Respect wins in council by-election

Last Thursday the Shadwell Ward of Tower Hamlets (in London), with a margin of almost a hundred votes over Labour (1512 vs 1415 votes respectively). That’s good news, as it shows that at least in Tower Hamlets Respect is more than just a protest party and can win succesive elections. The by-election was brought on by the resignation of one of the Respect councillors, amidst rumours that this was organised by Labour, whom certainyl seemed to do their best to win this election, to no avail.

Respect was set up to build an alternative to the Labour Party, one that embodies the social democratic ideals Labour has left behind in its quest for power. It’s nowhere near a true socialist, let alone revolutionary party, but then it’s not meant to be. In the current political climate it’s a great leap forward to even have a proper social democrat party again. Politics have moved to the right and the old social democrat parties have moved with it; having a proper alternative therefore is a must, one that doesn’t scare away people, yet doesn’t abandon its own ideals either.

Here in the Netherlands we’ve seen the same process at work. For most of a century the PvdA and its predecessor, the SDAP, were the main social democratic party, while there was a variety of more leftwing, socialist and communist parties operating in their shadow. In the Eighties however the PvdA was largely sidelined from government, while the smaller parties lost votes and membership, which ultimately led them to fuse into GroenLinks, less doctrinate, less socialist and more of a challenge to the PvdA, or so the hope was.

In reality, what happened was that as the PvdA moved towards the right in the eighties and nineties, GroenLinks moved along with them, until there was little difference between them apart from a vague sense of smugness… In the process hardcore social democrat –let alone socialist– values had been thrown overboard.

Enter the SP, or Socialistische Partij. Founded in 1970 as a Maoist party, the SP had never managed to get even one seat in parliament, until 1994. Since then the party’s share of the vote steadily increased election on election, until today when they’re the third biggest party, with 25 seats.

How did they do that? By starting small, in local neighbourhouds and unions, by relentlessly campaigning, not for some distant socialist utopia, but on practical issues of direct importance: “sewer socialism” at its best. Through their evolution the SP shed a lot of baggage, became less socialist perhaps, but the end result is that there’s still a party in Dutch politics that talks about realising a socialist world and it’s a party that cannot be ignored.

That should be the future of Respect. It did well in the 2005 general elections, getting Galloway elected and they hope to get him elected again, but for the moment they should concentrate on building up their strength locally, around issues that directly influences the lives of the people they hope to be their voters.

Strange Times Indeed…

…when ir’s the Tories that are making the anti-racist noises.

Hazel Blears, evil dwarf, New Labour careerist to beat all careerists and candidate for the deputy leadership, has been, like Gordon Brown last week, making dog-whistle noises to BNP voters:

Labour chairman Hazel Blears was accused of stereotyping immigrants today after suggesting that the public associated them with anti-social behaviour.

The deputy Labour leadership hopeful expressed concern that people in her Salford constituency were “worried” about changes in the community.

“We have got areas in Salford where private landlords are letting properties with 10 and 12 people in there,” she said.

“Now, the community doesn’t object to the people – they object to the exploitation and the fact that that leads to people being on the street drinking, anti-social behaviour.

“They don’t object to the people being there, but they object if they are undercutting wages and not getting the national minimum wage and they are not abiding by health and safety, so you have got to enforce the law.”

What I object to is underqualified midgets ith the compassion of a rabid stoat aspiring to political leadership via nastiness, racism and botox.

But never fear, Tory shadow Home Secretary David Davis was on Blears like white on rice:

Her comments, in an interview with the Independent on Sunday, prompted Shadow Home Secretary David Davis to blame her for the public’s concerns.

“It is wholly irresponsible for Ministers of the Crown to stereotype any group in society,” he said.

“If anybody is responsible for the concerns about immigration – on housing, education or indeed community relations – it is a Government that, while Hazel Blears was a Home Office Minister, allowed 600,000 immigrants to enter the country in one year.”

Well, quite.

It really has come to something when it’s the Conservatives you have to rely on to protect us against government ministers’ politically expedient racism.

Hanging Chads Galore

Yesterday’s UK elections really are an analogue of the US midterms of 2006, aren’t they? The ruling party’s hammered, but somehow not as badly as you’d expect;and purely co-incidentally, there are massive irregularities in the voting process and a potential election challenge.

I said yesterday that the news reports showed that of all the electoral reforms put in by New Labour those in Scotland were the most likely to be totally fucked up, produce a knife-edge result and lead to an election dispute. Well, well, well:

There were calls today for an investigation into the Scottish election after polling descended into chaos with tens of thousands spoilt ballot papers, faulty counting machines and bad weather delaying the return of ballot boxes.

With two simultaneous elections being held under three different voting systems, some seats saw more than a 1,000 spoilt papers being discarded.

Although the SNP leader, Alex Salmond, won his own seat and appeared set for a narrow national victory, a result is not now expected until the early afternoon.

Mr Salmond said the confusion between the two voting systems was “totally unacceptable in a democratic society”.

In one seat more than 1,500 votes were discounted – more than the majority by which Labour beat the SNP.

