As the local government
election short campaign gets under way – let’s keep it local.
Local government elections
will be held for every seat in Scotland on Thursday 4 May. The first reminder
is to make sure you are registered to vote. Changes to the system means that a
lot of people have been missing from the register. If you haven’t received a
polling card by now, you are probably not registered. It’s easy to do this
online at https://www.gov.uk/register-to-vote, but it has to be completed by 17 April.
The second reminder is that
these are local elections. The councillor you elect will make important
decisions about local services including schools, social care, roads, libraries
and much more. While I am not naive enough to believe that national issues
don’t impact on local elections, I get very irritated when leaflets arrive
through the door with the local issues relegated to an afterthought. – I bin
them.
UNISON Scotland has published
its manifesto for the election. There are some general themes around fair
funding and the importance of keeping services local, as well as more detailed
ideas around individual services. We will be highlighting some of these, and
the people who deliver them, during the campaign because we all tend to take
these services for granted.
I take some comfort from a poll we commissioned from
Survation this month that voters do care about local services. Public services are the top priority for voters (70%); and half of all
voters chose the public sector as the best to deliver our public services, only
19% chose the private sector and 13% chose charities. This included
Conservative voters with only 31% saying the private sector and 10% saying
charities are the best place to deliver public services.
That’s a clear message to council candidates from all parties that people
in Scotland want high quality services, delivered by public sector staff. That doesn’t
preclude other service providers, but in-house staff should be the primary means
of delivering public services that are accountable to the public.
There was also support for keeping services local, with the council
being the most trusted deliverer of local services. Voters also wanted more of
their taxes spent locally. They also recognised that the cuts have had a
serious impact on the quality of public services. Hardly surprising when nine
out of ten jobs lost in Scotland’s public sector since the austerity cuts have
gone from local government.
We will be providing some useful questions for candidates in the coming
weeks. So if a candidate chaps on the door - start by asking them, not what
they have been told to say by central office, but how they will be standing up for
local services. Keep it local.
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