. It appeared with a warning that there wasn't enough time to consult and that somehow their 2 poorly supported options were the only way forward. Closing Limehurst was the most controversial followed by closing Garendon and Burleigh and creating an Academy time institution as well as dropping a UTC of 800 places into the mix. To be given 6-8 weeks to take this all on board after they had ignored months of opportunities to share this with Heads prior to Christmas was ridiculous. No wonder parents were filled with rage.
I was shocked when I called a meeting of the Heads of primary schools that one by one they had never been asked at any stage to take part in the planning. Even Heads of the the affected High schools hadn't been kept in the loop.
So we didn't get off to a great start. As soon as the plans were announced opposition groups were set up and Parents were organising. This is democracy in action. I attended meetings packed with angry parents demanding changes to the plans.
At this stage you would have thought County Hall would have shown some contrition and made serious attempts to find a solution. Instead they kept hiding behind the 'criteria' and Partnership for Schools technicalities.
Parents, schools and governors wanted more choices to consult on. The idea of opponents having to create their own Option C emerged as it became clear County Hall weren't willing to listen or help.
I called a meeting of Heads and included the OTS campaign. Details of an Option C emerged and were agreed. It was far from a a detailed worked up option - but we did not have the resources of County Hall. Rightly we felt it was there job to do the detailed workings!
OTS suddenly dropped out a week later without telling anybody and then started attacking supporters of option C. This was the low point. Encouraged by County Hall the town now split between those willing to throw Limehurst on the scrapheap to get the money and the majority of respondents to the consultation who wanted another option to consider. Sadly the County attempt to divide and rule only achieved dividing the towns parents.
During this time attempts to draw County Hall into a proper debate and consultation fell on deaf ears. They were so committed to their options A & B they were not listening to the warnings that I divisive Bid would not be successful. They needed consensus above all else.
The technical analysis of their bid and their 'readiness to deliver' was carried out by Partnership for schools - the arms length independent body set up by the government to do the work to run the BSF programme. They sift the bids and make firm recommendations to Ministers about the bids ready to go.
Last Thursday the list of successful bids would have arrived on the desks of Ministers. They would have no 'political' say over the bids they would have to go with the technical recommendations. They received a list with 6 authorities ready to go and a further 3 authorities nearly ready to go. Leicestershire did not get into either list placed on Ministers desks.
For some reason County Hall now want to blame Ministers or a political decision. This is wrong. They should simply acknowledge their failure to get a local consensus and to be seen to ignore the findings of their own consultation.
So where do we go. Well County now suggest they have more than the £4m they threatened was available if the bid failed. They now say suddenly they may have double figures to implement OneThroughSchools. Strange isn't it?
But I think they should not give up on ambition. I think they should now be humble enough to say we were wrong. We couldn't command local support so we will come and listen properly. We will create a local partnership where stakeholders feel they have a say. I believe they should work hard with the time they have and resubmit a BSF bid in the next round.
Of course the only problem here is if the Tories by some misfortune won the election. Under the Tories BSF will basically disappear. As Ed Balls confirmed on Monday - with Labour it will stay.
You see elections are about choices!
I will work with County Hall to help them build bridge locally with disillusioned parents if they are genuine about coming and talking to them.
The shock news that a major company like AstraZeneca can just pull out of Loughborough is a salutary lesson in what globalisation means even in a small market town like Loughborough.
I have been around long enough to be Chair of Economic Development at Charnwood as Astra the Swedish drug company first took over Fisons and started heavily investing in the Loughborough site. Over the last 14 years or so I have visited the site at least twice a year to see new investment, meet staff and talk about the business.
However, as Astra merged and eventually became part of the global company AstraZeneca the duplication of Research and Development facilities across the world and in particular here in the UK became a little bit of a worry. But in the last few years further investment has continued to come to Loughborough.
Sadly 2010 is a bit of a crunch year for AZ. A number of patents have come to an end or are nearing their end and there does not appear to be any major new drugs coming to market which will fill the gap.
