Welcome to ITV Local Meridian and Thames Valley Blog, the blog with local spirit!

We're here to bring you all the latest news, features, events and conversations going on in Meridian and Thames Valley, so love your neighbourhood, subscribe to our RSS feed and get stuck in!

June 2008 archive

Could the LibDems be pushed to the edge of politics?

Written by Guest blogger on 30 June 2008

Political Editor Phil Hornby blogs from Parliament

As the dust settles on the Henley by-election, most of the pundits have concentrated on Labour’s terrible showing. Coming fifth - behind the BNP - is the stuff of nightmares for Gordon Brown and co.

But Labour were never going to win Henley, they were never even going to come second, and their bad result might be partly due to Labour supporters voting tactically and switching allegiance to the Liberal Democrats.

It’s the Lib Dems that’s the real story.

Ever since they won the Eastbourne by-election in 1990 - a victory which some, including Paddy Ashdown, believe saved them from oblivion – the Lib Dems have been incredibly good at picking off Tory seats in the south. By-elections in Newbury, Christchurch, Eastleigh, Romsey…. and in 1997 victory in places like Poole and Guildford.

The secret of their success? Formidable campaigning skills, and ruthlessly exposing the unpopularity of the Conservatives.

But the Tories are riding high in the polls now (for the first time, don’t forget, since 1992), and they’ve also copied some of the LibDems’ campaign tactics - evident in Henley and also in Crewe and Nantwich.

The LibDems don’t seem to have a Plan B. They’d better come up with one fast. Otherwise, almost all their MPs in the south could lose their seats, including Eastleigh’s Chris Huhne, who very nearly became the party leader.

If they are not careful, they could be pushed to the margins of British politics again. Nick Clegg, the man who beat Huhne, has a lot of thinking to do over the next few months




ITV x Local = Together – we are the news!

Written by Sarah on 25 June 2008

Sparklers and party poppers ahoy! Taking a quick break from covering all your local news in the Meridian and Thames Valley area, ITV Local are proud to announce a shiny new web presence to keep you updated with everything happening in your local area, and everything you want everyone else to hear about.

We hope that our blog will be a chance for you to hear about the news behind the news, opinions from your local areas plus lots more. We’d love for you to contribute, and with your help we can cover not only the big stories that occur daily in our region, but also, just as importantly, news from your doorstep.

Don’t just see this as ITV’s very own up-to-the-minute blog site, or merely a companion to the news on the telly; this is your site too, with optional RSS feeds bringing the news straight to you, and regularly updated stories of the news that matters to you. If you care about what happens in Meridian and Thames Valley, and want a voice to be heard – do get in touch; bookmark us, join our Facebook group or email us your ideas.

Together – we are the news!

photo courtesy of foxypar4




Experiencing the heart of Jamaica to celebrate immigration

Written by Guest blogger on 20 June 2008

Journalist Derek Johnson blogs from Jamaica

To appreciate the extent of Jamaica’s deep-rooted social problems you need look no further than the tag line advertisers have chosen to bestow upon its capital city, Kingston.
Billboards across its sprawling districts picture a smiling face beside the words “City Of Kingston - COK For Life.”

It is a line so awful, so plainly hilarious and ridiculous when spoken out loud (as it very often was on this trip), that you cannot help wondering if the great and the good who signed off on it at some multi-media presentation had their heads in the sand, clueless about to the way their message would be perceived by the wider world.

Something of this obliviousness exists in the official attitude to crime. All the time tourists flock to Montego Bay and the beaches of the east coast with their wallets full of greenbacks things are OK. Every time a returnee who sought their fortune abroad buys a plot of land, builds a house and pumps money into the economy, the island is doing fine.

The reality is painfully different. A taxi driver in Montego Bay said he dreamed of leaving. “There is a monster on this island,” he said. “And the monster is crime.”

On the main strip along Montego Bay, the same one American tourists waddle down by day en route to tat shops and jerk chicken emporiums, 200 people have been killed this year. Victims of gang and drug crime, shot and stabbed at night, long after the visitors have been serenaded to sleep by a hotel band knocking out Country and Western classics.

