Showing posts with label Kent County Council. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kent County Council. Show all posts

10 June 2009

An interview with one of Kent's newest county councillors

Kent County Councillor Tim Prater, Liberal Democrat from Folkestone WestPhoto: Kent County Councillor Tim Prater, Liberal Democrat from Folkestone West

Folkestone West’s newest county councillor Tim Prater spent ten hours Monday going between introductory meetings and interviews in Maidstone, describing the experience similar to the first day of school.

Prater finally sat down at the Providence Inn in Sandgate just after 7 p.m. with his wife Season and mother-in-law Ann Rimmer, both of whom were recently elected to Sandgate’s parish council. As the Liberal Democrats’ lone county councillor from Shepway District, Prater had already made a name for himself after winning election to the Folkestone Town Council in 2006 and the district council a year later. His victory Thursday over Robert Bliss, the Conservative’s leader on the Shepway council, came by 11 votes and three recounts, erasing a 1600-vote margin from 2005.

Prater’s victory, one of two LibDem gains from the Tories, drew the Tories’ ire over the weekend.

“I’m happy to find a letter from the chair of the local Conservative Party on their Web site which claims that I had stolen the seat from the Conservatives,” Prater said “I don’t believe I could have stolen that seat because it wasn’t his [Mr. Bliss’s]. I don’t believe it’s mine either. I believe it’s their [the voters’] seat. They lend it for four years on trust to the person that they think is going to do the best job for them.”

Prater said that Shepway’s ranking as least improved local council in the England and front-page coverage of Tory MP Michael Howard’s expense claims for £17,000 of gardening work factored into his win, as Conservatives experienced negative swings in Folkestone.

The state of Kent’s roads, particularly in the eastern half of the county, was the top issue residents brought to Prater’s attention, he said.

“They’re full of puddles, they’re not even in a fit state,” Prater said, adding that the current estimate has Kent crews needing almost 300 years to bring the county’s roads up to standard.

Prater said that the previous county council, which had a 37-seat Tory majority, increased funding for this year, but did not budget that increase for next year.

“Suddenly in an election year, they found a few extra pounds for it,” Prater said. “Something that we’re very clear on is ‘OK, they put more money in it this year. I want to see it next year, and the next year as well.’”

Prater has shown in interest in politics since he became old enough to vote in 1991 and said he works by the mantra “don’t get mad, get even.” While attending Aston University, Prater became involved with the Liberal Democrats, writing a news letter and setting up phone fundraising operations during the late 1990s.

Since 2002, Prater has operated Prater Raines Ltd. with Web developer Matt Raines. The company has developed over 350 Web sites, principally for Liberal Democrat groups and candidates across the United Kingdom and Europe.

As a member of three councils, Prater says that it will be a challenge to manage his time between the three but that he will be able to provide a shortcut for discussing issues between bodies.

“I’m planning to go to those meetings as well so that when they’re bringing up issues that need assistance from Kent who deal with things like the highways–there’s a lot of road issues, a lot of parking issues, a lot of street light issues down here–they are things that I can take from those meetings and go back up the chain and say ‘here’s a real problem,’” Prater said.

Prater said that councils often don’t communicate with one another. As a short circuit, he adds, he will be able to communicate discussions from the county and district councils to his district’s town councils.

Following the slashing of the Labour Party’s representation on the county council from 20 to two, Prater’s arrival adds to the LibDem’s count of seven councillors, placing them in the official opposition. With only ten of Kent’s 84 councillors not affiliated with the Tories, Prater says he and his colleagues will do their best to ensure their residents’ concerns are properly voiced.

“You can only bring up the issues which are in front of you and just make it as clear as you can,” Prater said. “Often these things are not political. They are issues about management, they are issues about making sure the right thing is done. It’s often not a fundamental difference in opinion on some of these things.”

Prater has experienced a similar minority situation on Shepway District Council, where the LibDems also have an official opposition with six members to the Tories’ 36.

“What you’re doing is watching what for the majority group is doing and pointing out when they’re making mistakes, and doing it in a way that is hopefully constructive but is equally forceful.” Prater said. “Just because there are a lot of them doesn’t mean that they are right. Groupthink quite often sets in on these things, and it becomes very easy as a very big majority to think that because you come up with the idea that it has to be right, and there is always another way of doing something.”

