Category Archives: Graham Cox

Raping the facts about justice

This weekend the news was dominated by the tragic revelation that a woman committed suicide part-way through a trial over whether she had been indecently assaulted and raped. Unaware of her death, the jury convicted Michael Brewer of five indecent assaults and acquitted him of three similar charges and rape; he awaits his sentence. Commentators fell over themselves as they rushed to condemn the manner in which rape trials are conducted and, in particular, the way barristers do their jobs. The fact that the Brewer’s victim, Frances Andrade, chose to be cross-examined in open court and not via a CCTV screen, has largely been ignored. Her decision was inconvenient for their chosen polemics.

We are told that complainants feel like they are being raped all over again in trials. Undoubtedly, that is true in many cases. Let’s be absolutely clear about this. There can be no doubt whatsoever that having to recount in public the manner in which you have been raped is as traumatic as the rape itself. We are driven to this conclusion by reams of therapeutic evidence and by everything we ever hear from rape victims who go through trials.

However, it cannot be true in those cases where the complainant is lying. Some people tell lies in court. As a society, there is a very great taboo in discussing the fact that some women lie when making rape allegations. By and large, the media and our politicians are not interested in the facts of life about rape trials. For example, the established media endlessly repeats the myth that the conviction rate in rape cases is tiny. Actually the rape conviction rate is higher than it is for the average conviction rate for other reportable crimes. Unfortunately, those who pretend to inform us, tend to mislead us. Neither the established media nor our established political parties give a damn about the facts. All they seem to care about is a sudden surge in popularity.

How can we conduct these trials and still maintain a fair trial system? How can we provide emotional protection for the women making rape allegations and still allow a defence lawyer to test those allegations with detailed questioning? These are very difficult questions to answer. Cross-examination is at the heart of every trial. Without it, there cannot be a fair trial. If anyone tells you otherwise, suggest they go and observe a trial in a country where it isn’t allowed or is restricted. In Brewer’s case, the trial judge declared that the cross-examination was fair. Excepting the people who were uninvolved in the trial and watched the cross-examination in person and all the rest of the trial, no-one can usefully comment on that judicial opinion. We have to take it as it is. Clearly, the jury believed some of the victim’s allegations but were not sure beyond reasonable doubt about all of them. Therefore, the cross-examination was partially successful.

Of all the world’s legal systems, none has yet bettered the method we use: allowing detailed questioning of each witness. The entire point of such questioning is to draw out inconsistencies, discrepancies, contradictions and so on, so as to be able to claim that a witness’s evidence is less credible than another’s. That’s how every trial works, criminal or civil, in this country. The same techniques are applied to a simple cash claim following a road traffic accident, a multi-handed conspiracy to defraud or a rape trial.

Incidentally, we use much the same approach when assessing politicians. However, when they meet a challenge they cannot deal with, they just go quiet. In a court of law, that is not much of an option. Juries can be expected to draw their own conclusions.

There are two important differences with most rape trials. Firstly, the only witnesses are usually the alleged victim and the alleged defendant. That means that it isn’t possible to highlight differences between the witnesses on one side of the case. Secondly, the questions will inevitably be of an intimate nature. It just isn’t possible to ask questions about someone’s underwear, vagina or penis, without crossing the normal social boundary of acceptability. The normal rules have of social etiquette have to be suspended, in the interests of a fair trial.

No-one likes being accused of lying, even liars. No-one likes being shown up as unreliable, especially the unreliable. No-one enjoys being cross-examined. In other criminal trials, a great deal of emotional distress is caused during cross-examinations. Such is life with criminal trials. They are not clean, clinical exercises with everything conducted as you might expect in a scientific lab. Real people present real problems.

There are obvious problems with the manner in which the justice system treats victims of crime. They are not cared for particularly well. We could spend much more money on treating them with the care and decency they deserve. For example, they could have much lengthier and frequent meetings with the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS). Although they should not be allowed to dictate the decision on whether to prosecute, they could be properly involved in the process.

All our mainstream political parties are calling for cuts to public services. None of them are calling for more money to be spent in this area. Our politicians are casting allegations of bullying against barristers, despite not having witnessed the trials they are talking about, not having any meaningful proposals for how to change the rules of evidence and not understanding how difficult rape trials are for the sometimes innocent defendants.

A friend of mine has been charged with rape. In reference to him, I wrote a post  called what to do if a friend is charged with rape. His case is due for trial later this year. He’s maintained his innocence. For legal reasons, I prefer not to comment on his case now. However, his pre-trial experience is commonplace: he has been on bail awaiting his trial for well over a year! If he loses his trial, he loses everything: contact with his children, a harmonious relationship with his ex-wife, his girlfriend, his reputation, his home, his liberty. Over the last year plus a few months he has faced the prospect of his fate hanging in the hands of an eventual twelve strangers. His experience is commonplace. A substantial number of the men accused of rape are innocent.

The justice system visits enormous stresses on innocent people. In many of these cases, including my friend’s, there is no justification for having to wait in torment for so long for a trial. The reason for the delay lies with the incompetence of the Crown Prosecution Service and/or the money we choose to spend on the justice system. This is unacceptable but we don’t hear politicians calling for more money to be spent, to save innocent men from this incredible stress overload. Clearly, our politicians are not terribly interested in fair trials. If they were, they would call for justice to be dispensed faster. My friend feels like he is being punished now, despite being, according to law, presumed innocent.

