Councillor Tony Belton’s Latchmere June, 2016, Newsletter (# 85)
Councillor Tony Belton’s Latchmere June Newsletter (# 61)
May highlights
1. May was, as you have probably guessed, totally dominated (for me) by the Borough Elections. For the record, as I assume that many of you will not know the details, the votes were: Tony Belton 2172: Wendy Speck 1933: Simon Hogg 1899: William Plummer (Tory) 1218: Rose Sintim (Tory) 1203: Rosemary Summerfield (Tory) 1096: Peter Mason (Green) 508: Angela Tinkler (UKIP) 327: Hollie Voyce (Lib/Dem) 221: Robert Edwards (TU & Socialist Coalition) 106
This amounted to an average swing to the three of us, Wendy, Simon and me, of 5%, for which many thanks to t
hose of you who voted for one, two or all three of us. Indeed to anyone who voted – Great, but I am afraid that the turnout was only 34.93% so two out of three Latchmere residents did NOT vote! (This picture of us on the platform was at about 2 a.m. on the Friday morning after an election day when we were up and around the polling stations as early as 7 am on the Thursday – it was a long day).
2. In the Borough as a whole the Tory party comfortably retained control by 41 to 19 councillors, but they did lose six Council seats and Labour gained six. Other interesting facts about the election in Wandsworth included a) every single Green Party candidate came third after the two “main” parties and defeated the Lib/Dems in every ward, b) there was a 5/6% swing to the two main parties from all the other candidates, who included Green, UKIP, Lib/Dem, Independents, Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition and the Communist Party of Britain and c) that UKIP really did not figure anywhere at all in the Borough (or indeed anywhere in Inner London). The other notable feature of election night was the rise of women. Of the six Labour gains five were women and so now of the 19 Labour councillors 10 are women. On the Tory side there are 26 men and 15 women, with the result that we have 25 female councillors as opposed to 35 men.
3. I also went to a few Hustings meetings, all of which had a respectable sized audience – maybe 50 or 60 residents. One of the most dramatic was in Wandsworth, where the UKIP speaker had a stroke just as he was starting to speak. We later heard that, after spending a night in hospital, he went home and has recovered well.
4. A quick update on the Mayoral Bike stations. I continue to monitor the usage of all the Bike stations and there is no doubt that usage continues to grow quite rapidly. The weather of course helps so the bikes are being used about three times as much as when they were first installed in January. I am happy to give individual figures if anyone is interested but, until usage shows something new, I think I will leave it at that.
My Programme for June
1. Well, imagine you were at work and overnight you had a 50% turnover of staff. There would be all kinds of roles to sort out and jobs to arrange. So I guess that most of June I will be getting to know new people and sort out new roles. One new job for me is that I am going to take on the lead role on the Labour side on Children’s Services, all about schools and social services. That is a completely new job for me and so I have to teach myself about all the issues involved!
2. I am, however, continuing to be the Labour lead on the Planning Applications Committee, which will meet on 17th. And, of course, I will continue to be interested in the whole Latchmere regeneration project. Meanwhile Simon Hogg is taking over my current job as Labour lead on Housing and Wendy Speck is moving to Strategic Planning.
3. On 1st June I led a “History Walk”, partly in Latchmere, for Wandsworth’s Heritage Festival. This is becoming an annual feature and would interest, I like to think, anyone interested in local history. Let me know if that sounds interesting to you and I will put you down on the list for next year! A part of the walk includes the following
Did you know that?
The last time a Prime Minister took part in a duel, it took place in Battersea Fields
– a marshy area which is now Battersea Park. The Prime Minister was the Duke of Wellington, popularly known as the “Iron Duke”. He had been the British hero, along with Nelson, in the Napoleonic Wars and was in command at Waterloo, when Britain and its allies finally defeated Napoleon.
He got the sobriquet, Iron Duke, by being a hard disciplinarian, but a popular general. One of his major dislikes was duelling. He forbad it in the army because he was, not unreasonably, concerned that, if his officers had to die, they should die facing the French and not in silly duels.
So imagine the publicity that he got in London’s morning papers when they discovered that the Prime Minister had fought a duel across the river in the rather infamous Battersea Fields. His opponent was the Earl of Winchilsea, who, when it came down to it, shot into the air, leaving Wellington to fire his pistol into the ground.
This was in 1829 but how did the Prime Minister, a Duke, and an Earl come to be fighting a duel in the first place. It wasn’t about a woman or gambling debts or a casual slight but about politics. Wellington had decided to repeal anti-Catholic legislation, which had been imposed during and after the Civil War, and Winchilsea, who was an ardent Protestant accused Wellington of “selling” Protestantism short.
In fact Wandsworth, being near to Westminster but safely on the “wrong side of the river” was the scene of one or two famous duels between “top people” in the early nineteenth century. As for me, I am distinctly pleased that nowadays we use ballots and no longer bullets!





![7 wendy[1]](https://tonybelton.blog/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/7-wendy1.jpg?w=276&h=300)


