Author Archives: Natalie Bennett

The local election: a Green summary

Now the dust has settled from last Thursday’s elections, the overall picture from a Green Party perspective is clear. The results proved that when a Green group gets established on a council, people like what they do, like what sort of councillors they are.

In Brighton, we leapt from six to 12 councillors, in Lancaster from five to 12, and in Norwich we reached 10 councillors. (They have annual elections there, so leaps don’t happen quite the same way, but we missed out by ONE vote on getting another seat – and that was an enormous swing to us. That would have made us the second-largest group on council, and was in Thorpe Hamlet ward, where I made my contribution with an eight-and-a-half hour canvassing day – if I’d only done nine hours…)

Norwich is particularly interesting because in the parliamentary constituency of Norwich South we achieved the highest overall vote of any party. That’s a seat currently held by Charles Clarke – and the Norwich Evening News is already acknowledging that fact by including a Green comment in a piece on Clarke’s political future.

I haven’t seen the breakdown figures on Brighton, but we must also be doing very well on overall votes there.

As for the back story to Lancaster, I don’t know a great deal, but it seems it was seriously a shock result that saw the Greens unseat the Labour leader on council.

There’s a complete listing of results here.

It is clear that what the Green Party has to do now is get a lot more footholds, that can make the same sort of leaps as these cities have made… sounds simple when you say it quickly!

(Jim also has a summary, from a slightly different perspective.)

The state of the Australian media

Barista provides an excellent summary of recent changes in the Australian media and its likely future direction – particularly the purchase of Rural Press by the Fairfax group.

Perhaps a specialist interest, but of particular interest to me, since I worked for one and nearly worked for the other. I was lined up to do a cadetship on the Sydney Morning Herald until young Warwick came in and took over the company in one of those disastrous late-eighties takeover swoops that meant an immediate staff freeze.

And I did work experience at The Land, which was at the time Rural Press’s only paper – and owe a lot to the patient chief sub there who first taught me to turn 100cm of detailed notes into a 30cm news story. (My first story published was on chital deer: I still have it somewhere.)

And then at the Cootamundra Herald I worked for Rural Press and later the Northern Daily Leader, indeed directly with Brian McCarthy, who I see has risen to great heights, which surprises me not at all. If you want a man to “control” your costs, I’d reckon he’d be it.

Nostalgia? No!

A journal on feminist blogging

… well a whole issue of Scholar & Feminist anyway.

Al the big isues are there: “where are the women bloggers”, sex and audience, pseudonimity, pedagogy, race, class, “mummyblogging” – a pretty good wrap-up for anyone wanting to read about the current state of the feminist blogosphere, or wanting to write a paper on it!

Britain’s miserable youth…

You might wonder why recent studies indicate Britain’s youth are the most unhappy in Europe. A story today in the Sunday Times sums it up nicely: A 2,200-pupil high school is being built in Peterborough, under the “flagship” academy schools programme (so the local authority – and hence the local, democratic council, representative of the community won’t have any say in its running).

This school will replace THREE current schools, so pupils will be going from relatively small communities to be all mixed up in a huge one. But the real misery clincher is this – there will be NO PLAYGROUND – no space in which to chill, relax, take some time away from structure.

“We are not intending to have any play time,” said Alan McMurdo, the head teacher. “Pupils won’t need to let off steam because they will not be bored.”…
Miles Delap, project manager at the academy, said: “For a school of this size, a playground would have had to be huge. That would have been almost uncontrollable. We have taken away an uncontrollable space to prevent bullying and truancy.”…
There will be a 30-minute lunch period when pupils will be taken to the dining room by their teacher, ensuring they do not sneak away to run around.

In those three quotes there is so much to unpack it is hard to know where to start. There is fear – teenagers must be kept strictly under control at all times; there is planning – everything, every second, must be strictly managed; there is desire to turn these children into nice little corporate automata.

I certainly wouldn’t want to live in a house near this school; when the kids escape they’ll explode out of it like cork from a pressured bottle. And that will be used as an excuse to demand more controls…

My new baby…

redesign2 (2)

You might have noticed that I’ve been around here a little spasmodically lately, and anyone who knows me might have noticed that the bags under the eyes have hit the jawline; that’s in part because I’ve been involved in the major redesign of the Guardian Weekly, which has gone from tabloid to half-Berliner (“micro” I believe in American), as well as going full-colour in the European edition, and with the complete font and design change that went with it (so we again finally reflect the appearance of the Guardian).

Anyone in newspapers will appreciate that’s been rather a big job: I’ve written about the process, and about how the news gods had a good laugh at my expense, on the editors’ blog on Guardian Unlimited.

But, it’s out tomorrow, it doesn’t look half bad overall, and it’s done – just got to do it all again next week…

Here’s Jenny Cogan, our production editor, and the designer John-Henry Barac mugging it up for the cameras beside the press. J-H has also blogged about the process.

redesign

You know you are in the countryside when…

… a passing Green Party person stops to give you directions to a polling day committee room, not because you are wearing a rosette or other party paraphenalia, but simply because you are on a bicycle, and in this part of the world that’s pretty unusual.