Archive | July, 2023

They work for you (kind of)

28 Jul

Hat tip to former councillor Andrew Baikie for his recent Freedom of Information request, asking how much constituent casework each councillor has been logging on the council’s i-Casework system.

He asked:

Please can you provide:

Data (numbers thereof) for Member (Councillor ) Enquiries logged by Newham Council between May 9th 2022 and May 8th 2023, broken down by :

1. Each Ward

2. Within 1) then broken down by individual Ward Member.

Although it took the information governance team an age to respond, they eventually did.

The data comes with a mild health warning: although i-Casework is the primary system for managing member enquiries (i.e. casework)…

…Councillors have a number of ways of raising issues on behalf of their constituents, or helping their constituents to raise issues themselves through the most appropriate channels, such as the Council website and online forms. Similarly councillors may refer issues directly to services for their direct action and assistance. Where councillors have assisted their constituents in these ways they would not be recorded centrally on the casework system. As such, the data shared below should be treated as only a partial representation of all of the casework that councillors undertake as we are aware that a significant amount of casework does get administered and managed ‘off’ of the i-casework system through emails and other channels of contact.

So, to the data. Broken down by ward

Ward Total enquiries
Beckton 419
Boleyn 54
Canning Town North 74
Canning Town South 55
Custom House 143
East Ham 110
East Ham South 147
Forest Gate North 111
Forest Gate South 47
Green Street East 103
Green Street West 213
Little Ilford 93
Manor Park 238
Maryland 68
Plaistow North 108
Plaistow South 82
Plaistow West & Canning Town East 120
Plashet 128
Royal Albert 48
Royal Victoria 33
Stratford 84
Stratford Olympic Park 116
Wall End 119
West Ham 102

And by councillor. The original response sorts the results by ward, but I have put them in rank order

Councillors Enquiries Ward
Asser, James 376 Beckton
Godfrey, Lewis 166 Green St West
Patel, Salim 134 Manor Park
Tripp, Rachel 110 Forest Gate N
Dawood, Mariam 101 Manor Park
Gulamussen, Zuber 98 Plashet
Masters, Susan 82 East Ham South
Higgins, Nate 80 Stratford OP
Hudson, Lester 80 Wall End
Morris, John 79 Plaistow W & CTE
Patel, Miraj 70 Green St East
Laguda MBE, Joy 67 Plaistow North
Booker, Elizabeth 60 Little Ilford
Whitworth, John 58 West Ham
Beckles, James 57 Custom House
Kamali, Sabia 57 Stratford
Shah, Lakmini 49 East Ham S
Corben, Carolyn 49 Maryland
Haque, Imam 48 East Ham
Chadha, Rita 47 Canning Town N
Ruiz, Sarah Jane 46 Custom House
Easter, Canon Ann 46 Royal Albert
Gray, John 42 West Ham
Odoi, Thelma 40 Custom House
Rush, Simon 40 Plaistow W & CTE
Keeling, Danny 36 Stratford OP
Wilson, Neil 35 Plaistow South
Ferdous, Shantu 34 East Ham
Wilson, Tonii 33 Beckton
Adaja, Caroline 33 Royal Victoria
Khan, Mumtaz 32 Green St West
Charters, Luke 32 Wall End
Makwana, Pushpa Dipaklal 30 Plashet
Ali, Zulfiqar 29 Plaistow North
Dasgupta, Dr Rohit Kumar 28 Canning Town S
Falola, Femi 28 East Ham
Lofthouse, Jane 28 Plaistow South
Welsch, Cecelia 21 Boleyn
Singh Virdee, Harvinder 20 Boleyn
Rahman, Muzibur 20 Green St East
Penton, Ken 19 Maryland
Lee-Phakoe, Carleene 19 Plaistow South
Chowdhury, Areeq 18 Canning Town N
Bashar, Syed 18 Little Ilford
Paul, Terence 18 Stratford
Griffiths, Alan 17 Canning Town S
Islam, Anamul 17 Forest Gate S
Sarley-Pontin, Madeleine 17 Forest Gate S
Alam, Musawwar 16 East Ham South
Virdee, Amar 15 Green St West
Begum, Nur 15 Little Ilford
Gani, Mohammed 13 Boleyn
Vaughan, Winston 13 Forest Gate S
Zilickaja, Larisa 13 Green St East
Lee-Phakoe, Daniel 12 Plaistow North
Rahman, Rohima 10 Beckton
Guaña, Belgica 10 Canning Town S
Mohammed, Shaban 9 Canning Town N
Garfield, Joshua 9 Stratford
McAlmont, Jemima 7 Wall End
Bailey, Jennifer 3 Manor Park
McAlmont, Anthony 2 Royal Albert
McLean, Charlene 2 West Ham
DasGupta, Sasha 1 Forest Gate N
Hossain, Dina 1 Plaistow W & CTE
Brayshaw, Stephen Royal Victoria

Even given the health warning that not all casework flows through the system there is a remarkable variance between the casework being logged across the council.

