Help Save Local Services From Tory Cuts 

Filed under: Causes on Saturday, February 12th, 2011 by Tulip | No Comments

You will all be aware that the Tory-Liberal Democrat coalition government has cut local government funding. As a result, there is less money for local services such as libraries.

I believe that libraries are the cornerstones of our community and everyone in Camden realises their value.

I also believe it is crucial that the public have a say in how their library service changes and develops.

We have therefore launched a libraries consultation to find out your views.

Please fill out the survey at your local library or online here:

http://camden.xarg.co.uk/surveys/respond?survey_id=469001

Your opinion matters greatly to us, as we want you to help us make the best decisions possible in difficult circumstances.

The Threat Of The Cuts 

Filed under: Issues, Press on Friday, February 11th, 2011 by Tulip | No Comments

As you may know, I’ve been active in my horror at the scope and scale of the future Tory/Lib Dem cuts, and I was one of 130 labour councillors who signed a letter today to The Times on the subject.

If you didn’t get hold of a copy of the paper, here’s the letter I signed:

Dear Sir,

We welcome the discussion that has been opened following yesterday’s letter by the Liberal Democrat councillors regarding the Tory-Lib Dem Government’s funding cuts to local authorities. It is important that as local councillors we stand together for our communities who will suffer as the result of the severe and frontloaded cuts to local authorities. We are therefore appealing through your columns for cross party co-operation in response to this urgent matter.

The Prime Minister David Cameron himself acknowledged in a speech in 2009 that “local government is officially the most efficient part of the public sector”. As councillors and elected Mayors we will work to continue to drive down the costs of delivering quality public services. However, we feel that Secretary of State Eric Pickles has been disingenuous about the impact his cuts will have on our ability to provide services. The design and depth of the cuts to local authority budgets will undoubtedly hurt local economies and damage frontline services.

Because of the costly long term impacts these cuts will have to our communities and our local economies we believe it is important that we keep the discussion with the Government open. We therefore invite Liberal Democrat councillors to join us in writing to their fellow Liberal Democrat, Chief Secretary to the Treasury Danny Alexander, to ask him to ask the Secretary of State for Local Government, Eric Pickles to look again at the unfairness of the Tory-Lib Dem Government’s cuts.

Our residents all across the country are relying on councillors of all parties to work together in the interests of the public and be their voice during tough times.

Fighting for Camden 

Filed under: Issues on Wednesday, February 9th, 2011 by Tulip | No Comments

Happy New Year to everyone! It’s been a while since I’ve posted here due to being insanely busy, but I have been keeping up my Tweets (Follow @tulipsiddiq)!

Pick up today’s Evening Standard to see me fighting for Camden! If you missed the paper, you can read the article here:

http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/standard/article-23921760-our-share-of-games-cash-is-too-small-to-cover-costs-claims-eurostar-borough.do

I hope you also saw the coverage of our campaign to get bankers to try to help their local communities in the Telegraph. The article is here if you missed it:

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/banksandfinance/8289978/Council-to-ask-bankers-to-give-up-bonuses-to-plug-budget-black-hole.html

Taking The Plunge 

Filed under: Campaigning on Monday, November 8th, 2010 by Tulip | No Comments

If you pick up the Camden New Journal this week, you’ll see just how far I’m willing to go to support their hamper appeal!

Ok so I’m a bit scared but it’s all in the name of charity!

Please sponsor me – it’s for a great cause.

Click here to sponsor me:
http://uk.virginmoneygiving.com/team/CamdenLabour

Baroness Warsi; Pessimist or Optimist? 

Filed under: Issues on Monday, October 4th, 2010 by Tulip | No Comments

Just days after the new Labour leader Ed Milliband called for an optimistic approach to politics, Sayeeda Warsi sinks to negative mudslinging and the best example of pessimistic politics we could hope for.

Pessimistic politics preaches that things can’t be better, and that things can’t change. This breed of politics plays on fear and manipulates opinions to achieve its own negative goals.

It is pessimistic because it attacks groups in our society who need to be engaged, not alienated. It is pessimistic because it panders to people outside those groups who need to be challenged, not have their prejudices reinforced. It is pessimistic because it states that British society is irreversibly divided and offers no hope of improvement.

It is our duty to challenge this kind of pessimism.

At a time of fragile relations between the political class and the voting public, making unsubstantiated allegations about certain groups in our society and accusations of disrespect for democracy is hugely irresponsible especially from someone in a position of such responsibility. Our approach should be to challenge fraud wherever it exists, and not to make it an ‘ethnic problem’.

Yes I acknowledge that problems do indeed exist in some communities, but by singling it out as a purely ‘Asian issue’ rather than an issue for all of us, Warsi risks alienating huge numbers of people. Of course we need to fight voting fraud, but let’s do it together.

Warsi has been around long enough to know that the way to engage with different groups in our society is not to accuse them needlessly of fraud and corruption, but to engage with them, open those societies up and bring them fully into the political mainstream. We must expect and support everyone to do the right thing, not condemn communities as incapable of playing by the rules. Corruption, wherever it exists, can only be defeated with optimism, not Warsi’s pessimism.

Her rhetoric is particularly damaging because of her position as a cabinet member, a baroness and chairman of the Conservative party – not to mention as the most senior British politician of Asian origin. What she says carries enormous Lose Weight Exercise/”>Lose Weight Exercise-weight-Lose Weight Exercise/”>Lose Weight Exercise, and her lead is taken by others and it is essential that she understands that she is a link to a community which desperately needs engaging.

Don’t get me wrong, of course she has every right to critique communities and, in fact, it is her duty to do so when there is clear proof of wrongdoing but it is imperative that she is reasonable and rational in her critiques.

Furthermore, without her providing clear evidence there is no way to respond to these attacks. Why is she not identifying which constituencies she alludes to? The lack of clarity means that everyone in this community gets tarnished with the same brush and no one has a chance to defend themselves.

More disappointingly, I feel that Warsi is making this a partisan issue. If voting fraud does exist, and it may well do, we need to tackle this across communities and across parties. This problem will not be solved through political point scoring.

In his acceptance speech, Ed Miliband said that we have to face facts and realise that people have lost faith in politics and politicians. Ed was absolutely right when he said that our politics is broken – ‘its practice, its reputation and its institutions’. Ed went on to speak about turning the page but unfortunately, in contrast, Warsi seems to be engaging in the same old pessimistic politics that prevents real work from being done and real outcomes from being achieved.

Most regretfully, she does not seek to balance out her accusations by reminding the public of the countless hardworking and honest members of the Asian community who performed their civic duty and voted.

The politics of engaging with minority communities can be challenging. It will involve being critical at times, but this must be done in the correct way, a way which will not cause alienation and encourage the pessimists. It is only by balancing these competing demands that Warsi will help more British Asians enter the mainstream and prove that she is indeed the optimist our communities need.

Sadly she is yet to show she can provide the optimistic, inspirational leadership that is needed.

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This article was originally published on LabourList.org.


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