In May 2023, rookie Labour councillor, Joshua Charters, scraped home by just 12 votes to finally secure a seat on Oldham Metropolitan Borough Council. 

Before being one of the three successful St James ward candidates in last year’s ‘all-out’ local elections, surprisingly finishing ahead of the very promising sitting Labour councillor, Leanne Munroe, he had failed at the polls several times elsewhere since 2019.

In that year, Cllr Charters lost the Saddleworth West and Lees seat, previously held in that ward by Labour, after the sitting councillor, Stephen Hewitt, was de-selected by the Party over his support of the Save Our Valleys campaign. A popular local character, Cllr Hewitt, as he was then, chaired a group opposing the building of almost 500 new homes on two controversial sites.

Opponents in the Saddleworth area had characterised Josh Charters as ‘lazy and arrogant’, despite politics, or employment obtained through political connections, being dominant on his curriculum vitae. He has, remarkably, had 12 jobs since 2017, none of them lasting more than 12 months, most of them much less. 

His biography (or autobiography, more likely) on the Oldham Labour Group (OLG) website describes him as an expert in human rights law and political science. The same website that continues its palpably false pledge of ‘Holding senior officers to account for the treatment residents get from Oldham Council and improving customer service’, despite being held up to public opprobrium over that palpably dishonest claim. That article headlined, unsurprisingly, ‘Labour stick with fake holding to account pledge’ here). It stands, as yet, unchallenged by Oldham Labour Group, 

Cllr Charters is now Secretary of the OLG, and its trainee Organiser, despite offering up what was described at the time as ‘the most inept maiden speech in living memory’ and his questionable employment and local election history. The manner in which he dealt with the outfall from the article referenced in the above paragraph also reflected poorly on him personally, his standing as an elected Member and his Party.

But being a noted apparatchik, and enjoying the patronage, for the moment at least, of the Council Leader, Cllr Arooj Shah, are, apparently, far more crucial to Labour, locally, then ability or stability. It also the clearest of indicators of how shallow, in more than one sense of the word, the Party’s talent pool is in Oldham and its attendant ethical and professional deficit..

On Thursday of this week (7th March, 2024) an article headlined ‘Places for Everyone and the great betrayal’ (read in full here) was published by Neil Wilby Media. At its core was an extensive and highly forensic report, by local activist Matthew Broadbent, upon the dangers inherent in the PfE plan to areas of land in the Oldham Borough currently designated as Green Belt.

One of the areas under threat is actually situated in Derker, which falls in the St James ward. Thus directly impacting on Cllr Charters and how he votes on whether the Full Council adopts PfE which is the Greater Manchester Mayor’s flagship plan to alleviate the present housing crisis across the City Region (read more here from the Mayor’s PR team). It has a troubled history dating back to 2014 when it was launched as the Greater Manchester Spatial Framework, a handle that became toxic and was replaced in 2021 by Places for Everyone.  

At the end of 2020, Stockport Metropolitan Borough Council, following a rebellion by Conservative and Liberal Democrat councillors, had voted against GMSF, leaving the remaining nine districts in the Region ((Bolton, Bury, Manchester, Oldham, Rochdale, Salford, Tameside, Trafford and Wigan)) to decide whether to conjoin and adopt PfE.

Over three years later, the moment for Oldham to decide comes at a Full Council meeting that will take place at the Civic Centre on Wednesday 13th March, 2024. 

The vote is expected to be tight, more so as several Labour councillors have confirmed that the Mayor, Dr Zahid Chauhan OBE, will again be absent for very understandable personal reasons. Meaning that a maximum of 32 (out of a total of 60) will be present for the vote, which includes the Deputy Mayor, Cllr Eddie Moores, who will chair the meeting and may only be able to vote in the event of a deadlock. By a curious twist of fate, his own Chadderton North ward is also adversely affected by the PfE proposals and he, too, is holding onto a dangerously small majority when he faces re-election in less than two months time.

