Harringay online

Harringay, Haringey - So Good they Spelt it Twice!

Below is the email sent to party members. His crime? He asked questions about the risk to old people if the Haven Day Centre closes.

Democracy is officially dead in Haringey.

Dear redacted

Re: Suspension (removal of the whip) of Councillor Gideon Bull

Please see below emails (verbatim) from the Chief Whip of the Haringey Labour Group regarding the suspension of Councillor Gideon Bull.

I am conscious that the Tottenham CLP has many new members and there maybe confusion about what this means. By way of a brief explanation and foresee questions you may have:

  • The CLP only deals with the disciplinary of members if the case they have been accused of is in regards to their membership of the Labour party.
  • All Councillors belong to a Labour Group (as well as a CLP), in Haringey they belong to the ‘Haringey Labour Group’ as Councillors are borough-wide based on the geographical boundaries of Haringey Council. (i.e. there is no such thing as a Tottenham Labour Group as Tottenham is a Parliamentary Constituency boundary not a Local Council Boundary).
  • If a Councillor is subject to disciplinary based on their role as a Councillor (not as a member of the party), then the case is dealt with by the [Haringey] Labour Group.
  • The Labour Group can impose action on the membership of Councillors to the Labour Group and not his Labour Party membership.
  • As Councillor Gideon Bull’s case is about his role as a Councillor it has been dealt with by the Haringey Labour Group.
  • Councillor Gideon Bull’s suspension is a suspension from the Haringey Labour Group and not from the Labour Party. Gideon still remains a full member of the Labour Party.
  • A suspension from the Labour Group means he is still a Councillor for the London Borough of Haringey as he has been elected to serve for 4 years.
  • The technical term for this action is called the “removal of the whip”.
  • The ability to remove Councillors from their role is covered by the Local Government Act and Representation of the People Act which has specific rules when Councillors can be removed from their role as Councillors.
  • The decision to ‘remove the whip’ (suspend) is not an action that can be taken by one person, it is subject to a vote by the whole of the Haringey Labour Group. In this case the vote concluded to suspend Councillor Gideon Bull.
  • The local MPs, the Assembly Member and MEPs have no vote and no decision making powers over the removal of a whip of a Labour Councillor.

As Gideon is still a full member of the Labour Party, he remains the Vice Chair of the Tottenham CLP and Secretary of the White Hart Lane Labour branch.

Councillor Gideon Bull has the right to appeal the decision to London Regional Board. If Councillor Gideon Bull decides to appeal and is successful then the suspension is withdrawn and you will be informed.

I hope my attempt to explain has helped.

As this is a decision by the Haringey Labour Group and not by the Tottenham CLP, I cannot not respond to any questions about the decision and I am writing to you solely to share the information.

Regards
Seema Chandwani
CLP Secretary | Tottenham

Emails from Liz McShane - Chief Whip of the Haringey Labour Group To Be Shared With Members.
(Please note there are two emails)

Dear Seema

This is to formally notify you that the whip has been removed from Cllr Gideon Bull, following the Special Labour Group meeting on Thursday 21st January,  where the Labour Group voted for the recommendation.

The period of suspension is for 3 months,  from 21st January 2016  to the end of the day on 21st April 2016.

I have written to Cllr Bull to confirm this and to formally notify him of the terms of his suspension.

Regards
Liz

Second Email [Following Request for Reason]:

Dear Seema, 

You can say it's because of Gideon’s intervention at the Cabinet meeting on 10
th November, where he spoke out against an agreed group decision, that the Labour Group voted  on a recommendation to withdraw the whip based on  concerns about comradely behaviour and collective responsibility in accordance with the Party’s rules and our own group standing orders.

Regards 
Liz

Link to the meeting http://www.haringey.public-i.tv/core/portal/webcast_interactive/191461 the relevant part is 1 hour and 22 minutes.

Views: 9801

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

I didn't say or imply any of that..

