Archive | Crime

Gordon’s slush fund

Gordon’s slush fund

This guest post has been contributed by Julian Bray who writes on his Duckhouse blog.  Over to you Julian

FROM: THE CONSERVATIVE PARTY CENTRAL OFFICE

The Prime Minister
10, Downing Street
London, SW1A 2AA

3 February 2010

Dear Mr Brown

At Prime Minister’s Questions today, you told the House of Commons that you knew nothing
about the secret fund, worth a reported £50,000, which was held by the Labour Party for your benefit. When asked why you did not declare this on the Register of Members’ Financial Interests (RMFI), you said specifically: ‘I know nothing about what he [the questioner] is talking about.’

This simply cannot be true.

It is clear from Peter Watt, the Labour Party’s former General Secretary, that you were the beneficiary of a secret fund held by the Labour Party. He has said explicitly:

‘Before becoming Prime Minister, Gordon went to some lengths to insulate himself and the Treasury from our financial troubles, setting up his own personal pot of cash at party HQ. This was money we could not dip into, since it was set aside for the Chancellor’s own pet projects. Murray Elder helped secure donations from the Chancellor’s supporters’ (Inside Out, January 2010, page 105).

He went on to claim that it may have been used to finance your ‘long-term campaign to become party leader’ (Inside Out, Peter Watt, 2010, page 105).

Mr Watt’s assertions were widely reported. Indeed, across several pages in the Mail on Sunday, Mr Watt claimed that you used ‘up to £50,000-a-year of Labour money to pay for private polling’ (Mail on Sunday, 17 January 2010).

The allegations were explicitly confirmed as truthful by a Labour official who said in the same article: ‘It [the fund] was funded through donations to the Party.’

In the light of these allegations, my colleague, Greg Hands MP, wrote to you more than two weeks ago, on 17 January, to query why you had failed to declare the fund properly the

Register of Members’ Financial Interests. This letter was publicised in several newspapers on 18 January.

As you did not respond, Greg Hands submitted a complaint to John Lyon, the Parliamentary Commissioner this week. I attach a copy of this complaint for your reference. Again, this complaint was reported.

Yesterday in a speech titled ‘Transforming Politics’, you said that you would ‘do all that is necessary to restore trust’ in politics and the conduct of MPs. If you wish to restore trust in politics, you should stop treating people like fools by claiming that you were unaware of this fund when all the evidence points to the contrary..

I therefore urge you to admit to this fund’s existence, apologise for misleading the House and co-operate with any inquiries that John Lyon may wish to make.

Yours sincerely,

Eric Pickles
Chairman, The Conservative Party
Member of Parliament for Brentwood and Ongar

About Julian:  Julian Bray is a broadcaster, moderator, speaker, journalist and lectures on leadership, company turnarounds, corporate and recession busting strategies, politics, aviation, travel and The City.

Posted in Blunder, Crime, Election, Featured, General Election, News0 Comments

UPDATE: Drugs Advisory Council, advises; again

UPDATE: Drugs Advisory Council, advises; again

The Government has once again proved that its Policy on illegal drugs is in total disarray.

Professor David Nutt, who heads the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs and is the government’s chief drug adviser has gone on record accusing ministers of ‘distorting‘ evidence with regards to cannabis to advance their cause.

According to Professor Nutt smoking cannabis presents only a “relatively small risk” of psychotic illness, and claimed those who advocated moving ecstasy into Class B from Class A had “won the intellectual argument”.

I am not a person to preach and I never will for the record I have never taken an illegal substance, never wanted to, never felt the need, never considered it but I have in my past lived with a drugs user whose resume skipped between class A, B and C and whilst the claim ‘nobody has ever died from smoking cannabis‘ may be true there are thousands of people who have lost their lives through drugs whereby the first step on the slippery slope was cannabis.

There are also countless lives wrecked by the selfishness of the drug user who may be prone to bouts of depression, schizophrenia or worse, suicidal tendencies.

Whilst it may be hard to argue with scientific evidence I suspect the family of Leah Betts would find it particulary hard to advocate the reclassification of ecstsay.

I believe the Government was right to reclassify cannabis last year back to class B but it should never have had to do it because it was simply wrong to drop the classification in the first place.

Making amends for your past mistakes does not earn you a merit, especially when the Government claimed it was the right thing to do at the time.

Professor Nutt further claimed

It may be that if you move a drug up a class it has a greater cachet..[the government's approach] “starts to distort the value of evidence

What kind of nonsense is that? There is simply no proof and therefore no place for statements like this to back up scientific research.

The former Home Secretary Jacqui Smith came in for some stark criticism when Professor Nutt stated that she had ‘devalued..scientific research‘ when she reclassified the drug.

What the Government needs to do is to either act on what an Advisory Council does or remove the Council altogether.

