Free
doughnuts and partisan propaganda won’t
boost local democracy
Malcolm Moss MP responds
to Government proposals to change the
way councils work
Malcolm Moss
MP for North East Cambridgeshire
expressed concern this week at proposals
by the Government to scrap vital
protection for local taxpayers from
wasteful town halls and ‘jobs for the
boys’ corruption.
They also
facing having to bankroll free doughnuts
to bribe Labour supporters into voting,
and allowing their salaried councillors
to avoid turning up to meetings and vote
‘remotely’ instead. The proposals were
outlined by Labour Ministers in a
so-called ‘Community Empowerment’ White
Paper.
Mr Moss gave
his backing to some of the
proposals in the White Paper, such as :
-
Greater
scrutiny of unelected public
officials, akin to Select Committees
in Parliament.
-
Promoting the transfer of assets to
community management and ownership.
-
Giving
‘backbench’ councillors more powers,
such as through small budgets for
their ward.
However, in
the small print of the White Paper,
there are a series of more controversial
proposals:
-
Doughnuts to vote: Electors are to
be given ‘incentives’ to vote in
local elections, such as entry into
prize draws or free doughnuts. In
these ways, Labour councils could
mobilise the disillusioned and
demoralised Labour core vote at
taxpayers’ expense.
-
Propaganda on the rates: The
Government intends to tear up the
guidelines which prevent taxpayers’
money being spent on partisan
propaganda by town halls. A survey
by the Taxpayers’ Alliance last
December highlighted that publicity
spending by town halls has already
soared to £450 million a year. The
new partisan local publicity will be
on top of the new taxpayers-funded
Communications Allowance which funds
partisan propaganda by Labour MPs.
-
Jobs for
the boys: Labour Ministers want to
weaken anti-corruption rules which
prevent council officers from being
councillors, because so few people
want to stand as Labour candidates
to stand in local elections. Yet
these rules were drawn up in the
1980s to stop local civil servants
becoming politicised and preecnt
conflicts of interest.
-
No need
for councillors to attend meetings:
Under new plans for ‘remote’ voting,
councillors will not have to turn up
at meetings. They will be able to
vote and participate in meetings
‘remotely’. This will make it easier
for Labour councillors to hold down
multiple jobs, on top of cashing in
on their councillor allowances.
Malcolm
said:
“Councillors
have a valued role to play in holding
town halls to account, and act as
champions of the local community. Yet I
am concerned that the Labour Party wants
to push through partisan laws that will
allow them to bribe their voters, bring
back jobs for the boys and slip in
back-door state funding.
“But rather
than these highly controversial changes,
if Ministers were genuine about local
democracy, they would hand back the
powers that unelected regional
assemblies and Whitehall quangos have
seized from local communities.
Unfortunately Labour are moving ahead
with a barrage of new quangos which will
take even more powers away from local
communities. Only Conservtives will give
these powers back to local people where
they belong.”