Like many people I wondered why drugs are so expensive until you see the sheer scale of the research and development required to get any drug to market. The work of 1200 people at Loughborough AZ is about drug discovery for the future. Then it takes about 12 years to get a drug to market. This is an enormous cost and an enormously risky business. Sadly AZ have not been as good as the competition for a couple of years.
It means that the Global Board of AZ perhaps sitting thousands of miles away are taking 'strategic' decisions over which very few people have a great deal of influence. This is happening daily in Board Rooms across the world. Ironically the day before the news was celebrating a British Insurer buying up the Asian are of American insurer AIG. When we buy these companies we celebrate. When others buy our companies we live in fear.
These decisions are bigger then individual areas like Loughborough and bigger sometimes than even countries and their governments can withstand. I was given the clear impression that there was nothing that can or could have been done to change the mind of AZ when making this decision to 'rationalise' ( I hate that phrase). The survival of AZ and thousands of other jobs seem to require the Board to react in this way.
I am clear that we cannot bury our heads in the sand and hope globalisation will simply go away - but surely 'people' have to take back the control of unfettered market liberalism at some stage. People being used as economic pawns in a global economy is destroying lives. The collapse of the driving force of international capitalism -ie the banks has given us an opportunity to think afresh about the sort of world we live in. Before we slip back into the old ways perhaps we need a fresh debate about the role of government in the free market. It is destroying too may lives and the planet at the moment. For 1200 people and their families in Loughborough they have woken up today fully understanding the global economic settlement and it impact on real people as well as bottom lines.
I was going to Blog about Ashcroft because his influence has been felt in Loughborough. It was one of the marginal seats to get his money. But when I read this article in nearly said it all for me... The Times Editorial. A rare chance to almost agree with a newspaper:
Lord Ashcroft is not just any old political donor. As deputy chairman of the Conservative Party, he has become a significant public figure. Today, his power may be at its peak. His tax status is thus a matter of legitimate public interest. His behaviour in concealing it should be a matter of public concern.
The next general election will be won or lost on the battlefield of marginal constituencies. This, even more than sunny Belize, is Lord Ashcroft’s domain. Quite apart from the sums that he has directed into Tory coffers, the peer is personally responsible for the professionalised strategy that will, very possibly, deliver a Conservative victory.
His system sets targets for marginal candidates, delivers funding on the basis of those targets being met, and then conducts private polling on their effect. Although senior Conservatives have suffered embarrassing questions about his tax status for several years, there has never been the slightest suggestion that he might be jettisoned. If proof were ever required of his value to the Tory high command, this would surely be it.
Despite this prominence, Lord Ashcroft has long appeared to consider himself the victim of a media witch-hunt, which forms an unreasonable intrusion into his private and business life. This has always been a childish conceit. Since he became the Conservative deputy chairman in 2007, it has been an absurd one. If Lord Ashcroft wishes his life to be entirely private, he should not have made himself a public figure of great influence. Most pertinently, he gave very public assurances about aspects of his life as a condition of entering the House of Lords in 2000.
These assurances were given to the Public Honours Scrutiny Committee, this newspaper, and William Hague, then the Leader of the Opposition. In his letter to the latter, written in 2000 but published yesterday, he stated his intentions quite clearly. “I hearby give you my clear and unequivocal assurance”, he wrote, “that I have decided to take up permanent residence in the UK again before the end of this calendar year.”
In fact, as was also revealed yesterday, Lord Ashcroft became a “long-term resident” of the UK and a non-dom, liable only to pay tax on his British earnings. While the Labour Party also has non-dom donors (such as Lord Paul and Sir Ronald Cohen), it is now clear that Lord Ashcroft has been dissembling over his tax status for years. Repeatedly, he has said that he has fulfilled the undertakings that he made. This is by no means clear. Arguably, he has quietly renegotiated them.
For the past ten years, the peer has treated inquiries about his tax status as a game, to be played with a smirk. For the past 18 months, moreover, he has hung one colleague after another out to dry. David Cameron, George Osborne, Mr Hague, Philip Hammond, Eric Pickles and more — each one has been forced, on air, to trot out the same line: that an assurance has been given, and that it has been believed. Repeatedly, he has made the Shadow Cabinet look evasive and weak.
