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Labour needs to get local and expose the Conservative record in power

Old Woking Rose

By Theo Blackwell

Labour's record in power nationally needs to be juxtaposed with the record of Conservatives where they are in power at a local and county level and in London. David Cameron's Conservatives should answer for the choices Conservative-run authorities have made since the last general election. This will show their true colours in diverting support away from childcare, closing play centres, weakening affordable homes targets, increasing charges for services to the vulnerable or watering down policies aimed at tackling inequality.

Often Labour has relied on the strengths of incumbency to promote its message. Yet what people see and hear at a neighbourhood level is just as important in shaping their views about Labour and the viability of a Conservative alternative. Yes, we have a Labour government - but in many areas across the country where people are represented by a Labour MP their services are no longer delivered by a Labour council.

This is not an argument about central versus local, but one of local choices by Conservative-led councils. Since 1997, more funding has been given to local authorities. They are able to do more, and have a suite of powers to help change communities for the better. Yet as we enter recession, in several notable areas we see Conservative-led authorities, often feted by David Cameron, cutting services and raising charges.

In Camden - a Tory-Lib Dem administration with the Tories very much in the driving seat - since 2006 we have seen:

- Over £30 million in overall cuts to services since change in administration, watering down or ending outright Labour's emphasis on the borough's most deprived areas

- ‘Stealth tax' hikes in fees and charges, such as 50p extra per meal for community meals for elderly, higher play service charges and burial fees

- 267% increase (£9 to £33) for permission-to-park notice for builders or workmen outside your house to bring charges "in line with Westminster ", the most rapacious parking authority around

- Reduction in award-winning street warden service

- Cuts in Welfare Rights, Camden Language Services and equalities support

- Less funding to the voluntary sector, targeting advice services

- Abolition of door-to-door recycling schemes on council estates

- An end to street ‘gully cleansing' team and 3am street cleaning cut in entertainment hotspots such as Camden Town and Covent Garden.

Councillor Stephen Cowan's reports from Hammersmith & Fulham tell a similar and even more disturbing tale. There, meals-on-wheels charges have been forced up £547 since 2007 and there have been a host of substantial cuts to valued services such as libraries, social care, public protection and maintenance. The Conservative Leader there, voted ‘Local Hero of the Year' in 2007/2008 by Conservative activists, is feted by Boris Johnson and David Cameron and is a lead member of a body called the Conservative Council Innovation Unit, suggesting that what Hammersmith has done to public services could be replicated elsewhere.

Websites like Labour Matters provide ample juxtaposition between the choices Labour councils make and those taken by the Tories. This issue is not just one of councils recently taken by the Tories. Opposition posts from Westminster Labour are a great example of an effective opposition questioning a long-standing ‘flagship' Tory Council.

The challenge to Labour is to highlight these and other examples from across the country, providing a clear diving line between Labour's priorities for helping local communities, and their narrow vision of government. Simply put, looking at how the Tories or the Lib Dems operate in local government, what choices they make and priorities they have, is an important exercise - not least because it provide us with a ‘behind-the-spin' example of what they would be like if they ever were in power.

We need to translate the local evidence into a national narrative. This has to be led from the top. Gordon Brown himself needs to join this debate and make clear how important this local evidence is when it comes to judging the Tories.

There also needs to be greater communication between councillors and ex-councillors well versed in these issues, who have witnessed cuts to the voluntary groups they once championed or the services they once supported. Yet, in the very best sense of the word, local councillors are parochial, in the best sense of the word, and so far it has been difficult to develop our experiences into a wider discussion.

Now is the time to take this further and properly build our evidence-base.

Taking it to the blogs
Together with some other local councillors and campaigners in December I established a roundup of local Labour activity. Although at a nascent stage, it aims to highlight local stories by Labour councillors from across the country, or examples of poor policymaking by Conservative or Lib Dems or the SNP in power.