Much more money must be spent on the justice system. We need sex cases to come to trial much quicker, so that those men who are falsely accused, do not have their lives ruined by the delay. We need rape victims to get proper care and attention by the prosecuting authorities. One fifteen minute chat with the CPS prior to trial is not only inadequate, it is grossly offensive. All this extra care and attention will cost money. The next time you hear a politician proposing reform of the legal system, ask them how much money they propose we spend to clear up these two issues. If they can’t answer, be their jury and draw your own conclusions.

However, there is another problem. For some time, therapists have been of the opinion that rape victims should not get treatment before a trial in case the defence barrister somehow uses those therapeutic conversations against them in court. It’s inevitable that a defence barrister will consider the option of scrutinising everything an accuser says about the alleged crime. Clearly, those calling for such areas to be off-limits to cross-examination have no clue at all about justice. It’s notable that in Hove, a local Tory councillor who used to be a senior police officer has made that call. Our police care about convictions, not justice. Sad, but true. Here he is, the Tory (Graham Cox), in a quick exchange with a local Labour Party candidate  in Brighton (Emma Daniel) on twitter, on this very topic.

Labour and Tory politicians discussing rape trials

Click to enlarge.

It’s only one example. Yet it typifies the whole problem with the way politicians tackle these problems. Here we have two people, both official representatives of their respective parties, spouting crap about how to improve justice in rape trials. There isn’t a shred of evidence that inquisitorial systems produce better justice for rape victims. I asked Emma Daniel to produce it but she declined. I asked the lawyers on twitter too; my request was retweeted by Carl Gardner, who has thousands of followers. No-one came forward with any evidence for this claim. None whatsoever. Ms Daniel’s second claim is that we can have a court system which doesn’t “further degrade and humiliate victims“. I asked her how many rape trials she has watched? She declined to answer that too. The fact is, as explained above, that it isn’t possible to cross-examine someone in a rape trial without going over all the details and calling them a liar. No-one wants anyone to be degraded or humiliated but all the evidence says that recounting these intimate details and being called a liar does risk humiliating the genuine victim. Thorough therapy could go a long way towards obviating that humiliation. That’s Mr Cox’s point. However, his tweet seems to suggest that somehow barristers should be prevented from asking questions which mention the therapy! The police would love barristers to be banned from asking some questions. How very convenient that would be, unless you care about fair trials.

Both of these two politicians are members of parties which support cuts to public services. Clearly, both of them are politically unable to address the main issues without a conflict with their party leadership. Caring for victims and speeding up justice will cost money which they are unable to promise. Instead we get these glib proposals which can’t be justified. It’s remarkable that Ms Daniel is happy to fire off a tweet about this, get challenged, not produce any evidence or links but doesn’t delete the tweet when she must have realised her error. There are no remaining political solutions to the problem of how to scrutinise allegations about private lives.

The therapeutic community could revisit its opinion on the merit of pre-trial treatment but obviously I’m not qualified to have a proper opinion on that, since I am not a therapist. The current thinking is that therapy involves conversations which can properly be a subject matter for cross-examination and thus may possibly interfere with a trial. Consequently, therapy is usually suspended until after a trial. Obviously, that frequently leads to a situation where traumatised people have to face further challenges in court, some of which will in themselves be traumatic. As a layman, I can’t help thinking that it would be better to give people therapy, to reduce their trauma and then let them go to trial. Sure, the barristers are going to ask those difficult questions but wouldn’t the genuine rape victim be better placed to deal with them after therapy than before? This is a question which can only be properly answered by experienced therapists who have also sat through rape trials.

Beware of politicians proposing solutions on this subject. It’s too easy for them to make wild claims. Beware of politicians who attack lawyers too. Everyone hates lawyers, until they need one.

Greens win cross-party support for 20mph speed limit in Brighton & Hove

Yesterday, Brighton & Hove City Council’s transport committee decided to change the speed limit across most of the city to 20mph. This plan was championed by the local Green Party, which controls the council administration, although it does not have a majority of the seats. It will improve the city’s air quality and road safety. In particular, cycling will become significantly safer as a result. It is hoped that more people will be persuaded to take up cycling around the city.

The biggest lobby against the change were the local taxi drivers, who argued that they would face increased risk of violence from passengers late at night because they were travelling more slowly than before. This has to be one of the weakest political arguments ever made. Almost every time I’ve got a taxi in Brighton, the driver has broken the speed limit wherever that has been convenient. Whilst no-one has advocated a special exemption for taxis, it is a bit rich to hear them claiming they will observe limits all of a sudden. Sure, they will drive more slowly. All they have to do is inform their passengers that the speed limit is 20mph and that all political parties voted for the change (I discuss the politics further down this post.). Then they can have a good whinge about it.

