Mayor

That list of Influential Bristolians in full…

Via Bristol 24-7:

A group of influential Bristolians are calling for a new debate over whether the city should have a directly elected mayor.

In an email circulated throughout Bristol last week, the group want residents in the city to put their views forward over the need for an elected mayor.

Speaking as an uninfluential Bristolian, I’m also in favour of an elected Mayor (and a separate, elected Police Chief). It won’t be a panacea for all my issues with local government, but such an office does have the potential to limit the power, salary and influence of unelected council officers, which is no bad thing in my view.

But who are these influential citizens? I’ve done some research and put together a list:

UPDATE

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Any more to add? Stick them in the comments.

Arnos Vale Cemetery reopens

After many years of refurbishment – and even the threat of a Poltergeist-style disinterment – the Arnos Vale Cemetery Trust - building on the efforts of the Friends of Arnos Vale - has successfully re-opened Bristol’s Necropolis.

Thursday 29 April 11.15am - The Official Opening

A horse-drawn hearse and children in Victorian dress will help the Lord Mayor of Bristol mark the official re-opening of Arnos Vale by planting an Irish Yew. The ceremony will take place near the beautiful chapel which now houses the Spielman Centre. Because of limited space official places are by invitation only but visitors are very welcome to watch.

There are further events and guided tours taking place over the bank holiday weekend. Bristol’s resident honourary archivist, Eugene Byrne, has edited/written a guide and trail book. Which might be this one, available online via the Genfair store. [UPDATE: No it's not this book, but this one is also worth reading according to Eugene]. 

The new guidebook is available online from the Trust's website. Order Now.

Related Links:

English Democrats – new Mayor of Doncaster interviewed by BBC. Hilarity ensues.

Note – BBC Bristol haven’t objected yet to me posting short segments of their programmes on You Tube as long as they are attributed; hopefully BBC Sheffield have the same view.

This is a segment of The Toby Foster Bigger at Breakfast Show from BBC Sheffield, in which Toby interviews newly elected Mayor of Doncaster, Peter Davies (Eng Dem). Please try not to gnaw through your knuckles when listening to this, as it really is quite painful. A full transcript is available at Luke’s Blog, which was originally published at Andy’s Org.

Doncaster, a city large town in the North of England, is one of relatively few local authorities in the country to have a directly-elected political chief executive – a Mayor. This is a good idea, and I prefer this model of municipal government to Bristol’s “cabinet+chief executive” model where an executive cabinet is formed from elected councillors and express their policy through an appointed Chief Executive.

To avoid further confusion – the concept of an elected Mayor is distinct from (e.g.) the civic office of Lord Mayor of Bristol, which in our city performs the honorary role of “first citizen” and the legislative role of chairing meetings of the full council.

Anyhow, on June 4th, the voters of Doncaster elected Peter Davies of the English Democrats. Interestingly the election used the Single Transferable Vote (STV) system, and Mr Davies squeaked through ahead of an independent on the basis of second preference votes. None of the major national parties were even close to being in the running.

Followers of Bristol politics may recall that the English Democrats were the party that hijacked a popular local Facebook group and turned it into a campaigning platform.

The best one can say about this interview – being extremely charitable - is that perhaps Mayor Davies was ill-prepared to discuss detailed policy points. Perhaps he was expecting something a bit more light hearted - "getting fitted for chains of office" and "settling in to the office".

PeterDavies

Regardless - the key learning point: there is no such thing as a friendly media interview if you're nominally right of centre. Prepare for the worst.

Some of his points did actually have a reasonable argument behind them. There is a good rationale for getting rid of "diversity" departments, but employment law, contracts of employment and public sector unions all mean that it is not just a case of pointing at people Alan-Sugar-style and yelling "You're fired".

The interviewer also offered a non-sequitur that for a Council to cut in-house translation services "is, under the European Court of Human Rights it’s illegal." But this is simply incorrect. There is no legal obligation from the ECHR or anywhere else to translate routine local authority publications and documents into non-native languages, although there is one relating to criminal charges. Regardless, such a service could be offered more efficiently - on-demand telephone translation or even with Google Translate.

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