Saturday, 7 May 2016

South Kilburn's new park to open this afternoon


At 12.30pm today the  Woodhouse 'urban' park will open in South Kilburn's Albert Road accompanied by festivities.  LINK


The park is smaller than its Chalkhill counter-part (see below) but has some robust high quality adventurous play equipment.

The Chalkhill Park has had a major impact on the quality of life on the Chalkhill Estate - providing a free (unusual these days) social space for the community to mingle and relax and following its carefully planning, which involved residents, caters for all ages.

It is much appreciated by local residents as 'our park' and has not seen any major vandalism, young saplings have survived and the only issues have been litter and regular maintenance.

It will be interesting to see how Woodhouse will fare situated as it is now in a mixed social area which includes new private developments.


Greens hail their 'biggest and best campaign in London to date'





The Green Party has recorded its best ever election results in London where Sian Berry, the Green Party’s London Mayoral candidate, came third and the Party retained its two London Assembly seats.

On the Assembly, councillors Sian Berry and Caroline Russell replace Baroness Jenny Jones and Darren Johnson, who have both stepped down after 16 years of outstanding service.
The Scottish Greens enjoyed a superb night, growing their representation from two MSPs to six. In winning election, 21-year-old rising star Ross Greer became the youngest-ever MSP .
Reacting to the outstanding results in the capital, Natalie Bennett, Green Party Leader, said:
The Greens standout results in London demonstrate how a positive campaign with good ideas for London can resonate widely with voters. We thank all our candidates, activists and supporters for delivering our biggest and best campaign in London to date.
Sian Berry said:
Today is a victory for the politics of bringing Londoners together not dividing them. I’m proud that Londoners have voted for good, positive ideas in such numbers. In every vote Greens have cemented our position as the number three party in London, coming third in the vote for mayor, on the Londonwide list and in a majority of constituencies. The immediate priority for Greens on the London Assembly now will be to push the new mayor to make the right decisions on road-building and estate demolitions and to clean up our city’s filthy air.
In the local elections, the Green Party saw strong results in the West Midlands and the South West. In Stroud, where Natalie visited on the eve of the poll, the Party retained five councillors and added three gains. The party retained all its councillors in Solihull and made two gains. The party now have 27 Green Party councillors on 11 councils in its growing West Midlands powerbase (including making a breakthrough in Cannock Chase and winning a hard-fought seat in Worcester that led to the Tories losing control of the council). The party also won a first-ever seat on Weymouth and Portland council.
Reacting to the local election results, Natalie said:
My thanks to everyone who voted Green yesterday, particularly those who voted Green for the first time, of whom I know there were many.
I also want to thank all of the candidates, members and supporters who helped us to stand in the largest-ever number of council seats, 54% in these elections compared to 25% in 2012.
That reflects the growth and development of the Green Party since then, with membership five times larger, and we’re looking forward to the county elections next year to further increase our representation.
The new Green councillors will join a team who are dedicated to standing up for the most disadvantaged, to taking real steps to alleviate the ever-worsening housing crisis, and to helping communities live within the environmental limits of our one fragile planet.
The breakthroughs we have made mean more councils will now have Green voices, voices that scrutinise, challenge, and ask tough questions. Sadly, we have lost some long-term, dedicated, valued councillors in Norwich, Oxford and other places. I thank them for their years of service to their communities and the Green Party and am sure that the parties there will be bouncing back in coming years, with strong representation still on both councils.
The final Green tally of English council seats will not be known until Sunday when the Bristol City council count is completed. Bristol is the Greens’ stronghold in the South-West and the party is poised to increase it representation from 14 councillors.
The Scottish Greens increased the presence in Parliament threefold and achieved almost a 14% increase on their best-ever total in the regional vote across Scotland.
Turning her attention to Scotland, Natalie said:
This was a great night for the Scottish Green Party and they are taking a great team into Holyrood. As well as the much respected Alison Johnstone and Patrick Harvie, Ross Greer will be the youngest MSP and land reform campaigner Andy Wightman will be a formidable force.

After the GLA plenty happening in Brent next week.

These are the final results for the London-wide seats on the London Assembly. I am sure that Sian Berry and Caroline Russell will do a good job in getting the Green Party's concerns on the Mayoral agenda but it is a pity that Brent's own Shahrar Ali will not be joining them. A few more votes of 'Green on Orange' would have secured a seat for him at the expense of Ukip to the benefit of Londoners.

However now it is time to turn our mind to other issues including the preposterous attempt to push through several major controversial multi-million planning applications at TWO Brent Planning Committee meetings to be held next week before Saturday's Labour AGM.

That AGM may also see the airing of leadership issues as well as changes in Lead Members and committee memberships.

Friday, 6 May 2016

How Brent and Harrow voted on the GLA London List


Party Votes Percentage
Animal Welfare Party 1570 0.90
Britain First 2560 1.47
British National Party 1254 0.72
Liberal Democrat 8538 4.89
Christian Peoples Alliance 2154 1.23
Conservative Party 58219 33.34
Green Party 9151 5.24
Labour Party 74028 42.39
Respect 4213 2.41
House Party 765 0.44
UKIP 7151 4.09
Women's Equality Party 5039 2.89
Total 174642 100.00



Rejected votes 2565



Turnout
43%

Breakdown of Mayoral votes in Brent and Harrow constituency

These are the first and second preferences for the London Mayoral vote recorded in the Brent and Harrow GLA constituency


Candidate  Party 1st pref 2nd Pref Total Order
Sian Berry Green Party 7432 24333 31765 3
David Furness Britsih National Party 1113 2208 3321
George Galloway Respect 3787 9980 13767
Paul Golding Britain First 2206 4789 6995
Zac Goldsmith Conservative 67131 21125 88256 2
Lee Harris  Canabis Safer than Alcohol 1669 4291 5960
Sadiq Khan Labour Party 75260 28821 104081 1
Ankit Love One Love Party 777 3034 3811
Caroline Pidgeon Liberal Democrat 6552 20492 27044 4
Sophie Walker Women's Equality Party 2923 11419 14342
Peter Whittle  UKIP 3742 11498 15240
Prince Zylinski Independent* 1185 1690 2875

Total of good votes 173777 143680








Rejected votes

2565







Total Ballot Papers counted 177207


Brent and Harrow GLA Constituency result

Labour win Kilburn by-election



Labour swept to victory in the Kilburn by-election which saw a turn out of 44% compared with 32% at the last Brent Council election.

The result was:

Tilly Boulter Lib Dem 459
Elcena Jeffers Independent 35
Peter Murry Green Party 452
Janice North UKIP 232
Barbara Pitruzzella Labour 2841
Calvin Robinson Conservative 802
4898 votes cast
77 spoilt papers

Pete Murry's vote of 9% was one of the best the Greensha ve had in Brent Council by-elections.

Thursday, 5 May 2016

STAND UP FOR GOOD IDEAS: Vote Sian Berry & Green on orange today



And another good reason to vote Green from Barnet Greens in yesterday's Evening Standard