Whinging seems to be the local drivers stock in trade, though you never hear them moan about their recent request to increase the number of taxi licences in the city and increase their fares. Normally, when supply increases the price comes down. Despite trading in a medieval style market economy, far too many of them complain about the politics of our modern city. I travel by taxi fairly frequently. Over the years, whenever my driver starts slagging off the local council, I ask them who they vote for. The majority say they do not vote. “Your opinion is irrelevant then“, I tell them. That’s how it is. If you vote or at least spoil your ballot, you can complain. Not voting is antisocial.

Having myself fought over 800 road traffic accident trials, when I practised as a barrister, I have particular expertise in this field. The fact is that most people seem to think that they are entitled to drive at the speed limit whenever they can. That is legal nonsense. You have to travel at the speed which is appropriate for the circumstances. Around the city, that means mostly you have to drive more slowly. Hurtling around the leafy suburbs of Hove at anything approaching 30mph is not safe. Driving down any of Brighton’s residential hills lined with parked cars is similarly dangerous because if a child steps out from between those cars, you will seriously injure them. Time and again an angry driver whom I’ve cross-examined has told me, “I had the right of way!” Since when did having the right of way allow you to drive like a nutter? In my view, there’s something about the way cars have combined with our culture that creates bad characters behind the wheel. All sorts of perfectly decent folk drive very badly indeed and they don’t even know they’re doing it. Decades of road safety campaigns has failed to stop people from driving right up against the limit whenever they can. As for the number of people who believe that ABS helps them brake quicker, don’t even get me started… 

Curiously, the best driver I have ever travelled with was an ex-rally driver. He’d passed the advanced driver test. His experience with a car had trained him into being an extraordinarily safe driver. I lived on a remote farmstead with him in mid-Wales for a while. After that, I noticed that everyone else lacked his acute judgement. No other driver had his sense of spatial awareness or social awareness.

The local politics around this decision is even more curious. When the Greens first proposed the new limit, the Tories said that they would oppose it, if it harmed local business. At yesterday’s meeting, three Conservative councillors sat on the committee. Two of them ~ Tony Janio & Geoffrey Theobald ~ did not vote for the new limit, despite both representing outlying areas of the city where people frequently drive too fast. A third Conservative councillor ~ Graham Cox ~ voted in favour. Mr Cox used to be a copper. Perhaps his decision was informed by his knowledge of the real road traffic issues? The split vote by the Tories suggests that they had not reached any conclusion as to whether local business would be harmed.

The new Sussex Police and Crime Commissioner told me in an interview that she thought there needed to be evidence that a localised rule about a lower speed limit was required before it would be enforced. (4th paragraph at that link.) I had been asking her about police priorities, prior to her winning the election. That sounds worryingly close to her thinking that it is acceptable for the police to override the democratically expressed wishes of the people affected. She should now unequivocally state that the police will enforce the new limit. Otherwise, she risks a breakdown in trust between the citizens of Brighton & Hove and Sussex Police. Ms Bourne is a member of the Conservative Party.

From the Tory committee members’ split vote, you’d think that they weren’t greatly concerned by the plan. Yet collectively they proposed an amendment to defer it indefinitely. If they didn’t want it, why didn’t they all vote against it?

The local Labour Party’s policy on this issue has been muddled from start to finish. Initially, they misrepresented a statement by Sussex Police as a declaration that the new limit would not be enforced. In fact, Sussex Police had merely responded to enquiries by saying that it was a matter for the local council, which it is, of course. At the time, I contacted Sussex Police to ask whether Labour was right to say that the police would not enforce the new limit. They replied to say that they would.

At the committee, the Labour councillors proposed an amendment to remove a large number of roads from the new limits. Bizarrely, the roads that they wanted removed included North Street, which already has a 20mph limit. Since North Street is right at the heart of the city, this request cannot be explained away as a minor mistake. The Labour amendment was defeated. In the final vote, Labour councillors Gill Mitchell and Alan Robins voted in favour of the plan. Presumably, they changed their minds during the course of the committee meeting? How else can their policy gymnastics be explained?

The final vote was eight in favour (all the Green committee members voted for it), none against and two abstentions. The new speed limit will start to come into force this April and will be phased in completely within four years. Since no-one voted against it, we can assume that both Labour and the Conservatives will not campaign against it in future. The police will have to enforce it, regardless of what Katy Bourne thinks.

Blogging, tweeting councillors in Brighton & Hove

These days anyone can talk to everyone for free by blogging or getting some kind of social media account. So far as the latter is concerned, twitter is by far and away the most useful. Celebrities, media junkies, various other extroverts and, of course, politicians make use of these new mediums. Today, I’m focusing on this last category of talkers – those who would seek to govern us. By doing the new technologies, they sidestep established media completely and thus avoid the manner in which these esteemed organs curate the news. Now it is possible to discuss matters directly with the highest policy wonks and pullers of the levers of power.

Every day radio and television news discusses what twitter has been talking about because more Britons are active on twitter (11 million) than buy a daily newspaper (9 million). We are living through the cusp of change. The early adopters seized the new opportunities some time ago, the ready to be convinced were fledgling technocrats by the time of the last general election in the UK and the most reluctant parts of the political world have now grudgingly accepted that they must join in. Yet some still resist. Of the refuseniks, some are probably too stuck in their ways to progress beyond occasional or frequent use of emails, some are frightened of the dragons that await inside the blogosphere and some don’t really want to talk to other people. Some just want the status that comes with their high office and are happy to be guided by their public relations consultants or party spin doctors.

