Deadline to register for Referendum
RBK website says:-
With the first UK-wide referendum in over 30 years taking place on Thursday 5 May, Kingston Council is urging voters in the borough to be ready to have their say by registering to vote before the 14 April registration deadline.
We would urge all residents of whatever political persuasion to vote
Alternative vote referendum
With our country in the parlous financial state Gordon Brown has left it in and our Borough Council preferring to subsidise a theatre rather than take proper care of the most vulnerable and bent in inflicting an environmental disaster on Oakhill, we could forgive readers for thinking there are more pressing concerns than voting reform. However one party to the Coalition Government is very keen on it – though not on Alternative Voting, as it happens! – so we are to have a referendum on it on 5th May. It will come as no surprise, I’m sure, that SH Forum does not support Alternative Voting. The letter which follows explains quite clearly why:-
History teaches us to vote ‘No to AV’
March 11 2011 12:01AM
For the first time in centuries, we face the unfair idea that one citizen’s vote might be worth six times that of another
Sir, Our nation’s history is deeply rooted in our parliamentary democracy, a democracy in which, over centuries, men and women have fought for the right to vote. That long fight for suffrage established the principle of one man or woman, one vote. The principle that each person’s vote is equal, regardless of wealth, gender, race or creed, is a principle to which generations of reformers have dedicated their lives. It is a principle upon which reform of our parliamentary democracy still stands.
The referendum on May 5 that threatens to introduce a system of “Alternative Voting” — a voting system that will allow MPs to be elected to Parliament even if they do not win the majority of constituents’ first preference votes — also threatens to break this principle.
For the first time since 1928 and the granting of universal suffrage, we face the possibility that one person’s casting ballot will be given greater weight than another. For the first time in centuries, we face the unfair idea that one citizen’s vote might be worth six times that of another. It will be a tragic consequence if those votes belong to supporters of extremist and non-serious parties.
Twice in our past the nation has rejected any threat to the principle of one citizen, one vote. The last time, in 1931, Winston Churchill stood against the introduction of an alternative vote (AV) system. As he argued, AV would mean that elections would be determined by “the most worthless votes given for the most worthless candidates”. He understood that it was simply too great a risk to take.
The cause of reform, so long fought for, cannot afford to have the fundamentally fair and historic principle of majority voting cast aside; nor should we sacrifice the principle that generations of men and women have sought: that each being equal, every member of our society should cast an equal vote.
For these reasons, we urge the British people to vote “No” on May 5.
Professor David Abulafia, Dr John Adamson, Professor Antony Beevor, Professor Jeremy Black, Professor Michael Burleigh, Professor John Charmley, Professor Jonathan Clark, Dr Robert Crowcroft, Professor Richard J. Evans, David Faber, David Starkey, Professor Niall Ferguson, Dr Amanda Foreman, Dr John Guy, Robert Lacey, Dr Sheila Lawlor, Lord Lexden, Simon Sebag Montefiore, Dr Richard Rex, Dr Andrew Roberts, Professor Richard Shannon, Chris Skidmore, MP, D. R. Thorpe, Alison Weir, Philip Ziegler, Professor Lord Norton
No2AV
Council Tax freeze
Council Tax will be frozen this year at its 2010 level, thanks to the actions of the Conservative-led Coalition (Ed Miliband likes to call it that, so why shouldn’t I?) This will be the third year in a row that the Mayoral precept has remained at its 2008 level, thanks to the policies adopted by the incumbent Conservative Mayor of London, Boris Johnson.
We are pleased to see that RBK has made some tentative steps towards sharing back-office facilities with Sutton and Merton, which should result, according to the RBK website, in savings of £5m over the ten year agreement period. The website doesn’t specify whether that means £5m each or £5m shared between the three of them. The steps are, however, much more tentative than some other Boroughs are adopting and one hopes for greater boldness in years to come.
One blot on this year’s budget, however, is the decision to cut further community services to those in real need of them while at the same time continuing to break the pledge made years ago that the Rose Theatre would not be subsidised out of the Council Tax. What amounted to a three-year subsidy of £600,000 a year has been replaced by a five year one of £500,000 a year. When will this ever end?
Houston; we have a problem!
Extract from entry on RBK website:
Party: Liberal Democrat
Ward: Surbiton Hill Ward
Neighbourhood: Surbiton
Contact information
Home Address:
16 Cumbrae Gardens
Long Ditton
Surbiton
KT6 5EL
Phone: 020 8546 4469
Bus. Email: neil.houston@councillors.kingston.gov.uk
The address given above is in Long Ditton, Elmbridge, outside RBK, even outside Greater London. Assuming that RBK has got its facts straight, and depending on his stated qualifications for election at the time of nomination last year, it may well be legal for him to remain a councillor in RBK even after having left it.
However it seems bizarre, to say the least of it, that a man should move outside the Borough less than one year after being elected a councillor in it. He will now be voting for Council Tax levels he no longer pays and doubtless enjoying performances at the Rose funded by subsidies paid for by his constituents but not by him. As I say, this is assuming that the info given out on the RBK website is accurate – and I know they go to a great deal of trouble to ensure that it is.
Curious phone number too! For Long Ditton…….
Holding street parties in Kingston
from the RBK website:
Kingston Council is making as it easy as possible for residents to celebrate the Royal Wedding with a street party or summer fete.
Just complete one easy-to-use form and you and your neighbours could be celebrating in style at a small street party or similar local event.
Applications to hold a street party in the Royal Borough of Kingston during the weekend of 29 April need to be submitted to Kingston Council by Friday 25 March.
The Council will be happy to provide advice and information about the logistics of organising your event, such as providing emergency access, erecting Road Closed signs etc.
See the Kingston Council website (link in right hand column) for more info.


