Blogs in the key of life

Written entirely using my own fingers….

Posts Tagged ‘Ramsbottom’

Three days after the night before.

Posted by orangemarauder on May 9, 2010


Thank you

What a turnout!

Well, first things first. I need to say a massive thank you to the people of Ramsbottom. 1298 votes is nothing to be sniffed at, and made me feel very humble indeed. The support is very much appreciated and it gives me even more reason to believe that the number will be even higher next year with a little more work from myself and the Bury North team. Better than 3rd place next time? Watch this space!!

My congratulations also go to Ian Bevan, who I am sure will be working hard for the area for the next few years. I spoke to him briefly at the count and he seems like a decent and committed man. I’m sure that won’t stop us from locking horns in the future however on local issues!

Can I also say here how disappointed I was that the Lib Dems lost one of our hard working councillors in Sedgley Ward after a very close contest between all three parties. Andrew Garner has served his area tirelessly for many years and I hope that this may just be a blip in the electoral cycle and we will see him re-elected soon. I know that I speak on behalf of myself and the other members of the local party  in saying that all his work for the party is very much appreciated.

Labour taking this seat and three others from the Tories however means that we are now back in a situation of Bury Council being back at no overall control status, so locally the Lib Dems will have a much greater say in things, just as we find ourselves nationally. Maybe we can stop that Tory bandwagon after all.

Climate change

We asked the question - and even came up with a few answers!

During the election campaign I had the pleasure of debating some of the key issues surrounding the environment and sustainability with other campaigners and councillors from the other parties. The event, held at the brand Fusiliers museum in Bury Town centre was very well organised and a big well done needs to be given to Tristan Humphreys from Oxfam and the Bury Times who chaired the event.

The debate itself was quite a constructive event generally with the varying points of view put forward by Councillor Derek Boden from Labour and Councillor Dorothy Gunther from the Tories. (There was also a very knowledgeable guy from Oxfam whose name I unfortunately missed). UKIP unfortunately failed to turn up – no explanation why unfortuantely!

This was my first experience of publically ‘getting my hands dirty’ with other local councillors and I think that everything went ok. I can’t deny I was a little nervous, but I think I more than held my own. The fact that Mrs Gunther felt the need to bring out a few personal attacks during the debate about me not living in the area nearly as long as she had obviously means that I touched a few raw nerves during my time on the debating floor.

 All’s fair in love and war I suppose.

The full live blog can be read on Twitter if you’re really interested! Check out http://twitter.com/oxfamnorthwest for April 28th 2010 and you’ll get the full lowdown!

On we go…

 And so the political bandwagon rolls on. As senior Lib Dems and Tories to figure out who will be running the country, the same will be true in Bury for our local councillors and campaigners. Whether it be bins and street repairs locally or the electoral system and nuclear deterrents at Westminster, I’m pleased that the Lib Dems are right at the centre of things. We’ll do our best to make sure that the best job possible gets done!

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Paul Jenkins – Ramsbottom Ward Candidate

Posted by orangemarauder on April 18, 2010


  

Liberal Democrat Ramsbottom Ward Candidate - PAUL JENKINS

 

The clock is ticking… 

 As election day looms closer, some residents have asked if they can have a little information about what the campaign for the Lib Dems consists of. As we don’t have the financial resources to be able to get printed literature to people en masse, the internet will have to do! (Why publish to 5000 homes, when the whole planet could get access instead??).  I shall be trying to ‘do an Obama’ and point people in this general direction as much as I can!

Paul Jenkins 

The local candidate 

Paul Jenkins has been selected as the Liberal Democrat candidate in Ramsbottom. Living locally in the area of Holcombe Hill, Paul has been a Liberal Democrat campaigner for over fifteen years. As a drama teacher and father of two young boys, Paul’s main priorities are for high standards in Education. He is a governor at St Andrew’s Primary and pupil voice co-ordinator within his secondary school, working with young people to ensure that their views are represented within the community. 

Other areas that Paul would like to see gaining more attention from Bury council include improved leisure facilities in the area (he completed the London Marathon in 2008 and is a keen amateur road runner) and the development of more community arts based activities in the borough. Finally, Paul would like to see the heritage status of Ramsbottom maintained and would actively look at ways of improving publicity about the area to increase trade for local businesses based in the “Jewel in the Crown” of the borough. 

As well as this, local Liberal Democrats in Bury have identified four key areas to improve the local council. 