It is to Mr Cameron’s credit that he has forced this issue, planning legislation to require both peers and MPs to pay full tax. In this, the Conservative leader has been both pragmatic and principled. And yet, even now, Lord Ashcroft keeps the same smirking tone. In finally admitting his non-dom status, he does not say, directly, that it will soon change. He merely acknowledges Mr Cameron’s intentions, and adds that he expects to remain a peer. Wilfully, or because he simply cannot help himself, he continues to give the impression of holding not only regular British taxpayers but also his own colleagues in contempt.
Lord Ashcroft has done much for the power of the Conservative Party, but absolutely nothing for its reputation. He is an effective political force, but an enormous political embarrassment.
I predicted a year ago that as soon as there was any serious analysis of the Tories their poll lead would disappear. Most of the things I said then are still as true today. They are worth repeating.
The Tories were seen by the majority of people as right wing, mean, nasty etc. These are my observations but they are also supported by the Tories who lost again in 2005. The Tory party is so arrogant that it sees itself as the natural party of government. It thought in 1997 it was a temporary blip and they would be back in 2001. I work with these people daily and there were many who believed such nonsense. After the defeat in 2001 more started to understand how toxified the Tory brand had become. But not many. And certainly not David Cameron who went on to author the right wing election manifesto they lost the 2005 with under Howard. They thought if we just pull to the right a little more people will support us.
So the Tory party is still seen as nasty, right-wing and for the rich. These are the perceptions people have. I am sure there Tories who would hate this description but recognise it is the perception people have of them. Equally I know lots of Tories who sadly fit the description! They hate the moves to the middle ground being made by Cameron. The Tory party , MPs and many candidates are old fashioned right wing Thatcherites. They can't wait to move the Party to the right again.
Cameron realised the problems the Party faced if it was ever to get back into power. Unfortunately all he has ever done is try a marketing campaign to detoxify the Tory Brand not the Party and its policies.
So you have a right wing party with lots of right wing candidates who hate the NHS, Europe and want to bring back foxhunting. But Tory MPs and candidates are also desperate to get into government. So for a couple of years there has been an uneasy truce. All these MPs and candidates would keep quiet about the arrogance of Cameron and the direction he was taking the party whilst they appeared to be ahead in the Polls and heading for government. Once in they could return to the Right where they feel most comfortable.
The problem is simple. Cameron is no Tony Blair. The Cameron project is a pale imitation of New Labour. It has no overall strategy. It was a marketing campaign to grab cheap headlines for a couple of years without saying very much. Keep your head down say to people what they wanted to hear and let Labour run out of steam. At one level you can see why they did this. But under scrutiny it was always going to fall apart. If they looked like forming a government people would start to ask awkward questions.
Like what so you stand for? Why don't your policies add up? Why are they facing in both directions? Locally they are as bad. They never say anything about anything important. They simply pick up litter or say they are listening. They try never to offend by saying nothing. There is an empty space where a serious political party should be.
Well none of this is good enough for a party in opposition - never mind a party which thinks it should be in government in a few months time.
The other big mistake has been to concentrate so much on Cameron. One way of re branding was simply to ignore the fact there is a Tory Party. Instead it has all been about Cameron. The Tories decided to make this a presidential run off. But now they are paying a price. You see Cameron isn't liked by even his own MPs. The shine has come off with the electorate too. They can see though his airbrushed features and his smug arrogance. They don't like him. We all know they don't like Gordon very much but they certainly don't care for Cameron either.
So it leaves them in a bit of a hole. They have failed the re-brand and their main asset turns out not to be an asset after all. I still predict Cameron will fail to become PM and the Tories will wonder why they ever let him loose on their party.
There is lots in the papers today again about this terrible phrase - Broken Britain.
I will post a longer response to why I think this stereotyping is dangerous.
But what struck me was just one policy area - murder and in particular child murder. There have been some really awful high profile cases recently and the nation has dwelt upon them - and possibly quite rightly.
Now in the Broken Britain promoted by the Mail, Express and Telegraphs of this world the legend is one where danger stalks every street corner. In Real Britain the police have just recorded the lowest murder rates for 19 years. Now you can't fiddle murder rates. You are either killed or you are not.
