Shirley Porter

Dame Shirley Porter, Lady Porter
DBE
Lord Mayor of Westminster
In office
1991–1992
Preceded by David Avery
Succeeded by Cyril Nemeth
Deputy Lieutenant of Greater London
In office
28 June 1988[1]  26 October 1994[2]
Leader of Westminster City Council
In office
1983–1991
Succeeded by David Weeks
Councillor (Hyde Park Ward)
In office
1974–1993
Personal details
Born (1930-11-29) 29 November 1930
Clapton, London, England, U.K.
Nationality British
Spouse(s) Sir Leslie Porter (deceased)
Children John Porter, Linda Porter
Residence Park Lane, Mayfair, London
Tel Aviv, Israel
Religion Judaism

Dame Shirley Porter, Lady Porter, DBE (née Cohen; born 29 November 1930) is a former Conservative leader of Westminster City Council in London.[3] She is the daughter and heir of Sir Jack Cohen, the founder of Tesco supermarkets. She was appointed Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1991[4] by John Major after delivering "a spectacular victory" in Westminster for the Conservatives in the 1990 elections.[5]

While leader of Westminster City Council she oversaw the "Building Stable Communities" policy, later described as the "homes for votes" scandal and was consequently accused of gerrymandering.[nb 1] The policy was judged illegal by the district auditor, and a surcharge of £27m levied on her in 1996.[6] This was later raised to £42 million with interest and costs. She eventually settled in 2004, paying a "full and final settlement" of £12.3 million.[7]

Porter moved to Herzliya Pituah, Israel, in 1994 during the inquiry, and returned to London in 2006.[8][9] She helped establish the Porter Centre for Environmental Studies at Tel Aviv University, which opened its iconic LEED Platinum-graded building in 2014.

Background and political career

Shirley Cohen was born in Upper Clapton, London, on 29 November 1930. Her father, Jacob Edward "Jack" Cohen, was the founder and owner of Tesco, and her mother was Sarah "Cissie" (née Fox), the daughter of a master tailor.[10][11] Cohen opened the first two Tesco stores in 1929. By 1939, he owned over 100 Tesco stores across the country.[10] The family lived at 7 Gunton Road, Hackney, a former council house in the East End of London that Jack had purchased from Hackney Council with the help of a £1,000 council loan.[12]

Between 1939 and 1945 she boarded at Warren School For Girls in Worthing, Sussex.[3] She then spent a year at La Ramée, a finishing school in Lausanne, Switzerland, followed by a year at St. Godric's Secretarial and Language School in Hampstead, London.[3][13][14] She married Leslie Porter (10 July 1920 – 20 March 2005) on 26 June 1949 at the New West End Synagogue, Paddington, London.[15][16] They had a son and daughter.[3]

Shirley Porter became a magistrate before entering local politics. Looking back at that time, she has said “I remember my great lack of confidence, that I came in there and for the first time and I wasn't somebody’s daughter, somebody’s wife, somebody’s mother. That’s a very very mind-boggling feeling.”[17] In 1974, she was elected to Westminster City Council as a Conservative councillor for Hyde Park Ward. In the early 1980s, she chaired the Environment Committee, calling for strict enforcement of litter laws. In 1983, she was elected as Leader of the Council. Her initiatives and policies included the Say No to Drugs Campaign and the Plain English Campaign and she was also involved in the abolition of the Greater London Council. She became the Lord Mayor of Westminster in 1990 and later a governor of Tel Aviv University.[18] In 1960 Porter was involved in the exposure of 10 Golf Clubs in North London for discriminating against Jews.[19]

Initiatives

Litter

Earlier in her career, Porter garnered national attention for her involvement and implementation of anti-litter campaigns in Westminster. In a 1985 interview with The Times' Shirley Lowe, Porter explained that litter was the reason why she had first entered local politics in 1974. She said: "I was walking along the street with a friend one day and it was filthy and I said, 'My God, somebody ought to do something about this,' and my friend said 'Why don't you?'"[20] Despite sitting on the Highways and Works Committee, which was responsible for street cleaning and refuse collection, Porter did not mention litter again until late 1976 following a visit to Leningrad and Moscow. On her return she told the Paddington Mercury of her distaste for the Soviet regime but continued "one thing they must be given credit for is the cleanliness you find everywhere... I should hate to think that we need such a repressive regime to get our cities cleaned to their standards."[21]