In fact there have been 700 murders in Jamaica in the first six months of 2008. The island is heading for a record death spree. It is so bad that the government has been shaken out of its COK For Life alternative reality. A minister has already resigned and the prime minister has warned that Jamaicans may have to give up some of their cherished freedoms if crime is at last to be put to the sword.

The worry, strangely, is not so much about the tourists. We drove around Kingston, saw its thriving street life, soaked up the reggae and soca sounds, chatted to passers-by and even clubbed until the early hours. And it was no more intimidating than Maidstone on a Friday night. Having said this our driver refused to go anywhere near Trenchtown, the area immortalised by Bob Marley and the Wailers - where Bob sang of meeting friends at the Judgement Yard and lighting fires in the cold night. It was so dangerous after dark these days, he said, that the police never went there. Residents blocked up their own streets with tyres to avoid drive-by shootings by rival gangs.

You see the tourists are largely confined to the beaches, the dolphin and plantation tours and the all-inclusive, pile-it-high buffets close to the pool. Concern revolves around crimes committed against returnees – the migrants who’ve returned home after decades away. The US$2 billion a year they provide Jamaica with trumps tourism when it comes to foreign exchange earnings.

The danger of losing some of this income is one of the factors causing the government to talk tough about crime. Plus they can hide their heads in the sand no longer. The recent Biennial Jamaican Diaspora Conference put crime and corruption at the top of its agenda, delegates warning that returnees may end up staying in their adopted lands.

It’s a fact alluded to by the Labour Minister Pernell Charles. Mr Charles has the most extraordinary hairstyle. It is a perfect split – one side black and the other white. It is so striking and original that it’s very easy to drift off while talking to him and speculate on how exactly this wonder is achieved. There are privet hedges and manicured lawns in the Home Counties whose lines are not as straight and well-maintained as Mr Charles’s hair. It is hard to think of anything else except a badger. It is even remarked upon by Edward Seaga, a former Prime Minister clearly not given to bouts of humour with interviewers and whose conversation is otherwise measured and serious.

Anyway, The Badger says that Jamaica would be in big trouble if not for these earnings from overseas Jamaicans. And he acknowledges the extraordinary fact that there are far more Jamaicans outside the country than within.

That exodus did not begin after World War Two. After emancipation from slavery hundreds of thousands left in one fell swoop for the promise of a better life overseas. As Mr Seaga says: “Jamaicans have always been a migrating people.”

But in 1948 the Jamaicans allowed 492 West Indians to board a troop ship bound for England – the Empire Windrush. It docked at Tilbury on June 22 where its passengers looked for work. The Windrush began a mass migration of Caribbean people to England. That eventually transformed our nation, re-defined the way we perceive ourselves – we became multi-cultural for the first time. It would have been unthinkable in 1948 for black, Asian and Chinese people to call themselves British whereas now it seems unthinkable that once they would have been frowned upon for doing so.

The Windrush anniversary was the reason we were in Jamaica. For all its troubles it is a beautiful and welcoming island where people look at you for who you are and engage you with genuine interest. And they always ask you to come back again. We shall indeed COK For Life.

You can watch the full series about the story of Caribbean migration on ITV Local.




MPs pour scorn over eco-town plans

Written by Guest blogger on 19 June 2008

Political Editor Phil Hornby blogs from Parliament

MPs queued up today to pour scorn on the Government’s plans for so-called ‘eco-towns’.

The idea is to build sustainable new communities, which will help to solve the housing shortage - in an environmentally-friendly way.

Trouble is, no-one seems to want one built near them.

Ford in West Sussex is on the shortlist for possible locations. There’s already an impressive local campaign to fight the plans, and the area’s two MPs, Nick Gibb and Nick Herbert didn’t pull any punches during today’s Commons debate.

They argue that developments shouldn’t be imposed on communities by central Government. Whitehall, they say, doesn’t know best.

