Abingdon-on-Thames Town Council Candidates

Town Council Candidates
As the sun goes down on the four year term of the current Abingdon-on-Thames Town Council there are some names I was suprised to see missing on the list of candidates for the next four years (Julie Mayhew-Archer, Lesley Legge, Alison Rooke, Iain Littlejohn):
Town Council Candidates
Standing to serve the town for the 2015 to 2019 term are:
Town Council Candidates
That makes 53 candidates going for the positions of 19 town councillors:
* 18 Conservative
* 4 Green
* 5 Labour
* 19 Lib-Dems
* 3 Independents.

The development of the Guildhall as a major asset for the town centre will be very important in the next four years, and it belongs to Town Council. The Town Council, among other things, runs the museum, half the town’s play parks, the cemeteries, and Markets. It runs various Community events, and is consulted, by the district and county council, on matters affecting the town.

Bees at St Nics

It has been a warm and sunny week.
Bee Swarm at St Nics
People walking through the Abbey Gateway gave St Nicolas church a wide berth at lunchtime today.
Bee Swarm at St Nics
A swarm of bees looked to be setting up home and the air was full of them. Somebody said the bees had not been there five minutes before.
Bee Swarm at St Nics
I did ask at the district council whether their pest control people could take a quick look, but was told they don’t have a pest control department anymore.

Somebody else said they were probably mortar bees – not honey bees, and so their sting could not penetrate human skin.

Abingdon’s 2015 Parliamentary Hustings

Thanks to Mike for this report …
Parliamentary Hustings
The latest in the series of hustings took place in Abingdon’s Guildhall on Wednesday, 15 April. Organised by the Church In Abingdon it saw attendance from Nicola Blackwood for the Conservatives,
Parliamentary Hustings
Sally Copley, the Labour Party candidate, Nick Foster for the Socialist, Layla Moran for the Lib-Dems, and Larry Sanders for the Greens. Harriett Salisbury did a sterling job representing her sister, Helen of the National Health Action Party who was unwell. Alan Harris of UKIP wasn’t present. Also of note was that Nicola and Sally had a pact to wear colours appropriate to their parties on the night.
Parliamentary Hustings
Unlike the CPRE event, the Abingdon hustings were extremely well moderated by Chris Bryan who took questions that had been submitted prior to the event. These ranged from the economics of the Abingdon Hydro scheme to replacing the Trident missile system, while other topics included the need for continuing austerity and a one on the acceptability of the various parties to one another in the likely event of a hung parliament. This variety thankfully allowed the candidates’ mettle to be tested on topics other than planning and housing issues.

Despite the apparent non-functioning of the soon to be re-vamped Guildhall’s air conditioning system, the audience were extremely well behaved after Chris Bryan stated he wanted 21st century manners, and not those of the 18th when hustings began and often ended in a riot. Hecklers were threatened with a mandatory obligation to see every Oxford United match of the season which served to keep interruptions in check. However, it would have been nice to see more young people turning out.

All of the candidates made some good points although the best spontaneous applause of the night went to Sally Copley when she wished that Prime Minister’s Question Time could actually feature sensible debate rather than political point scoring.

In his closing remarks, Chris Bryan reminded the audience that it was only three weeks to the election. Oxford West and Abingdon is a key marginal and, with the polls close, the political atmosphere can only get hotter.

People’s Ballot: NHS Not TRIDENT

Thanks to Sally for this short piece about the NHS v TRIDENT Abingdon People’s Ballot that took place on Monday. Sally said …
Stop Trident
We had a good morning, the market place was busy although the market itself seemed a bit thinner than usual.

The consensus of those who voted in our “people’s ballot” was to spend the £100 billion on Health and Education rather than on Trident….

Many people didn’t even know what Trident is, much less that we, the taxpayer, spend over £5000 per minute on it… Some people still seem to think we need it for “deterrence”. Although who it is supposed to “deter” and from doing what, is not clear.

Trident is the UK’s nuclear deterrent with missiles on 4 submarines. The next parliament could take the decision to replace it with an updated Trident.