LDV accounts published

In a follow on from Stephen’s post yesterday giving details of donations to the Liberal Democrats, I can now put on my LDV Bursar hat and announce that the summary of LDV accounts are available online to members of our forum.

I give details of our income from donations and advertising, and how we spent it last year.  I also give a few ideas of how we might spend our money next year.

But I’m afraid as ever, it ends with an appeal for cash:

We continue to warmly welcome donations! The donations figure above represents only 11 individual donors with a modal donation of £10, and some very generous individuals (we’ve had a further three in our new financial year). Is LDV worth an occasional tenner to you?

Tweets on 2009-05-28

  • Please follow @unepandyou – for every new follower before 5th June, they will plant a tree. #
  • RT @TomattheChad Now, DON’T PANIC, but . . . first case of swine flu confirmed in Notts. http://is.gd/H1Hq #
  • @ramptops ask him to surf his site on a mobile phone or eeepc? #
  • #LibDem bar chart features in university statistics exam: http://tr.im/mzvR #
  • Sat in the comfy conservatory chair with the cat, coffee and a book: Mark Forster’s “Do it tomorrow” #
  • Liking this coverage of Clegg loads and loads RT ldv Clegg unveils 100-day plan to abolish Lords and reform voting http://ldv.org.uk/15175 #
  • Is it me, or is twitter majorly flakey this evening? #

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UKIP and BNP having trouble with facts

We’ve brought you plenty of news about the BNP’s electoral efforts in the past few weeks – how there’s nothing British about the BNP; how they falsely implied a Guardsman was a supporter when he most definitely is not; indeed how all of their listed supporters are actually just stock photos; and how they can’t count.

Now it’s the turn of UKIP to struggle with actual numbers.  Their deep pockets have paid for dozens of billboards across Britain’s cities, many emblazoned with Winston Churchill and the catchy little factoid that the EU costs Britain £40million a day.

Just two little problems with that.

Firstly, wasn’t it Winston who said

[…] there is a remedy which, if it were generally and spontaneously adopted by the great majority of people in many lands, would as if by a miracle transform the whole scene, and would in a few years make all Europe, or the greater part of it, as free and as happy as Switzerland is to-day. What is this sovereign remedy? It is to re-create the European Family, or as much of it as we can, and to provide it with a structure under which it can dwell in peace, in safety and in freedom. We must build a kind of United States of Europe. In this way only will hundreds of millions of toilers be able to regain the simple joys and hopes which make life worth living. The process is simple. All that is needed is the resolve of hundreds of millions of men and women to do right instead of wrong and to gain as their reward blessing instead of cursing.

Why, yes, it was. (It’s a German website.  You might not like to follow the link if you have a problem with foreigners.)

Then there’s the £40million factoid.  Is it true?  Apparently not.  Now, here, I have to bow to other experts – people who can actually count – since I am not personally writing cheques to the foreigners.  But the considered opinion of the party’s policy specialists is that UKIP’s claim is “Nonsense.”  The statistic they provide is that the net cost of the EU is £4billion a year – and dividing that by 365.25 gives you just a little over £10million a day.  A quarter of UKIP’s figure.

That figure works out at a miserly 18p per British person per day.  Certainly to my mind,  worth paying when you just take into account how much easier it is to live, work, study and holiday in EU countries.  All of which I have happily done.  And that’s before you start taking into account the many serious benefits of there being an EU, not least greater security, fewer wars, an immense trade benefit, a healthy balance against US dominance and, ooh, some 3million British jobs.

That’s not to say the Lib Dems think that the EU is perfect. We certainly think  that it could spend its money more wisely. As all those of you who have read our manifesto for the European elections will know, we have an entire section devoted to reform of the institutions.

So, on the basis of dodgy facts, UKIP are asking voters to elect them to a parliament they don’t believe should exist, but are powerless to remove.  Add that to dodgy accounting practices, and the dismal record of UKIP parliamentarians, and I’d say you have a pretty clear reason to vote Lib Dem.

Daily View 2×2: 28th May 2009

2 big stories

LDV’s daily glimpse into the world of media and views.  Our biggest story today has already made the news here at LDV, but it’s too good for us not to trail again: Nick Clegg has launched a campaign for 100 days of proper discussion about real reform.

It’s the front of the Guardian: the main story; the article by Clegg himself, and the version of the story where Clegg mocks Cameron’s pathetic attempts at real reform.

There’s been a wide variety of responses to the article here and in the comments over at the Guardian – ranging from praise to  ”aim lower – you might get something done” – but my favourite response so far has been the approving words from Felix Cohen – he of the (very strongly worded) openlettertothelibdems.net.

While we’re on the subject of reform, don’t miss my second pick – Matthew Norman in the Independent calling for a written constitution.  He’s not exactly complimentary about the Lib Dems but he reserves his truly scathing commentary for the other two main parties. So that’s alright, then.

