“My message to them is - Be afraid, be very afraid.”
Posted: Sun Jun 24, 2012 6:05 am
Cleveland Police Commissioner Election Campaign is under way.
The front man appears to be Mayor of Middlesbrough Ray Mallon.
During a heated meeting at Middlesbrough Town Hall (June 20 2012)
veiled and not so veiled threats loomed along with stories of doom & gloom mixed with the message -
“be afraid, be very afraid”
Democracy died a little more in Middlesbrough during that meeting.
Those who question the leadership at Middlesbrough Town Hall are now deemed "terrorists".
Constituents who wish for nothing more than a "Better Middlesbrough" are being called "terrorists" by Ray Mallon led Middlesbrough Council.
Has the "TERROR" in Middlesbrough started?
Calls resounded around the chamber stating the Evening Gazette should stop publishing readers (dissidents) letters.
YOU COULDN’T MAKE IT UP
Talk about balance:
Residents of Middlesbrough are beginning to wonder should members of MBC begin a course of collective group therapy?.
The front man appears to be Mayor of Middlesbrough Ray Mallon.
During a heated meeting at Middlesbrough Town Hall (June 20 2012)
veiled and not so veiled threats loomed along with stories of doom & gloom mixed with the message -
“be afraid, be very afraid”
Democracy died a little more in Middlesbrough during that meeting.
Those who question the leadership at Middlesbrough Town Hall are now deemed "terrorists".
Constituents who wish for nothing more than a "Better Middlesbrough" are being called "terrorists" by Ray Mallon led Middlesbrough Council.
Has the "TERROR" in Middlesbrough started?
Calls resounded around the chamber stating the Evening Gazette should stop publishing readers (dissidents) letters.
YOU COULDN’T MAKE IT UP
Talk about balance:
Residents of Middlesbrough are beginning to wonder should members of MBC begin a course of collective group therapy?.
Mayor of Middlesbrough Ray Mallon
“My message to them is - Be afraid, be very afraid.”
Mr Mallon added said politics was about influencing and persuading one another, a complex interaction of many people across the town from all walks of life. “There will always be some agreement and disagreement but, when major decisions are taken, the democratic voting rights of elected representatives will prevail,” he added. He referred to “so-called community-type activists” who had been scathing about many councillors in the Council Chamber. “Such individuals had personal agendas towards some of you, both individually and collectively,” he added. “Many of these people could only criticise and could not articulate viable alternatives. “It appeared to me they did not want change in so far as the town was concerned.”