Thursday 28 August 2014

250 days to go: Warren Morgan sets out Labour's priorities for Brighton and Hove

With only 250 days to go until Brighton and Hove's electors go to the polls to elect a new Council, Labour Group Leader Warren Morgan has set out the five key priorities for the administration on his blog.


A winning team for Brighton and Hove - Brighton Pavilion Labour Candidate Purna Sen and Council Labour Group leader Warren Morgan


Warren wrote:


Our manifesto will be published in the early Spring, but a labour council under my leadership will:


  • make cleaning the streets, collecting the rubbish and increasing recycling a corporate priority for the city council. Our refuse and recycling service Cityclean will stay in-house, and management of the service will become the responsibility of the Policy and Resources Committee chaired by the Leader of the Council.  
  • tackle poverty, inequality and lack of opportunity in the city through a wide-ranging Fairness Commission. Independently chaired and paid for through existing budgets, it will bring together all existing measures and look at what other steps can be taken to tackle low-pay, less secure employment, poor housing and any other factors that limit the opportunities of the more than ten thousand people in Brighton and Hove in poverty, of whom more than four thousand are using food banks to feed their families. In the seventh richest economy in the world and in the richest region in the UK that is a disgrace. 
  • boost the economy to the benefit of all, not just a few in the city centre, ensure all young people have access to education, training, apprenticeships and employment opportunities no matter what part of the city they live in. We cannot afford to waste their potential.  
  • seek to address the housing and secondary school places shortfalls that will become crises in the next four years, including looking at regulating landlords and the private rented sector to the benefit of tenants. We will have to face the growing costs of social care and find new and better ways of delivering quality care that we can afford through better procurement and in close co-operation with our trades union partners.  
  • meet the challenge of adapting to the £100 million in cuts imposed by the Government by working with local voluntary sector, business, community and co-operative sector partners to keep services local, accountable and deliverable where they cannot be kept in-house. We should not, in my view, be spending city council money buying in services from outside the city and losing the value of that spend from the city’s economy. Other Labour authorities, including those in the Co-operative Councils Innovation Network, have developed innovative solutions to cuts in funding. Where there is ageing infrastructure we need to find investment; where there are major projects we need to ensure that decent jobs, affordable homes and real apprenticeships are delivered as part of the package.
These aims are in line with my values, with Labour values of fairness, of supporting those in poverty, of promoting opportunity for all, of making our city and all of our communities a better place to live. Much of this will need the support of a Labour Government elected on the same day. If you share those values and goals then work with us, join us and support our campaign to win in 2015.
Warren emphasised the important of not just electing a Labour Council. but returning three Labour MPs across the city who can make a real difference in Government, and deliver the changes we need at Westminster to support our administration in Brighton and Hove.  Preston Park's Labour candidates, Kevin Allen, Julie Cattell and Neil Schofield will be working tirelessly between now and May to make Warren's vision a reality and to secure Purna Sen's election as MP for Brighton Pavilion.


Sunday 24 August 2014

Brighton hosts fact-finding visit from shadow Minister for preventing violence against women

The Labour Party has announced that Seema Malhotra MP has been appointed Shadow Minister with specific responsibility for preventing violence againt women - the first time a Shadow Minister has been tasked with this role.  Ed Miliband said the appointment demonstrates the importance Labour attaches to eliminating violence against women and girls.

A few days before hand, she visited Brighton to visit RISE, the local service provider for women and children experiencing violence.  She was accompanied by Labour's Brighton Pavilion PPC, Purna Sen, who is a trustee of RISE and has spent decades campaigning to stop violence against women, both  in the UK and internationally, and is an acknowledged authority on the issue.

Purna Sen and Seema Malhotra MP with Rise chief executive Gail Gray during the visit (picture: Brighton and Hove Independent)


Commenting on the visit, Dr Sen told the Brighton and Hove Independent:


“I offer my profound gratitude to the immensely-strong women who came to share their stories. They told us that they wanted their trauma to be useful in preventing the same happening to other women and their children.
“Though I have been working against violence against women for over 20 years – in war, in peace, in the UK and abroad – I am moved and angered every time I hear that women have been failed and my resolve to continue fighting this scourge is strengthened. I thank Seema for coming to Brighton for her first listening exercise in her new role.“
Office
During her visit to Brighton, Ms Malhotra found time to open the new Labour campaign office in Brighton Pavilion - at 179 Preston Road in the heart of the Preston Park Ward.  As well as cutting the ribbon she discussed local and national issues with Labour candidates and campaigners, including Preston Park Labour candidates Julie Cattell and Neil Schofield.
Seema Malhotra MP cuts the ribbon on Brighton Pavilion Labour's new office at 177 Preston Road

Seema Malhotra MP with Purna Sen and Labour activists from across the Brighton Pavilion constituency

Seema Malhotra MP and Purna Sen with Labour councillors and candidates from across the Pavilion constituency, including Preston Park's Julie Cattell (far left) and Neil Schofield (back row, second from right)