Birmingham Post

Time for Birmingham to turn the tables on the Government

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When there is a drastic housing shortage – and we are only just beginning to emerge from a slump in house-building – it seems there may have been little alternativ­e but to keep them going.

But the response since the tragedy has been one worthy of a responsibl­e landlord.

The city’s leadership has ordered fire safety tests on all 213 high and low rise blocks, not just the recently refurbishe­d, without waiting for the inevitable Government order.

It will come as great relief to tenants that none of the council’s flats have been clad in the dangerous materials and none so far have been found to have flammable coverings.

And it was also right of council leader John Clancy to start the ball rolling on retro-fitting sprinklers in blocks – even it meant raiding the council’s reserves and asset bank to pay for it.

Of course, the Government has now offered to pay or at least contribute.

Next job is to accelerate the regenerati­on of Druids Heath, an estate dominated by 15 tower blocks, and which has seen little non-essential investment. A decision to go ahead was taken a year ago and now needs to be acted on.

NOW that the election season is over and we have a new mayor and sort of Government, our local politician­s are getting back to more parochial matters such as saving their own skins ahead of next year’s council election.

The local Labour Party had kept a lid on its internal squabbles and deferred its hotly contested council candidate selections in the noble pursuit of the greater good of Jeremy Corbyn’s national campaign.

Now with all that behind us the blood letting is beginning. There are several pressures - one is the reduction of councillor­s from 120 to 101 meaning less safe seats to go round. The other is that there is a shift in the balance of power with the Corbynista­s in the ascendancy.

Third, are the little petty divisions, rivalries and factions within Birmingham, such as between cronies of former leader Sir Albert Bore and acolytes of his replacemen­t John Clancy.

And finally there are complicati­ons over gender equality rules which means several male councillor­s are scrapping for their political lives.

One battle which has reopened is over the rush of new Corbyninsp­ired members who have joined since summer 2015, initially they were blocked from voting in selections to prevent a hard-left takeover – but now this appears to have been lifted, placing severallon­g-standing and hard-working local councillor­s at risk of de-selection. Details of these behind the scenes shenanigan­s are of course patchy and evidence unreliable, but we will see what emerges.

COUNCILLOR­S and council staff looking to buy the leader a birthday or Christmas present could do little worse than get a thesaurus to broaden his vocabulary.

One of John Clancy’s predecesso­rs as council leader, Mike (now Lord) Whitby, was fond of picking the odd slogan like ‘fiscal discipline’, ‘journey to excellence’ and the always winning ‘global city with a local heart’ and then repeating it like a stuck record to anyone within earshot.

Even our Prime Minister has suffered from this tendency with her ‘strong and stable’ mantra during the election campaign.

But beating the lot for repetition was Cllr Clancy during his threeminut­e speech at Birmingham’s impressive­ly huge Eid celebratio­n on Sunday after.

He managed to say ‘great’ an incredible 18 times including mentioning the ‘great diversity of this great city’ and what a ‘great day’ he was having at this ‘great event’.

So here’s a few synonyms to help him mix things up a bit : ‘fantastic’, ‘excellent’, ‘wonderful’, ‘outstandin­g’, ‘superb’.

As one onlooker observed: “It begins to grate after a while!”

There is also anger in English provinces that this is another example of the Scots, Northern Irish and Welsh getting favourable devolution

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 ??  ?? > The DUP extracted £1bn for Northern Ireland out of Prime Minister Theresa May – but what do big cities like Birmingham have to do to compete?
> The DUP extracted £1bn for Northern Ireland out of Prime Minister Theresa May – but what do big cities like Birmingham have to do to compete?

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