[…]

Ken Ritchie, the chief executive of the Electoral Reform Society, which is monitoring the election, said the situation was “shocking and intolerable”.

Turnout, though it won’t be completely clear till the count has finished, was reportedly only around 50%, so the electorate apparently had little faith enough in the democratic process to change anything before this fiasco. I doubt this will help.

In other election news: my home town,a Labour stronghold, has gone Tory; the voters have turfied out a New Labour administration of career politicians in it for the power and the allowances, some of whom I once knew personally and whom I now take great delight in seeing brought down. That it took going Tory to get rid of the fuckers is not a good thing but there are a lot of naval voters, white-flighters and ‘Keep Them In Birmingham”ers there so, not that surprising. This Tory gain has been repeated in 15 other local authorities too.

But Labour Party chair and sweatshop-supporting, deputy-leader candidate Hazel Blears is as usual on the news insisting with that eternally sunny, upbeat monotone of hers that it’s all gone beautifully and it’s really a plus for Labour, a learning curve, blah blah blah.Yes, I know ‘upbeat monotone’ is contradictory, but you really have to hear her: she is the personification of NuLab. And she’s botoxed up the wazoo too. Here she is in full Stepford mode:

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We Can Send A Message, But Will It Be Heard?

The UK’s last election in 2005 was so dodgy it was described by EU monitors as as befitting a banana republic: in the city of Bradford alone, 252 allegations of fraud were made.

Well, it’s election day again in the UK for the Scots and Welsh assemblies and English local authorities and such is the general pissed-offness of the electorate it’s anybody’s guess just how big the New Labour bloodbath will be. Having been one of those deluded people who helped New Labour to victory in 1997, there’s nothing I want to see more now than them totally wiped off the electoral landscape and the ground where they stood sown with salt. That may well be what the rest of the electorate want too – but how will we know, with so many doubts about the trustworthiness of the results? Birmingham 2005:

[…]

Vote-riggers exploited weaknesses in the postal voting system to steal thousands of ballot papers and mark them for Labour, helping the party to take first place in elections to Birmingham City Council.

They believed that their cheating would be hidden for ever in the secrecy of the strong boxes where counted votes are stored, never suspecting that a judge would take the rare step of smashing the seals and tracing the ballots back to the voters. Election corruption has been so rare in the past 100 years that lawyers have struggled to find examples since the late 19th century, when Britain was adjusting to the novelty of universal male suffrage.

The elections last June were the dirtiest since the general election of 1895, when Sir Tankerville Chamberlayne, the Conservative candidate for Southampton, notoriously travelled by cart from pub to pub, waving and throwing sovereigns at the crowds. His election was later ruled invalid.

The Birmingham vote- riggers were more cunning than the flamboyant Sir Tankerville. They coldly exploited communities where many cannot speak English or write their names. They forced what the judge called “dishonest or frightened” postmen into handing over sacks of postal ballots. They seem to have infiltrated the mail service: several voters gave evidence that their ballot papers were altered to support Labour after they put them in the post.

Proof that votes were stolen came when Richard Mawrey, QC, the election commissioner, ordered ballot boxes to be unsealed. Unknown to most voters, ballot papers can be traced back to individuals through serial numbers. The judge was struck by how many had been amended, sometimes using correction fluid.

Voters were traced and asked if they really had voted Labour. It emerged that some had handed completed postal ballots to Labour supporters calling at their homes offering to post them. The envelopes had been opened and the papers altered, then delivered to the election office for counting.

Birmingham is only one of the places where postal vote fraud happened and they were only caught because they were so blatant. More than 20,000 postal voters have since dropped off the register in the Birmingham wards investigated over fraud; in Aston and Bordesley Green wards – which were the focus of the investigation – the number of postal voters this year is down by 80%. It’s estimated, the BBC reports, that at least 5% of all nationwide postal votes this time round will have to be discarded becuse of suspicion of fraud.

But the government is adamant that their wonderful new electronic checking system for postal voting will eliminate any problems. Uh-huh.

When their activists were caught red-handed all over the country trying to subvert the election after the government had deliberately ignored the Electoral Commission’s advice not to go ahead with increased postal voting because of the potential for fraud, New Labour hurriedly put foward their usual knee-jerk response: a brace of new regulations. These were cleverly designed to be face-saving for them and incorporate “look over there, oooh-shiny technology!” which would of course need to be bought in, so that their pals did well too.

This is what we got:

The 2007 election marks another significant test for e-voting technologies since the UK began a voting modernisation programme in 2000. The programmes, however, have raised the same concerns over privacy, security and the ability to perform recounts as other e-voting systems deployed worldwide.

A variety of systems will be tested, including electronic scanning of votes and internet and telephone voting. The Department for Constitutional Affairs (DCA) has published details of the 12 pilot plans for 13 administrative areas.

[…]

Under close watch this election season will be software used to verify ballots from postal voting across England and Wales. Once voters are registered, they can cast their votes and send the ballot through the mail. Postal voting is seen as a way to make it easier for people to participate in elections but has been criticised as susceptible to fraud.

