Hi everyone,
I’m Olly Bennathan. I’ve been a Ladder resident since 2019, I’ve previously worked with the Cabinet and senior officers in Haringey Council, and I’m delighted to be one of your Labour candidates in the local elections on the 7th of May.
I’m very proud to be standing for election alongside two of our serving councillors, Anna Abela and Zena Brabazon.
Our manifesto for 2026-2030 outlines what Haringey’s Labour group will deliver if we are elected on the 7th of May. Please follow this link to see it in full: Haringey Manifesto
From next month, we will start to feel some of the changes the national Labour government is delivering, including uplifts to National Minimum and Living Wages, £1.5 million of Pride in Place funding for Haringey, a generational upgrade to workers’ rights, and new rights to protect renters from bad landlords.
Haringey Labour has had a longer time in government, and we have achieved so much for local people. To cite just a few achievements, we have:
Our new manifesto builds on these achievements.
One of our most important pledges is to build 3,000 council homes at council rent by 2031, alongside at least 500 genuinely affordable homes for key workers - teachers, nurses, firefighters, ambulance workers, social workers. This will make us the biggest builder of council housing in the country – that is so important for the thousands of people living in temporary accommodation across our borough.
But we also fought for pledges to be included in this manifesto which will deliver for Harringay ward. Some of the ones we are most excited about are:
These are just some snapshots of what you will see in our full manifesto – please do have a look at the full document: Haringey Manifesto
Thank you for reading, and do get in touch with any of us by email if you have any questions about this or anything else.
Thanks for reading,
Olly Bennathan
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Why don't you tell us about yourself instead, Olly.
Personally, I find the stuff you've posted above cringeworthy and a bit insulting of our collective intelligence.
In 2010 when we dug into the back stories of the candidates it had real bearing on the result. People voted for the candidates over the party and there was a lot of split voting, it took ages to count the Harringay Ward and then it wen through two recounts.
Tell us about yourself Olly. What did you do before you got into politics?
......all those interviews from 'HarringayOnline TV'.... there was a huge amount that went into that election from the resident side. There was even a local elections home page set up on HoL.
Hugh, I remember with admiration those short video interviews. I assumed they would break the fusty dusty model of how local elections were done.
Before then, I'd neither seen nor heard about local campaigns where relatively cheap cameras were used to get candidates speaking online.
But somehow the legacy style of campaigning has survived the decades. Does anyone's reading interrupt progress of Party leaflets from doormat to recycle bin?
Were candidate videos effective? I don't know. For me, they exposed the dire weaknesses of a few blokes who hadn't made minimum preparation to be filmed. Maybe Parties and their candidates stick with the boring old methods because even a short video may reveal too much truth?
As this is a local election, Olly, many of the residents on the Ladder – which must constitute thousands of potential Labour voters – would love to know what your plans are for reducing vehicular traffic and pollution on the Ladder? Your last councillor promised to tackle this, but quite recently told us there was nothing to be done at a disastrous meeting attended by hundreds of Ladder residents and then walked away weeks later. I can't see any mention of this on your manifesto, but it would be decisive certainly in garnering my vote. Any thoughts?
THIS is a local election. Reducing vehicular traffic and pollution in the Ladder—the northern two-thirds of Harringay Ward—will likely remain a local issue,
However, the the Labour Council's dealings over Finsbury Park have recently became a national issue, with certain national implications. The entirety of our park lies in the southern third of the ward.
Labour candidates across the borough may already have been warned to say nothing about an avowed Nazi who is scheduled to headline for three days with the Labour council's cosy customer, Live Nation.
Even if Labour's candidates have not be directed to keep quiet about the antisemite, then they may instinctively understand their need to say nothing: either knowing or suspecting that this is on their fellow candidates Ahmet & Arkell or the council Events Team. It would not surprise if they are all following PR advice to make no comment.
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