Prater said that several ideas the Conservatives will propose will be right for Kent or almost right but need some tweaking from the opposition.

“We’re going to be the ones who are sitting in the room who are reading things and going, ‘is there another way of doing it? Is there a problem with this? Would people understand this, and if they understand this, would they like it?’” Prater said.

Prater said that with the word expenses mentioned often the past three weeks, he and fellow Shepway District councillor Tom McNeice have not been involved with excessive reimbursements.

“People say ‘you can claim expenses at district council, you can claim mileage allowances, you can claim food and subsistence allowances,’ and we can say ‘yeah, we can,’” Prater said. “In the last two years, neither of us have claimed a penny. And that does kill an argument very quickly.”

Prater added that he does not plan to seek reimbursement for mileage and believes the basic allowance as a county councillor should cover mileage to and from Maidstone. He said that expense claims at the county and local level also should be made available for public review to determine whether a councillor’s claims are reasonable for the amount of work he or she does.

Prater maintains an office on Sandgate High Street and operates a personal Web site at http://prater.org.uk/. He says he can also be reached via Facebook or through his Twitter user name @timprater.

For the remainder of the week, The Missouri Expatriate will also upload audio clips from our interview with Tim Prater.

Technical edit: Technorati Profile

05 June 2009

Conservatives extend majority in Kent


Kent County Council election results maps. From KCC Web site.

Labour's popularity woes could not be emphasised more than the voice of Kent voters on Thursday.

With all of Kent County Council's 84 seats up for grabs yesterday, Labour could only retain two of their 20 seats. The Conservatives, who entered with a 37-seat majority over the Labour Party, now have a commanding majority of 74 councillors. The Tories defeated Labour in 18 of Labour's defending seats, and gained one from the Liberal Democrats (Malling Rural North East) while spotting the LibDems two. The LibDems will now be the primary opposition party with seven members.

Throughout the traditionally Conservative county, Labour experienced negative swings as the Tories and Liberal Democrats made modest vote gains, fueled by the ongoing expenses scandal and lower voter turnout. In Dover's district, all five Labour councillors were cast aside in favour of incoming Conservatives. A twelve percent swing against Labour cost leader Mike Eddy his seat, resulting in him placing sixth in the Deal dual division behind colleague Terry Birkett.

Across the county, negative swings for Labour allowed smaller parties to gain votes. Notably in Gravesham and Dartford districts, candidates from the Green Party, Eurosceptic parties England Democrats and UK Independence Party, and local parties made sizable gains. A 25 percent swing against Labour allowed Richard Lees of the Swanscombe and Greenhithe Residents Association to claim a seat, becoming the only non-Westminster party to earn representation on the county council. In Maidstone Central, where a six percent swing allowed the LibDems to claim both seats over a Tory incumbent, the one UKIP candidate earned more votes than both Labour candidates combined.

Labour's only two holds came in dual divisions where two councillors were elected. Leslie Christie remained the top-vote getter in Northfleet and Gravesend West, with the Tory's Harold Kraske placing second. In Ramsgate, Elizabeth Green placed second to the Tory's John Kirby, while Green's colleague Alan Poole fell to fifth behind another Tory and a UKIP candidate.

General resentment toward MPs caught up in the expenses scandal was evident in the Shepway district, where Michael Howard's defence of his £17,000 claim for gardening on his rural Folkestone home and £44,000 for renting a constituent office in Folkestone's town centre also caused backlash on Tory incumbents. The Liberal Democrats were able to claim Folkestone West, as Tim Prater defeated Robert Bliss by 11 points, a nine percent swing away from the Conservative incumbent. The remaining Tory incumbents also experienced negative swings, mostly toward UKIP, but were able to retain their seats.

The obliteration suffered by Labour in Kent was echoed through the rest of England, where Labour only mustered an estimated 23 percent of the vote and lost control of all four councils where they had a majority. Labour's majority in the northern county of Lancashire was reduced to six seats total, with the Tories assuming the majority and the ultra-nationalist British National Party claiming their first council victory in their history. The Tories also gained majorities from the LibDems in Devon and Somerset in England's south west, despite their vote share shrinking to 38 percent from last year's 44 percent.

Election results for the European Parliament will not be released until Sunday night, but if local election totals are a foreshadow, Labour may face further significant losses and put into deeper jeopardy the tenure of Prime Minister Gordon Brown.