UPDATE: It would seem that Gordon Brown mistyped his URL this morning and instead of finding himself on LabourList he arrived with us at LabourLost.org – seemingly he acted on the line directly above whereby we suggest he listens or removes the council. Today the Government sacked Professor Nutt 24hrs after he provided the content for this blog post!

Posted in Crime, Featured, News4 Comments

Councils get access to your bank accounts

Councils get access to your bank accounts

“Draconian police powers designed to deprive crime barons of luxury lifestyles are being extended to councils, quangos and agencies to use against the public.” according to this times article.

“The right to search homes, seize cash, freeze bank accounts and confiscate property will be given to town hall officials and civilian investigators employed by organisations as diverse as Royal Mail, the Rural Payments Agency and Transport for London.”

Labour are using a statutory instrument to bring this Al Capone law into force so that parliament is denied a chance to debate it. Even the chairman of the Police Federation was shocked to learn of the powers now being given to (amongst others) the Royal Mail, Transport for London and your local council.

Have Labour lost the plot … we think so!

Posted in Crime, Featured, Justice0 Comments

A no-nonsense approach to crime and disorder

A no-nonsense approach to crime and disorder

Continuing our coverage of the Conservative Party conference to enable LabourLost.org readers the chance to fully enhance their knowledge prior to a General Election we are including the sppech as given by Chris Grayling this morning.

Chris is the Shadow Home Secretary. He has been Member of Parliament for Epsom and Ewell since 2001.

Let me tell you a story about life in Britain today.

About one of our soldiers in Afghanistan

He was home on leave

In his local town centre on Saturday night.

Out of the blue he was attacked and beaten by two drunk youths.

The police were called.

The two attackers were arrested.

And let off with a caution.

Not tried.

Not put behind bars.

Not even given a community sentence.

Just given a legal slap on the wrist.

Time and again the troublemakers just seem to get away with it.

The gangs, the drunks, even those who commit acts of violence.

They just get away with it.

Criminals aren’t caught because the police are stuck at desks doing paperwork.

Or because they aren’t listening to the communities they are supposed to protect.

Violent offenders, sex offenders and heroin dealers get off with cautions because it’s the least hassle option for police and the Crown Prosecution Service.

And even if they go to prison, the Government releases them automatically after a fraction of their sentence to reoffend on the same streets as before.

People think our criminal justice system is broken.

Worrying too much about the criminals and not enough about the justice.

It makes me furious.

It makes you furious.

And law abiding, decent, people are asking – who’s looking after me?

Well, my message to them is that a Conservative Government will start looking after you.

That’s why need radical reform in every part of the system.

The police. The CPS. The courts. Prisons. Probation.

We need to sort it out, so there’s no more excuses, no more buck-passing, no more nonsense.

We need a criminal justice system that is focused on fighting crime and that is exactly what we plan to deliver.

**

But today I want to focus on the antisocial behaviour that blights so many of our communities.

And the drunken disorder that so often causes it.

No one thinks that the Government’s 24 hour drinking regime has led to the creation of a “continental café culture”.

We’re not talking about stopping people enjoying a few drinks in the pub. But things have gone far too far.

Our town centres on a Friday and Saturday night can be battle zones for our police.

Local parks and local estates are blighted by gangs of young troublemakers….fuelled by alcohol given to them by irresponsible adults.

I have talked to people up and down the country whose lives are being ruined by antisocial behaviour.

It’s time we stood up for them.

Last week in Brighton Ministers announced tweaks to the system so they could claim to be doing something about it.

They aren’t.

We will.

So let me tell you how we’re going to tackle binge drinking and antisocial behaviour.

We’ll start with the problem of fourteen year olds hanging around with bottles of super-strength beers or ciders.

It’s much too easy for them to get very drunk quickly and cheaply.

So let me today give you more detail of our plan to introduce big increases in the tax on super strength alcohol.

We will increase the price of a four pack of super strength lager by £1.33

We will more than double tax on super strength cider.

And our planned increase on alcopops will raise the price of a large bottle by £1.50.

These tax changes will not hit responsible drinkers.

The ordinary pint in the pub will not be affected.

and there’ll be exemptions for some local traditional products.

But we’ll call time on the drinks that fuel antisocial behaviour.

Then there are supermarkets which boost the sales of other products by selling alcohol below cost price. That also fuels Britain’s binge drinking culture.

So we will ban them from doing so.

We’ll tear up this Government’s lax licensing regime.

Right now virtually anyone can get a licence to sell alcohol. We even have all night takeaways selling more drink to people as they stagger home from the pub.

We will change that.

Local councils will have the power to stop town centres being taken over by pubs, clubs and off-licences.

We’ll give communities a right of veto over new licences in their area.

There’ll also be tough new rules for existing licensed premises.

Councils will be able to restrict opening hours.

There’ll be strict penalties for pubs and off-licences that break the rules.

Much bigger fines if they sell to under age drinkers.

If they do it again, we’ll close them for a few days as a penalty.

And if it still happens, we’ll strip them of their licence permanently.

