Tag: Mayor

Boris goes nuclear

Paris is in it. Berlin is in it. So is Rome. So are Los Angeles and Sydney. And about 2000 other cities around the world.

But London is no longer a member of Mayors for Peace following Boris Johnson's decision to withdraw.

The organisation was set up and is still run by the office of the Mayor of Hiroshima.

See the story at: http://www.mayorwatch.co.uk/Johnson-Defends-Anti-Nuclear-Group-Pull-Out-article_id-1693.html

 


Last chance to drink on the tube

I will be taking alcohol drinks with me when I go out tonight and tomorrow - I dont normally drink during transit but will be doing so because this is my last opportunity so to do.

Hoey defeats deselection bid

Vauxhall MP Kate Hoey tonight (29 May 2008) came under sustained criticism for her actions during the last week of the London Mayoral election when Boris Johnson's team gleefully announced that Hoey would be advising him on sport if he were elected. 

Towards 2012?

Without wanting to be disrespectful to the recently deposed Mayor of London, the race must surely now begin to find a Labour candidate to challenge Boris Johnson in 2012.

And the election loser is...

…local democracy!

I’m not saying this because the Conservatives won or because we got a hammering but consider for a moment what has happened vis-à-vis how we got these results.

Londoners' Votes Count - letting people know how to make the most of their votes

For Labour activists, there is an easy line to push for the London elections: 'vote Ken / Labour on each of the ballot papers'.  But there can be more to it than that.

Londoners' Votes Count
www.londonersvotescount.org.uk has been set up in these final days of the election campaign to respond to the needs of Londoners to understand how to vote and - importantly - how they can make the most of their vote.  As highlighted by the YouGov poll in Tuesday's Evening Standard, there are many people wanting to vote but who are unsure of exactly how the different systems work and the importance of the different ballot papers.  But there is a very simple, positive and exciting message that voters should be hearing:

Once every four years, all Londoners’ votes matter.  Contrary to a general or local election, every vote counts. For the London Assembly, the system is straightforward and empowering. The make-up of the Assembly will reflect how all of London voted. People can affect the overall result no matter where in London they live.  That is because of the proportional voting system used.  Moreover, for the London Assembly (London-wide ballot paper) people's vote will in effect count twice: once for the party they support; and once against extremists. This is because their vote makes it harder for extremist parties like the BNP to be elected; as it takes such parties an extra vote further away from reaching that 5% threshold. And for electing the Mayor, Londoners get the chance to express both their 1st and 2nd choices, rather than condense all their thinking down into a single candidate. So people can vote with their heart and with their head if they want to. Again, the advantage of the preferential system used for the mayoral election.

www.londonersvotescount.org.uk also contains predictions about the results, provides more detailed information about the voting systems used, and makes the connections between these elections and the current electoral reform debate about the Alternative Vote for the Commons.  The site will be updated as the results come in to provide further analysis and comment.

Crow and RMT call tube strike days before election


Watch Boris Johnson's 'Michael Howard moment' here!



Ken should try and slip this into one of his campaign ads!

Ken's campaign responds to Gilligan's attack on environmental and black organisations

It has been a feature of the build-up to the election that any organisation or individual who backs Ken, or gives him credit for what he has done for London, or criticises Boris Johnson, can find themselves aggressively targeted by Johnson’s allies.

Johnson’s supporters now operate the policy of trying to silence anyone they don’t agree with by claiming that their views are illegitimate or bought.

We’ve seen repeated examples of this in the past. Boris Johnson earlier launched a general attack on community leaders declaring “When anything is signed by so-called community leaders I take it with a big pinch of salt.”

Today, Andrew Gilligan has launched a renewed attack on a variety of individuals, leading figures from the black communities, and environmentalists from Greenpeace and Forum for the Future, on exactly this basis.

London's Success Must Be For All Says Ken

For the latest information on Ken Livingstone's re-election campaign visit: www.londonforken.co.uk

Boris outlines his vision for London, Tube Strike

stToday Boris Johnson copied most of Ken's ideas and basically said the opposite of what he has been saying in his newspaper since Ken was elected outlined his vision for London.
And the RMT still hold a strike for no valid reason, UNITE do not.

Racist Boris Exposed

http://www.blink.org.uk/pdescription.asp?key=15278&grp=66&cat=442

According to this article in Blink, Boris Johnson is in fact a racist, Xenophobic, tory toff.(This was already known to us of course).

Could a gay candidate take on Ken Livingstone?

Andrew Boff may be the only serious challenger to Boris Johnson and a gay candidate would add an interesting element to the primary- there's over a million LGBT Londoners to reach.