“Lutfur Rahman: a
defence based on lies”, the Telegraph’s
part-time “London editor”, Andrew “transcription error” Gilligan told
his readers yesterday, laying into the deeply subversive Guardian for the heinous sin of
publishing an opinion piece without consulting Himself Personally Now. Gilligan
accusing others of lying, while basking in the glow from his burning trousers,
is a not uncommon occurrence.
Perhaps Andy has already forgotten his observations on the
elections in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets, a favourite target for his
obsessive seeking out of Scary Muslims, and particularly his pursuit of elected
– and now re-elected – Mayor Lutfur Rahman. Let me remind him of the
title of that article: “‘Stolen
election’ in the heart of London”. The quotation marks, as I’ll show, were
well-merited.
Gilligan fixes on Labour candidate Sanu Miah: “In the recount, his vote dropped by a
quarter from 2,270 to 1,722 and he fell from first place to sixth. Two of the
three seats in his ward went to Mr Rahman’s Tower Hamlets First party”. And
the recount, Gilligan tells readers, had been ordered personally by Rahman.
There can be only one conclusion, that something irregular had gone on.
However, and with Gilligan’s pursuit of Rahman there is
inevitably a however, his own narrative contains a get-out clause: “One of Mr Miah’s opponents had the same
surname: the counters could have got them mixed up”. Gilligan also deploys
the tried and trusted Postal Votes fraud allegation frightener, before once
again conceding “No evidence links any of this to Mr Rahman at this election”.
But let me put Mr Transcription Error straight: looking over
at Ted Jeory’s blog, and this is someone who is often critical of Lutfur
Rahman, the keywords are “shambles”
and “incompetence”, rather
than any allegation of fraud. “There will be many reasons for the counting
shambles of the past few days, but the most basic is that we have a
dysfunctional local authority at a political level”, he tells.
Jeory’s answer is to ask that Rahman makes “a call for reconciliation, a plea for
everyone to work together to draw the poison from Tower Hamlets politics”.
And he has
hosted a guest post by former Labour Councillor Carlo Gibbs, who was
defeated in the St Peter’s ward of the Borough. He tells that the elections “were free and fair and conducted under the
most intense scrutiny”.
Moreover, he emphasises “While
there may be complaints about intimidation at polling stations and elsewhere, and
any evidence should be looked at and referred to the appropriate authorities,
this would not have shifted 3500 votes towards John Biggs or 174 to me in my
ward”. Gilligan should put up his evidence to the relevant authorities, or
concede that he is just shit-stirring and hearsay mongering.
And do something for
the capital’s cyclists for that bung Bozza is giving him.
2 comments:
Am I right that votes are first sorted into trays/boxes according to the selected candidate, and then counted subsequentl?. If those in charge dopily overlooked the fact there were two candidates called Miah then that would easily account for what at first sounds like a very startling shift in final numbers.
"Transcription Error"?
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