Friday, 21 September 2007

PRAISE FOR COLLEGE'S ANTI-TRUANCY SYSTEM

Herald Express 21 September 2007

The spoils of Paignton Community and Sport College's new £50,000 electronic registration system and measures to combat truancy were shown off to a VIP audience yesterday - and the greatest fans are the children.

Pupils met with shadow minister for the cabinet office Francis Maude and Torbay Conservative prospective parliamentary candidate Marcus Wood to see how the school is tackling truancy.Torbay has one of the worst rates for unauthorised absences in the South West and last year the college's attendance was at 88 per cent, six per cent below Government targets.

But the new system, together with a range of measures including incentives such as tickets to Wimbledon, Twickenham and David Beckham's Football Academy seem to have started to turn things around.

Read more on this story HERE

CONSERVATIVE MP GIVES BYPASS GUARDED BACKING

Herald Express - 20th September 2007

More support for the proposed £130million Kingskerswell bypass has been given by a former Tory transport spokesman.

However Chris Grayling MP, visiting Torbay yesterday, fell short of saying the road will be built if the Conservatives overthrow Gordon Brown's Labour party at the next general election.A decision will hinge on how much it costs and if there is money to pay for it.

Mr Grayling said although he no longer speaks about transport issues he still recognises the importance of good roads to the South West.

"There are a least half a dozen important projects like the Kingskerswell bypass in the South West. I stand by that, as does my party," he said.

Read more from this
HERE

Tuesday, 18 September 2007

BYPASSING THE LONG-WINDED ROUTE

Parkers Pen - Herald Express - September 17th 2007

This may just to put to bed the clash between Adrian Sanders. pictured left, and his arch Tory rival Marcus Wood, pictured right, over the Torbay MP's support for the Kingskerswell bypass.

Last week I revealed how the Tory's prospective parliamentary candidate had used the Freedom of Information Act find out how many times since 2001 Mr Sanders had met transport Ministers over the link road plansThe answer has finally come from the Department of Transport.

It reveals that Mr Sanders has had three official meetings with Ministers to discuss the bypass in the past six years.

Mr Sanders was asked by the department if he was satisfied the information could be released because it was not 'exempt' under FOI laws.

He has told the Ministry he has no problem with the information, adding: " I am happy for this to be sent to Mr Wood. I do not wish any more of your, or any other tax payer funded department's valuable time to be distracted from completing the vital Kingskerswell by-pass."

He has since added: "Do not overlook the fact that formally arranged meetings through Government departments and quasi government bodies are but a fraction of the communications that can pass between MPs and decision-makers and that the vast majority of these fall outside FOI rules, while those that do can, as in this case, tie down resources that could help speed up the outcome."

Monday, 10 September 2007

SANDERS STAYING FIRM OVER BYPASS SUPPORT

Parkers Pen -Herald Express- Monday 10th September 2007

I am taking you inside the murky world of Torbay politics today and a spat between Torbay MP Adrian Sanders and his arch Tory rival Marcus Wood.

The Conservative prospective parliamentary candidate for the Bay has been trying to bring into question Mr Sanders's support for the Kingskerswell bypass - and he has even resorted to using the Freedom of Information Act in his quest.The latest squabble - obviously not the first and by no means the last between the two adversaries - follows a recent letter from Mr Wood to the Herald Express letters page which carried the headline 'Lib Dem hypocrisy over bypass call'.

In it, he quotes Mr Sanders 'from a couple of years ago' as saying 'a new road could be a passport to easy commuting for thousands of Bay workers, leading to yet more congestion', raising questions over his support for the link road.

The quotes, however, were from a Herald Express article in October 2002, where Mr Sanders warned that 'without job creation' as well as a new bypass workers could be taking the new road out of the Bay. He also said then that there was a clear need for the new road.

Continue reading this article
HERE
WHY THE LURE OF WESTMINSTER IS SO ATTRACTIVE
Western Morning News
11:00 - 08 September 2007

For most people, lingering reports that Gordon Brown might call an election in the autumn are easily ignored as just Westminster whispers.But for a handful of political anoraks across the Westcountry, the Prime Minister's plans to go to the country could change their lives forever. They are the peculiar breed of politician known as "parliamentary candidates" - and it can cost them tens of thousands of pounds for the privilege.