She soon joined the "Clean Up London" campaign. She encouraged hoteliers to join forces to attack the squalor that was affecting their businesses. Her enthusiasm also aided her election as vice-chairman of Highways and Work on 28 June 1977. Her anti-litter activities within the CUL campaign continued. The Paddington Mercury described Porter as "fast winning a reputation as Paddington's Mrs Mops". She also mobilised schoolchildren in her campaign, raising brooms over their shoulders like rifles at the Lord Mayor's Show and singing "Pick up your litter and put it in the bin". By 1978, Porter had been elected as Chairman of the Highways and Works Committee, in the same year she launched the "Mr Clean Up" anti-litter campaign.[22]

In January 1979, a series of strikes began to unfold as part of the "Winter of Discontent". Westminster was struck by the striking rubbish collectors and mounting waste in the streets. As a result, Porter opened thirty-three emergency rubbish dumps across the borough. Porter told press reporters that they would privatise rubbish collection if the strikers did not return to work. This practice was installed later on.[23]

Porter's successive litter campaigns included the "Cleaner London Campaign", followed by the "Cleaner City Initiative" in 1980. Activities included the deployment of additional street sweepers in particularly squalor-ridden areas of Westminster for a 2–3 week period. Porter also increased the regularity of rubbish collections and convinced local businesses to sponsor litter bins.[24]

She threatened to resign in September 1980 when her department of Highways and Works faced a £1 million budget cut; "I will resign in the event that they cut our basic services and that means keeping our frontline services and a clean and litter-free city."[25] In 1981, Porter launched "Operation Spring Clean", a cleaning blitz of the West End.[26]

In a 1991 interview on Desert Island Discs, Dame Porter said: “I really just feel so strongly that it isn't right for people to live in a dirty environment, and in an unpleasant environment. And it isn't just litter: I’m talking about the whole quality of life. When you live in pleasant surroundings, I think you are a better person.”[17]

Soho sex trade

In the late 1970s, Soho residents were troubled by the growing sex industry. Between 1965 and 1982, the number of sex shops had doubled from thirty one to sixty five. In 1982 Porter became Chairman of the General Purposes Committee and set to work in alleviating the issue. Porter and her aides soon proceeded with a fact-finding mission. The Local Government (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1982 stipulated that Westminster could shut down any pornographer that did not hold a licence. Porter soon decided that the number of sex shops in Soho would be limited to twenty. The legislation also ensured that any successful applicants would require a minimum of 6 months residency in the UK as well as a clean police record. It was also legislated that sex shops would have to conceal their practice with blinds. Other measures included the requirement of business owners to keep a register of their staff. By February 1983, just thirteen sex shops remained in Soho.[27]

Homes for votes scandal

The Conservatives were narrowly re-elected in Westminster in the 1986 local council elections. Fearing that they would eventually lose control unless there was a permanent change in the social composition of the borough, Porter instituted a secret policy known as 'Building Stable Communities'.[nb 2]

Eight wards were selected as 'key wards' – in public it was claimed that these wards were subject to particular 'stress factors' leading to a decline in the population of Westminster. In reality, secret documents showed that the wards most subject to these stress factors were rather different, and that the eight wards chosen had been the most marginal in the City Council elections of 1986. Three – Bayswater, Maida Vale and Millbank, had been narrowly won by Labour, a further three, St. James's, Victoria and Cavendish had been narrowly lost by them, in West End ward an Independent had split the two seats with the Conservatives while in Hamilton Terrace the Conservatives were threatened by the SDP.

An important part of this policy was the designation of much of Westminster's council housing for commercial sale, rather than re-letting when the properties became vacant. The designated housing was concentrated in those wards most likely to change hands to Labour in the elections. Much of this designated housing lay vacant for months or even years before it could be sold. To prevent its occupation by squatters or drug dealers, these flats were fitted with security doors provided by the company Sitex at a cost to local tax payers of £50 per week per door.

Other council services were subverted to ensure the re-election of the majority party in the 1990 elections. In services such as street cleaning, pavement repair and environmental improvements, marginal wards were given priority while safely Labour and safely Conservative parts of the City were neglected.

Another vital part of 'Building Stable Communities' was the removal of homeless voters and others who lived in hostels and were perceived less likely to vote Conservative, such as students and nurses, from the City of Westminster. While this initially proved successful, other Councils in London and the Home Counties soon became aware of homeless individuals and families from Westminster, many with complex mental health and addiction problems, being relocated to their area.