1 – Get the Basics Right
We’ll concentrate on making sure that the basic services that everyone needs work well. This will include spending more money on street repairs, getting bin collections working and better gritting. 

2 – Better Place to Live  

We’ll make sure everything we do helps make our towns and communities better places to live. Our first priorities will be improving our environment and making people feel safe from crime. This will include providing extra community policing in each town of Bury. 

3 – Power to the People 

We’ll cut back Town Hall bureaucracy and give power back to local towns and citizens. Everything we do will be open and fair and involve local people. We will immediately give back the right of people to ask questions at every meeting of the Council.    

4 – More Money in Your Pocket  

We will keep Council Tax as low as we can, and make what Bury Council does great value for money for local people. 

Thank you for your time 

Paul Jenkins 

Ramsbottom Liberal Democrats

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Always on the run…

Posted by orangemarauder on April 15, 2010


Is it a bird?…er yes it is actually…
Election campaigning combined with getting healthy … who says men can’t multi task? The bit the picture doesn’t show you is the bird on the back, alongside the website details. I’ve got some good responses so far - a few hello’s, a couple of car horns tooted and the odd good luck. The people of Ramsbottom are getting used to seeing the giant running bumblebee now… 

The second time in my life I've been dressed as a bumblebee in public. The other story will have to wait for another time...

I’m hoping the press may pick up the story as a bit of light relief from the heavy dredge of the ‘big’ campaigning that people are already beginning to tire of. Below is the text of the release that went out earlier this week. Who knows if they’ll print anything – but why should you all miss on news of my foolishness if they don’t… 

Running for Rammy!  

The election campaign is now fully underway in the general and local elections, but for one local candidate, it really has become a race for office. Paul Jenkins, the local election candidate for the Liberal Democrats in Ramsbottom is attempting to run the length of breadth of the town to try and get his message across to electors. His aim is to run up every street in Ramsbottom at least once before May 6th

Paul, who has been an amateur road runner for ten years and who has completed two Great North Runs and the London Marathon, is really enjoying this new challenge. “I got the idea when I was training for the Sport relief mile with my son” he explained. “Lots of people wished us luck as I was wearing my sport relief socks – so I for figured that while I’m training for the Joe Geeling Fun Run in June, why not advertise something else I’m passionate about while I’m doing it?” 

 “The response has been good so far, with some people even tooting their horns in support as they drive past. My only regret is that some of the ward is at the top of Holcombe Hill – I’m determined to get up there though!” 

Paul is one of four local candidates standing in the Ramsbottom ward and knows that it will be struggle to get his message across. “I’ve been meeting lots of people across the ward, but without the money of the other parties to get  thousands of pounds worth of leaflets delivered in the post, I’ve had to be a bit creative with how I advertise the campaign – at least I’m keeping healthy doing it!” 

The election campaign runs until 6th May with three other candidates challenging to be the new local councillor for the area. For more details on the campaign you can contact Paul by email paul@burylibdems.net

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Rumble in Rammy

Posted by orangemarauder on April 10, 2010


Anticipation 

The debate last night was billed as “The Big Debate” by the people at ramsbottomonline.com, and maybe considering the fact Ramsbottom is not the largest of places, you could argue they were right. The three main general election candidates were asked to put their views forward to the electorate and try and convince us all why they should replace disgraced MP Daivd Chaytor as the representative for Bury North at the Theatre Royal in Rammy. With the election campaign only a few days old, this was the chance for the three candidates to really show us what they were made of. Would Labour candidate Maryam Kahn be the feisty, young thing that we’d heard so much about on the political rumour mill? Had David Nuttall turned around his image of simply being an empty suit to fill with Tory policies? And could Richard Baum really convince a place that weighs Tory votes in stead of counting them that the Lib Dems really are a credible alternative? The audience at the Theatre Royal was buzzing with these questions at 7pm last night and the evening didn’t fail to give us answers to those questions. 

 

  

David Nuttall, Conservative. Improved, but still lacking charisma

Lighthearted 

 

The debate got off to a good start with the chair for the night Arif Ansari (from the BBC’s ‘The politics show’) keeping things real by putting the candidates very much in their place. Pointing out that Nuttall had lost his last four elections on the bounce and that Maryam Kahn had given up the law for politics whereas her predesessor had given up politics for the law (David Chaytor is one of the big three in court for fraudulent expense claims) the audience were warmed up nicely. No merry quips about Richard Baum – maybe Mr Ansari couldn’t think of anything funny, maybe there was a little bit of “Oh – and here’s a LibDem” itis, but nevertheless we were off. Questions came thick and fast about the economy, the cuts to public services, the way that the candidates would engage with their local communities. It was politics as it should be – open, transparent and in front of people. 

