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Despite entering the Official Singles Chart at No4 - & riding high in the download charts - the BBC decide to censor reggae band Captain Ska's hit single "Liar Liar". The anti-austerity song is "too political" for the State broadcaster, though this doesn't stop them showing the headlines from the right wing media at every possible opportunity, on radio, TV and the internet. So the band, in protest and for the fun of it, performed the song right outside the BBC's front door, with the People's Assembly poster warning of the threat of re-electing Theresa May in the background.
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Born 23 March, 1872 in Australia, Michael Joseph Savage (1872-1940), or “Mickey” as he affectionately became known, was one of New Zealand’s best loved Prime Ministers. For two generations he spearheaded the social security structure of New Zealand, being a leading spokesman for increased pensions and a totally free health system.
He was a leading figure in the New Zealand Labour Party following its formation in 1916, and he succeeded Harry Holland as leader, following the latter’s death in 1933. In 1935 Savage became New Zealand’s first Labour Prime Minister, when Labour was swept into power at the tail end of the Depression. Immediately a Christmas bonus was paid to the unemployed and poor, and a programme of state housing commenced. In 1938 he began drawing up plans for his Social Security system, calling it “applied Christianity”. This provided for a universal free health system and an old-age pension of 30 shillings a week for men and women at age 60, with a general payment at the age of 65.
"Mickey" Savage, along with Peter Fraser and Walter Nash were considered the big three in the early years of the first Labour Government. In 1938, despite already being diagnosed with colon cancer, Savage made many inspiring speeches during the election campaign, leading the Labour government to an even greater victory than in 1935. Despite declining health he continued to lead the government, until on 27 March 1940, he died at his home in Wellington, at the height of his popularity.
There was a huge outpouring of grief after Savage’s death, with hundreds of thousands paying their respects in Wellington and Auckland and at stops along the main trunk line as his body was transported to its final resting place at Auckland’s Bastion Point, where the Savage Memorial now stands. For decades after his death his photograph still hung on the wall in thousands of New Zealand homes.
Above is the personally signed portrait of a young MJ Savage given to Walter Nash in 1911. At that time he was a member of the NZ Socialist Party. It comes from the Nash collection, of which you can see more here: www.archives.govt.nz/gallery/v/Walter+Nash+Exhibition/
Archives Reference: AEFZ 22624 W5727 Box 2596/ 3102/0216
collections.archives.govt.nz/web/arena/search#/?q=R23696441
For further enquiries please email Research.Archives@dia.govt.nz
For updates on our On This Day series and news from Archives New Zealand, follow us on Twitter: www.twitter.com/ArchivesNZ
Material from Archives New Zealand
The 2014 New Zealand General election takes place on Saturday September 20.
The image presented here is of the advice provided by the Chief Electoral Office for Polling Day Staff from the 1981 general election. The advice covers topics on how to set up a polling booth and the materials needed to ensure the polling day ran smoothly, such as having a thermos flask and a spare clock.
The Chief Electoral Office has had four main functions. First, it has been responsible for the registration of electors and the maintenance of electoral rolls. Second, it has been responsible for conducting general elections, by-elections, licensing polls, and referenda. Third, it has provided administrative support for the activities of the Representation Commissions. Lastly, it has been responsible for providing advice to Ministers, and to Parliament, on electoral matters.
Until 1975 the office employed the Registrar of Electors in each electorate. However, when the compilation and printing of the rolls was computerised the Post Office took over this function. In 1975 the Registrars of Electors in each electorate became Post Office employees. In 1980 the Director-General of the Post Office became the Chief Registrar of Electors. When the Post Office was split up in 1987 New Zealand Post took over this function.
Although Representation Commissions do not come under the authority of the Chief Electoral Office, the office did keep records relating to these commissions. The first Representation Commission was created by the Representation Act 1887. These commissions had the function of determining how electorate boundaries should change after each census. They were independent statutory bodies. However, the records of the commissions appear to have been kept by the Chief Electoral Office. Records concerning electoral redistributions can be found in the records described below, as well as in the IA and EL record groups. Details on the process of redistribution can be found in the New Zealand Electoral Atlas.