2 must-read blog posts

There were some good instapundit reactions to the Clegg news including:

But for my two picks, I’m choosing Mark “Star of Radio 4’s More or Less” Thompson’s latest revisiting of the correlation between safety of seat an MP’s seat and the likelihood of him or her abusing expenses. After all, the first outing of this just ten days ago is arguably what has boosted electoral and constitutional reform so high up the agenda.

And my second pick, an unhappy Jo Christie-Smith is narked at unkempt Boris’s unkept promises – South-East Londoners still can’t use their Oyster cards on trains.

Coming up later today

On Lib Dem Voice today – we’lll have news of UKIP’s tenuous grip on reality – and I’ll be donning my Bursar’s hat and  publishing LDV’s accounts for members of our forum to investigate.

Tweets on 2009-05-27

  • Phoning the Goat and Tricycle in Bournemouth to warn them about Liberal Drinks during the party conference in September. #
  • Our election address arrived this morning for the East Mids European elections http://europe.libdems.org.uk/ #eu09. #
  • Ooh, it’s gone scary dark again and the weather looks ominous. #
  • … and down with the great gobs of rain. Splat splat splat. #
  • #3wordsaftersex We’re still married?! #rejectprop8 😦 #
  • Loving this ole blog post on sustainability by design: http://tr.im/msJ6 #
  • Seeing an unfelicitous phrase in a target letter only after sending it to mailmerge. #
  • 12seconds – Stuffing envelopes http://tiny12.tv/0I24X #

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Lib Dems tackle UKIP head on

On Monday, the Lib Dem’s chair of Communications Edward Davey wrote to the leader of UKIP Nigel Farage MEP to challenge him on failing to publish his own expenses, on the disgraceful voting record of his European Parliamentary Party, and on the shameful track record of his fellow parliamentarians.

“UKIP MEPs have attacked others over their expenses while living the high life in Brussels, charging the taxpayer, and hiding the true cost from voters.

“One in six UKIP MEPs elected in 2004 has since faced criminal charges over their creative accounting. Meanwhile, UKIP turned up in the European Parliament to vote against a cap on MEPs’ earnings, against reforms to make travel more transparent, and in favour of laws aimed at keeping their expenses secret.

The chair of the Liberal Democrats’ Campaigns and Candidates Committee, went on to say, “It’s one thing to complain about MPs’ expenses. But it is quite another to point the finger while hiding the truth about yourself.

“UKIP’s absent accounting, elusive expenses, and secretive attitude add up to bare-faced cheek. Nigel Farage must explain to the public where the money has gone and why they have voted against change.

Edward concluded “UKIP must end the hypocrisy and show us the money now.

Find out more about what the Lib Dems are saying about the European Elections.

Interesting use of YouTube

A current Lords parliamentary inquiry is allowing YouTube submissions from members of the public.  The inquiry is on the topic of how people engage with the work of the House of Lords and Parliament more generally.

One such member of the public who has shared her views is, erm, Jo Swinson, in an excellent short video that addresses many of their questions.

You can see the video for yourself here on the Parliamentary YouTube channel, along with many other interesting shorts, including information about the clock that chimes Big Ben.

Tweets on 2009-05-26

  • @rfenwick NO COMPROMISE!! STV MMC FTW!! #
  • None of yesterday’s brilliant sun today – it’s already gloomy enough to need lights on. #
  • Lazyweb: what’s the best free software for resizing images to exact pixel shapes to make icons etc? #
  • @edfordham change your password. Deauthorise any third party sites with permission to post (eg facebook) #
  • @chrishughes mostly PC #
  • @iaindale queues of 1hr because of lane closure after accident earlier on. Expected clear by 2245. #

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Cometh the hour, cometh PR?

It’s quiet in LDV Towers this afternoon as all the responsible editors have day job responsibilties.

We can always tell when we’re not talking about something our readers want to have their say on, because you kindly have your say on it anyway on whatever was the top post.

And today’s topic is clearly Call Me Dave’s speech on parliamentary reform, in which he sets out a series of Lib Dem policy proposals and pretends they’re new.  There’s no zealot like a recently converted zealot, but hang on a minute, Dave?  Power to the people?  Small government?  All of that is Liberalism 101, the first chapter from An Intelligent Person’s Guide to Liberalism.  We’ve long held it dear, and we simply don’t believe you when we hear it from your lips.

As Lynne Featherstone said earlier today on her blog

There is stuff that Cameron’s said which I agree with – as you would expect given that many of the ‘ideas’ he puts forward in today’s Guardian are long-standing Liberal Democrat policies! Fixed-term parliaments, reducing of the power of the executive, cutting the number of MPs, devolving power to councils and empowering individuals. Transparency and accountability – definitely. Shame Cameron has had to be dragged kicking and screaming on these. But – to be fair – at least he is going out there.