This year, special equipment, called postal vote identifiers, will be used to compare a voter’s signature on the voter registration form and the signature on the ballot as well as the voter’s birth date. The DCA has allotted up to £12.2 million for the equipment. One of the vendors is Northgate Information Solutions, which is providing equipment for 75 local authorities.

Northgate’s majority shareholder is General Atlantic LLC, a global private equity firm. New Labour is very fond of private equity firms; not only do they drool in the presence of obscene personal wealth, they’re drawn to private equity’s opacity to scrutiny. But that’s by the by.

In common with any given UK.gov IT project, it has issues:

However, concerns have been raised over the accuracy and speed of the equipment. A DCA spokesman said if a postal vote identifier detects anomalies between signatures, the ballot will be reviewed by an election official.

And if those anomalies are multiple, in their hundreds? What then?

Many areas have yet to test their new software and returning officers, though putting a brave face on it, are reportedly not happy. Scotland’s count will be a particular problem.

This year for the first time Scotland will replace manual counting with electronic counting, which it says will produce results by the next afternoon after the election. The e-counting services will be provided by DRS Data Service, the UK’s only e-counting software vendor.

(An interesting data point: guess who’s a non-executive director of DRS Data Services plc? Former labour leader Neil Kinnock.)

Already a proportionnof the Scots electorate has lost their vote but no-one in charge seems particularly bothered:

BBC May 1: Voting concerns as papers delayed

Postal voters at home and abroad fear they may have lost the chance to vote in the Scottish elections because of a delay in delivering ballot papers. Production and distribution problems have been blamed, with forms failing to arrive at homes ahead of Thursday. The problem has been highlighted in areas including Aberdeenshire and the Borders ahead of Thursday’s elections. The Electoral Commission’s Andy O’Neill admitted that some people could miss out but the vast majority would not.

Only some? Oh well, that’s all right then.

The SNP has been showing signs of hammering Labour candidates, a disaster for wannabe PM Gordon Brown and his Scottish Labour Party power base.. But if the result is close, if the SNP narrowly beat Labour(or vice versa) expect calls for an enquiry into the validity of the count. I wouldn’t be at all surprised to see a large number of results contested nationwide, such is the damage done to the credibility of the voting system by New Labour.

It’s started already in some places:

Birmingham Post: Lib Dems accuse opponents of ‘dirty tricks’

May 2 2007 By Neil Connor, Chief Reporter

Liberal Democrats in Birmingham last night accused their political opponents of dirty tricks after a councillor and a local election candidate were arrested in a postal votes fraud inquiry.

Coun Zaker Choudhry, who was elected to the Bordesley Green ward last year, and Mohammed Saeed, who is standing in the ward in tomorrow’s elections, were released last night on police bail.

The arrests again raise the spectre of corruption claims marring the local election polls.

[…]

Senior Liberal Democrats last night voiced anger at the timing of the arrests and at what they described as a “set up”.

There’s a cult of the strong leader and a mentality of entitlement to power that’s been cultivated in the Labour party: so much so that many actvists think that if you can’t win a seat, steal it. It’s all about undermining the sovereignty of the people. If the voting system can’t be trusted and the electorate can’t be trusted with the vote, ergo democracy itself can’t be trusted either. A strong, centralising authoritarian leader or party’s what’s best for the country.

It’s fascinating isn’t it, how Blair and Brown’s New Labour palely reflects Bush & Cheney’s GOP, in their very own peculiarly flabby and incompetent British way.

In. Out. Shake It All About…

Britain’s much-vaunted NHS, currently almost bankrupt due to New Labour’s ideologically neoliberal, market-based brand of incompetence, is nevertheless investing what is estimated to eventually be 31 billion pounds in a centralised national patient record database, known as The Spine.

Doctors, other health professionals and patients alike are opposed: given the propensity of UK government IT schemes to be shoddy, leaky, crap and easily compromised, a lot of people, including me, are not at all happy at the the thought of their confidential medical information being available to any petty bureaucrat or nosy parker, as will inevitably happen given the government’s IT project record so far.

At first there was no opt-out, then if you wanted to opt out you had to prove that you would suffer genuine mental distress if your records were put online. How the hell do you prove that before it’s happened?

The government has now given in and allowed patients to opt out without this necessity (how very nice of them) and the movement for everyone to opt out is growing apace. I’ll certainly be opting out – my notes run into several volumes and there’s no way I’m allowing access to my medical records out of my control at all.

The more that do opt out of this shabby piece of government deceit, the less viable the system becomes – if no-one’s in it, what use is it? The opt out movement is civil disobedience at its simplest, a simple ‘no’ against an unwarranted state intrusion. No-one seems to have a problem with medical records per se or that they should be held by your doctor or hospital: no, this is about who owns us, ourselves or the state as embodied by New Labour.

Whether the opt-out becomes massive and national is also a test of how strong the opposition to biometric ID cards is likely to be – if the populace rolls over supinely for this, then they’ll accept those too. Then we’ll really know where we stand.

Go here to find out more and how to opt out yourself.

Read more: UK politics, New Labour, NHS database, Opt-out