As the City Council found it more and more difficult to move homeless people outside Westminster, increasingly the logic of the 'Building Stable Communities' programme required the concentration of homeless people within safe wards in the City. In 1989 over 100 homeless families were removed from hostels in marginal wards and placed in the Hermes and Chantry Point tower blocks in the safe Labour ward of Harrow Road. These blocks contained a dangerous form of asbestos, and should have either been cleaned up or demolished a decade before, but had remained in place due to funding disputes between the City Council and the by now abolished Greater London Council. Many of the flats had had their heating and sanitation systems destroyed by the council to prevent their use as drug dens, others had indeed been taken over by heroin users and still others had pigeons making nests out of asbestos, with the level in flats in Hermes and Chantry Points well above safe norms. One former homeless refuge was sold off at a discounted price to private developers and converted into private flats for young professional people at a cost to the ratepayer of £2.6 million.[28]

Labour councillors and members of the public referred this policy to the District Auditor to check on its legality, and as a result it was ordered to be halted in 1989 whilst investigations continued. In 1990, the Conservatives were re-elected in Westminster in a landslide election victory in which they won all but one of the wards targeted by Building Stable Communities.

Porter stood down as Leader of the Council in 1991, and served in the ceremonial position of Lord Mayor of Westminster in 1991-2. She resigned from the council in 1993, and retired to live in Israel with her husband.

Court cases and surcharge

In May 1996, after legal investigation work, the District Auditor finally concluded that the 'Building Stable Communities' policy had been illegal, and ordered Porter and five others to pay the cost of the illegal policy, which were calculated as £31.6 million.[29] This judgement was upheld by the High Court in 1997 with liability reduced solely to Porter and her Deputy Leader, David Weeks. After the judgement, the scandal and its effects were discussed in Parliament on 14 May 1996.[30]

In 1998, BBC2 screened a documentary, Looking for Shirley, which profiled Westminster City Council's efforts to recover the surcharge and Porter's efforts to move her estimated £70m assets into offshore accounts and overseas investments.[31][32]

The Court of Appeal overturned the judgement in 1999, but the House of Lords reinstated it in 2001 (see Porter v Magill [2001] UKHL 67, [2002] 2 AC 357[33]). Including interest, the surcharge now stood at £43.3 million.[34] In Israel, Porter transferred substantial parts of her great wealth to other members of her family and into secret trusts in an effort to avoid the charge, and subsequently claimed assets of only £300,000.[35]

Final agreement

On 24 April 2004, the still Conservative controlled Westminster City Council and the Audit Commission announced that an agreement had been reached for a payment of £12.3 million in settlement of the debt. The council declared that the cost of legal action would be far greater than the amount to be recovered, while Porter still maintained her innocence. The decision was appealed by Labour members on the Council and the District Auditor began another investigation. The ensuing report, issued on 15 March 2007, accepted the position of the council that further action would not be cost effective. The Auditor further stated that Westminster had recovered substantially all of Dame Shirley's personal wealth and had acted at all times in the best interests of the taxpayers of the City.

The Labour Party in London has continued its pursuit of Porter and following the settlement, Porter has returned to Westminster to live, buying a £1.5m flat with family money.[9][36] The former Mayor of London, Ken Livingstone, subsequently requested that Lord Goldsmith, the Attorney General, commence an investigation as to whether or not Porter committed perjury or other offences, during the conduct of the 'homes for votes' case.[37]

It is also in question whether Porter is now a full-time resident in the United Kingdom, considering her commitments to the Porter Foundation and the trust's various Israel-based projects. In November 2007, The Jerusalem Post cited her as a "permanent fixture" at the annual Balfour Dinner hosted by the Israel Britain and Commonwealth Association as she does "reside in Israel".[38]

In November 2009, ahead of a BBC radio play, Shirleymander, dramatising the principal events of Shirley Porter's time as leader at Westminster council,[39] Council leader Colin Barrow apologised unreservedly to all those affected by the "gerrymandering" policy. He criticised Shirley Porter by name for the first time and added that her actions were "the opposite of the council's policies today".[40]

Philanthropy

The Porter Foundation

The Porter Foundation is a UK-registered charitable trust established in 1970 by the family of Sir Jack Porter. In particular, Dame Shirley Porter and her late husband, Sir Leslie Porter, donated funds to causes such as Tel Aviv University, where the latter became chancellor. The foundation has given several naming donations to the University: the Porter Institute for Poetics and Semiotics, the Cohen-Porter Family Swimming Pool, the Shirley and Leslie Porter School of Cultural Studies, the Cohen-Porter United Kingdom Building of Life Sciences, the Porter Super Centre for Environmental and Ecological Research. The foundation also provides scholarships and has paid for equipment and books.