Now based on recent horrific newspaper headlines you would say that child murders must be soaring - wouldn't you?
But guess what. Child homicides have fallen by two thirds sine the 1970s. Yes it was far more dangerous when I was a child.
Britain used to be the third biggest killer of children. Now we are 17th.
There are some other great myths too. A girl aged between 15-19 today is about half as likely to be pregnant as her grandmother was! Yes it is possible the man will not stay around as long as the grandparent but there is much less chance of him beating her too.
You see each generation creates a magical past that for too many people never existed.
Yes there are new challenges but anybody would think everything is wrong. Our media fuelled perception o the world certainly loves us to think so.
I don't think Britain is Broken and it is insulting to the millions of volunteers and helpers and happy families to suggest so.
The Tories love to keep this myth going. But will they be claiming all is well after a few policy announcements. No they don't have the answers to deep rooted problems. I suggest they are the architects of many of the social problems we see today.
There is the great scene in the Monty Python film The Life of Brain when the terrorists ask themselves what the Romans had ever done for them.... of course only to then list so many things. Tony Blair quite often would quote this in Labour Party meetings to understand that the electorate don't give governments credit for things done & this was nothing new!
It therefore made me stop and think this week when one of my serial moaners (a regular letter writer to me being offensive about pretty much about everything) asked the Loughborough Echo what have I done apart from smile in the Echo. First it made me wonder if I should look more miserable in the Echo every week. But then I wondered what bit they had missed. So I sat down and looked just at the last month....
I took a look at what happened in January:
A major part of my workload of course is the 12 hour days I serve in parliament – we sat for 16 days in January. I parliament I have spoken in various questions and statements as well as meeting with Ministers and attending All party Groups. As always I have a high attendance rate – usually in the top 10% of MPs I have spoken up about Student Housing, the special Olympics, 3M and health care spending, International development, the Copenhagen summit for example. On top of this I have done various TV and Radio interviews for the BBC and Premier radio for example. I have also worked with Cancer Research, The Royal legion on their Pledge, Holocaust Memorial Educational Trust, StreetGames, and many other charities and events.
I January I received over 1500 emails each week
I wrote 165 individual casework letters on behalf of constituents on cases of varying complexity.
I have worked on the following which have come to fruition just this month:-
• I have been involved at every level with ‘The Eastern Gateway’ regeneration project which has fallen into place – years of intervention & meetings – bringing new housing, hotel, improved parking at the station. Work will start in April. I have removed barriers and lobbied the partners at various stages to keep the project moving.
• After 9 years of leading a local and national lobby of Ministers on behalf of SARG - new housing legislation announced on HMOs with planning & Licensing to deal with the issue of studentification.
• SportPark opened to its first jobs – over 500 sport jobs located into Loughborough. Part of a £15m investment in which I have been involved for the last 6 years at bringing together partners and releasing investment from EMDA and Sport England for example.
• Platform lengthening at Loughborough Railway station confirmed by Network Rail after lots of lobbying and work over 5 years
• Supporting our retained Fire Fighters against plans to reduce their numbers at Loughborough by the Tory Fire Authority
• Attended the Loughborough Learning initiative launch
• Involved in various elements of the County Councils’ School reorganisation consultation – meetings, discussions and producing alternative plans
• Visited Shepshed High School with DfiD Minister to meet pupils & staff involved in government funded link with Ethiopia & have helped various times in the past with things like visa problems for visitors.
• Took a delegation from the RNIB College to DWP Minister over future funding for the College
• Escorted Supporters from Rainbows Children Hospice on fund raising tour of Commons
• Working with Shepshed Boxing club to find a solution to their planning eviction and to find a new home.