In 1993 the Electoral Act established a new system for parliamentary elections in New Zealand. From 1996 on Members of Parliament have been elected using a Mixed Member Proportional system. Under the new system each elector had two votes – one electorate vote and one party vote. From 1996, the representation of political parties in Parliament was largely determined by the total vote for each party across the country. As part of these changes the Electoral Commission was established to register political parties, receive returns of donations and election expenses from these parties, allocate election broadcasting time and funds, and produce public information about electoral matters.
This item and other items from the Chief Electoral Office can be seen in the Wellington Reading Room of Archives New Zealand.
File Reference: ABCL W4035 13 E83/3 part 1
collections.archives.govt.nz/web/arena/search#/?q=R1250559
Material from Archives New Zealand
8/5/10 - London, UK. The first 'Take Back Parliament' protest following Britain's general election, in support of a genuinely proportional electoral system.
The protest gathered in Trafalgar Square and made a case for 'fair' votes, after the inconclusive election result. It then wound its way to Smith Square, where Liberal Democrat Party leader Nick Clegg was conducting negotiations with the Conservative Party to seal some form of coalition or parliamentary agreement. The protesters made it clear they expected Clegg to keep PR on the negotiating table.
Clegg himself then unexpectedly addressed the crowd to huge acclaim.
At 1am this morning I cut up all my previous pieces of work and reassembled them into a new piece. It's very messy and quite exciting (as things tend to be at that time in the morning)!
I have assembled the three stumpwork face samples at the bottom of the canvas to show the result, which is a departure from my other general election pieces which end on election night before the result is known.
This seemed to be appropriate this time as the election process thew up such an indeterminate result.
I deliberately made the faces of Cameron and Clegg very flat, compared with Brown's as their public character is still being formed.
I have enclosed them in a painted symbol which is one I drew many years ago whilst looking out of a porthole on a cruise. The effect I am aiming for is people caught in the limelight .
Mixed media. Stumpwork, fabric, embroidery, canvas, paint, paper and pen.
Ireland goes to the polls on 25th February to elect a new Dáil Eireann (lower house of Parliament). In the Republic of Ireland, Members of Parliament are called Teachta Dála (or TD for short) and 165 deputies are elected by proportional representation using a single transferable vote in multi-seat constituencies.
Brian Meaney of the Green Party has the most original election poster in the Clare constituency.
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All Rights Reserved
Please do NOT use my photos without my permission.
Source: Scan of original poster from our ephemera collection
Date: 13th July 1865.
Repository: Local Studies, Swindon Central Library.
www.swindon.gov.uk/localstudies
Poster advertising the poll in the Borough of Cricklade for the elction on Thursday 13th July 1865.
The polling booths for Swindon were in the Market Place, Old Town, and a shop in the High Street belonging to a Mr John Lansley.
In the interests of Universal Suffrage in the UK Polling Stations are provided for any Elves, Gnomes or Pixies that wish to vote in parliamentary elections.
Workers' Party Rally @ Yishun Stadium 1 May 2011
Hi-Res images available over at: yunir.net/elections/
The 2014 New Zealand General election takes place on Saturday September 20.
The image presented here is of the advice provided by the Chief Electoral Office on how to vote in the 1975 General Election. The languages the advice is provided is in English, Maori, Cook Islands Maori and Samoan.
The Chief Electoral Office has had four main functions. First, it has been responsible for the registration of electors and the maintenance of electoral rolls. Second, it has been responsible for conducting general elections, by-elections, licensing polls, and referenda. Third, it has provided administrative support for the activities of the Representation Commissions. Lastly, it has been responsible for providing advice to Ministers, and to Parliament, on electoral matters.