Brighton & Hove City Council is comprised of 54 councillors. Presently, there are 23 Greens, 18 Tories and 13 Labour Party councillors. Our local population is, according to official statistics, very well educated. One-third of them have a degree. We are well known for our vibrant digital economy and when we do buy newspapers, we are frequently given the impression that they are written by people who live here. You might think that in these circumstances, a very high proportion of our local politicians would be active online. There’s no shortage of matters to discuss. Are our politicking brigade leading the discussions? I’ll take each by turn, using the simple but expedient method of a google search to determine whether they blog or use twitter. Of course, this will not establish whether they write something online anonymously but that can hardly be claimed to be assisting the political dialogue.

  • Dawn Barnett is a Conservative Party Councillor for Hangleton and Knoll Ward. She does not blog or use twitter.
  • Jayne Bennett is a Conservative Party Councillor for Hove Park Ward. She does not blog or use twitter.
  • Geoffrey Bowden is a Green Party Councillor for Queen’s Park. He does not blog but he is very active on twitter: @TheSussexSquare
  • Vanessa Brown is a Conservative Party Councillor for Hove Park. She does not blog or use twitter.
  • Ruth Buckley is a Green Party Councillor for Goldsmid Ward. She does not blog or use twitter.
  • Bob Carden is a Labour Party Councillor for North Portslade. He does not blog or use twitter.
  • Denise Cobb is a Conservative Party Councillor for Westbourne Ward and is the Deputy Leader of the Opposition. She does not blog or use twitter.
  • Graham Cox is a Conservative Party Councillor for Westbourne Ward. For a while he ran two blogs! On 1st May 2012 he abandoned his personal blog because it had been a place where he could “write ‘opinions strictly my own’ type entries on here.” He says he realised that in fact, “there is really no such thing.” After that he has only maintained his official Conservative Party blog. Mr Cox is also very active on twitter: @CoxGraham
  • Ian Davey is a Green Party Councillor for St Peter’s & North Laine Ward and is the Chair of the Transport Committee. He does not blog or use twitter.
  • Lizzie Dean is a Green Party Councillor for St Peter’s & North Laine Ward and is the Chair of Licensing Committee. She does not blog. She has a twitter account but it has been inactive for more than two years: @LizzieDeaneBton.
  • Ben Duncan is a Green Party Councillor for Queen’s Park and is the Chair of Community Safety Forum. He was a very active blogger and tweeter until very recently when he stopped suddenly. The precise reasons for his unexpected silence are closely guarded secrets although they can be easily guessed at, given the heat that his political opponents turned on him for deploying a risqué sense of humour. Being funny is a serious crime in our boring political world. I know exactly how and why he came to quit the online chat (don’t ask – I’m not going to tell you, not yet anyway) and, as with many others, I want him to come back.
  • Leigh Farrow is a Labour Party Councillor for Moulsecoomb & Bevendean Ward. He does not blog or tweet.
  • Brian Fitch is a Labour Party Councillor for Hangleton & Knoll Ward. He does not blog or tweet.
  • Matt Follett is a Green Party Councillor for Hanover & Elm Grove Ward. He does not blog or tweet.
  • Penny Gilbey is a Labour Party Councillor for North Portslade Ward. She does not blog but she does tweet frequently: @PortsladePen.
  • Les Hamilton is a Labour Party Councillor for South Portslade Ward. He does not blog or tweet.
  • Christopher Hawtree is a Green Party Councillor for Central Hove Ward. He blogs beautifully and has taken to twitter like the proverbial quacking animal does to water but with more eloquence and wit than any political animal and beats many of our celebrity heroes hands down too: @chrishawtree.
  • Linda Hyde is a Conservative Party Councillor for Rottingdean Coastal Ward. She does not blog or tweet.
  • Tony Janio is a Conservative Party Councillor for Hangleton & Knoll. He does not blog or tweet.
  • Rob Jarrett is a Green Party Councillor for Goldsmid Ward and is the Chair of the Adult Care & Health Committee. He does not blog but he tweets frequently: @RobHove.
  • Mike Jones is a Green Party Councillor for Preston Park Ward. He does not blog or tweet.
  • Amy Kennedy is a Green Party Councillor for Preston Park Ward. She does not blog but she does tweet. She is presently recovering from a serious illness – that’s why she is less active than she was formerly on twitter: @AmyK_redux – everyone’s looking forward to her getting well very soon!
  • Ania Kitcat is a Green Party Councillor for Regency Ward. She does not blog or tweet.
  • Jason Kitcat hardly needs an introduction of any kind. He is a Green Party Councillor for Regency Ward and Leader of the Council. He is a very active blogger and tweeter: @JasonKitcat.
  • Jeane Lepper is a Labour Party Councillor for Hollingdean & Stanmer Ward. She does not blog or tweet.
  • Leo Littman is a Green Party Councillor for Preston Park Ward. He does not blog or tweet.
  • Phelim Mac Cafferty is a Green Party Councillor for Brunswick & Adelaide Ward. He does not blog but he is a very active tweeter: @Phelimmac.
