Thursday, 5 March 2015

THE ELEPHANT IN THE TOWN HALL






THE ELEPHANT IN THE TOWN HALL

(A discussion document for UKIP Bolton Branch)

An issue which has been bubbling under the surface finally showed its face at last week’s meeting of the Planning Committee.

The Application before the Committee was for the construction of a 700 place Islamic boys school in Wolfenden St.

This would be a Free school, a Faith school and a Single Sex school.

In the absence of guidance from higher up the UKIP ladder, I effectively had to make up Policy on the hoof.

There was a speaker ‘For’ the application and one ‘Against’ the application. The lady who spoke against the application, apart from highlighting the traffic issues , emphasised  her view that a single sex faith school which could set its own admission policy and not be liable to admit pupils of different faiths would be Socially Divisive.

Starting off the debate, Councillor Cliff Morris stated that if the applicant said they would admit pupils of other faiths then we had to take their word for it.

Councillor Peel admitted that in the case of a Free school, the Local Authority had little or no say in how the school was run. He had issues with Free schools (They are against Labout Party Policy). However in relation to traffic issues he said

 “The money being offered is very welcome, because if there was no financial offering for dealing with the highways, then this application would have been on dodgy ground.”

My contribution was next. Although my main argument was on the matter of traffic issues, I prefaced my remarks with something along the following lines.

“Thousands of young men would be educated in isolation from young ladies of their own culture and boys and girls of other cultures. This would be Socially Divisive. We are going in the wrong direction - away from Social integration.”

At this point the Chairman intervened saying that these were not planning matters (correct) even though both Cllr Morris’ and Cllr Peel’s remarks were equally about non-planning matters.

I then pursued the traffic issues and left it at that.

Subsequently Conservative Councillor Bob Allen (who has something to say on every application) said :-

“As the planning committee we are here to judge plans on technical grounds — that doesn’t include issues of faith or gender and I want to distance myself from such comments.”

The debate continued and in spite of the Highways Officer’s remarks on traffic the application was delegated to the Director (ie – passed by the Committee)

I abstained.

It is obvious once again from all of this, that any mention, let alone criticism, of the onward march of social division between the Muslim culture and everybody else  in the town is jumped upon and slapped down.

This I could understand from the Labour members in pursuit of their client vote, but it seems that the Conservatives either from cowardice or their own cultivation of the Muslim vote, are taking the same stance.

………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….

The issue for UKIP (in my view) is this.

A brief history of Asian immigration in the town is as follows. I lived on Daubhill in the mid to late 60’s when significant numbers of Asians began to arrive in Bolton.

These were colloquially referred to as Pakistanis although for all we knew then they could have been Indian. Reputedly they were all on National Assistance and living twenty to a house which was probably untrue anyway.

Although they no doubt subscribed to the Muslim faith this was unnoticed – there were no Mosques and no Muslin dress either for men or women.

Over the following decades they established and built up their businesses and broadly speaking everybody rubbed along with each other.

It is only in the last ten years or so when their religious identification overtook their Nationality identification – they were now noticeably Muslims as opposed to ‘of Pakistani descent’.

Encouraged by the Labour Party’s Multiculturalism experiment (failed), integration into the traditional British way of life seems to have been abandoned and more and more emphasis has been placed on Muslim identity  - particularly in matters of dress.

We are now probably heading into the third generation of people of Asian origin. They are superbly organized along religious lines and several prominent Mosques have been established and built.

Although the census indicates that the Muslim population of Bolton is only some 11%, their concentration into particular areas of the town gives the perception that there are many more than this.

Many Muslim parents seem to have the imperative that their children do not become ‘Westernised’, (although inevitable a significant proportion do). To ensure this there seems to be a movement to establish educational facilities (including out of school) where the children do not mix with others of different cultures.

All this has recently led to the perception amongst the indigenous white population that parts of the town are becoming ‘Islamified’.

A perfect example of this is the triangle between Halliwell Rd, Blackburn Rd and Wolfenden St/Astley St.

This triangle will shortly contain the Mosque at the bottom of Halliwell Rd, the existing Mosque in the old Congregational Sunday School on Blackburn Rd adjacent to the soon to be built Super Mosque, the refurbished All Souls Church now a Community Centre and now the 700 place Islamic Boys school.

The now vociferous ‘Silent Majority’ of the indigenous white population on the fringes of this area have thus been prompted into a protest organisation.

Their principle means of communication seems to be the ‘Stop the Asley Bridge Mosque’ Facebook page.