I leave you to draw your own conclusions.

WTF just happened?

17 Jul

This was not the news I was expecting to wake up to on Friday morning:

Boleyn (Newham) council by-election result:

IND: 42.5% (+42.5)

LAB: 32.1% (-27.0)

GRN: 21.1% (+3.5)

CON: 2.5% (-15.6)

REF: 0.8% (+0.8)

LDEM: 0.8% (+0.8)

Votes cast: 2,710

Independent GAIN from Labour.

The Independent in question is Mehmood Mirza, a figure well-known (and not necessarily in a good way) to local Labour people.

For those fortunate enough not to have encountered him before, the excellent Newham 65 blog addressed the question Who is Mehmood Mirza? 

Mehmood Mirza has surprised many by winning Thursday’s by-election in Boleyn ward. But who is he, and what does he stand for?

He has described his occupation variously as a legal adviser, a campaigner and a human rights activist, but he is also a significant private landlord. He currently owns ten properties in the borough, which will make him – since the departure of Ayesha Chowdhury from the council last year – the most propertied Newham councillor-landlord.

The piece is worth reading in full for a flavour of what we can expect to see in council meetings over the next three years. His first outing as Cllr Mirza will be on Wednesday. 

Lewis Baston, writing for the On London blog tried to take a broader view of why Labour had lost a seemingly safe seat.

Mirza’s win came as a surprise to most observers, although he had obviously run an effective campaign on the quiet. While Labour dominates in Newham, other candidates poll a third of the votes cast even at a peak Labour elections such as 2018. There – particularly with the focus of a local by-election – there is still the critical mass required for a challenge in the right ward at the right moment.

I don’t think anyone in Boleyn would have described the Mirza campaign as being run on the quiet. But the point about a potentially critical mass of non-Labour voters that can coalesce around the right message is well made. As Baston notes

Boleyn was one of the three best Newham wards for Respect in 2006, when it mounted the most successful recent challenge to Labour’s ascendancy. Mirza’s vote in 2023 mobilised some of this left of Labour and independent strand of opinion, and he was assisted by left wing campaigners. Some of Mirza’s policies were not particularly socialist – he said he was in favour of free car parking and a lower council tax, so he might have attracted some Conservative-inclined voters too.

Some? The Tory vote collapsed completely! Mirza basically stole their local policies – opposing LTNs and parking charges – and combined them with a hefty dollop of anti-establishment populism. As in May 2022, Mirza’s actual policy platform – as opposed to his left-wing posturing – was indistinguishable from the Conservatives.

Open Newham, the voice of the dispossessed ancien regime, wasted no time in pointing the finger

This is an indictment on Mayor Fiaz. In five years, she has taken Labour from a seemingly impenetrable position to one in which Labour appears vulnerable; she has alienated her colleagues on the council; and faces serious accusations of bullying of staff and colleagues.

The two constituency parties remain suspended by the Labour Party. There is a real doubt that Fiaz would have been reselected if the members had been allowed to choose in 2022.

The election of Mehmood Mirza will not mean that the voting arithmetic on the council has significantly altered. It will mean that there is a consistent and hostile, independent opposition voice who will seek to hold the mayor to account. If Fiaz experienced some discomfort at council meetings before, we can only anticipate that this will increase in the future.

Over on Twitter the Jeremy Corbyn fan club was in equally jubilant mood, declaring

Seat taken by a staunch Corbyn supporter standing as an independent – up yours Akehurst and co

And

Newham folk don’t like being stitched up by Central Office & [having] candidates foisted on them.

Which ignores two inconvenient facts. Firstly, that in neighbouring Wall End ward Labour’s vote share went up by 12 percentage points with a candidate selected in the exact same way

And secondly, that staunch Corbyn supporter is a buy to let landlord with multiple properties who swans round the place in a huge Mercedes & campaigns on lowering taxes, abolishing parking charges and removing LTNs.

Maybe get your head out of your arse, understand that most voters neither know nor care about Labour’s internal processes and recalibrate your political compass.

None of which is to ignore the fact that this result is an absolute disaster for the Labour party in Newham. Losing two seats to the Greens is one thing; losing a third to a populist campaign like Mirza’s is altogether more threatening. Just look across the borough boundary to Tower Hamlets.