  • Jo Marsh is a Labour Party Councillor for Moulsecoomb & Bevendean Ward. She does not blog or tweet.
  • Ann Meadows is a Labour Party Councillor for Moulsecoomb & Bevendean Ward. She does not blog or tweet.
  • Mary Mears is a Conservative Party Councillor for Rottingdean Coastal Ward. She did blog between September 2009 and July 2011 but seems to have abandoned her extensive efforts since then. She does not tweet. Perhaps with no elections in sight, she cannot see the point of it?
  • Gill Mitchell is a Labour Party Councillor for East Brighton Ward. She does not blog or tweet.
  • Warren Morgan is a Labour Party Councillor for East Brighton Ward. He does not blog but is a very active tweeter: @warrenmorgan.
  • Ann Norman is a Conservative Party Councillor for Withdean Ward. She does not blog. She has a twitter account but as with her husband (below), she does not use it, so as with Ben Duncan, I’m not counting her. There’s only three tweets there, all sent on 18th March of this year, concluding with the statement that for her, “being an effective councillor for my residents and for the cityis a full time job“, by which she presumably means that she hasn’t got time for anything else.
  • Ken Norman is a Conservative Party Councillor for Withdean Ward. He does not blog. He has a twitter account but like Ben Duncan and his wife he does not use it, so I’m not counting him either. Like his wife, his account doesn’t reveal much enthusiasm. There are only 7 tweets between February 2009 and today! The first announces who he is, presumably because he doesn’t understand that is what is bio space is for – he’s left that blank. Two and a half years later he updated his job description in another tweet. On the same day he praised David Cameron. Nine months after that he tweeted a single name, enigmatically: “Jason Kitcat” (also on this list). In a rush of activity, five days later he tweeted his wife’s account name, twice. In June of this year, he boasted that he was going to Buckingham Palace. It is fair to say that he doesn’t get it.
  • Gary Peltzer Dunn is a Conservative Party Councillor for Wish Ward. He does not blog or tweet.
  • Alex Phillips is a Green Party Councillor for Goldsmid Ward. She does not blog (although she does have a personal, political website for her campaign to become Green Party Deputy Leader). She is so active on twitter that she has had more than one account, moving from one to another as she ups her political ambitions. Currently she is tweeting here: @alexfordeputy.
  • Brian Pidgeon is a Conservative Party Councillor for Patcham Ward. He does not blog or tweet.
  • Anne Pissaridou is a Labour Party Councillor for Wish Ward. She does not blog but she tweets frequently: @paulinemable.
  • Stephanie Powell is a Green Party Councillor for Queen’s Park Ward. She does not blog or tweet.
  • Bill Randall is a Green Party Councillor for Hanover & Elm Grove Ward and is also the Mayor of Brighton & Hove. He does not blog but he is very active on twitter: @BillRandallBHCC.
  • Alan Robins is a Labour Party Councillor for South Portslade Ward. He does not blog or tweet.
  • Sven Rufus is a Green Party Councillor for Hollingdean & Stanmer Ward. He has taken to blogging recently and is very active on twitter: @SvenRufus.
  • Sue Shanks is a Green Party Councillor for Withdean Ward. She does not blog but she tweets occasionally: @ShanksSue.
  • Dee Simson is a Conservative Party Councillor for Withdean Ward. She does not blog but she tweets frequently: @Woodingdean_Dee.
  • David Smith is a Conservative Party Councillor for Rottingdean Coastal Ward. He does not blog or tweet.
  • Christina Summers is a Green Party Councillor for Hollingdean & Stanmer Ward. She does not blog but she is on twitter: @SummersCM.
  • Ollie Sykes is a Green Party Councillor for Brunswick & Adelaide Ward. He doesn’t blog or tweet but he does share an occasionally used twitter account with Phelim Mac Cafferty: @Brunswick_Green.
  • Carol Theobald is a Conservative Party Councillor for Patcham Ward. She doesn’t blog or tweet.
  • Geoffrey Theobald is a Conservative Party Councillor for Patcham Ward and Leader of the Opposition. He doesn’t blog or tweet.
  • Craig Turton is a Labour Party Councillor for East Brighton Ward. He doesn’t blog or tweet.
  • Liz Wakefield is a Green Party Councillor for Hanover & Elm Grove Ward. She doesn’t blog but she is very active on twitter: @LizGreenBH.
  • Andrew Wealls is a Conservative Party Councillor for Central Hove Ward. He doesn’t blog but he is an infrequent tweeter: @Wealls.
  • Geoffrey Wells is a Conservative Party Councillor for Woodingdean Ward. He doesn’t blog or tweet.
  • Pete West is a Green Party Councillor for St Peter’s & North Laine Ward. He doesn’t blog or tweet.

19 Councillors out of 54 are engaging directly with the voters by blogging and tweeting – that’s 35%. Is this good enough? How does this compare with other local authorities?

Inevitably more Greens are currently active online – there are more of them on the council. Taken by party, 13 out of the 23 Green Councillors are ‘engaged’ (57%), 3 out of 13 Labour Councillors (23%) and 3 out of 18 Conservative Councillors (17%). Age obviously comes into play, with younger councillors being more likely to adopt the new technologies but that doesn’t explain the situation away altogether.