Until 1975 the office employed the Registrar of Electors in each electorate. However, when the compilation and printing of the rolls was computerised the Post Office took over this function. In 1975 the Registrars of Electors in each electorate became Post Office employees. In 1980 the Director-General of the Post Office became the Chief Registrar of Electors. When the Post Office was split up in 1987 New Zealand Post took over this function.
Although Representation Commissions do not come under the authority of the Chief Electoral Office, the office did keep records relating to these commissions. The first Representation Commission was created by the Representation Act 1887. These commissions had the function of determining how electorate boundaries should change after each census. They were independent statutory bodies. However, the records of the commissions appear to have been kept by the Chief Electoral Office. Records concerning electoral redistributions can be found in the records described below, as well as in the IA and EL record groups. Details on the process of redistribution can be found in the New Zealand Electoral Atlas.
In 1993 the Electoral Act established a new system for parliamentary elections in New Zealand. From 1996 on Members of Parliament have been elected using a Mixed Member Proportional system. Under the new system each elector had two votes – one electorate vote and one party vote. From 1996, the representation of political parties in Parliament was largely determined by the total vote for each party across the country. As part of these changes the Electoral Commission was established to register political parties, receive returns of donations and election expenses from these parties, allocate election broadcasting time and funds, and produce public information about electoral matters.
This item and other items from the Chief Electoral Office can be seen in the Wellington Reading Room of Archives New Zealand.
File Reference: ABCL W4035 13 E83/5 collections.archives.govt.nz/web/arena/search#/?q=R1250564
Material from Archives New Zealand
The two Metropolitan Police Officers monitor events. The officer on the right is Superintendent Vic Coventry, second in charge of 'A' or Whitehall Division. A perfect gentleman who was always fair and honest in all his dealings and worked extremely well with Chief Superintendent William Gilbert, both excellent policemen who were, without doubt, a credit to the Metropolitan Police.
The police officers would be attached to Cannon Row Police Station (Alpha Delta) the Headquarters of the Metropolitan Police's 'A' or Whitehall Division that formed part of the world famous Scotland Yard designed by the acclaimed Scottish architect Norman Shaw in 1898.
Cannon Row Police Station handled all of the major ceremonial occasions in the Capital from 1902 plus the many large demonstrations that took place most weeks on Trafalgar Square, Whitehall, Parliament Square and Downing Street.
As well as the above, the station was responsible for the protection of the Monarch and the Royal Family when resident at Buckingham Palace, Clarence House, Holyrood House (Scotland), Balmoral Castle, (Scotland), Castle of Mey (Scotland), Birkhall House (Scotland), Windsor Castle (Berkshire), Royal Lodge, (Berkshire).
The station also had huge policing responsibilities for the Palace of Westminster (Houses of Parliament).
For more about Cannon Row Police Station click on the links below:
Which will you choose??? If you are entitled to vote, then please do so.
Our sensory room has a 'colours and shapes' theme this half term... and handily had all these strips hanging from the ceiling. Convenient colours too!
Strangford DUP candidate with Deputy Leader Nigel Dodds pictured at the launch of the Party's slogan for the 2010 General Election
*click delete* "Now, infidels, let us see how your evil empire gets on without its precious Lolcats...mwa ha ha ha ha!"
UK Government warn that the country is at risk of cyberattack. Acid Rabbi wonders if this may be connected to an earlier embarrassment for the Commons.
The general election is about to start. Picture taken in the Guild of Students Courtyard, the University of Birmingham.
In 1852 the Parliament of the United Kingdom passed the New Zealand Constitution Act (15 & 16 Vict. c. 72). The long title of the Act was "An Act to Grant a Representative Constitution to the Colony of New Zealand", and it received Royal Assent on 30 June 1852.
The 1852 Constitution Act came into operation with a Proclamation by Governor George Grey on 17 January 1853. The Proclamation is on parchment and contains the signatures of Governor Grey and Civil Secretary Alfred Domett, and the Public Seal of New Zealand.