• Attended & spoken at public meeting to support opposition to closure of Limehurst
• Supporting Shepshed Volunteer Centre against cuts from Tory County Hall
• Supporting users at John Storer House against local Charnwood cuts
• Visited 3M with Health Ministers to promote new products to save NHS money & secure local business
• In talks with AstraZeneca Vice President over international performance of the company and any impact on Charnwood
• Visited & spoke to with schoolchildren involved in Barrow Development Group – School Best initiative
• Talk to year 3&4 pupils in citizenship at St Barts school
• Visit to Rawlins Community College to meet Principal & students
• Promoting Loughborough to take its place in the 2012 torch relay to come through the area at local forum
• Attended launch of Suzuki/ Intelligent Energy hydrogen fuel cell scooter –
• Surgeries in Loughborough & Sileby
• Set up a Trust for injured rugby player Richard Engleardt
• Chaired the Leicestershire 2012 Steering Group – making 2012 work for the county
• Loughborough based Energy Technology Institute reception –
• Helping campaigners against the Incinerator in Shepshed
• Sat on the Loughborough Building Society Community Awards panel
• Celebration of 5 years of Loughborough Community Awards – speaker at celebration event
• Visit to Garendon School
• Meetings at Limehurst School
• Meeting with all Loughborough School Heads
• Presented healthy lifestyle award at Leicester Mercury Sports Awards
• Launched Leicestershire Get fit for Life
• Continuing to work with protesters, campaign groups and others on hundreds of other projects like, Sileby Boxing Club, Barrow Housing development, Barrow Community Centre, Wymeswold airfield noise, Nanpantan conservation
I have not had as much time this month to do quite so much as a great deal of the time has been spent on working with Heads, governors and parents on their reaction to the reorganisation of local schools! This has been the dominant feature of January.
On Saturday I captained and played in a charity rugby game ahead of the England v Wales game at Twickenham.
The Parliamentary rugby team exists to play fun rugby, foster international relations through sport and raise money for various charities. I reckon last year we raised about £40,000+ from our 7 games.
This weekend it was the turn of the Welsh Assembly to come to London and enjoy our hospitality and have a bit of fun.
It didn't quite work out like that though. I always forget just how much the Welsh want to win against England at rugby - at whatever level. I am at that age where I am still glad to be running around on a rugby pitch and enjoy the experience. Winning makes it a bit sweeter but it isn't everything any more. After 5 minutes on Saturday I had switched. The agression and then breaking the spirit of parliamentary rugby by kicking a penalty turned me into a ruthless win at any cost captain!
Everyone loves to play wide expansive running rugby (apart from about 8 forwards that is) but it was clear our strength was our pack. We could out muscle the Welsh. I ordered we revert to plan 'E' for England. ie keep it tight, rolling mauls, break and start another one. I moved Ikram Butt our hard hitting Rugby League inside cenjtre to No 10 with instructions to take it bak up the middle and no wider. We then dominated and the penalty came. We were 9-7 down after the Welsh had kicked 3 penalties. There was 10 minutes to go but the idea of losing meant for the first time in 13 years of fun rugby I gave the ball to our Kiwi Scott Divine to lick the penalty and take us 10-9 up. He slotted it from 35m out. It was so sweet. I have never thumped my fist in the air with such determination at this level of rugby. I told our pack to play out the last 10 minutes in their 22 and as near the try line as possible. I was sure their defence couldn't hold us out. Sure enough the forwards with a little help from the backs scored the vital try 4 minutes from time. Victory was ours 17-9.
Wondering what this has to do with a political website? Look at the similarities.
For me the arrogant Tories are the same. Their personal attacks on Gordon Brown today show that distasteful streak they are capable of both locally and nationally. The problem is it has the effect of inspiring me to play the game and play to win. The more they play dirty tricks the more I rise above it and inspire those around me to play to win. As the tide shifts away from the Tories in the polls expect to see more of this desperation. You see it in sport. You will see them at it too.
As the series of public meetings about the reorganisation of Loughborough Quorn and Barrow schools continues there is so much happening it is difficult to keep up to speed for everybody.
As well as the public meetings I have met with various Heads and governors. I chaired a meeting of the Loughborough Heads and the OneThroughSchool team to develop the option C alternative for parents to have a realistic alternative. I have had quick discussion with the Tory Lead spokesperson on education at County Hall and met the Director of Education again. I have spoken to numerous parents from across town and have received hundreds of emails and facebook messages. This issue is very much alive. It is not just the parents at the schools now but I am also keen to engage parents of those in primary schools who will be the first to be affected by this proposed change.