They pop up in local papers with their views on everything from dog's mess to the war in Iraq, but can do little about either. They can shake hands and attend meetings - but until a full-blown election campaign swings into action they must resist too much in the way of kissing babies. In fact they can't really do anything except talk - and at times it can be hard to get anyone to listen.

Yet many in Devon and Cornwall have been selected - for all the main parties - for some time in preparation for polling day. Some are even veterans of the battle, having stood, and lost, before.

But what makes people give up their well-paid job - or work part-time - to spend days on end pounding the streets in all weathers, to sit through endless meetings and try to convince the local paper to print their photo of them standing near a police station?

Clearly the prospect of a seat in the House of Commons - with the £60,000-plus salary and perks - is a big draw, along with the potential to claw their way up the greasy pole to high office. At this stage, of course, the talk is of making a difference to society and "giving something back".

If any of them do find they are able to park themselves on the famous green benches it will not have been an easy ride. With few very safe seats in the Westcountry, the fight is on for every vote. But all that campaigning can come at a cost, both emotionally and financially.

Marcus Wood, a headhunter who spends two days a week "working" as the Tory candidate in Torbay, calculated that his failed bid to win the seat at the last election cost "well over £150,000".

He includes loss of earnings leading up to the election and then restoring his momentum afterwards, relocation, donations and supporting costs - no wonder every candidate admits it's "a massive financial commitment".

"The fact is that being a candidate and nursing a seat is a huge commitment not just for oneself but also for the family," Marcus told the WMN.

Even visits from party leader David Cameron - a coup for any candidate - require time off work, only possible with "a forgiving boss".

But he said the financial pressures were the "most difficult thing" about being a part-time politician. He has campaigned for more support for candidates so that people from less well-off backgrounds can get their foot on the political ladder.

"I'm not complaining, but a lot of people think you get paid for it, and you don't. My concern about the financial commitment is not my money, but if you really want to have an interesting supply of people into politics it needs to be looked at.

"We are not going to get people who have modest means - mechanics or self-employed plasterers cannot bring their experience, but these people need to be represented in Parliament."

He said local Conservative associations needed to be more understanding and supportive of candidates instead of being "tempted sometimes to go for someone with lots of money because it helps their fundraising".

"We need to represent people of all ages and means. At the moment unless you have means it is much tougher - it's a major, major challenge."

In particular he thinks politics needs more people in their 40s. "It's the very age that people make great politicians because they have got the life experience but they have also experienced work pressures," he says.

His sentiments are echoed by Judy Robinson, the Labour candidate hoping to win the new seat of Camborne and Redruth.

She said: "I am pleased to be doing it now rather than earlier. I am not trying to make rules for everyone else but I don't think it's the sort of thing I could have done with a young family.

"Having had experience of things like the health service and education system helps. This is a really good age for me personally. The family ties are loosened and it's a good time to do it. I have got some perspective on life."

Clearly not everyone who has passed through the NHS or struggled with their local school would set their sights on Westminster as a solution.

But Stephen Gilbert, a Liberal Democrat hoping to inherit the part of the three Lib-Dem seats which make up the new St Austell and Newquay seat, insists that "people should try to give something back to society".

"It's not a one-way street. We have rights but we also have responsibilities to make things better."

He too is now earning "significantly less" since being selected to stand, but sees it as part of the job. "There is no doubt that people who go into politics have a lot of balls to juggle."

Despite them concentrating their efforts on defeating opponents, if not outright ousting adversaries, none of the three would-be parliamentarians will be drawn on their opposite numbers. Which is no great surprise.

Marcus only describes Torbay MP Adrian Sanders as having "good recognition" thanks to the local papers, but insists the personal vote is not as big as people think.

Stephen says he has met Tory Caroline Righton a few times but wants to focus on policies, not personalities.

And Judy claims not to have met her Lib-Dem adversary, Julia Goldsworthy, who defeated her old boss Candy Atherton at the last General Election. But she says she does not think about the fact that her campaigning aims to leave Ms Goldsworthy without a job.

It is all part of politics, it could be argued. But whenever Gordon Brown fires the starting pistol and announces a General Election date, the battle for the ballot box will be fought hard, whatever they say now.

And win or lose they will all be left counting the considerable cost.