The Conservative Party seems to acknowledge the issue – it’s website gives the official Conservative Twitter feed as a place to contact all its councillors without their own account, despite this approach defeating the big advantage of twitter: direct, personal contact. The times they are a-changed but the older politicians don’t seem ready to accept modernity just yet.

Very few doubt that within a decade newspapers as we know them will be dead. Lots of our local councillors waste their time by writing to our local rag, a poisonous contribution to politics popularly known as The Evening Anus, even though it only sells approximately 5,000 copies per day and probably half of those to businesses who use it for little more than table space filling. We can have some sympathy with hard working councillors who have allowed their brains to become too stuck in their current methodologies to cope with digital life but we have to ask them, don’t you want young people to vote for you? Don’t you know how people communicate these days? What are you waiting for?

There’s been much fuss in Brighton & Hove lately about whether politicians should be independently minded or not. On close analysis, most sensible commentators agree that we want them to vote for the policies owned by the parties whose platforms they stood on. That need not stop them from expressing themselves freely online, from debating the issues thoroughly, from being available for communication free from party spin doctors. Our national political life is completely tedious because it appears to be dominated by policy wonkers and people who, frankly, you would not want to spend an evening in the pub with. We want real people in charge of our lives. That’s the whole point of democracy.

We know that our politicians will be forced to accept the modern communication systems or lose office. The question is how quickly they will catch up with the rest of us. That is still a challenge for all parties.

Councillor Graham Cox denies having opinions of his own

Councillor Graham Cox

This morning’s post is an analysis of the public pronouncements by the newest Conservative Party councillor in Hove, Graham Cox, who represents Westbourne Ward on Brighton & Hove City Council. With a cheesy grin like this you didn’t need me to tell you that he was a politician. Shortly after his win in a bye-election in December 2011, he started posting his thoughts on a blog – http://grahamcoxblog.wordpress.com/ -  or so I thought. Now it appears that he has been running two blogs, one at that address and another at http://grahamcox.yourcllr.com/. He says he did this so that he could use the first address to post opinions which were strictly his own. He also says “in reality there is no such thing“! Just for the record, here’s him saying that:

Click to enlarge image

How can this be? Is he a robot controlled from afar? Even the most cynical critics of politicians recognise that individual politicians must have some individual views.

His first post was on the WordPress site. He declared that he found three hours of work per day “very hard” and declared that his job as a councillor would be “will be to represent local residents on the Council as part of a responsible Opposition to the Green administration“. Beyond the usual pleasantries, it didn’t say much. His next post made good his promise by relentlessly attacking the Green administration in Brighton. The next day he posted again, this time attacking a Sussex Police Officer for failing to ‘have a word’ with a friendly drunk sitting on a bench, despite this fellow having broken no laws and the officer plainly being on other duties. Graham Cox used to be a police officer.

Whilst there is some overlap between the two blogs, there are also some differences. Whether this is because Cop Cox (as he is popularly known) actually did have some opinions of his own or due to some other reason, I do not know. Using his own categories, here’s some pie charts showing the proportions of his posts he devoted to various subjects. It’s a simple analysis but it’ll do for now. First up is chart showing the division of categories on his WordPress blog. Remember, that’s the one allegedly there to publish his non-existent personal views. Despite stating that he viewed his job as a councillor to oppose the local Green administration, a minority of his posts are concerned with Brighton & Hove City Council.

Subject Proportions on Councillor Graham Cox's 'Personal' Blog. Click To Enlarge Image.

Perhaps I’m being a bit unfair here? After all, here is a man who says he has no opinions of his own and clearly most of the public pronouncements he has apparently authored are over at the blog set up by his colleagues in the Conservative Party. Certainly they’ve done a better job at visual presentation with their blog than Cop Cox managed on his own. Again, using his categories, here’s a pie chart showing the division of subject matter on that more polished blog.

Graham Cox's Blog Hosted By The Conservative Councillors' Association. Click On Image To Enlarge.

Brighton & Hove’s political bloggers

Brighton & Hove claims to have the highest per capita proportion of digital companies in the country. Unsurprisingly, it also has a large number of bloggers but not, as you might expect, inside the local political class.

Despite the opportunity that blogging provides for free personal publicity, the majority of our local councillors appear unwilling to take advantage of it. The excuses are rather familiar. Some will claim that it takes too long but after the initial setup it takes as long as it does to write a letter. Some will claim that they are away from their workstation too often to make it convenient, even though it is a doddle to blog, as I do frequently, from a mobile phone. Some will claim that they do blog but in fact their blogs are so infrequently updated that they could more properly be described as moribund.

Written communication is a vital life force in politics. Clearly our local councillors have all grasped that, which is ironic given its chronic security issues. Correspondence from and to their local residents lies at the heart of their work.