Inevitably and sadly, a forum like this attracts many far right contributors as well as the moderate people with legitimate concerns who set up the page. Equally, many of the posts are extreme and anti- Islamic. (I avoid using the term ‘racist’ as its overuse has rendered it meaningless)

What is clear, however, is that most contributors lay the blame at the feet of the Labour controlled Bolton Council and many see the solution as the voting out of Labour Councillors next year by the means of voting UKIP.

The danger for us is that although there are many hundreds of votes to be picked up as a consequence of this issue, we have to avoid being associated with most of the sentiments expressed by these people.

They are indeed right to blame the Labour group on Bolton Council which has for years patently and obviously block voted Muslim friendly applications through the Planning Committee as well as directing millions of pounds to so called ‘Deprived’ areas which seem to coincide with areas of high ethnicity.

What the Labour group fail to realize is that whereas their antics in the past have been a political game to massage their client vote, to persist in this will only inflame anti-Islamic sentiments amongst many of the majority population and in the final analysis could even result in a complete breakdown in community relations and possible disorder on the streets.

As I have said privately in certain quarters of the Town Hall, this is going to get worse before it gets better and they can’t keep relying on GMP to calm the situation.

This is not Bolton and mustn’t become Bolton.

UKIP Bolton, whilst perhaps taking advantage of the votes on offer as described above, must make it clear that we are not anti Islamic but we will promote Social Integration and we will not subscribe to anything that is Socially Divisive.

This is the Elephant in the Town Hall and we must be the ones to talk about it.

Paul Richardson

............................................................................................................................................................

This document was distributed at the Branch meeting on Thursday 2nd October 2014 for discussion at the Branch Meeting on 6th November.

Prior to that meeting Kath Kavanagh e-mailed her response to the Branch Chairman which is as follows.
 



Regarding Councillor Richardson’s report, ‘The Elephant in the Town Hall.’

He reports on the Planning Department’s meeting regarding the Faith School.

I thank him for his views but have to say he gives a personal critic, which is not what is required when reporting of the workings of the planning department. 

I thought the objective of his report was to give UKIP members an insight of how he as a UKIP councillor contributed to a Planning Department meeting.  However what I read is an attack on his colleagues and the functioning of the planning department. The content of his report is mainly a subjective personal history of the Asian community in Bolton?

The comments he makes are not directed to the correct department. Planning meetings are not the right place to air these views. Planning meetings are precisely that...Planning. In his rambling report his concern appears to be what he conceives as unfair financial distribution to certain sections of the Bolton community. He should direct these questions to the Executive who are better able to act upon these matters. 

He says the Asian community are given more finance being a ‘Deprived area’ He should direct the question to the Executive, 

'Is the Asian community really deprived when they can afford vast amount of cash building Mosques? Where is the money coming from to build these Mosques and why should Tax payer’s cash be used to fund areas when there seems to be a surplus of cash in most Asian areas.’  (KATH KAVANAGH’S WORDS – NOT MINE)

Upon reading Paul’s report I thought I was reading a BNP publication. It is a rant, it rambles incoherently in parts and criticises the planning department, and his council colleagues. Quite frankly, it is a diatribe and bears no place in a Council Chamber and is not worthy of a UKIP Councillor.



.......................................................................................................................................................

Putting aside this response which was the cause of the row in the meeting, the considered view of the other members resulted in the adopted Policy as follows.

"Bolton UKIP will support anything that leads to Social Integration and oppose anything that leads to Social Division "

..................................................................................................................................................................











Monday, 26 May 2014

Bolton Results in full









WHERE DID OUR VOTE COME FROM

 

 

The tables below show the 2014 Local Election results.

The % + or - in the right hand column shows the change from 2012 for each party in that Ward



Astley Bridge ward

Astley Bridge ward [1]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±%

John Walsh
1,481
36.33%
- 10.17

Stuart William Murray
1,279
31.38%
- 9.42

Harry Lamb
1,039
25.49%
+ 24.59

Ben Deed
182
4.47%
+ 4.47

Clive Richard Atty
85
2.09%
- 1.24
Rejected ballots
10
0.25%

Majority
202


4,076
40.44%
+ 5.04




 

Bradshaw ward

Bradshaw ward [2]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±%

Mudasir Dean
1,585
43.72%
- 13.28

Arthur Norris
932
25.71%
+ 25.71

Paul Fitzpatrick
786
21.68%
- 9.22

Gaby McDowall
172
4.74%
- 7.26

Daniel Bolton
150
4.14%
+ 4.14
Rejected ballots
0
0.00%

Majority
653


3,625
40.95%
???




