Democracy inaction
Brum plans 30 per cent spending cuts
Never let it be said that public spending cuts are painless. I hear Birmingham City Council is proposing drastic spending reductions in various departments. In some cases this will be as much as 30 per cent of the existing budget.
How will that play at election time when the councillors and their Conservative Parliamentary candidates are up for election and facing the full fury of the unions?
Wycombe wanderers
I hear that David Cameron’s centrally-imposed candidates’ shortlists are not going down well in the provinces. Never mind the “turnip Taliban”, I’m told that in one recent selection meeting, “the woman on the shortlist wouldn’t have got anywhere near selection” had she not been a member of the fair sex.
Likewise, there is much gnashing of teeth in CCHQ that the selection of a local, and a man, for the safe seat of Wycombe. Steve Baker slipped through the net, much to the fury of the party high command. Of course, they will say they are delighted, have every confidence, blah blah blah but the truth is distinctly otherwise.
Solihull goes off piste
Get a new flier through the letterbox from David Cameron urging me to give more money to the party to boost the chances of election victory. It includes a map of Britain and a list of target seats.
Embarrassingly for Maggie Throup, the candidate for Solihull, this map tells us that the constituency is already safely in Conservative Party control. This will come as a surprise to the woman who beat John Taylor at the last election, Liberal Democrat MP Lorely Burt. Mind you, I notice that the seat doesn’t rate a mention on the ConservativeHome website either. Is it possible that is where CCHQ gleans its information?
Cash and questions
Disgruntled Bromsgrove Conservatives are none the wiser following last week’s hardly shock news that Julie Kirkbride doesn’t want to resign after all.
The “expenses queen” has been assiduously re-cultivating her contacts for several months now and her attendance at last week’s executive committee meeting – not advertised in advance to the people who were turning up – came as a surprise to some, though it shouldn’t have.
The real issues now are: If there is to be a £40,000 postal ballot primary for the selection of a candidate, how many names will be on the ballot paper? Will Julie have to take her chances alongside several others people at the interview stage? Or will the question be simply, “Do you want Julie Kirkbride? Yes or No?”
Most concerning of all is the question: Who pays the £40,000?
The locals do not think the money they raise from raffles and lunch parties should be channelled into a mightily expensive PR exercise to promote Julie as the “comeback queen”. So that suggests the money will come from CCHQ which is fine, in theory, with the locals. But is it a good use of that money?
Admittedly, now the rich and very rich can see the way the wind is blowing, the Conservatives’ coffers are overflowing with cash, but even so, forty grand is still forty grant. It’s enough to keep the average MP in duck houses for several months.
Never let it be said that public spending cuts are painless. I hear Birmingham City Council is proposing drastic spending reductions in various departments. In some cases this will be as much as 30 per cent of the existing budget.
How will that play at election time when the councillors and their Conservative Parliamentary candidates are up for election and facing the full fury of the unions?
Wycombe wanderers
I hear that David Cameron’s centrally-imposed candidates’ shortlists are not going down well in the provinces. Never mind the “turnip Taliban”, I’m told that in one recent selection meeting, “the woman on the shortlist wouldn’t have got anywhere near selection” had she not been a member of the fair sex.
Likewise, there is much gnashing of teeth in CCHQ that the selection of a local, and a man, for the safe seat of Wycombe. Steve Baker slipped through the net, much to the fury of the party high command. Of course, they will say they are delighted, have every confidence, blah blah blah but the truth is distinctly otherwise.
Solihull goes off piste
Get a new flier through the letterbox from David Cameron urging me to give more money to the party to boost the chances of election victory. It includes a map of Britain and a list of target seats.
Embarrassingly for Maggie Throup, the candidate for Solihull, this map tells us that the constituency is already safely in Conservative Party control. This will come as a surprise to the woman who beat John Taylor at the last election, Liberal Democrat MP Lorely Burt. Mind you, I notice that the seat doesn’t rate a mention on the ConservativeHome website either. Is it possible that is where CCHQ gleans its information?
Cash and questions
Disgruntled Bromsgrove Conservatives are none the wiser following last week’s hardly shock news that Julie Kirkbride doesn’t want to resign after all.
The “expenses queen” has been assiduously re-cultivating her contacts for several months now and her attendance at last week’s executive committee meeting – not advertised in advance to the people who were turning up – came as a surprise to some, though it shouldn’t have.
The real issues now are: If there is to be a £40,000 postal ballot primary for the selection of a candidate, how many names will be on the ballot paper? Will Julie have to take her chances alongside several others people at the interview stage? Or will the question be simply, “Do you want Julie Kirkbride? Yes or No?”
Most concerning of all is the question: Who pays the £40,000?
The locals do not think the money they raise from raffles and lunch parties should be channelled into a mightily expensive PR exercise to promote Julie as the “comeback queen”. So that suggests the money will come from CCHQ which is fine, in theory, with the locals. But is it a good use of that money?
Admittedly, now the rich and very rich can see the way the wind is blowing, the Conservatives’ coffers are overflowing with cash, but even so, forty grand is still forty grant. It’s enough to keep the average MP in duck houses for several months.