Bear with me, Antoinette, but I really don't understand what you are saying or implying. Let's keep it simple and stick to the topic of this thread.
* Should Cllr Gideon Bull have read the cabinet papers published a few days before the meeting? Especially bearing in mind that he cares deeply about the day centres.
* When he was seriously worried about what he read, should he have sought comments and advice from people with expertise and experience?
* Should he have gone to the "cabinet" meeting and asked questions?
* Should he have been punished for opening his mouth and suspended for being "uncomradely"?

The poor reputation is well deserved, and not a creation of legitimate concerns being aired....

I don't dispute that Philip. What I find irritating is solely finding fault but never giving an alternative. I think the role of opposition in scrutinising is vital but they also need to have their own, viable policies. Otherwise is feels a bit like an old boss of mine who once said to me "It's my job to tell you when you've done it wrong, not to tell you how to do it right". I found that so demoralising that I got another job shortly after that.

Good Grief!  Mr. Foxe and I are in agreement! 

I await the imminent arrival of Elijah in his golden chariot--or however the Bible says he is supposed to come. 

To be fair to Clive Carter, he has at least suggested that one way to trim a budget is is to avoid spending on wasteful projects.

But please let's return to the discussion thread topic.  As you probably know, Michael, I've never been a fan of Cllr Gideon Bull. But on this occasion I want to focus on what he has said and done. About which we've learned more.

It seems that, at fairly short notice, Gideon read the cabinet committee reports about the cuts in adult care. (These are all in the public domain, by the way. He didn't share any confidential papers.)

It seems generally agreed in Labour Party circles that he was personally worried about some of the proposals. It's also clear that he sought some alternative view or views from people outside Haringey. This seems sensible to me. I'd expect a councillor to try to "triangulate" from people they know who can give them independent advice. (Which in this situation means people with expertise and experience, but who aren't either defending their own proposals, or who have a conflict of interest.) He then posed valid and helpful questions at the Haringey cabinet meeting.
This led to his punishment - losing the Party Whip for three months. Frankly, this seems perverse to me.

What's now happened is that he appealed to a panel of three non-Haringey Labour members from the London Regional Board. (I know their names but have never met any of them.)

That panel have now endorsed the original decision.

What a waste of time and a wasted opportunity! What they could and should have done was to lay all this nonsense to rest. And endorsed the right and indeed duty of a "backbench" councillor to raise questions - especially on a vital issue like this.
Why was it a wasted opportunity? Because there was and still is time to reexamine the plans and look into the questions  Gideon Bull has raised. The outside appeal panel
could and should have recommended this.

In an important sense it's quite frightening that he's being punished for what was - in essence - ***whistle blowing ***.
I don't just mean frightening for basic democracy. It's also very worrying for the service users - our residents personally affected.


I once did a piece of research which included reading every major UK inquiry into things which had gone badly and publicly wrong in: residential establishments: some were homes for children and young people; others for elderly people; others hospitals etc.
When each inquiry was underway an early question its members usually asked was: 'Why didn't someone say?" This was just as often followed by the realisation that someone did say.  Sometimes this was a family member. Sometimes another staff member. Sometimes it was the local press.
Which led to a further question: "Why didn't the people in charge listen?"
In one case I particularly remember the whistle was blown by a young social work student who refused to use the physical restraint prescribed by the "care" establishment where she was on placement. And not only that. She had gone to see the Director of Social Services and insisted on waiting for him until he agreed to meet and listen to her.
Luckily that Director was not some arrogant know-it-all who patronised the student but dismissed and ignored her worries.  He promised  to look into it, and kept his promise. The ensuing publicity and Public Inquiry didn't do much for the public reputation of that local authority. But it ended the abuse in that residential establishment. And showed that the Director was a person of integrity.

Cllr Peter Morton is Haringey's "cabinet" councillor responsible for our adult services. It's scary that he apparently lacked the common sense to listen.  Would it have been that hard to pay close attention to what Cllr Gideon Bull had to say?  Too hard to promise to examine or re-examine Gideon Bull's genuinely felt and carefully
set out questions and concerns?