Apathetic? 

Politicians all over the country often scratch their heads as to why so many people are turned off by politics completely and disengage with the process that is there to serve them. “We knock on their doors and give them thousands of leaflets but they still don’t go out and vote?”. Well last night we all witnessed a concrete example of why many people have just given up on the process altogether. The room (which was very nicely refurbished – well done people of the Theatre Royal!) was filled with activists of all political colours, as well as local people who were very much of the mindset that they didn’t know who to vote for, so were going to see for themselves. What that second people saw was the true nature of some (not all) local activists, who think that politics should be a gladiatorial debate and not a process of getting the best from your community. There were jeers, heckles and outright abuse coming from some parts of the room as the candidates tried to give their answers. 

The most worrying thing was that this was not from some young upstart who didn’t know better, this was from local councillors, many of whom have senior positions on Bury Council. When I raised this point with the chair and the audience as it was not helping those floating voters with any chance of making up their mind, I was told roundly to “Shut up” and “Get a life” by the boo boys behind me. I’m thick skinned, but if that’s the way they talk to their opponents in front of the electorate, it’s no surprise that turnout has been steadily falling for so many years. That kind of behaviour is for the Stretford End, not the debating chamber in my opinion although from many years of witnessing events like this – it doesn’t really shock me anymore. 

The boy did good 

And so how did the candidates get on? Well, that’s hard to me for say in a balanced way, as you know full well that I’m 100% behind our candidate Richard Baum. From my point of 

Maryam Kahn, Labour. A real dissappointment, failed to show up

 view, I thought he ran rings around the other two candidates. Using humour to soften the audience but then immediately backing it up with some solid information about policy, he’d obviously done his homework. There was warm appluse from all sides of the room for what he was saying and he seemed to be the only candidate with real debating experience. Clearly his three years as a St Mary’s ward councillor has paid dividends and he was in complete control throughout the evening.

David Nuttall has improved in five years since I saw him debating last election but he was clearly struggling to get his point across to the audience as there was very little in the way of policy that the Tories have announced in their campaign as yet. He did well with the little he had to work with, but you really do need the charisma of David Cameron to get an audience on side with so little substance. He’s a nice man, but charismatic David Nuttall is not.

The biggest shock for me was the performance of Maryam Kahn as the Labour candidate. With the questions being given to the candidates in advance, I would have thought that she would have done much more research into party policy as well as ensuring that she knew more about the local area (she has only moved back here recently to be a candidate). Struggling with her notes, tripping over herself on many occasions and failing to answer at least two of the questions put to her, she looked at one point like she wanted the floor to open up and swallow her whole. It was uncomfortable to watch at times and from speaking to some floating voters in the pub after has definitely failed to win over any of the people that came with an open mind. 

The best they can do? 

The real thing that the debate showed to me is that the problem of having the wrong  people for the job of local MP will continue for a long time to come. We all know that the Lib Dems have a mountain to climb if they are to win a seat like Bury North as there are so many ‘core’  Tory and Labour voters who would not have witnessed the debate last night, nor will they hear about it other than from political wafflers like me. The glossy leaflets which are costing tens of thousands of pounds from the two Labservative candidates will make no mention of Maryam and David’s lacklustre performances in front of their electorate, nor will they give an idea of how poor either would be as a representative of the people of Bury North. The Lib Dem campaign – funded entirely by activists (ie on the cheap) will always look third place in comparison, leading to the assumption from voters that we are not to be taken seriously as a party. With no union backing and no tax dodgers ploughing millions into party coffers, that’s unlikely to change anytime soon, so the status quo looks set to rumble on. 

Richard Baum, Liberal Democrat. The winner in the room on the night

My major worry is that if this is only target seat number 46 for David Cameron and the 46th most marginal for Labour, then what is the quality of the candidates like for seats no 100 & 150?  These people are clearly not good enough to hold this office, yet are statistically likely to do so. More than worrying. 

A footnote 

Completely aside from all this – last night I also had the pleasure of meeting the pirate party candidate for Bury North. Contrary to popular belief, he had no parrot or wooden leg and didn’t start every sentence with an ah-hargh! apparently they are a serious political organisation. How disappointing…..