But as eco-towns were one of Gordon Brown’s few big new ideas when he became Prime Minister, they’re unlikely to be scrapped.

We’ll know which locations have been chosen in the autumn, so Ford will soon know its fate.

But the ten eco-towns around the country will amount to just 75,000 new homes.

And that’s a drop in the ocean when you consider experts say, over the next few years, the number of new homes needed in the UK is three MILLION.




Should England have an English Parliament?

Written by Guest blogger on 19 June 2008

Political Editor Phil Hornby blogs from Parliament

Derek Wyatt, the Labour MP for Sittingbourne and Sheppey, led a special debate today calling for an English Parliament. He says it’s crazy that Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales all have assemblies or parliaments - and we don’t. He says it’s unfair, and it’s leading to a lot of resentment.

I am not sure how this will go down with his leader Gordon Brown - well, I am actually - so don’t expect Mr Wyatt’s ideas to become Labour Party policy.

But the English question will be a factor at the next election, especially in the key battleground that is the south and southeast.

The truth is, Labour’s consitutional changes, much heralded when Tony Blair came to power, are unfinished business. Reform of the House of Lords is stuck; reform of the voting system has ground to a halt; regional government is dead; and Labour’s hierarchy are in denial about England’s democratic deficit.

The Conservatives haven’t come up with a coherent policy either. Traditionally the party of the Union, they’re terrified of being really bold.

But Derek Wyatt is right.

England expects a system that gives it a fair deal.




Breaking the North/South divide

Written by Guest blogger on 19 June 2008

Political Editor Phil Hornby blogs from Parliament

The north/south divide just got bigger.

Some of the cafes and restaurants in the Palace of Westminster are promising a special menu next week to celebrate food and drink from the South of England.

This hasn’t gone down well with MPs from the north and the midlands, who are demanding similar weeks to celbrate their own regions’ cuisine.

Black pudding and faggots? Can’t wait.

So far, the south of England week seems to consist of just one meal: lobster, cooked in lemon, with a glass of English white wine thrown in. Price: 20 quid.

I’m not sure how many takers there will be, and I am not sure how representative of the south that meal is. Maybe they’ll come up with some more recipes before the great week begins.

I’ll keep you posted.




Another view of the Isle of Wight…

Written by Sharon on 18 June 2008

…this time from a festival old hand. I’ve been to more festivals than you can shake a stick at, yet this was my first experience of the Isle of Wight.

Why? well the cost of getting the ferry across for starters. Not for nothing is the Solent named as the most expensive ferry route in the world, mile for mile. And once we get there, a place in the campervan field costs a steep ÂŁ250 on top of the ticket price - yikes! But I always fancied a trip to this festival, as the line-up never fails to impress.

Well, having secured media tickets and cunningly found a free parking space for the camper just off-site, nothing could stop us this year, and although I was working, thought it would be a good idea to bring the family along too (hubby and five year old son).

Casey says below that it didn’t feel like work, interviewing bands and other celebs who were hanging out in the VIP area. In a way she’s right, but at four months pregnant, I certainly knew I’d been working by the end of each day. My head barely touched the pillow on the rock-and-roll bed in the camper, and I’d be asleep till morning, when it all started again…

We were presented with a steady stream of bands and solo performers to interview, and in-between I tried to catch performances so I’d know what to ask them. Once I found myself face-to-face to a young rock band The Gundogs, who I knew absolutely nothing about. I had no choice to admit this in my first question and asked them to describe the music in ten words or less. They didn’t seem to mind and were just happy to be part of the bill.

One surprise visitor was Mike Rutherford of Genesis who turned up on Sunday afternoon and gave us a short interview. He didn’t divulge whether Genesis were hoping to headline next year, but I’m told that casing a festival one year is a good indicator of a willingness to play the next…


As festivals go, this was one of the best organised I’ve ever been to (and I’ve been to so many I’ve actually written a book about them!).

We’ve got several more coming up in the region over the summer - Guilfest, Reading, the Bestivals and more. So expect more festival updates from your increasingly pregnant news editor as the summer progresses!