Have your say………….

The Metropolitan Police Authority (MPA) is the independent body that aims to get the best out of the Met police. When I was a London Assembly Member – I was on the MPA for the whole five years I was there. It really does hold the Met to account – so definitely worth taking part in this survey.

The MPA try and ensure that all of London has a voice and the needs of Londoners are taken into account, especially when they set the annual policing priorities for the Met. To do this they consult as widely as possible and they want you to help.

Their ‘Have your say’ survey lets you to give your top three priorities for policing London and to suggest what the police should do to tackle them.

To complete the survey – either giving your name or anonymously – please complete the questionnaire online at: http://surveys.mpa.gov.uk/v.asp?i=22753hocwi

Alternatively you can call 020 7202 0063 to request a paper questionnaire or to complete the questionnaire over the telephone with one of our staff – whichever suits you best.

Lynne Featherstone MP joins Muswell Hill residents for Macmillan Coffee Morning

Lynne Featherstone and local residents at the Macmillan fundraiserTo help support the important work of Macmillan, on Friday Lynne Featherstone MP joined local residents at a special coffee morning in Muswell Hill that helped raise over £500 for the cancer charity.

The Liberal Democrat MP joined Muswell Hill resident Emma Glover, who was hosting the fundraising garden party for the second year running, with generous help from neighbours and local businesses who donated coffee and prizes for a raffle.

Lynne Featherstone MP comments:

“Most of us have, in one way or another, been affected by cancer. Macmillan is there to help make the trauma easier to bear, with invaluable advice and support.

“It’s so heart-warming to see the local community come together to help make sure Macmillan can continue their important work. It’s been great to see local residents like Emma, and local businesses step up to the mark and donate so generously.”

Local GPs deliver accessible information for visually impaired patients after visit by MP

Lynne Featherstone with Haringey Phoenix members and staff from Dukes Avenue PracticeIn the latest breakthrough in her fight for equal access to health information for local blind and partially sighted residents, Lynne Featherstone MP on Friday had a commitment from Dukes Avenue Practice that they will produce information in accessible formats for their visually impaired patients.
 
The assurances were given as the Hornsey and Wood Green MP visited the Muswell Hill based surgery with members of the Haringey Phoenix Group in a bid to help advise on the best way of delivering for visually impaired residents. The visit was set up after Lynne wrote to all GP surgeries in her constituency in the summer about their provision of information in formats such as Braille, audio and large print.
 
This was the latest step in the ‘losing patients’ campaign, which aims to get local providers to adhere to laws that ensure health information is accessible in all formats.
 
Lynne Featherstone MP comments:
 
“It’s great to see that our fight for accessible health information is picking up steam, with many local GPs showing a real willingness to develop good systems that deliver for blind and partially sighted residents.
 
“The visit to Dukes Avenue has been especially encouraging – they are really going the extra mile to make sure they meet their patients’ needs – and today I think we have made great strides for visually impaired residents here in Muswell Hill.”

Catch up

Came back from conference Wednesday night – and went straight off at 6.30 next morning to the Women’s Business Forum being held in Leeds. Heather Jackson, in nine months, had brought together the key women in the region for this forum – an amazing feat.

From a government point of view (I was there to speak on what we are doing about Women on Boards) it was very very interesting. I heard a few speakers before me – one of whom was talking about the woman as purchaser. Any business listening to that speech has to know that to not have women on their board bringing that dimension to the boardroom is hitting their bottom line. And that’s the point – it’s not women for women’s sake – but it is about good business. An executive director from M&S, an academic from Cranfield who had done some amazing research on women in the FTSE and many more – all told from different vantage points – the same story. There were lots of men in attendance – and talking to the Head of Diversity at Barclays Wealth – I was much encouraged about a real feel of a change in attitude. It’s the bottom line!

Friday was firstly a visit to Duke’s Avenue GP practise – who have stepped forward to help me with my quest (pushed by the  brilliant Phoenix Group for the blind and partially sighted) to change their patient IT record to flag up what format their blind and partially sighted patients want to receive information in. This dove-tails with my work with the Whittington Hospital who at their end are keen to take referrals from GPs with this information so they too can flag up on their IT system which format would be suitable. Very heartening!

Followed directly by popping into a coffee morning in Muswell Hill where a local mum had organised the annual McMillan Nurses coffee morning – to raise funds for this fantastic charity and the amazing work they do. There are few of us who are not touched by cancer at some point in our lives. McMillan nurses came to my sister’s house for the last two days of my mother’s life – and they literally were angels.

Surgery all afternoon as usual.

On Saturday I had the pleasure of celebrating the 50th anniversary of the Highgate Counselling Service – a fantastic group who for 50 years have provided counselling for anyone in the community who needs it. Now situated in Tetherdown Halls – there is no charge – so anyone can go regardless of ability to pay. If people can afford it – then a donation is of course very welcome. Most people stumble at some point in their lives and having someone to talk to and to hold us safe at our periods of greatest vulnerability is invaluable.

