Saturday, 5 May 2012

Green progress in London elections

Green candidate Jenny Jones has come third in this year’s London Mayoral elections.

The Green vote on the London Assembly was also the third highest, meaning the party has overtaken the Liberal Democrats to become London’s third party.

The Greens also finished in the top three in five constituency elections.
Jones said: “This is a wonderful day for Green politics. 

“The almost exclusive focus on the two frontrunners in the Mayoral election meant that any other result was very unlikely, but our resolutely positive campaign has stuck to the issues affecting Londoners and the policies to address them.

“I am over the moon that these messages have resonated. We’ve been able to dispel the myth that when times are tough, green politics are a luxury. More and more Londoners are realising that social and environmental justice are tied together inseparably, and with more Assembly members the Greens can help ensure that the Mayor is held to account on his promises and that City Hall can help create a city more equal, affordable, healthy, and safe for everyone.

“And we know that this campaign has attracted some wonderful bright, dedicated and loving young people to the party, who will pick up the torch and carry it forward in the interests of London’s future.”
Jones received 98,913 votes compared to 91,774 to Brian Paddick in fourth place. 
 
On the Assembly, the Greens received 189,215 votes compared to the Liberal Democrats on 150,447.
The Greens came third in Barnet and Camden, City and East, Greenwich and Lewisham, North East and South West constituencies.

Shahrar Ali, the Green Party candidate in Brent and Harrow, said: "I thank the 10,546 Green voters of Brent and Harrow. We have increased both our vote and vote share across the electoral constituency and we will be back for more. I look forward to receipt of the detailed results in a few days, which I think will show even big advances in places where we campaigned hardest."
Shahrar Ali continued, "I congratulate Navin Shah on his excellent win, where he will be joined by our two London wide Assembly Members Jenny Jones and Darren Johnson. Across London, the Greens came third and we have overtaken the Lib Dems in London for the first time in electoral history."
Commenting on the prolongation of the count for Brent and Harrow, Shahrar Ali said: "I was an observer at the Brent and Harrow count throughout the day, from 8am to 11pm. From the outset, I found I had to make several complaints about what I witnessed as sloppy handling procedures. I think the discovery of two thousand ballot papers whose votes had not initially been recorded, and the need to rectify this, was partly a result of poor handling processes. Whilst I have every confidence in the result, I shall be raising my concerns with the requisite authorities."

Election of Johnson a disaster for the excluded

As the dust settles on the GLA election results my main concern, despite the good news that Greens are now the third party across London, is the disastrous re-election of Boris Johnson as Mayor. In line with London Green Federation policy I voted second preference for Ken Livingstone as a progressive candidate with many faults but one who in terms of policies shares our concerns about social justice and the environment.

The domination of personality over policy involved in the Mayoral system means that at a time when London is facing unprecedented pressures over employment, housing, school places and deteriorating air quality impacting on the elderly and children,  we have a Mayor who has no strategy - just bluster and boorishness concealing a policy vacuum.

I ask anyone who voted for Johnson to consider what he has achieved for ordinary Londoners.

The message his aides are feeding to the media that he represents a more right-wing, muscular Conservatism that the Lib Dem infected Coalition government bodes ill for the future of London and its citizens - particularly the excluded.

There has been much discussion of the limited powers of London Assembly members in terms of scrutiny but they can reject the Mayor's budget. Labour with a gain of 4 places now have 12  assembly members against the Conservatives nine  (a loss of 2 including the reviled Brian Coleman) so now have an overall majority. Greens are unchanged at 2 on a par with Liberal Democrats who lost one seat.

How this pans out will be interesting.  Despite the policy vacuum it is possible that Johnson will be granted more powers by central government and given his lack of attention to detail there may be opportunities for the opposition to step in with well-researched suggestions on how these could be used.


Green votes by GLA constituency


Constituency
2012 (%)
2008 (%)
Barnet and Camden
10.72
9.50
Bexley and Bromley
5.48
4.63
Brent and Harrow
7.27
6.54
City and East
6.37
6.26
Croydon and Sutton
6.69
5.17
Ealing and Hillingdon
6.64
7.28
Enfield and Haringey
8.49
7.88
Greenwich and Lewisham
9.43
10.63
Havering and Redbridge
3.67
5.54
Lambeth and Southwark
11.51
11.04
Merton and Wandsworth
7.48
8.44
North East
15.46
13.34
South West
9.84
6.78
West Central
8.74
10.40

Jenny Jones thanks Londoners for Green's third place

Mayoral Election Results for Brent and Harrow


Candidate
Party
1st pref votes

2nd pref votes
Siobhan Benita
Independent
5,152

13,691
Carlos Cortiglia
BNP
1,405

3,367
Boris Johnson
Conservative
58,777

20,466
Jenny Jones
Green
4,370

19,835
Ken Livingstone
Labour
67,083

26,961
Brian Paddick
Liberal Democrats
5,810

23,554
Lawrence Webb
UKIP
2,231

8,915

Brent and Harrow GLA Election Result

Lab Maj: 29796 (20.54%)

Navin ShahLabour70,400 (48.53%)
Sachin RajputConservative40,604 (27.99%)
Charlotte HenryLiberal Democrat15,690 (10.82%)
Shahrar AliGreen10,546 (7.27%)
Mick McGoughUK Independence Party7,830 (5.40%)    
Turnout: 37.06% (change: -5.09%)
2008
Navin ShahLab57,716 (37.27%)
Bob BlackmanC56,067 (36.21%)
James AllieLD19,299 (12.46%)
Shahrar AliGreen10,129 (6.54%)
Zena ShermanCPA4,180 (2.70%)
Sunita WebbUKIP3,021 (1.95%)
Pat McManusLeft List2,287 (1.48%)
Arvind TailorEng Dem2,150 (1.39%)

Friday, 4 May 2012

Barnhill By-election Result

Michael John Charles Pavey - Labour - 2326 votes - 56% (elected)
Kanta Ratna Pindoria - Conservative Party - 1180 votes - 29% (not elected)
Martin Francis - Green Party - 457 votes - 11% (not elected)
Venilal Vaghela - Independent - 156 votes - 4% (not elected)

Number of ballot papers rejected 77
Turnout 38%

Many thanks to all those who voted for me and supported my campaign. Pushing above 10% is a move in the right direction but Brent Greens are still waiting for the breakthrough.  Thanks to the other candidates for their straightforward campaigning.

Ultimately the national mood swing against the Coalition and towards Labour was the default position for many people I spoke to when campaigning. National issues rather than local issues such as the closure of libraries were cited as their reason for voting Labour.  Nonetheless I congratulate Michael Pavey on his election and will be in touch over Barnhill and Chalkhill issues regularly in the future.

I think it would be misguided for Brent Labour to take this result as a vote of confidence in their policies and continue to ride roughshod over local residents.

Thursday, 3 May 2012

Call In on Leaflet Licensing Thursday 17th May

I understand that the meeting of the Call In, Scrutiny and Overview Committee that will hear the Liberal Democrat motion on leaflet licensing will now be held on Thursday 17th May at 7.30pm, Committee Room 3 at Brent Town Hall.