Posted in Campaigning, Politics | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

And we’re off….

Posted by orangemarauder on April 7, 2010


Shleepy 

This post WILL be short as I’m dog tired already, and we’re only at the end of day two. Maybe working till 11:30 last night stuffing envelopes for a supporters mailing wasn’t great in terms of my grabbing enough shuteye…

This could also have something to do with being up at the crack of dawn to speak to a researcher from Radio Five Live about the possibility of having some sort of local voice from the Lib Dems on their Breakfast programme that this morning came from Bury . She nervously enquired with her producer, who politely informed me that Sarah Teather MP was going to be doing our bit for adding balance to their programme from London. (Which to me defied the point of the Beeb sending a whole crew up here anyway…) And after I’d got up to get down there for 6.15am as well – how rude! Still our girl Sarah did well, even convincing an online listener to switch allegiance live on air! Having caught her speech at confidence, she is a very safe pair of hands and good at getting people on side.

Nominations are now finally in for the candidates in the locals (I am now officially ’The Ramsbottom candidate’)  and now we have to have our candidate here in Bury North’s parliamentary papers to be done as soon as possible. Will these pointless pieces of paperwork ever come to an end?? By the way if you haven’t had the time as yet to discover why you’d be silly enough to vote anything but Lib Dem in Bury North as yet, I suggest that you check out Richard Baum, our candidates website. He’s a man on a mission!

As you can tell, now Gordon’s hit the green light, everyone’s on the go – but trying to fit all that in with two kids on school holidays is not that easy either. I’m feeling a little guilty that I’m not out there with the troops tonight, but have been filling my time with my real job (exam marking waits for no man!) and doing the artwork for a campaign leaflet in one of our target wards. With only 29 days left (hooray for the facebook countdown calendar!) there are still plenty of jobs to be done. Including of course waflling into cyberspace for no good reason…

Chuckle

To finish I thought I’d share this with you, as it made me laugh at just the right time today. Sums up everything we already knew…  

I've seen many of these floating around, but this was the first to make me chuckle out loud...

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An old grump writing to moan.

Posted by orangemarauder on March 21, 2010


 Grumpy

 Last week I sent this letter to the Bury Times. Stuff not being done properly makes me grumpy and I’d had enough. They’ve decided not to publish (as yet) so you may as well have a gander at my chirpy, yet damning verdict of waste collection services in dear old Rammy.  

 

A blue bin with rubbish to be recycled in it - for all you Visual learners out there....

Dear Editor…

I have held off from writing this letter for many months now, as I wanted to see just how ludicrous things would get before I put pen to paper. I think we may possibly have reached the pinnacle now, so I feel confident that things couldn’t possibly get any more disorganised with our waste recycling here in Ramsbottom. 

At the end of last year, a new recycling calendar was put through our door after the Conservative council decided to change the delivery routes to ‘improve’ things for us all. Two weeks later, I received a different calendar in the post (this time in a costly envelope with a first class stamp) with a note to destroy the old one as it had been delivered to our route by mistake. A glitch? No, it was just the beginning. 

 On the first run, they missed us completely. But I bit my tongue – we’re classed as a farm route and I can understand why the blue bin might be missed as we’re classed as being in an ‘awkward’ place (that’s the call centre’s description – not mine). 

Then came the snow. Lack of grit equals lack of road. Lack of road equals lack of collection. It was the beginning of February before my Christmas wrapping paper was on its way. At least this time though they got it right for the blue bin, but mucked up the paper. Bags were taken – but not replaced. Oh dear. More phone calls, new bags delivered. 

February was mostly fine, we all thought we’d settled. Until we had the same problem last week when the green bags were not replaced after collection again. Personally I’m ok, as I managed to pull one out of a ditch at the bottom of my hill that must have fallen off of the truck – I have no idea how many others may be bagless. 

And then to top it all off, today I received a copy of the recycling calendar – the same one I received three months ago in the post! What a waste of money, time and my patience. When the Conservative council promised to make things ‘easier’ by changing the routes, was this really what they had in mind? 

All it means is that it has strengthened my resolve to become a councillor myself, and I would like to thank the frustrated residents of my street for offering to nominate me in the upcoming election. I hope I would never make as much of a mess of something which should be so simple. 

Yours sincerely 

Paul Jenkins 

Ramsbottom Liberal Democrats

Posted in Waffle | Tagged: , , , , | 1 Comment »

 
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