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Old February 13th 09, 10:22 AM posted to uk.transport.london
David Cantrell David Cantrell is offline
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On Thu, Feb 12, 2009 at 01:00:45PM +0000, Ian Jelf wrote:

However, the way in which they can be held to account **more strictly
than other members of society** does seem to me deeply unfair. If
anyone else undertakes actions they are not subject to anything except
the law of the land and their employers' internal disciplinary
procedures. Councillors, on the other hand, seem to be held to account
by this Orwellian-sounding "Council's Code of Conduct for Councillors".


That "code of conduct" sounds a bit like an employer's disciplinary
procedure to me.

In any case, I *do* think it reasonable that while people in positions
of authority (such as councillors, police, MPs, etc) should be held only
to the same standards as the rest of us, they should be punished more
severely when they fail to meet those standards. Because not only have
they breached the standards that we expect normal people to adhere to,
they have also abused the trust of we who put them in their exalted
positions and permit them to have power over us.

It strikes me as not being a council's job to hold its own members to
account in this way. Certainly temporarily barring them from meetings,
effectively putting them out of office for a time, seems to me to be
deeply undemocratic.


Indeed. If they think that barring a councillor from meetings is
appropriate, then it should be permanent and a by-election held.

Once again, I stress I am not referring to Colin here.


Nor am I. I can't be bothered to read all the background.

--
David Cantrell | http://www.cantrell.org.uk/david

"Every normal man must be tempted at times to spit on his hands,
hoist the black flag, and begin slitting throats." -- H. L. Mencken