The text of the 1852 Act can be found here: nzetc.victoria.ac.nz/tm/scholarly/tei-GovCons-t1-body-d1-...
Archives Reference: IA9 Box 13/ 17
collections.archives.govt.nz/web/arena/search#/?q=R21434445
Material from Archives New Zealand Te Rua Mahara o Te Kāwanatanga
CLA President Henry Robinson with Liz Truss, Secretary of State for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs
Bumped into Nicola Sturgeon MP, First Minister of Scotland, doing a TV interview on my way home this evening.
This was the day after the UK General election in which the Scottish National Party won 56 of a possible 59 seats in Scotland. Giving her plenty to smile it about.
The following information is taken from The Board of Deputies of British Jews Facebook page:
Corbyn organised the Apr. 1977 defence of Jewish populated Wood Green from a Neo-Nazi march
7 Nov. 1990: Corbyn signs motion condemning the rise of antisemitism
11 Apr. 2000: Jeremy Corbyn signs motion condemning David Irving for being a Holocaust Denier
6 Nov. 2000: Jeremy Corbyn praised the ‘British Schindler’, Bill Barazetti, for his WW2 kindertransport
28 Jan. 2002: Jeremy Corbyn signs motion praising football clubs for commemorating Holocaust Day
30 Apr. 2002: Corbyn was a primary sponsor on a motion condemning antisemitism
11 May 2002: Jeremy led a clean up of Finsbury Park Synagogue after an anti-Semitic attack
23 July 2002: Corbyn condemned attacks on a synagogue in Swansea
26 Nov. 2003: Corbyn officially condemns attacks on 2 Istanbul synagogues
16 Dec. 2003: Jeremy Corbyn signs motion commemorating International Holocaust Day
2004: Jeremy condemned news that anti-Semitic hate crimes had risen for yet another year
21 Jan. 2004: Jeremy Corbyn condemned the French government’s moves to ban the Jewish Kippa in French Schools
26 Feb. 2004: Jeremy signed a motion praising Simon Wiesenthal for bringing Nazi perpetrators of the Holocaust to justice
8 Sept. 2004: Corbyn co-sponsored a bill expressing fears for the future of the United Synagogue Pension Scheme
11 Oct. 2004: Jeremy Corbyn condemned arbitrary attacks on civilians in Israel and Palestine
12 Jan. 2005: Jeremy Corbyn signs a motion commemorating International Holocaust Day
16 June 2005: Jeremy condemned the desecration of a Jewish cemetery in east London
11 Jan. 2006: Jeremy Corbyn signs a motion commemorating International Holocaust Day
8 Mar. 2006: Jeremy Corbyn led condemnations of an Iranian Magazine soliciting cartoons about the Holocaust
16 Apr. 2006: Jeremy Corbyn condemned Bryan Ferry for anti-Semitic remarks
26 June 2006: Jeremy Corbyn praised British war veterans for their efforts to combat the Holocaust
10 Oct. 2006: Jeremy signed a motion marking the 70th anniversary of Cable Street
14 Nov. 2007: Jeremy co-sponsored a motion lamenting the poverty and social exclusion East London Jews suffered
12 May 2008: Corbyn praised the efforts of the Jews in the Warsaw Ghetto during the uprising of 1944
27 Oct 2008: Jeremy Corbyn signs a motion marking the 70th anniversary of the horrors of the holocaust
8 Dec. 2008: Jeremy condemned the Press Complaints Commission for refusing to sanction The Times for antisemitism
14 Jan. 2009: Jeremy Corbyn condemned a wave of recent anti-Semitic incidents targeted
27 Jan. 2009: Corbyn signed John Mann’s motion condemning antisemitism on university campuses
26 Feb. 2009: Jeremy signs a motion condemning antisemitism on the internet
24 Mar. 2009: Corbyn signs a motion praising the heroism of British Jews during Holocaust
2 Dec. 2009: Jeremy Condemned Iran’s treatment of Jewish minorities in Iran
