Friday, 29 June 2007

The politics of tennis

Given that we're in the midst of Wimbledon fortnight, I couldn't let the opportunity to pass to talk about tennis.

Anyone who has kept even a fleeting eye on coverage from the All England Club, just across the constituency boundary in SW19, will have picked up on rumblings among Britain's tennis "elite" over radical changes to funding arrangements and priorities being introduced by the Lawn Tennis Association (LTA) under Roger Draper's leadership.

Essentially, this is the usual debate about how, with the huge resources ploughed into British tennis, we get so little return. The difference is that things are now actually changing and some vested interests aren't happy. So far, that's taken the form of disgruntlement about the replacement of perfectly decent national coaches like David Felgate and Jeremy Bates with the very best on offer: proven winners like Brad Gilbert (who now coaches Andy Murray, and previously Andy Roddick and Andre Agassi) and Paul Annacone (today working with Tim Henman, but previously with Pete Sampras).

In the sedate world of British tennis those changes would be radical enough, but now Roger Draper wants to shake up the funding regime that for too long has gone unquestioned. Until now the LTA has picked up the tab for supporting not just players but also their coaches and assorted hangers-on. That's the right thing to do, provided those players justify the support they're getting. Too often, they're not making the grade: they're not fit enough to compete at the highest level; they're more focussed on who'll get the four or so wild cards into Wimbledon each year than actually trying to get there on merit - through having the ranking to get in automatically, or being good enough to win through the qualifiers.

Instead, the LTA's new management has begun prioritising those players who have the drive and commitment and to focus on identifying new talent early enough to really come through. About time too. Greg Rusedski's taking the lead on that aspect. Tim Henman's also been frank in his support for the changes. I haven't heard Andy Murray's views but I'd be surprised if he dissented either.

Tim comes from an affluent family steeped in tennis with the means and passion for the game to support their son's talent. Greg came through the Canadian training system. Andy's family had to relocate to Spain years ago to get the level of training and support he needed. Not one of our recent tennis successes is actually a success of British tennis development.

What does this have to do with Putney?

Well, I think we're in an unparalleled position locally to become the beacon for the new regime to prove itself. Won't it be great if Andy Murray isn't the only British player seriously competing for a tennis Olympic gold medal in 2012 - and if the other homegrown talent came from our patch? We in this area are now fortunate enough to have the spectacular LTA training facility in Roehampton. We have Wimbledon and The Queen's Club (in West Kensington) on our doorstep. We have Putney Tennis Club in Balmuir Gardens. There are tennis courts in our parks and our schools: Elliott, for instance, has six tennis courts in its grounds. If we in Putney can't lead the way in proving that Britain can identify, train and support home-grown talent then nowhere can.

That's why during this campaign - and hopefully as MP - I'm going to seek to work with the LTA to make Putney a pilot for the new approach to tennis: to get their fantastic facilities opened up to local kids - and to get them out in the community, making sure that tennis is being offered as a PE option and looking out for local talent. It's about time we had an MP advocating for British tennis. This isn't just about tennis politics though - it's about more than just money and training at a national level.

Schools need to engage with this agenda - using their facilities. I'd like private facilities like Putney Tennis Club to engage. Families need to be supportive of gifted children, because inevitably success at tennis will have consequences on academic pursuits - but the rewards are massive. And those who have the potential to be good or great tennis players need to have the commitment and rigour to train - not just on the tennis court but in the gym.

Part of the problem here is that tennis just isn't going to be our top priority - as an avid QPR fan and Sunday league footballer myself, I understand as well as anyone that sporty kids grow up wanting to be the next Beckham, Rooney or Gerrard; not Federer, Nadal or Djokavic (and apologies to the women's game here, which is in an even worse state than the men's).

An argument that seems remarkably true, even if it ultimately isn't the actual cause, is that the only sports we in Britain excel at are those associated with working class games: football, rugby, track and field. The exception is rowing - generally perceived as a middle-class sport at which we have a deep bench of talent. But it could also apply to tennis. And it could start with Putney. Local leadership is what's needed. The LTA appears to have it. I'm up for the challenge too.

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Peter Hain

There's a nice article in today's Wandsworth Guardian about Peter Hain, who as well as being a Cabinet Minister was for years a Putney resident and who contested this constituency for Labour in 1983 and 1987. Peter's parents, Ad and Walter are still active Labour members in Putney and there's a great deal of affection for his contribution locally, both within the party and in the wider constituency.

Nowadays, Peter lives just outside the constituency boundary in Wandsworth town - not far from where I grew up and went to school, in fact.


You can read the article here.

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Thursday, 28 June 2007

A Cabinet-level Minister for London

Great news for our Capital that we now have a Minister for London attending Cabinet following the reshuffle.

Tessa Jowell, who represents nearby Dulwich and West Norwood and who throughout her Ministerial career has been a staunch advocate for London has been given specific responsibility for the Capital and our 2012 Olympic bid in Gordon Brown's new government.

The only slight downside from his radical reshuffle is that there is only one "full" cabinet minister who represents a London constituency - Harriet Harman, who represents Camberwell and Peckham - she's the new Leader of the House of Commons. Given that Gordon Brown has recognised the crisis in affordable housing that is most acute in the Capital, it's important that after a decade in which London's priorities have not received the attention they deserve London's voice is heard loud and clear.

One of my priorities as Putney's champion within the Labour ranks is to make sure it is.