There’s also the huge cost of policing areas that are already dominated by pubs and clubs and off-licences.

Under a Conservative Government late night problem premises will pay more for their licence.

So we can pay more for policing in our town centres to tackle the blight of antisocial behaviour after closing time.

I know some of those in the drinks industry will complain about the impact of these changes.

But I think there are times when it’s right to put the interests of communities ahead of the interests of business.

**

We’ve also got to deal with those who commit the acts of antisocial behaviour and disorder as well.

Right now they can offend again and again and just get away with it.

Our criminal justice system is sending all the wrong messages.

We need real punishments for young troublemakers.

Not to send them home with a rap over the knuckles.

That’s why Dominic and I are working on a range of instant punishments for antisocial behaviour.

Like grounding the offenders for up to a month.

Or making them do community punishments, like cleaning up local parks.

Real consequences for the trouble they’ve caused.

But that’s for low level offences.

For the more serious incidents, things must be different.

We were all shocked by the tragic case of Fiona Pilkington.

But let’s be clear. What happened to her wasn’t antisocial behaviour. It was criminal.

The people who did that to her should be behind bars.

There are too many serious offenders getting away with it.

Our police are too inclined to take the easy option.

Giving someone a caution or a fixed penalty notice means box ticked, case closed, another solved crime.

But we know the system is being misused.

Not just for the young men who attacked that soldier.

Or the others who get violent on a Friday or Saturday night.

But when serious offenders, like people carrying knives, also get off with a caution.

When they should be behind bars.

And would you believe this.

Last week I met the commanding officer of a local PCSO who had been assaulted by a gang member, and then thrown down a staircase.

He was given an eighty pound fixed penalty notice.

That is outrageous.

It is the sign of a system that is bust.

I think anyone who assaults a police officer should end up in court facing time behind bars.

Then there was the extraordinary claim by a senior police officer, at the inquest into the death of Fiona Pilkington, that the police are no longer responsible for antisocial behaviour.

What complete nonsense.

So it’s time for real change.

It’s time for a new deal with our police.

We’ll deal with the things that frustrate them.

We’ll get rid of the mountains of bureaucracy that make it easier to cut corners.

We’ll provide them with proper protection against violence.

We’ll get rid of the target culture that makes it easier to issue a caution than to prosecute.

And we’ll give them back more power to charge criminals themselves.

But in return we want real action against the troublemakers.

And we want them to be more accountable to the communities they serve.

The next Conservative Government will get rid of Britain’s caution culture.

And will demand real moves to tackle antisocial behaviour.

It’s time justice was really done on our streets.

**

Ladies and Gentlemen. There are two other big priorities for a Conservative Home Office.

The first is our immigration system.

For twelve years it has been a complete shambles.

Uncontrolled immigration.

Widespread abuse of our student visa system.

Human traffickers exploiting the vulnerable for profit.

So let me make things clear today.

A Conservative government will be robust in the way it controls immigration.

There will be no open door to Britain.

Instead we will have a system that treats people fairly and decently.

That welcomes those who should be able to come and live here.

Like the Gurkhas who have done so much for our country.

But we’ll close the gaping hole in our student visa system.

We’ll crack down on the traffickers.

Britain will have its own, specialist border police force.

We will set an annual cap on the number of people who can come and live and work here.

I will not tolerate more of the chaos of the past few years.

**

The Home Office has another key responsibility.

The security of our people and of our nation.

To take the lead in the battle against terrorism.

And the fight against an ideology of hate and violence.

An ideology that damages the reputation of decent, law abiding British Muslims as well as threatening life and limb.

And let’s be clear. That ideology wants to destroy the civil liberties that make this country what it is. No Government should allow them to do so, and the way this Government has eroded those liberties is shameful and must be reversed.

Our police and security services have done a magnificent job in protecting us against the terrorist threat.

We owe them a huge debt of gratitude.

But we are still not tough enough on those who spread a doctrine of hate in Britain.

So I will immediately ban Hiz b’ut Tahrir, and any other group that actively incites hatred and violence.

We also have extremists using video links to hold meetings with banned preachers of hate from overseas who urge violence against our society.

If I am Home Secretary the people who organise those meetings will be arrested and prosecuted.

Under this Government the extremists have been free to protest on our streets and incite violence and hatred in the most blatant ways.

We cannot and we will not allow this to continue.

**

Ladies and Gentlemen.

What people want from the Home Office is a no-nonsense approach to the crime and disorder problems in their communities.

They understand that those problems are complex.

That we need to get to grips with the social problems that foster crime ….

….as well as with the crime and antisocial behaviour itself.

But right now they are hugely frustrated.

They feel let down by the police.

They feel let down by the courts.

They feel let down by the Government.

Above all they believe that under Labour those who commit crime and antisocial behaviour are just getting away with it.

They’re right.

They are.

And if we win, it will stop.

Posted in Crime, Featured, News0 Comments


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