 

Breightmet ward

Breightmet ward [3]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±%

Lynda Jean Byrne
1,490
43.03%
- 16.77

Kathleen Mary Kavanagh
1,217
35.14%
+ 35.14

Clara Heyes
577
16.66%
- 13.14

Laura Diggle
115
3.32%
- 3.58

Stephen Frederick Howarth
51
1.47%
- 2.03
Rejected ballots
13
0.38%

Majority
273


3,463
37.01%
+ 4.51

Labour hold



 

Bromley Cross ward

Bromley Cross ward [4]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±%

David Wells Greenhalgh
2,312
53.57%
- 5.43

Collette Harkin
957
22.17%
- 10.33

Lynda Rosewell
878
20.34%
+ 20.34

Chris Atty
169
3.92%
- 4.58
Rejected ballots
0
0.00%

Majority
1,355


4,316
40.75%
+ 5.15




 

Crompton ward

Crompton ward [5]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±%

Sufrana Bashir-Ismail
2,363
60.02%
- 14.88

George Stanley Bown
826
20.98%
+ 20.98

Ryan Patrick Haslam
456
11.58%
- 4.92

Anne Sanders Warren
148
3.76%
- 4.84

Pam Humphreys
121
3.07%
+ 3.07
Rejected ballots
23
0.58%

Majority
1,537


3,937
39.31%
+ 7.41

Labour hold



 

Farnworth ward

Farnworth ward [6]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±%

Noel Spencer
1,454
48.91%
- 18.29

Jeff Armstrong
1,108
37.27%
+ 37.27

Aidan Meagan
211
7.10%
- 6.7

Trevor Bonfield
115
3.87%
- 7.49

Doug Bagnall
73
2.46%
- 5.24
Rejected ballots
12
0.40%

Majority
346


2,973
28.14%
+ 6.24

Labour hold



 

Great Lever ward

Great Lever ward [7]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±%

Mohammed Ayub
2,420
68.57%
- 5.43

Dot Sexton
505
14.31%
+ 14.31

Jay Patel
338
9.58%
- 0.82

David William Collins
127
3.60%
- 7.1

Rebekah Fairhurst
64
1.81%
- 2.99

Joseph Thomas Holt
54
1.53%
+ 1.53
Rejected ballots
21
0.60%

Majority
1,915


3,529
36.59%
+ 5.89

Labour hold



 

Halliwell ward

Halliwell ward [8]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±%

Akhtar Zaman
2,260
66.14%
- 12.26

Leo Taylor
607
17.76%
+17.76

Jolyon Horton Coombs
223
6.53%
- 2.87

Ian David McHugh
173
5.06%
- 3.34

Francine Godfrey
95
2.78%
- 1.02

Andrew Mckenzie
42
1.23%
+ 1.23
Rejected ballots
17
0.50%

Majority
1,653


3,417
38.32%
+ 7.82

Labour hold



 

Harper Green ward

Harper Green ward [9]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±%

Mike Francis
1,713
56.74%
- 16.26

Geoff Hamlett
726
24.05%
+ 24.05

Rob Tyler
366
12.12%
- 4.98

Kathy Sykes
115
3.81%
+ 3.81

Wendy Connor
86
2.85%
- 7.05
Rejected ballots
13
0.43%

Majority
987


3,019
31.40%
+7.7

Labour hold



 

Heaton and Lostock ward

Heaton and Lostock ward [10]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±%

Colin Shaw
2,237
47.46%
- 12.04

John William Gillatt
1,154
24.49%
- 4.31

Stephen Thomas
933
19.80%
+ 19.8

Christine Joyce Macpherson
196
4.16%
- 0.94

Hannah Louise Middleshaw
179
3.80%
- 2.8
Rejected ballots
14
0.30%

Majority
1,083


4,713
44.58%
+ 5.48




 

Horwich and Blackrod ward

Two seats were up for election. Stephen Pickup will have to stand again for election in 2016 and Alan Bury in 2018.
Horwich and Blackrod ward [11]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±%

Alan Bury
1,313
21.54%
- 14.37

Stephen Pickup
1,310
21.49%


Bob Horsefield
1,147
18.81%
+ 18.81

Carol Ann Forshaw
850
13.94%
- 2.75

Daniel Clifford Haslam
708
11.61%


Keith Michael Cocker
401
6.58%
- 1.32

Lynne McCartin
201
3.30%
- 0.39

Lynn Natalie Rock
159
2.61%

Rejected ballots
8
0.13%

Majority
3


3,048
31.39%
+ 0.89

Labour hold



 

Horwich North East ward

Horwich North East ward [12]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±%

Kevin Peter McKeon
1,324
35.40%
- 8.2

Peter McGeehan
888
23.74%
+ 23.74

Anne Barbara Galloway
743
19.87%
+ 1.17

Stephen Michael Rock
573
15.32%
- 3.98

Rod Riesco
203
5.43%
- 4.47
Rejected ballots
9
0.24%

Majority
436


3,740
37.93%
+ 3.03

Labour hold



 

