Early indications now that nominations to the Labour Party NEC have closed are that the usual lead in CLP nominations enjoyed by the left "Grassroots Alliance" has been overturned.
Final figures are yet to emerge but I've heard that:
Ann Black (GRA) has over 170 nominations (including many CLPs that nominated the 5 Labour First candidates plus her as the most moderate of the GRA slate)
Ellie Reeves and Peter Wheeler (both Labour First) are both around the 125-130 mark
Pete Willsman (GRA) is at just under 120
Christine Shawcroft (GRA) has just under 100
Mohammed Azam (GRA), Peter Kenyon (GRA) and Sonika Nirwal (Labour First) have between 60 and 70.
Deborah Gardiner (Labour First), Azhar Ali (Labour First) and Fran Griffiths (GRA) have between 50 and 55.
It looks as though the actual ballot will be highly competitive, with some chance of Labour First taking 4 or even 5 seats.
"A derelict theatre or a tube station, which do you think people in Hackney want more?"
ReplyDeleteDid you ever ask the people of Hackney???? I don't think so
Lastly are you really the Deputy Mayor of Hackney?
I think the 2006 local election results in Dalston Ward indicated they wanted the tube station not the derelict theatre.
ReplyDeleteNo I'm not - the Deputy Mayor of Hackney is Cllr Jamie Carswell.
Your rich City friends wanted the tube station so they could get to work more quickly from their yuppie flats without having to travel on buses with the riff-raff. The rest of us wanted the heritage of Hackney to be protected.
ReplyDeleteDear Luke
ReplyDeleteAs anyone with the scantest knowledge of Dalston Junction knows, the derelict theatre was sited to the east of the station. If there had been the political will then the theatre could have been rebuilt/renovated and brought back into use alongside the new station.
The 2006 election results were hardly a mandate to either bulldoze the theatre or agree a social housing development that is least likely to deliver sustainable affordable housing.
The Council's own consultation showed that 95% wanted to save Dalston's character its historic architecture and have some affordable housing.
ReplyDeleteI'll hope you acn dig this out someone
Am I right in thinking that they're the only ones who have got the neccesary minimum number of nominations?
ReplyDeletei.e. Are those 11 the only ones that will be on the ballot?
Correct. No one else got validly nominated.
ReplyDeleteAre people even aware that LF are standing as a slate? And in't it time they had a website?
ReplyDeleteWe've managed perfectly well for nearly 30 years without a website.
ReplyDeleteHaha, that is classic old right.
ReplyDeleteAs both a Labour and Equity member, I know quite a lot about theatres and the NEC, but am mystified as to what the connection is in this thread. Was Luke's "NEC Nominations" post written in some code that I don't understand ?
ReplyDeletelast time Ann Black had around 156 nominations, Wheeler 88, Reeves 64, Willsman 109, Shawcroft 116, Ali 36 and Azam 70
ReplyDeleteSo Black, Wheeler, Reeves and Willsman up, some (Reeves) more than others. Shawcroft down.
Last time the ranking according to the number of nominations was 1) Black 2) Shawcroft 3) Willsman 4) Wheeler, then the rest with a group (Reeves, Wolfgang, Azam and Jackson) having more or less the same number of noms
Black will certainly get in. And Willsman number of nominations is pretty decent, so I think it looks unlikely from the nominations stats LF getting 5 seats.
I know I pulled out on March 3, do you know how many noms I got in the end
ReplyDeleteJohn
But all this tells us is that with membership at an all-time low, many of those who are not in sympathy with Government direction have left the party.
ReplyDeleteMany will not be voting for it next time. Shouldn't this concern you more than maintaining the dominance of those who fail to recognise that the New Labour experiment no longer rings true for 2008 as it did in 1997?
Luke - do you know when the nominations are 'official'?
ReplyDelete