London has a great pool of talent in our MPs - at least on the Labour benches - but a lot of them are fairly new, elected in 2005. Look out for several London MPs to fill junior government ranks in the next few days though, including my friend and Tooting MP Sadiq Khan, who I'm tipping for a ministerial appointment when the new Prime Minister announces them.

*** UPDATE ***

Sadiq has just been made a Government Assistant Whip - congratulations go to him.
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Monday, 25 June 2007

Putney High Street

There's been a lot of coverage and some discussion locally about last Friday's accident when a shop hoarding collapsed, injuring - in one case seriously - two passers by.

I send my condolences, and wishes for a speedy recovery to the two injured and welcome the Health & Safety inquiry launched by the Council.

Some have been questioning the common sense of a shop - any shop - choosing to have a hoarding made of concrete (or at least what was designed to look like concrete, and which was incredibly heavy anyway). I have sympathy with this view.

It was one of the reasons why my Save Putney High Street campaign launched in Autumn 2005 called for both far tighter design standards for the High Street and a shop front improvements scheme.

We proposed such ideas to try to smarten up our High Street - which any impartial observer must agree (still) looks cluttered and grubby almost two years on - but clearly to ensure some consistency in both safety standards and visual quality. This incident, while entirely unforeseen, suggests that the Council was at best unwise and at worst negligent in dismissing out of hand our ideas simply because local Labour supporters rather than Conservatives had proposed them.

Some progress in improving Putney High Street - but nowhere near enough - has been made since the last council elections: mainly thanks to London Mayor Ken Livingstone coming up with investment for aspects of the street scene that the Council is actually responsible for funding.

This isn't just about the Council. We need co-ordinated action from Transport for London, Network Rail and the train companies (to improve Putney Station), the Government's Departments for Transport and Enterprise (to deal with the impact of traffic on the area and to stimulate business growth locally), local businesses and, yes, the Council. What is clear is that the past two years since the Putney Society and my Labour team raised our concerns about the neglect of Putney High Street have been characterised by inaction and lack of imagination. What we need is local leadership. Putney simply isn't getting it from its Conservative MP and councillors.

Links on the hoarding incident:

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Sunday, 24 June 2007

Local links

I'm collating a list of links to (hopefully) useful local websites down the side menu of this blog.

I've got quite a comprehensive list already - ranging from amenity groups to reference sites, local churches and schools to local government and elected representative websites, but if you would like me to add your organisation to the list do please get in touch. If I've left you out it's probably an oversight rather than a conspiracy! The only qualification for entry is that you're not a commercial organisation.

Leave a comment on this blog, or email me at stuart.king@putneylabour.co.uk
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Friday, 15 June 2007

Revamping my website

Over the next few weeks I'll be completely overhauling my website - the things I needed from this site while I was campaigning to get selected are very different in both scale and style from the needs of a general election website.

While I'm focussing on building a comprehensive new site, I won't be able to contribute regularly to this blog, so do bear with me.
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Wednesday, 13 June 2007

www.putneysw15.com

When I was Leader of Wandsworth's Labour Councillors I wrote a regular column for the popular www.putneysw15.com website.

And following my selection, it was Sandi - the editor of that website - who was one of the first in touch to say "well done" and to ask for my comments on being selected as Labour's parliamentary candidate.

The website has a vibrant discussion forum that came into its own recently as a means for local residents rightly appalled by the Council's attempts to close Wandsworth Museum, the De Morgan Centre and West Hill Library to communicate, build the mass campaign against the closure and keep the community informed of developments.

You can read the putneysw15 news article about my selection here, and I very much look forward to renewing my association with this website, which provides an invaluable source of news, information and, dare I say, gossip for the people of Putney and Roehampton.

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Sunday, 10 June 2007

Selected!

Well, the selection hustings is over, the speeches made, the questions asked and the votes cast and counted. And I'm really delighted to have been selected as Labour's candidate for Putney with an overwhelming mandate. In a packed meeting at Lady North Hall in Ravenna Road, just behind Upper Richmond Road, I won over 70% of the votes cast so was elected in the first round of voting. This is the end of the selection campaign, but the start of the election campaign and I relish the opportunity to make the case for why Putney, Roehampton and Southfields need a Labour MP. My family has come down to help celebrate my win, so off to enjoy a (small) glass of champagne!
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Wednesday, 6 June 2007

Countdown to hustings

I've just finished putting the finishing touches to my selection speech for Sunday's hustings meeting and am now busy trying to commit it to memory.

There have been a couple of developments in this last week. Dan Lodge, who was one of the original 24 applicants for Putney was selected as Labour's general election candidate for Wimbledon last Saturday. I worked with Dan during last year's council elections - he was candidate for the Battersea ward of Queenstown, and only narrowly missed out on getting elected there after fighting a fierce campaign. He'll make an excellent candidate there.

And Eleanor Tunnicliffe, one of my fellow shortlistees for Putney and a local member, was selected to stand as our candidate in next-door Richmond Park the following day. Richmond Park's a much more difficult constituency for Labour than either Putney or Wimbledon - it's a marginal battleground between the Lib Dems (who narrowly hold it) and the Conservatives, who've picked Zac Goldsmith as their candidate.

I know Eleanor will continue to build the strong links that exist between Putney and Richmond Park Labour Parties: Richmond Park members often come over and help get out our vote on the Lennox Estate which is right on the boundary of our two constituencies - it's really appreciated and makes all the difference in close elections.
Zac's dad famously stood in Putney for his Referendum Party in 1997 - one of the landmark events of that great election night when Labour's Tony Colman ousted David Mellor and began his eight years' service as MP for this lovely constituency.
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