In 2000, the Porter Foundation, now headed by Dame Shirley Porter, founded the Porter School of Environmental Studies[41] (PSES) at Tel Aviv University as a multi-disciplinary school of environmental studies. Dame Shirley was personally involved in the design and construction of the school’s new building on the Tel Aviv University campus. The LEED Platinum-graded building was scheduled to open in May 2014.[42] It has been built according to international standards of energy-efficient and environmentally sensitive design, making it the University's first "green building" and one of the first of its kind in Israel. The building’s capsule design and energy-saving features was designed to make it a "living laboratory" for teaching and research on green architecture, both within the University and outside academia.[43]

In addition to founding the PSES, Porter has been involved with the Council for a Beautiful Israel[44] and the Society for the Protection of Nature in Israel, and on 23 April 2009 she was awarded the prestigious ‘Green Globe’ award for her contribution to Israel’s environmental movement.[45]

Another philanthropic project funded by the Porter Foundation is the Porter Senior Citizen Centre in Jaffa,[46] a facility for elderly and poor Jews in the area (mostly Sephardic Bulgarians).

The Porter Foundation also built the Daniel Marcus Nautical Centre, in memory of Dame Shirley and Sir Leslie Porter’s grandson Daniel Amichai Marcus who was killed in a car crash in Israel in 1993 at the age of 21 while on vacation with friends from their military service.

Other causes include endowing galleries in Britain's National Portrait Gallery, where The Porter Gallery exists on the ground floor ;[47] the Royal Academy and the V&A.

Biography

In a review for The Guardian of Nothing Like a Dame, Porter's biography by journalist Andrew Hosken, Nicholas Lezard described her in the following terms: "She remains, by a considerable margin, the most corrupt British public figure in living memory, with the possible exception of Robert Maxwell".[48] In the London Review of Books review of the same book Jenny Diski called the Homes for Votes scandal Porter's "biggest, stupidest and most cynical act of corruption". Diski, without justifying Porter’s behaviour, accused many of Porter's critics of "snobbery and an undeclared racism". She cited the "echo of something more than simple class snobbery in the judgments made of her voice and decor".[49]

See also

References

Notes

  1. Gerrymandering, the word used by the auditor, is not quite the right term to describe the actions of Westminster Council. Nick Cohen, writing in The Independent, said: "Technically, [gerrymandering] means drawing electoral boundaries to the advantage of the governing party. Westminster was more ambitious: the council was not merely changing the boundaries, it was attempting to change the electorate." Cohen, Nick (16 January 1994). "Dumping the poor". The Independent. London. Retrieved 2011-10-05.
  2. All facts below are taken from the description of facts as printed in the decision of the Judicial Appealate Committee of the House of Lords of the Westminster Parliament in Porter v Magill [2002] 2 AC 357.