9 Feb. 2010: Jeremy joins in calls for Facebook to do more to fight antisemitism
22 Feb 2010: Corbyn co-sponsors a motion calling for Yemen’s Jews to be given refugee status to the UK
27 Oct. 2010: Corbyn praises work of late Israeli PM in his pursuit of a 2 state solution
27 Jan. 2011: Corbyn co-sponsored a motion praising the ‘never again for anyone initiative’
3 Mar. 2011: Corbyn backed Ian Paisley’s motion condemning the anti-Semitic remarks of Dior’s lead fashion designer
14 Mar. 2012: Jeremy Corbyn condemned the sale of Nazi memorabilia at an auction in Bristol
14 Mar 2012: Jeremy Corbyn co-sponsored a bill condemning the rise of antisemitism in Lithuania
20 Mar. 2012, Jeremy Corbyn condemned a terrorist attack on a Jewish school in Toulouse
12 June 2012, Jeremy co-sponsored a motion condemning anti-Semitic attacks during EURO 2012 in Poland
13 June 2012: Jeremy attacks BBC for cutting Jewish programmes from Its schedule
1 Mar 2013: Corbyn joins a chorus of calls condemning antisemitism In sport
1 Oct. 2013: Corbyn was one of the few MPs who defended Ralph Miliband from Daily Mail antisemitism
9 Jan 2014: Jeremy praises Holocaust Memorial’s work on antisemitism education
June 2015: Jeremy condemns a Neo-Nazi rally planned for a Jewish area of London
Sat 4 July 2015: Jeremy co-planned a counter-fascist demo in defence of Jewish residents at Golders Green. The march was re-routed
18 Nov. 2015, Corbyn used one of his first PMQs to challenge Cameron to do more on antisemitism
9 Oct 2016: Corbyn, close to tears, leads commemoration of the Battle of Cable Street
3 Dec. 2016: Corbyn visits Terezin Concentration Camp to commemorate Holocaust victims
In 2017-19 Jeremy introduced 20 new measures to combat antisemitism in the Labour Party
General Election day. Marking the fact that it's the first time my daughter has been able to vote. I'm impressed by how politically engaged she and her friends seem to be.
Info: Canon 7D, 30.0mm, f/4.0, 1/500, ISO 100.
Melania Trump, is a former model married to Donald Trump.
This caricature of Melania Trump was adapted from a Creative Commons licensed (CC BY-SA 3.0) photo from Toglenn on Wikimedia. Toglenn requested to have this included in the attribution: Glenn Francis, www.PacificProDigital.com.
Cost: £5. Labour party manifesto cost: £3.50.
Seriously, I need a hardbound book which looks like the sort of textbook you might get for A Level history at an out of date public school (Telegraph version: "strikingly workmanlike" - workmanlike? Facepalm)?
Because that'll save money on waste won't it Dave?
Using the ever-dependable www.andybarefoot.com/politics/cameron.php
Source: Scan of an original postcard.
Image: P50438.
Date: January 29th 1906.
Postmark: Feb 2nd 1906.
Repository: Local Studies at Swindon Central Library.
The House of Commons and Big Ben, London
Picture free to use. Please credit: Alan Cleaver. See other free stock pictures in my Freestock set
Disabled People Against Cuts (DPAC) and supporters rally outside Parliament before marching to Conservative Party headquarters, to raise the profile of disability rights and to challenge MPs to abandon policies harming disabled people since the Tory party were elected in 2010. A brief sit-down protest blocked traffic on a busy Victoria Street while leaflets were handed to members of the public.
Read more about the event, and the devastating impact of Tory "austerity" cuts on disabled people here
All rights reserved © 2017 Ron F
Please ask before commercial reuse.
Follow me on Twitter for the most recent shots.