And on Sunday went to say a few words at the start of the Whittington Hospital 5K charity run. This year it is to raise funds for elderly care at the hospital. There was a huge turn out – and it was a real pleasure to see (as always) how much people love the Whittington. As I have managed to fracture my foot (again) I wasn’t running – but about 450 others were!

Keynote speech – equalities

Here is my keynote speech from Conference – “Breaking New Ground”

Liberal Democrats.

I look around and I see the faces of so many friends, colleagues, Cabinet Members.

Yes – I did just say that – Liberal Democrat members of the Cabinet.

Now conference, I was pretty clear at the time as to just what I thought of having an all male all pale team sent to negotiate on our behalves in May

Often for some of us women we get frustrated when we see mediocrity promoted above us

But in this case, they weren’t mediocre – our negotiating team did one hell of a job and I thank them all for their dedication and hard-work …

……………… but guys, no excuses next time!

Anyway – that’s enough praise for the men …for the moment.

As we race towards the future, I am conscious of our Liberal past.

And I think of great female titans who are no longer with us.

Women like Nancy Seear, Margaret Wingfield, Laura Grimmond – who all held the torch of Liberalism for so long – through the darkest toughest days.

I just imagine what they would have done with this great privilege that I have been given.

To be a Minister in the new Coalition Government – and to fight every day to set people free from inequality.

I know that it is critical to all of you that this is not an opportunity wasted, but an opportunity celebrated.

Celebrated by the people we were elected to serve:

• The women to whom equality in the work place is still a pipe dream
• The gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender members of our community – who still feel defined by that identity, not their personality
• The black and ethnic minority teenagers who are condemned daily by assumptions and prejudice
For these people my ambition is nothing short of a celebration.

A celebration of equality finally becoming a reality.

An reality that can only be realised with a new kind of politics.

And this is a new kind of politics, a new government, and a direct challenge – thank goodness – to the tired old ways.

We have created much confusion.

We have also created some alliances even stranger than our own.

When Jack Straw, Norman Tebbit and John Prescott are united against us, we know only one thing ….

We must be doing something right.

Neither Labour nor the media know what to do with us.

The media is obsessed with tensions and splits.

And Labour’s bitter scream of anger and entitlement is unimaginative and so predictable.

It’s a no-brainer that there are differences between Conservatives and Liberal Democrats.

We are two separate parties. Working in partnership.

A professional working relationship – a far cry from the early, heady days of the Blair Brown partnership – recently described by Tony Blair…

“Our minds moved fast and at that point in sync. When others were present, we felt the pace and power diminish, until, a bit like lovers desperate to get to love-making but disturbed by old friends dropping round, we would try to bustle them out, steering them doorwards with a hearty slap on the back.” …

…….Well anyone could have told them that wasn’t going to last

But perhaps I need to make something clear about my own working partnership.

Theresa May and I will work together. We will respect each other’s views. We will even sometimes agree to disagree.

But I am still a Liberal Democrat.

And one thing I can guarantee is there will be absolutely no merging of our shoe collections however extensive.

Indeed I can go further – I will be making no efforts to convert Theresa’s stylish taste in shoes for the much less fashionable socks and sandals, however comfortable.

So we will not always agree – but we will always do our best to work together for a fairer Britain.

And today I want to look forward

Forward to what that Britain will look like.

Forward to a Britain no longer suffocated by state intrusion.

Forward to a Britain where local and individual power is restored.

In this Britain of the future, individuals are empowered to live how they like, and to love anyone they choose.

The Labour party liked to claim that they were the party of equalities.

But where I come from

There is nothing equal about hoarding the DNA profiles of innocent people on a national database

There is nothing equal about high unemployment rates for people with disabilities.

There is nothing equal about a child’s life chances being determined by their parents’ wealth

No conference – after 13 years of a Labour government, this looks nothing like equality to me.

What Labour did was turn equalities into a burden.

It became a byword for bureaucracy and red-tape.

Less about liberation and more about frustration

And if ticking boxes and filling out forms led to equality, then Britain would be a utopia of fairness and optimism.

But it doesn’t. And it isn’t.

What Britain needs is a seismic cultural shift in the way people view and relate to each other.

Let’s be honest – people are still not free from the barriers of their place of birth, their sexuality, the colour of their skin.

But this will not be changed with lazy, short term thinking or shallow, headline-grabbing laws.

Nick Clegg told us that we must govern for the long-term.

In his words, “governing for the long term means recognising that the decisions of one generation profoundly influence the lives of the next.”

I couldn’t agree more.

And ensuring equality lasts for the long term means refusing to be sidelined and characterised as just “women’s issues” or “gay issues”.