Footnotes

  1. The London Gazette: no. 51405. p. 7915. 11 July 1988. Retrieved 2 June 2014.
  2. The London Gazette: (Supplement) no. 53834. p. 15227. 31 October 1994. Retrieved 2 June 2014.
  3. 1 2 3 4 "PORTER, Dame Shirley, (Lady Porter)". Who's Who. Oxford University Press. 2011. Retrieved 5 October 2011.
  4. The London Gazette: (Supplement) no. 52382. p. 7. 31 December 1990. Retrieved 10 June 2009.
  5. "Corruption". The Independent on Sunday. London, UK. 6 July 2003. p. 3.
  6. Hencke, David (14 December 2001). "Sorry end for headline-grabbing Dame Shirley". The Guardian. Guardian Media Group. Retrieved 24 November 2014.
  7. Millward, David (6 July 2004). "Porter pays £12.3m in homes for votes case". The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
  8. McSmith, Andy; Huggler, Justin (6 July 2003). "Sleaze scandal strips Dame Shirley Porter of her title". The Independent. Independent Print Limited. Retrieved 24 November 2014.
  9. 1 2 Weaver, Matthew (7 August 2009). "Dame Shirley Porter back in Westminster". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
  10. 1 2 Oppenheimer, P.M. (2004). "Cohen, Sir John Edward (1898–1979)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 5 October 2011.
  11. Hosken 2006, pp. 7–8.
  12. Hosken 2006, pp. 5–6.
  13. Hosken 2006, p. 5.
  14. Abdela, Lesley (1989). Women with X Appeal: Women in British Politics Today. London: Macdonald & Co. p. 187. ISBN 9780356171845.
  15. Pimlott Baker, Anne (2009). "Porter, Sir Leslie (1920–2005)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 5 October 2011.
  16. "Sir Leslie Porter". The Times. London. Retrieved 29 January 2011.
  17. 1 2 "Dame Shirley Porter on Desert Island Discs". BBC.
  18. Hosking, Patrick; Wighton, David (23 March 2005). "Sir Leslie Porter". The Times. London. Retrieved 26 March 2010.
  19. Lezard, Nicholas (24 March 2007). "A truth more ghastly than fiction". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 4 November 2013.
  20. Lowe, Shirley (27 September 1985). "Westminster whirlwind". The Times. London. p. 11.
  21. Hosken 2006, p. 36.
  22. Hosken 2006, p. 37.
  23. Hosken 2006, p. 43.
  24. Hosken 2006, p. 47.
  25. Hosken 2006, p. 48.
  26. Hosken 2006, p. 51.
  27. Hosken 2006, p. 68.
  28. Ware, John (8 October 1994). "The brass neck of Dame Shirley Porter". The Spectator. London. p. 27.
  29. Hosken 2006, p. 322.
  30. http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm199596/cmhansrd/vo960514/debtext/60514-07.htm |chapter-url= missing title (help). Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). House of Commons. 14 May 1996. col. 772.
  31. "Looking For Shirley". First Sight. 1998-10-15. BBC. BBC Two.
  32. Brown, Colin (14 February 1998). "Dame Shirley moves £70m out of Britain". The Independent. London. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
  33. "Magill v. Weeks [2001] UKHL 67 (13th December, 2001)". Bailii.org. Retrieved 29 January 2011.
  34. Hosken 2006, p. 325.
  35. Mathiason, Nick (18 February 2007). "Porter's son in US loan row". The Observer. London. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
  36. Mendick, Robert (7 August 2006). "Shirley Porter? Oh, She's Really Scary, Said Maggie". London Evening Standard. London. Archived at HighBeam Research. Retrieved 5 November 2013. (subscription required)
  37. Letter from Mayor Livingstone to Lord Goldsmith, 18 August 2006
  38. "Grapevine: Peers gather for peerless anniversary". Jerusalem. 6 November 2007.
  39. "Friday Play: Shirleymander". BBC Radio 4. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
  40. Bar-Hillel, Mira (27 November 2009). "Westminster chief: We're sorry for Dame Shirley and 'homes for votes'". London Evening Standard. London. Retrieved 30 July 2010.
  41. Dame Shirley Porter: Vision for the School of Environmental Studies, Tel Aviv University
  42. Green Knesset team, Tel Aviv Porter School explore environmental collaboration opportunities, Jerusalem Post, by Sharon Udasin, March 15, 2014
  43. Environment: Showcasing ecological design, Jerusalem Post, by Sharon Udasin, August 2, 2012
  44. The Yakir Israel Yafa Award, Council for a Beautiful Israel
  45. Environmentalism: Interviewing Philanthropist Dame Shirley Porter, Finally Good News, by Robin Cook, March 26, 2014
  46. "The Porter Foundation". Foundation Guide.
  47. Rayner, Jay (28 February 1999). "Dame Shirley of Tel Aviv". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 26 March 2010.
  48. Lezard, Nicholas (24 March 2007). "Review: ''Nothing Like a Dame: The Scandals of Shirley Porter'' by Andrew Hosken". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 29 January 2011.
  49. Diski, Jenny (25 May 2006). "Be mean and nasty". London Review of Books. London. Archived from the original on 15 October 2007. Retrieved 4 November 2013.

Bibliography

  • Hosken, Andrew (2006). Nothing Like a Dame. Granta Books. ISBN 978-1-86207-809-3. 
  • Dimoldenberg, Paul (2006). The Westminster Whistleblowers: Shirley Porter, Homes for Votes and Scandal in Britain's Rottenest Borough. Politico's. ISBN 978-1-84275-179-4. 
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