Hulton ward

Hulton ward [13]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±%

Diane Parkinson
1,291
33.73%
+33.73

Andy Morgan
1,150
30.05%
- 14.55

Shafaqat Shaikh
1,140
29.79%
- 12.71

James Tomkinson
162
4.23%
- 6.57

David Charles Cooper
69
1.80%
- 0.2
Rejected ballots
15
0.39%

Majority
141


3,827
39.24%
+ 8.54

UKIP gain from Conservative



 

Kearsley ward

Kearsley ward [14]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±%

Derek Burrows
1,139
35.73%
- 19.27

Mark Joseph Cunningham
1,096
34.38%
+34.38

Margaret Patricia Rothwell
348
10.92%
- 22.98

Simon Paul Colley
309
9.69%
+ 9.69

Sandra Macneill
278
8.72%
- 2.28
Rejected ballots
18
0.56%

Majority
43


3,188
30.68%
+ 4.68

Labour hold



 

Little Lever and Darcy Lever ward

Little Lever and Darcy Lever ward [15]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±%

Paul Richardson
1,255
33.22%
+ 33.22

Maureen Connell
1,051
27.82%
- 16.48

Eric John Hyde
661
17.50%
- 3.5

Rees Gibbon
657
17.39%
- 8.81

Alwynne Cartmell
147
3.89%
- 4.31
Rejected ballots
7
0.19%

Majority
204


3,778
39.51%
+ 3.51

UKIP gain from Labour



 

Rumworth ward

Rumworth ward [16]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±%

Ismail Ibrahim
2,876
72.50%
- 6.00

Geoffrey David Kay
492
12.40%
+ 12.4

Jack Heyes
317
7.99%
- 1.61

Alan Johnson
200
5.04%
- 3.96

Jaleh Salari
66
1.66%
- 1.24
Rejected ballots
16
0.40%

Majority
2,384


3,967
39.77%
+ 9.07

Labour hold



 

Smithills ward

Smithills ward [17]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±%

Andrew Martin
1,674
37.51%
- 3.69

Kevin Patrick Morris
1,329
29.78%
- 10.22

Aaron Hepworth
876
19.63%
+ 19.63

Christine Flanigan
429
9.61%
- 4.29

Richard Alexander Middleshaw
139
3.11%
- 1.89
Rejected ballots
16
0.36%

Majority
345


4,463
45.44%
+ 6.04




 

Tonge with the Haulgh ward

Tonge with the Haulgh ward [18]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±%

Nick Peel
1,399
43.34%
- 19.66

Derek Fisher
1,053
32.62%
+ 32.62

Zoe Jennifer Catherine Kirk-Robinson
486
15.06%
- 8.14

Dorothee Sayers
109
3.38%
- 6.32

Hafsa Patel
91
2.82%
+ 2.82

Paul Anthony Harasiwka
66
2.04%
- 1.96

Eric Thomas Hyland
14
0.43%
+ 0.43
Rejected ballots
10
0.31%

Majority
346


3,228
36.30%
+ 6.2

Labour hold



 

Westhoughton North and Chew Moor ward

Westhoughton North and Chew Moor ward [19]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±%

Martyn Andrew Cox
1,424
34.01%
- 0.99

Anne Graham
1,278
30.52%
- 15.88

Joan Johnson
984
23.50%
+ 23.50

Jack Speight
203
4.85%
- 6.75

Derek John Gradwell
163
3.89%
- 3.01

Heather Rylance
127
3.03%
+ 3.03
Rejected ballots
8
0.19%

Majority
146


4,187
38.24%
+ 5.24




 

Westhoughton South ward

Westhoughton South ward [20]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±%

Kevin Jones
1,268
39.33%
- 3.07

Les Wareing
917
28.44%
+ 28.44

Stephen Wallen
562
17.43%
+ 4.83

David Arthur Wilkinson
361
11.20%
- 23.6

Derek John Bullock
97
3.01%
- 7.09
Rejected ballots
19
0.59%

Majority
351


3,224
33.60%
+ 2.8

Labour hold







AVERAGE CHANGES OVER ALL 20 WARDS


UKIP               average % change from 2012 = + 25.021

Labour             average % change from 2012 = - 12.1515

Conservative    average % change from 2012 = - 5.588

Lib Dem           average % change from 2012 = - 4.89

Green               average % change from 2012 = - 1.428

(Difference in totals due to independents and odds and sods.)

So :-

48.56% of our vote came from Labour.

22.33% of our vote came from the Conservatives

19.54% of our vote came from Lib Dems

5.7% of our vote came from Greens
 

 VERY INTERESTING ! LABOUR TAKE NOTE !!