Meral Ece went one step further and noted that Cameron’s words are not all that dissimilar from Nick Clegg’s speech to conference last Spring:

“They say it takes a village to raise a child. It will take a whole nation to raise us out of these turbulent times. That’s why, if we’re to build a better tomorrow.It must be driven by a different kind of politics. Winner-takes-all politics will only ever deliver boom-and-bust economics. So, to make sure growth is driven in every part of Britain, not just London: we will devolve power. To stop vested interests from controlling the economy and holding back reform: we will bring an end to big donations. And to create an open balanced politics that includes, engages and involves every citizen of this great country: we will secure fair votes for all. And you know what else? We need to give people back their rights. We need to stop people being bullied and chivvied by a state that invades every corner of our private lives, putting our DNA on a database, fingerprinting our children at school and losing their private data on commuter trains. Our freedom is a hard-won inheritance: Liberal Democrats will get it back”

But much of the comment on the LD blogosphere this morning is reserved for David Cameron’s outright rejection of PR on the basis of a straw man paragraph at the end of his speech:

[…] a Conservative Government will not consider introducing proportional representation.

The principle underlying all the political reforms a new Conservative Government would make is the progressive principle of redistributing power and control – from the powerful to the powerless.

PR would actually move us in the opposite direction, which is why I’m so surprised it’s still on the wish-list of progressive reformers.

Proportional representation takes power away from the man and woman in the street and hands it to the political elites.

And you m’colleagues have been quick to put him right on where’s he’s wrong with this.

Millennium recaps why we’re here – from Mark Reckon’s analysis that “safe seats equals sleazy seats.”

Jennie Rigg joined Millennium and explained it’s not any old PR we need – not the bad PR we have at European elections, or the messy AV+ Scottish systems, but genuine single transferable vote in multi member constituencies.  (Oh – and David Cameron didn’t answer Jennie’s question about a return to traditional British multi-member constituencies.)

When the revolution comes, my placard will read “STV MMC FTW!”

Nottingham’s Guildhall – pictures

Friday was Nottingham Council House’s 80th birthday – it really does not seem that long ago that I was there for its 75th.  The building was open for tours all day and that meant that it was impossible to book a room for a meeting.

Coincidentally, a chap I know vaguely through the Flickr website took up his birthday present of a hot air balloon trip over Nottingham, and took a whole set of photos documenting it, including this brilliant aerial shot of the city centre centred on the Council House.  So, his photo of the building from the air captured it on its 80th birthday.

Towards the bottom of the aerial shot is Nottingham’s Guildhall on Burton Street (behind the Cornerhouse).  So when we couldn’t book a room in the Council House, we relocated our meeting to the Guildhall. I misread the agenda and for the first time in ages was early for a meeting. 40 minutes early.

Our meeting room was the Magistrates’ Retiring Room, which is a connecting room between Court I and Court II.  The Guildhall was Nottingham’s magistrates court until the early 90s when business moved to the much larger modern magistrates court near the canal. Since then, many of the rooms in the Guildhall have remained, essentially unchanged and unvisited.  My 40 minutes was enough to have a poke around and look and see.

 
Court 1 in Nottingham’s Guildhall on 12seconds.tv

I had a longer look around Court 2 and took some phonecam pics while I was there:

22052009026 The magistrates’ chairs – just sitting there abandoned.

Fixed wooden benchesFixed wooden benches fill the courtroom, each separated out by panelling. There’s a public/press gallery at the top. There was hardly any room for the masses of paperwork trials cause these days.

Your seat would be allocated by your role – these two have “JURORS” and “WITNESSES” in gold lettering on them.

Jurors' bench  Witnesses' bench

(Hang on a minute…? Jurors? Maybe this wasn’t a magistrate court but a crown court, but in that case, why are there three seats at the top of the room? My understanding is that magistrate cases are heard by three magistrates and crown cases by one judge…?)

The dock has a staircase…

The Dock - with stairs directly to the cells

… directly to the cells in the basement of the Guildhall

Cells

These cells are mostly used for council storage these days

Cells - mostly used for storage

Most of the time I was in Court 2, it was dead silent, and I could hear pigeons cooing and scratching in the ceiling above.

Then a staff member came through, who was clearly giving a young woman a tour of the rooms, so I skulked in a corner and listened in to what was being explained. And there were some interesting facts I learned: although the courtrooms are mostly unused, they are occasionally hired out to film and tv crews who making period drama about courts before about the 1960s. They are also used by law students at Nottingham Trent for practice / training trials and moot competitions. I butted in and asked questions too, and was told the door to the public galleries was through the Marshall Room on the first floor.

The building is fascinating, and must have an interesting history.  There are lots of interesting features like the courtrooms and cells. There’s a huge, beautiful foyer, empty and unused, with boards detailing former mayors and sheriffs, colums, tiles, mosaics and so on. There are also lower brick corridors that connect it to the other buildings on the same city block, like the Central Police Station and the fire brigade. The Guildhall is currently one of many office buildings for the City Council, and it makes a pretty useless office, and is fairly unpleasant for those that work there.

See also

Nottingham 21 – interior shots, more historical detail
My Guildhall photoset on flickr
Photo from 1906 on Nottshistory (scroll down)