Social mobility, education, work and pensions – these issues are at the heart of creating an equal society.

And conference, we are already making huge strides towards this goal.

Last month I launched a consultation on the public sector equality duty.

Public bodies have huge potential to create a fairer society through the way they deliver their services, the people they recruit, the training they offer.

But too often these bodies are sidetracked centralised targets – distracting them from the real goal –

serving their local community in the best possible way.

Under our plans, these organisations will be free.

Free to focus on the community they serve, not the Whitehall bureaucrat they fear.

But in return they must be transparent.

Public bodies will have to publish a whole range of equality data – about their staff – about their services.

Complete transparency, putting people in charge of the public bodies they pay for.

Because what really matters is not something complicated and expensive, but a service that is equal and fair.

One of my proudest moments so far in government was the launch at Number 10 of our action plan for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender rights.

Civil partnerships were a great first step – but as we know, in the classic words often used at a Liberal Democrat conference…

This did not go far enough!

In schools, in the workplace, in family life and in public life – I am committed to tearing down barriers.

In schools, we will tackle homophobic bullying

In the workplace, we will fight to end discrimination.

In family life we will protect the rights of same-sex couples to raise children in stable and loving families.

We also recognise that transgender issues are often distinct and sometimes need to be addressed separately.

That is why this government will be the first ever to produce an Action Plan on transgender equality.

But the greatest shift is that this government sees gay rights not only as a domestic issue, but in an international context.

Homosexuality is still illegal in over 70 countries.

This is unacceptable.

And it is why we will use Britain’s influence to push for a unified EU stance on LGBT rights.

And we will go further and proactively question those countries who retain homophobic laws.

And while challenging homophobia abroad, we must get our own asylum laws in order.

I was delighted when the Home Secretary welcomed the recent Supreme Court ruling on gay asylum.

A ruling which vindicated our commitment to stop the return of asylum seekers to countries where their sexual orientation or gender identification puts them at proven risk of imprisonment, torture or even death.

How can anything like that be tolerated in this day and age?

But as I said, conference, equalities is not an issue for one section of society only.

You must judge this government; indeed you must judge me, on whether we put equalities at the heart of every department.

And in this, I am so proud of the advances Liberal Democrats have already made in government.

Civil liberties – is an equalities issue.

So we have scrapped ID cards and are committed to ending the detention of child asylum seekers

Education – is an equalities issue.

So we are introducing a pupil premium to target support to children who need it most

Poverty – is an equalities issue.

So we have taken 900,000 people out of income tax altogether.

But I know there are still many challenges ahead.

And believe me, I won’t rest after one or two or ten achievements.

I will keep on fighting for fairness and equality where it doesn’t exist.

And I will always be looking to you, conference, to guide me.

We as party will not follow in the others’ footsteps. We are in Government but that will not stop our conference and our policy making from being as radical and robust as ever.

And I am proud this tradition continues with the motion you passed yesterday calling for equal marriage.

It is a sensitive matter, and while of course I absolutely respect the right to religious beliefs, I believe that equal rights should mean just that.

The same rights, not different rights.

Not an Orwellian Animal Farm where “all animals are equal but some are more equal than others”.

So I am working with those with a key interest in this issue about what the next steps should be.

And I want to thank you, Liberal Democrats, for continuing to inspire me.

But perhaps the biggest challenge that we all face as I stand here today is to ensure that future generations are not burdened with mounting debt.

And that while we work to reduce this broken balance sheet left to us by Labour, we ensure that the most vulnerable members of this society are not hit the hardest.

A society where the gender pay gap still stands at twenty per cent.

Where women lose their jobs, or don’t get hired at all, because they have children.

Where we still have a mountain to climb to achieve fair and flexible working

I saw a film recently called ‘Made in Dagenham’.

It is a fantastic film coming to a cinema near you October 1st – go see!

Set in the sixties, it tells the story of brave women at the Ford factory in Essex, who walked out in protest against unequal pay.

Forty years later, it’s a tragedy and a travesty that we are still fighting the same battles.

But these women should be an inspiration to us all.

Like all of you here today, they refused to accept the status quo.

They refused to accept that the way things are, is the way things have to be.

And this is a principle that has always driven Liberals.

What these pioneers showed us was that government will take us only so far.

But it is you, the people, who have the power to demand change.

And how will you know that this change has finally happened?

When you walk into a boardroom and half the Directors are women.

When a man, other than Nick Clegg, dropping his kids at the school gates is considered the norm, not the exception.

And when Jeremy Clarkson ditches the career in telly to take up equalities training in Leeds.

But to see this change we need a cultural shift in Britain’s values.

Government can’t force people to change.

But it can enable them to change.

This is why Vince Cable is working so hard in the Department for Business to extend the right to request flexible working to all employees.