Why? The short answer is that I've found that despite the growing of internet political activism, the voice of the local government councillor is not as present as it could be. Relatively few councillors feature in the top 100 of left or right blogs, and yet many of their experiences dealing with constituents or the real-life results of policies made in central government (or their own local councils) are also key to understanding current national debates.

That was just one step from a couple of opposition councillors in a couple of boroughs. If the party took hold of this agenda - and created a debate about local public services and local choices - the image David Cameron's Conservatives are trying so hard to maintain could be subjected to serious scrutiny and challenge.

Councillor Theo Blackwell is the opposition spokesperson on finance for Camden Labour.

Posted on Jan 28, 2009 at 01:15pm

6 Comments · Show / Hide
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Firstly id just like to say “Haringey Council”



The trouble is Theo, because of Labours "run away expenditure" people are starting to see the Tories as the prudent option.

Almost every statistic you find points to excessive expenditure, waste and Quango madness and so many huge failures with public funds.

What was it last week? A door-to-door campaign to tell us what to do with leftover food, funded government agency charged with reducing household waste.

You get one of these stories a day now.

But my favourite was the NHS trust that wants to buy a yacht.

I don’t think that people feel that Labour have given value for money in return for the tax take. Which means they are now tuning to a party that will bring in lower taxation.


Crazy Carrot @ 52 weeks and 6 days ago
Paul that sounds very sad and defeatist. Of course people are looking at the national picture, I'm not saying either or here. What I am saying is that the Tory record in local government is a pretty good taste of things to come if they get elected.

Ultimately yes, it's down to who you choose to vote for, but are you going to stand by while services for the vulnerable are cut by some really quite right-wing Tories?
Theo Blackwell @ 53 weeks and 4 days ago
Theo, Labour have screwed this country, but your answer seems to be 'don't look this way, look that way at those horrible Tories'. The population care about what is happening nationally and day in day out they are seeing the headlines declaring large scale redundancies.

Looking locally for negative Tory policies will be drowned out by the national picture. That is a shame for local politics. There are decent Labour councillors up and down the country, but given the chance the electorate will punish Labour, be it a councillor or an MP.
Paul 'hit or miss as to whether my comments will make it through' Pinfield @ 53 weeks and 5 days ago
Erm, isn't the Labour flagship borough of Newham the one with the highest number of employees that are paid in excess of £50,000 pa? Doesn't it have the highest paid CE on £250,000 pa (plus extras)? doesn't it have an elected Labour mayor on £76,000 pa who also doles out paid posts to over half of the Labour group (some are on allowances over £40,000)?

Isn't Newham the borough with the parks constabulary that have illegally stopped and searched people on the streets (they are not police officers) and falsely copied Met police stop and search forms?

Hasn't Labour Newham just forked out £80,000,000 on new dockside offices that reportedly have a subsidence problem?
Mike Law @ 53 weeks and 5 days ago
Thanks for the Taxpayer's Alliance line but in your haste you seem to lose the thread of what I am saying.

While Camden's publicity budget is high (and that's another argument) it hasn't been cut by the Conservative/Lib Dem administration while the front-line services I list have been since 2006.

Moreover, for publicity please see Hammersmith and Fulham - a big spender if there ever was any.

As for 191 middle managers above 50k, many of these you cite are not 'faceless bureaucrats' but headteachers, which is a problem with the research you are probably using. But again your dispute will be with those who run Camden now, no?
Theo Blackwell @ 53 weeks and 5 days ago
Your message of spend, spend, spend does not reflect the current economic reality.

It is disappointing that, despite the economic downturn, local authorities are still spending nearly half a billion pounds a year on publicity alone. Whilst I salute the 217 councils who have cut spending on publicity, the 225 councils who have increased spending should hang their heads in shame.

In the middle of a recession, councils need to cut back on propaganda and spin doctors and deliver savings to taxpayers.

Camden, a 4-star council, spends £3.5million on publicity and employs 191 middle managers on > £50,000, costing Camden’s taxpayers £12.3million a year.

Value for money? Worth four stars? I don't think so!

Andrew Webb @ 53 weeks and 5 days ago