Sunday, October 17, 2004

Ministers Guilty of an Offence?

Good morning to all at the Electoral Commission and the ODPM who now check on the site on a daily basis. I am sure that you will take note of how the purdah period is being breached. Perhaps there may be a court case and censure should it be revealed that the Ministers were using Ministerial transport to get to the region to campaign as Labour Party members.

Christopher Booker's Notebook
Sunday Telegraph
17th October

Prescott flouts democratic rule
John Prescott is so keen to secure a Yes vote in next month's referendum on an elected regional assembly for the North-East that, last week, he and two other ministers, Gordon Brown and Peter Hain, were out on the campaign trail. (As Mr Brown put it in Newcastle, "I believe that a Yes vote would be good for the people and the businesses in the North-East.")

On Thursday Neil Herron of the North-East No campaign lodged an official complaint with the Electoral Commission. He pointed out that the politicians' visit was in clear breach of the Referendums Act 2000, which rules that Ministers of the Crown may not actively campaign to promote a specific result within 28 days of the start of polling in a referendum. At the same time he asked the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister to explain why ministers appeared to be breaking the law.

He was told that they were not campaigning in their capacity as Deputy Prime Minister, Chancellor of the Exchequer and Leader of the House, but simply as Labour MPs (although this was not how their presence in the North-East was reported). When Mr Herron asked whether they had used ministerial transport to travel to the North-East, no explanation was forthcoming.

Perhaps the Electoral Commission, which has a statutory duty to ensure that the law is observed, would like to investigate, with a view to possible prosecution?

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Yes, welcome to our Southern cousins, and yes that means you too Mr John Prescott, pseudo-Welshman, meant in the best possible sense of course.

May I remind them all that we have sent servicemen to Iraq to try and add a touch of British democracy, when at home we're acting like the worst banana republic dictatorship - breaking all the rules when it suits, walking over the backs of ordinary folk, the very backbone of Britain, not forgetting to push ahead with a completely discredited voting system in the postal ballot.

Whather you're for or against the Assembly, the actions of those who wish to impose it, by any method, are completely deplorable, and an insult to the people of this proud region.

Yes, you should be really pleased with yourselves.

PS. Given Mr Prescott's taste for having a few houses, is he wishing to take the keys for all 480,000 in the South East...just curious.

PPS. Please spell DEMOCRACY a thousand times each night until it sinks in what it actually means.

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