Perhaps the powers-that-be didn't want to because Cllr Bull has actually exposed serious flaws in the plans now agreed. Flaws they didn't want brought into the open?
  Or perhaps, more charitably, because the cuts and the new plans have now gained their own momentum - are trundling through the machinery of local government - and nobody wants even to pause the bureaucratic train to see if maybe it's safe to chug ahead?

So now we've had an external panel being completely useless. Putting the need for party "loyalty" and toeing the Party line, over both democracy and common sense. And above all, acting as if Party Loyalty is more important than the safety and lives of some of the most vulnerable Haringey residents.

Cllr Kober and Cllr Peter Morton, it isn't.

Like trust and respect, a reputation is earned, not decreed or mandated.

It's not a confection, either of critics or—in the case of LBH's major PR tool—by Haringey People magazine. It is not the outside world that adds or subtracts to Haringey's reputation.

Too often, LBH seeks to defend its reputation either by silencing whistle-blowers or by attempting in the High Court to defend the indefensible (not my phrase: a judge's, in a case last year brought by Rev. Paul Nicolson).

As residents, tax payers and service users, we should care about actual results and conduct more than about corporate reputation, even if that is one of the more important objects within River Park House.

Clive, I was actually thinking about what you put into your local manifesto at the last local election about how the LibDems would manage spending priorities. I haven't been able to find that.

Clearing-out some old emails, I came across this article about a draft NHS whistle-blowing policy. Of course elected councillors aren't employees of their council. But the principles are surely the same. Here are some key points.

"... to encourage a culture where raising concerns becomes normal practice in the NHS and foster an environment where concerns are taken seriously and investigated properly."

"... to improve services for patients and a key part of that is listening to its staff and learning lessons."

"... any member of the NHS workforce should now feel comfortable in speaking out without fear of reprisal if they witness something that could threaten patient safety."

"... give staff the confidence they need in knowing that concerns are acted on, encouraging them to make improvements themselves."

“A safe NHS is an open and honest NHS where we routinely learn from mistakes and use that learning to improve patient safety. If we are to truly put our patients first, we must create a culture where owning up to mistakes and speaking out about poor care is fully encouraged and embraced."

However in Koberville we now have the Dear Leader and her sycophants putting themselves, their power and their personal ambitions ahead of all other considerations. It seems the guiding principle of what passes for leadership in Haringey is to foster a culture where raising concerns is "uncomradely".  An environment where the substantive concerns are ignored; and where but raising them leads only to the whistle-blower being investigated and punished. No listening and learning takes place. Anyone considering speaking out now knows they will meet closed minds and reprisals.

How is anything Cllr Bull did "whistle-blowing"? The decision to close the day centres was a matter of public knowledge. Challenging the validity of that decision does not amount to whistle-blowing. He didn't expose any information that wasn't already known.

A fair question, Antoinette. It's true that "the decision to close the day centres was a matter of public knowledge".  What was not widely known, however, was information in hundreds of pages published as part of the Cabinet reports.
In the days available to read those reports Cllr Gideon Bull read things which deeply troubled him. So he sought expert advice from outside the Council. And then posed questions at the Haringey Cabinet meeting - which is the policy-making meeting.

Not persuaded this is a legitimate point of view, Antoinette?  If you haven't read it, can I suggest a look at the Francis Report. And consider the interesting phrase "A Duty of Candour".

Or perhaps you can find a few minutes to watch a video of a Kings Fund event where Sir Robert Francis QC was interviewed.  I think you'll notice several aspects which he describes which echo the dysfunctioning of our own Council.
Despite - I need to say clearly - the best efforts of people with integrity and commitment who still work there.

Still dubious? Try this article in The Spectator. Not a left-wing voice. But a GP wanting his dissenting voice and views heard.  Needless to say, there were people who refused to listen to what he said, but instead mounted personal attacks on him.

So how is Cllr Bull reading and commenting on a "published report" whistle-blowing? You bandy these terms around when Cllr Bull is NOT a whistle-blower...a dissenter but not a whistle-blower

RSS

Advertising

© 2024   Created by Hugh.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service