Josh Charters has already made his decision, without it seems reading the Neil Wilby Media PfE article, which, of course, he is perfectly entitled to do. A post on his Facebook page on Friday afternoon (8th March) confirms his voting position:

“Over the last few days I’ve received emails instructing me to not attend the next council meeting or to abstain on the vote for Places for Everyone, a development plan that gives a strategic steer to housing and industry over the next 15 years, and will avoid developers grabbing land for inappropriate development and plans being approved due to their being no strategic vision.
In the interests of transparency, I’ve posted my response to the people in question who have contacted me, and reminded them that I don’t cower to threats over my position, and that ultimately I will always do what I think is right.”
 
He concludes the social media post by saying he is looking forward to increasing his majority at the forthcoming local elections. A claim a large number of St James voters might consider excessively bold and counter-intuitive.
 
There is no mention of the frenzied whipping of councillors, to attend Full Council and vote in favour of PfE (and the controversial Opposition motions due to be debated), irrespective of the views of ward constituents whom they represent, with which the Oldham Labour Group hierarchy is currently indulging itself. 
 
Or the bad faith at best, or a lie at worst, that Cllr Shah offered up to two Conservative councillors in Royton North (another of the affected Green Belt wards), in October 2023, when providing a written answer to Cllrs Dave Arnott and Lewis Quigg, over PfE concerns and shortcomings, and failure to follow ecological impact guidelines, that were raised with her.
 
The ‘people in question’ to whom Cllr Charters refers, but, curiously doesn’t mention by name, is the 400-strong Save Derker Green Belt Facebook group, led by Gillian Holden. The ‘threat’ is for that group to legitimately campaign against him, both on-line and with leaflets and feet on the ground, in the forthcoming local elections and end his short tenure as a councillor in the St James ward.
 
Cllr Charters may face Jacob Sharp as the Conservative candidate in that election, brother of Cllr Bethany Sharp, who lives in the St James ward, topped the poll in the ‘all-out’ elections and supports the Green Belt campaigners. 
 
The smart money is on the Conservatives, despite their Party woes nationally but with the help of the Green Belt campaigners, returning Joshua Charters to political oblivion. 
 
CORRECTION: It has been pointed out that the Deputy Mayor is entitled to vote as a councillor on any motion AND if sitting as Chair of Full Council in the absence of the Mayor, gets the decisive casting vote in the event of a tied poll.
 
UPDATE: Cllr Charters has responded to some of the points raised in this article by way of the following statement:
 
“Firstly, though I was selected to stand in Saddleworth West & Lees at the 2020 (postponed to 2021) elections, I withdrew my candidacy and Ken Rustidge stood for that seat.”
 
“Thank you for highlighting the insecure work that many young people, especially in Oldham face, and I make no secret of the jobs I’ve had, and how long I was in post. I do hold a masters degree in Human Rights Law/Political Science, and I don’t think it’s wrong to highlight this”.
 
“You do however fail to point out that a few of these roles were held concurrently as I have worked multiple jobs (like many Oldhamers) to make ends meet. The majority of these roles were outside of politics, including (but not limited to) healthcare companies, Argos, Odeon Cinema and an Oldham school.
 
“I did read Matthew’s article, and had a frank conversation with him and Gillian a few months ago. I didn’t expect them to agree with my position, but I the least I could do was offer them the courtesy of meeting with them and discussing the issue.
 
“Finally, you’ve misrepresented my words in terms of “increasing my majority”. All councillors and politicians want to get more votes, and from conversations I’ve had with residents, I feel like this may be the case.”

Page last updated: Sunday 9th March, 2024 at 1355 hours

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Picture credit: Save Derker Green Belt/Facebook

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2 responses to “Voting to concrete over Green Belt will increase my majority says Labour councillor”

  1. […] The seats in these wards that are up for re-election are all presently held by Labour councillors: Cllr Jenny Harrison, a former Mayor, who is retiring; Cllr Umar Nasheen; Cllr Ali Aqeel Salamat,  Cllr Ros Birch and Cllr Holly Harrison, respectively. There are six other Labour councillors facing re-election, the most vulnerable of whom is likely to be Oldham Labour Group Secretary, Cllr Josh Charters, defending a wafer thin majority in the St James’ ward (read the other reasons why here). […]

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  2. […] Chadderton North and St James are both wards where Save Our Green Belt campaigners will play a significant part in the election outcomes (read more here). […]

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