It is why Sarah Teather is

It is why Nick Clegg announced last week that the government will refocus its aid efforts to put the lives of women in developing countries at its heart.

And there are many more issues that affect women’s – and for that matter men’s – confidence and ability to succeed.

Narrow ideas of beauty, distorted and propagated by the media, puts endless pressure onto young boys and girls that can lead to low self-esteem, depression and eating disorders.

This is why Jo Swinson and I co-founded the Campaign for Body Confidence – and I want to applaud Jo for working so tirelessly to champion this cause.

And we are already having an effect!

Debenhams is no longer using airbrushed models in any of its marketing materials, and Channel 4 has launched its own campaign against airbrushing.

I am hosting a government roundtable to drive forward these issues.

Whilst we’re on the subject of confident women – Miriam – can I thank you for doing us all proud during the election campaign.

You refused to take any nonsense – from the media or indeed (I suspect) from your husband!

You did what so many others have to do, you carried on with the day job and we salute you for it!

And so conference, this is a new politics which has equality at its heart.

An equality which sets people free, rather than imprisons them with rules.

An equality for the future, which is driven by our liberal principles of the past

And it is from the past, from another one of our very own titans, that I would like to end.

In 1945 Violet Bonham-Carter said “A Britain without Liberalism would be a Britain that has lost its soul.”

Well we’ve taken our time, but we are finally back.

But we must be back with a purpose – and that purpose is to put the soul back into Britain.

I can’t think of a greater challenge, or a finer reward, than the fight for equality for everyone in Britain.

For the child who deserves a better future

For the woman who demand equivalent pay

For the gay man who expects to be treated as an equal

For all the others who are left out by a society that needs to change

That is my goal

That is our shared vision

That is Liberal Democracy in action in Government

Thank you conference

Conference diary – Wednesday

11.15 – 11.45       Keynote Speech / Equalities / main auditorium

11.50 – 13.00     Daily Politics

13.00 – 14.00    Diversity Unit and Electoral Reform Society / fringe / Political Reform in  Dragon’s Den / speaking

14.00 – close     Closing speeches main auditorium including Party President

Lynne Featherstone MP visits special dads' playgroup at new Highgate children's centre

Lynne with parents and children at Highgate Dads' ClubOn a tour of the new Highgate Children’s Centre on Gaskell Road today, Lynne Featherstone MP got the chance to chat with fathers who attend the centre’s unique ‘dads club’, a special playgroup for local stay-at-home dads and their kids.

The club, one of only a handful in London, was started by a local dad and has been running twice a week since the centre opened in the spring. The Liberal Democrat MP, who has long been campaigning for special dads’ clubs to help involve dads in their children’s education – so called ‘dads and doughnuts clubs’ – was excited to see such an outstanding example on the site of her old primary school.

The Gaskell Road centre, which has proven highly popular since it opened in May, is also helping local parents with health care, information and general child care.

Lynne Featherstone MP comments:

“The club is brilliant! Being a stay-at-home parent can be hard – and the dads club offers a unique chance for Highgate dads to share experiences with people in the same situation. I would love to see similar groups start-up all over the borough.

“Highgate has long been in need of a children’s centre, and this place is a true gem! They run a fantastic range of playgroups and the dedicated staff offer invaluable support to new mums and dads. I can’t wait to see what the future holds.”

Conference diary – Tuesday

7.30 – 8.30         Meeting Mail on Sunday team

Main session      Equal Marriage / main auditorium

13.00 – 14.00    Liberal Youth Fringe / What’s Youth Got to do with it: engaging the next generation / speaking

18.15 – 19.30     Liberty fringe: Common Values in Office / speaking

Conference diary – Monday

8.00 – 8.30       Meeting ITN political editor

9.30 – 11.00     Police round table

11.30 – 12.00     Meeting YWCA

13.00 – 14.00     BBC buffet lunch with Michael Lyons

16.00 – 17.00    Nick Clegg / Leader’s speech / main auditorium

18.30 – 19.30     Stonewall Fringe / What the Coalition Government means for LGB & T equality / speaking

20.00 – 21.30     Haringey representatives meeting for dinner

21.30 – 22.00     Candidates Reception / speaking

22.00 – 23.30     Sky News Reception

Conference diary – Sunday

F16                         Speech / Danny Alexander / main auditorium

11.00 – 12.00     Photo session with candidates and activists   

13.00 – 13.30     Speech rehearsal for Keynote speech / main auditorium

14.30 – 15.30     Ministerial Exhibition Tour to meet exhibitors

16.00 – 16.30     Diversity Engagement Group AGM

18.30 – 19.30    World at One Fringe Debate: The New Politics / speaking and for broadcast

20.15 – 20.30    Fundraising Reception

20.30 – 22.00    Guardian Women’s Dinner

22.30 – 23.00     Federal Executive Dinner / speaking