Beyond that, there is the hum drum routine of meeting residents’ associations. (Of ours, their websites reveal a hilarious lack of understanding as to what to do with the apostrophe on the word resident.) The problem residents’ associations present to local councillors is that they claim to represent lots of less active citizens without much evidence to demonstrate that silent majority even knows who they are. Clearly, whilst the associations definitely include the most active members of a community their numbers are tiny compared to the turnout in local elections. The great unknown is how much influence they have? Much of what is said in these meetings is unreported to the outside world. Councillors blogging could cure that problem. The associations don’t manage it because, on the whole, they are staffed by exactly the wrong sort of elderly person to master their digital affairs properly.

We have an aging population. Most of our councillors are either elderly or they are late middle aged. In other words, they have not grown up with modern digital social media. They’ve been obliged to pick up computing skills along the way. They complain that young people don’t show any interest in politics and fail to grasp the ease by which they could discuss the issues that matter to them at a time and in a place which is convenient to them. Smart phones & other mobile devices are the main method of communication amongst our youth. Obviously, they’re not going to abandon them in sudden favour of the Brighton Argus (See what I did there?).

The Green councillors are marginally better than the other parties at individual blogging but, really, all the parties are equally to blame. Why do they spend their political lives praying for a mention in the local rag, with its unknown circulation inside the City, when they could so easily provide their own stream of ‘press releases’?

Whether the answer lies in the inertia of age, fear of revealing that they have nothing to say beyond bland platitudes or a futile desire to make the digital age disappear, it is a self-defeating attitude to politics. Being keen readers and occasional commentators on a prominent independent political blog is still a very passive approach (link is to a much commented on post there, for illustrative purposes).

This is a plea that our local politicians become more proactive in their communications. With their own blogs, they could readily rebut allegations that they are merely a party man or woman. They could insist that the established media print or publish the web address of their blog whenever mentioning them, they could take control of their own communications in a very public manner.

Here’s a list of the few active blogging councillors we have in Brighton & Hove, as of today. I’m happy to add to this list if I’ve missed anyone out, regardless of party but they will have to have updated their blog frequently.

Cllr Christopher Hawtree (Green)

Cllr Graham Cox (Conservative)

Cllr Jason Kitcat (Green)

Cllr Ben Duncan (Green)

Four out of fifty four? The other 90+% may claim to use other social networks but these systems (twitter, Facebook etc) are dependent on people being willing to become disciples. Blogs can be visited as and when it is convenient. Most people don’t want to form any kind of permanent arrangement with their local politicians. People want politicians to serve them honestly, diligently and publicly. A blog is the perfect vehicle for proof of that service.

Graham Cox bloodstains his new clean sheet but there’s no pleasure in deflowering a political virgin

Graham Cox has recently been elected to represent the voters in Westbourne ward on Brighton & Hove City Council. He has been described, by the infamous Brighton Politics Blogger, as an inspired choice by the local Conservative Party. Perhaps this plaudit has gone to his head? He’s rushed into the blogosphere and will find it takes some time to find his feet under his virtual desk. Unfortunately, time is in short supply for Mr Cox because to win the respect of his dutiful voters he must demonstrate respect for the political office he holds. To be respectable, he must be responsible. To be responsible, he must be measured in his pronouncements. He’s got off to a sorry start.

His first couple of posts proffer his personal perspective on his success. They introduce little information worth remarking upon. It is the usual fare from a local politician: he attacks the party in power, points out the effort made by his opponents to defeat him and forgets to thank the voters who elected him.

Having dispensed with the pleasantries, Mr Cox turns his hand to his specialist subject – policing (the following quotes comprise his whole third post at the time of writing). With a distinguished career in the force behind him, he might have been expected to share his organisational wisdom with the rest of us, to support the police and make genuinely constructive suggestions. Instead, he attacks the police! Traditionally, the Conservative Party supported the police. Was the New Labour project of leaving no issue safely in the hands of the Tories really that successful? His first proper political posting has style of a rough and ready bar back room bare fisted brawler. Here’s how he throws his punches:

I really am trying to avoid posting about policing – honest. However I offer this observation which could be confirmed by about 30 other people who saw the same thing.

Here’s a man who recognises that he must raise his political game from being restricted to mouthing off about his old job, yet cannot manage it. Had the incident describes been really serious or of much local significance, his claim to wish to avoid the subject might carry some weight. He has hung up his cap but still thinks he is wearing it. Look at his description of the trivial incident which has bothered him so much that he cannot hold his tongue:

Today at 10.10am I was waiting for the bus opposite Waitrose to take me back to Kings House. A police officer drove up in his fully marked police car. He parked the car outside Waitrose in Western Road, one half on the double yellow lines and one half of the car on the pavement.

Where Cox Bussed His Political Balls

Mr Cox must be congratulated on his attention to detail. If only regular members of the public were so aware of its importance when describing events, then much crime would be easier to sort out. So far, so good and also he gets some political brownie points for subtly mentioning that some members of the Conservative Party use the bus, like the rest of us. He continues:

The officer got out, hatless inevitably, and walked slowly into Waitrose carrying an envelope. He walked past two men sat on the bench outside Waitrose. They were already drunk and openly drinking from their Special Brew cans. They shouted ‘happy new year’ to the officer as he tried to avoid their gaze. He ignored them and wandered into Waitrose.

