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A new chance for boroughs to support the people's vote
01 Mar, 2019

Newsletter - 1 March 2019

Dear Member or Supporter

Latest News 

The decision of the Labour Party national leadership to seek a public vote means that Labour groups who have been divided on the question should now be more likely to come out in favour of a referendum. So it is worth your lobbying councillors in these crucial weeks especially in these councils:

LB Croydon. Labour controlled: Labour 41 councillors, Conservative 29. 2016: 54% Remain. The full council meets on 4 March. No Brexit motion is on the agenda. But they could still take one as urgent business, or issue a statement by the leader and cabinet.  So do please write to your Labour councillors to support putting forward a motion - a model letter is in our blog (the more you personalise the letter the better) - find your councillor here. It would also be worth writing to the Leader of the Council, Councillor Tony Newman and the two deputy leaders: Councillor Alison Butler and Councillor Stuart Collins

Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea. Conservative controlled: Conservatives 37 councillors, Labour 12, Liberal Democrat 1. 2016: 69% Remain. The full council meeting on 6 March is to debate a motion calling for a referendum. The wording of the motion is politically neutral, focusing on the core case for a referendum [in 2016 Leave had no plan; the electorate should have the final say now that there is a plan] and steps that can be taken to make the process healing. Nothing in the text should put off any Conservative councillor. The motion is being put forward by the Liberal Democrat councillor and the Leader of the minority Labour Group.  So do please write to your councillors to support the motion - a model letter is in our blog (the more you personalise the letter the better) - find your councillors here. The motion is almost the last item on the agenda so is vulnerable to being talked out if other business over-runs. I suggest that you write to the Mayor, Councillor Marie-Therese Rossi, and Deputy Mayor, Councillor Mohammed Bakhtiar, to call on them to conduct the meeting in a way that makes sure that the motion is heard. EM Hammersmith, Kensington, Chelsea & Fulham will mount a demonstration outside the Town Hall, Hornton Street. 18.00 - 19.00. Do please join them - it should be fun.

LB Newham. All 60 councillors are Labour. 2016: 53% Remain. The full council meets on 18 March - just before the European Council. So do please write to your councillors to support putting forward a motion - a model letter is in our blog (the more you personalise the letter the better) - find your councillor here. You should also write to the directly elected mayor, Rokhsana Fiaz OBE, and the two deputy mayors: Councillor John Gray and Councillor Charlene McLean. Stephen Timms, MP for East Ham, is a supporter of a People's Vote. So if he is your MP it is worth asking him to lobby the Mayor and councillors in support of a motion. If you are not sure who your MP is you can enter your postcode here.

LB Wandsworth. Conservative controlled: Conservatives 33 councillors, Labour 26, Independent 1. 2016: 75% Remain. The full council meets on 6 March. I have not yet heard the result of the Labour Group meeting on 28 February so I do not know whether they are going to put forward a Brexit referendum motion and if so whether it will be in terms that Conservative Remainers might support. You will be able to check for updates to the Council agenda here. If a suitable motion is put forward, then please write to your councillors - a model letter is in our blog (the more you personalise the letter the better) - find your councillor here I would suggest that you also ask your MP to lobby councillors (Marsha De Cordova MP (Battersea); Dr Rosena Allin-Khan MP (Tooting) and Justine Greening (Putney)). If you are not sure who your MP is you can enter your postcode here.

There are also some Labour authorities which are not yet on side and which do not have a Council meeting coming up in March. It would be worth writing to the Leader, Cabinet members and to your own ward councillors asking that the Leader and Cabinet issue an official public call for a people's vote with the option to Remain to be endorsed at the next Council meeting. The authorities are: Barking & Dagenham, Enfield and Harrow.  Addresses and model letter in this blog. You can check where your MP stands here and if they are supportive ask them to urge the Leader and Cabinet to come out for a People's Vote.

 

Roll of Honour

There are 32 boroughs, plus the City, so 33 authorities. 14 - just under half - have already come out directly for a referendum (People's Vote), as have the Mayor and the London Assembly. They are listed in the Gold roll:

Gold: for local authorities that have come out for a People's Vote on any deal/ a bad deal and normally explicitly with a Remain option: LB Hammersmith & Fulham, LB Ealing* (position re-affirmed by the leader after the local elections), London Assembly*, LB Richmond upon Thames, LB MertonMayor of London, LB Tower Hamlets, LB Lewisham, LB Lambeth, LB Waltham Forest, LB Hounslow*, RB Greenwich*, LB Camden, RB Kingston-upon-Thames, LB Redbridge, LB Brent

* Explicit Remain option not formally part of resolution

Silver:  For the local authorities that have come out for all options to be on the table including a public vote if there is no general election. Remain should be an option in that public vote: LB Southwark, LB Islington, LB Hackney.

Bronze: For the local authority that has come out for all options to be on the table including a public vote if there is no general election and with no commitment to Remain being an option: LB Haringey

 

Sadly not all campaigns have been successful. Three boroughs have rejected outright a call for a People's Vote: BarnetBromley and City of Westminster; so has the City of London.

 

Campaigns in the Boroughs

Please write to your councillors (model letter in the blog) in these Boroughs.  (All boroughs voted Remain in 2016 except where stated; dates of full council meetings to March 2019): 

  • Conservative controlled: Hillingdon (Voted Leave in 2016, now Remain* - no meeting in March), Kensington & Chelsea (Council meeting 6 March) and Wandsworth (Council meeting 6 March) 
  • Labour controlled: Barking & Dagenham (voted Leave 2016; now probably Remain*; no Assembly meeting in March), Croydon (Council meeting 4 March), Enfield (no Council meeting in March), Harrow (28 February - no Brexit motion on the agenda; no meeting in March), Newham (Council meeting 18 March; write to the directly elected mayor as well as your councillors).
  • Liberal Democrat Controlled: Sutton (controlling Liberal Democrat group have called for a People's Vote, but no motion has been put to the Council - no meeting set for March). 
  • No overall control (Conservatives largest group): Havering (Voted Leave in 2016, still Leave*; Council meetings 27 February (no Brexit motion on agenda) 20 March)
There is no point in writing to Barnet, BromleyCity of London or City of Westminster (voted against) or Bexley (Voted Leave in 2016, still Leave*; no realistic prospect of a debate before April)

* Assessment of present status is based on Survation's borough level analysis of polling, November 2018 and more background here

 

How to Campaign

Five easy actions that you can take are:
  1. write to your ward councillors (model letter in the blog), the leader of the council and the leaders of the Green, Labour and Liberal Democrat groups
  2. write to your local newspaper - an under-utilised resource - you can take inspiration from the model letter to councillors in the blog (please send us links to your published letters) 
  3. if your MP is a supporter of the People's Vote ask her/ him to call on the Council to come out for a People's Vote
  4. ask your friends and neighbours to follow steps 1 - 3
  5. tell us what you are doing and the progress made, e.g. commitments to table motions - E-mail: [email protected]

You can then take your campaign to a higher level in your Borough with these steps:

  • get involved with your local EM branch or other pro-EU campaign organisation
  • contact other Remain groups in the borough and ask them to mobilise their members
  • meet your councillors, the leader of the council/ directly elected mayor (Newham) and the leaders of the Green, Labour and Liberal Democrat groups
  • ask a public question at a Council meeting - they will have a guide on their democracy pages
  • launch a formal petition to the Council - they will have a guide on their democracy pages
  • street campaigning with your EM local branch or other Remain organisation 

And afterwards, please remember your thank-you and follow-through letters to councillors and in the local press.

 

London4Europe

 

The contents of this newsletter reflect the views of the author and not necessarily of London4Europe