I have also met with the Schools Minister Vernon Coaker MP and raised the issue of closing down an outstanding school in the Commons Chamber. I had to laugh when a supporter pointed out I was being attacked by a Tory Councillor for raising our schools in the Commons! Clearly they have no idea about the important role of an MP and the need to work at every level - community right through schools, councils and to Westminster. Although I am aware this attack dog does this quite often apparently – an irrational hatred leads to quite bizarre attacks. I never read or see the stuff but it is all quite pathetic I am told and slightly sad and a poor reflection on the local Tories. Perhaps they should state more clearly that they support the closure of Limehurst and Garendon. Stating their position more clearly would be very helpful for parents.
So where does this all leave us. Well I am still wanting to get a consensus at local level that makes our bid for BSF even stronger. You see I have not invented or created the hostility to the plans put out by County Hall. I am reflecting that anger and have all the way through this tried to be measured in my response. There are so many people who say “if it means closing Limehurst then stuff the £80m on offer” I don't want to see this. I want to see a reorganisation that retains the best of what we have with the chance of modernising our local schools. The BSF team will be well aware that the current options up for consultation are getting a rough ride from parents. They don't need me to tell them that. That's why I have taken an active lead in trying to bridge the gulf that exists between County Hall and parents opposed to their plans. Sometimes it takes a bit of leadership and courage. I have been prepared to give that. It is what I enjoy about being an MP. I can make a difference. I am hugely passionate because as a parent of two children who will be affected by this I know how local parents think. I am also by nature a consensus builder.
There are some who are now being spun a line that if just shut up and somehow pretend there isn't any real opposition to these plans then County could push ahead and get the £80m and push ahead with option A or B. This is fanciful thinking.
The only way forward is some compromise and a consensus. It requires people to give a little from each of their corners. We can save Limehurst and make the case to the BSF and Ministers for a small good school if everybody really wants to. We can't hide behind guidelines. Making a passionate and reasoned case with community support would be so powerful.
I will continue to throw my energies into bringing the opposing parties closer together and lobbying Ministers about the great community involvement in this process. I could criticise the County Hall process at putting in this mess by springing an unpopular set of options without building any local consensus throughout the process - but I will leave that for another day.
Our job now is to all pull together around a viable option C.
As so many people know Limehurst was visited by Ofsted again last week. Some conspiracy theories were floating around the local blogosphere as it certainly wasn't their turn to be inspected again.
Some cynical locals thought it may be to make sure that by the end of the consultation period we wouldn't be talking about Limehurst being talked about as an 'Outstanding' school. I personally don't believe OFSTED could be manipulated in this way but you can see why cynical parents and teachers were thinking such thoughts.
However, unconfirmed rumours (as the full report will not be available for another 2-3 weeks) suggest that once again they have been judged 'Outstanding' the top judgement you can make.
Let me put this into context. Under the new OFSTED inspections only about 3% of schools will be judged Outstanding. These new controversial measures are really though.
So if there was a conspiracy it has backfired. If these rumours are confirmed then during the consultation period Limehurst will have been judged an Outstanding school. This is a remarkable achievement. Well done to the Head Jon Mellor, governors teachers and support staff as we ll as parents who make this place very special.
I was back in school again today. I seem to be spending lots of times in local schools at the moment talking about how they should be organised mainly.
Today was different. I was listening to the children. The year 6 School Council representatives have been meeting across the Barrow Development Group to decide what they would like to see as part of their extended schools services.
As one of my friends on my Sport Board said tellingly a few weeks ago - us adults are very good at deciding what children want.
In this case it worked. The children came up with ideas that I wouldn't have naturally put as priorities but they had also thought through issues like cost, delivery and safety - all very impressive. They then 'presented to me and parents ad the Head. Again a very impressive PowerPoint and case made.
When I hear that people think education is not 'as good as in our day' I wonder how many even bother spending time is modern schools. But the real lesson from today is that we need to listen to the children more!