Bench Marked For Temperate Citizens Only

Obviously Mr Cox thinks that a copper should wear his hat always. I dare say that he is more knowledgeable about the official grooming protocol than my humble self. Personally, I do not think it is all that important to have the thing glued to their heads.

We are told that the officer walked slowly. Being an ex officer himself, nothing he reports about this scene is insignificant to him. He draws attention to the officer’s speed of movement deliberately. Clearly, we are being told that this was not an emergency call. The implication is that is was a casual matter. Except that the police don’t do casual, hatless or not. When in uniform they are on duty. Here we have an officer carrying out his official duties, which was probably connected with the envelope.

Did Cox Rise To The Occasion?

Next, Mr Cox stoops to a fiction which neatly fits his prejudged view of the situation. Despite waiting for the bus opposite Waitrose, which places him on the other side of the road, he declares that the errant officer tried to avoid their gaze. Someone on the other side of the road would have be exceptionally well sighted to be able to see where a man getting out of a car to enter a shop was actually looking. He probably had one eye on the traffic, to start with. Mr Cox clearly doesn’t have a clue where the officer tried to look. Did he declare telepathy in his election manifesto? Most probably the officer was trying to look where he was going!

Sadly, many of us locals have become accustomed to not making eye contact with our local street drinkers. We prefer not to see them at all. Their conspicuous personal problems upset us. Mr Cox is clearly of the belief that they should simply go away, where we can’t see them. Perhaps this officer is of the same point of view? Perhaps he was just getting on with his job? Perhaps he didn’t even notice them? Mr Cox certainly noticed them.

What was the police officer doing? I have no idea. It certainly was not an emergency but he could have been investigating something.

He could have been doing any one of the vast range of activities that comprise the complex job of policing, as Mr Cox well understands. Having himself been in various positions of high responsibility when he was in the profession himself, he surely knows that pretty much anything this officer was up to was purposeful and probably under instruction from a more senior officer. Doubtless, he was focused on the task in hand.

What message did he send out to the 30 people watching him? Well presumably  it is ok to park on double yellow lines and the pavement if you drive a police car. As for the public bench, don’t worry about old people who might want to sit there while waiting for the bus, it is reserved for Brighton street drinkers to sit there consuming high strength lager.

Oh dear. As a local fellow, Mr Cox knows perfectly well the impossibility of finding a parking space in Brighton or much of Hove. Did he, when he was the last Superintendent in charge of Hove Police Station, order his officers always to find legal parking spaces when carrying out official duties? Doesn’t seem very likely, does it? That stance would have defeated the ability of his force to carry out their duties in sensible time frames; they would have spent much of their working lives driving around to find the free spots and then walking to and from their destinations. What sort of message would that sort of carry on give? None of us like to see parking on pavements but few of us begrudge the officers we pay for, especially when they park on really wide pavements. Where’s the real harm?

If Everyone Swept The Pavement In Front Of His House, The Whole Street Would Be Clean - Chinese Proverb

Mr Cox could have concentrated on the evident social problems faced by all end of the line places like Brighton. Street drinkers are the most visible end of that spectrum. Drinking in public is not illegal in Brighton. Perhaps Mr Cox wishes that it was? He doesn’t say so… what annoys him is that these particular alcoholics have sat on a public bench.

The alcoholics he finds so distasteful are members of the public but Mr Cox doesn’t think they should sit on a public bench. Therefore, he wants them to sit on the pavement. Has he tried to sit on the pavement at this time of year? I guess not…

Although street drinking is not illegal, antisocial behaviour can be dealt with by the police. However, these alcoholics were not being antisocial. In fact, they wished the hatless police officer a happy new year. This kind sentiment is exactly the sort of vibe which Brighton is famous for.

Such a shame – if the officer had parked round the corner, put his hat on and had a quiet word to the street drinkers the 30 people watching might have thought the authorities in Brighton cared a bit more.

The shame is on you Mr Cox. When was the last time you had a quiet word with our local street drinkers? When was the last time you spoke to them at all? You are now a member of our local authority. Respect for the local authorities rests on your shoulders too. If you want to criticise others, you must be prepared to show some of the public care which you complain is so lacking. When did you last ask alcoholic street drinkers if they might give their seat up for someone else?

What sort of message are you sending out? That it is okay to shoot your mouth off without investigating the facts? What policies does your party offer to cure Brighton & Hove’s serious problems with alcohol and drug abuse? Criticising a police officer like this is a really cheap shot. You would struggle to sink much lower. It is political gesturing gone mad. It serves no purpose whatsoever.

Had you really cared about this incident, which has apparently bothered you so much that you could not resist the urge to issue a public posting about it, you could have taken some constructive action and then written about that. You could have nipped over the road, noted the officer’s number and contacted your old colleagues to enquire whether it was considered acceptable for hatless officers to park on the pavement, to walk slowly, to ignore sociable citizens in the circumstances at the time. Being a local councillor and an ex-police officer, your enquiry would have been treated seriously. You’d have got a reply which dealt with the issues.

If you want to be taken seriously as a councillor, you’ll have to start thinking local issues through a more clearly, before shooting from the hip. This time your aim was ill advised. Consider yourself politically deflowered. Time to start acting the part you have obtained in the theatre of local politics, if you want to be taken seriously.