Image: Ana Clara Paniago / The Boar

Interview: Bob Dhillon, UKIP Candidate for Warwick and Leamington

The Boar interviewed Bob Dhillon, the UKIP candidate for Warwick and Leamington in the upcoming general election.

The Boar: The constituency of Warwick and Leamington Spa chose to remain in the EU by a majority of 58%, despite the country’s overall decision. How would you ensure that the resident’s wishes are maintained during Brexit negotiations, and how would you prevent ideological divisions from forming within the local community?

Bob Dhillon: “Brexit has now been approved by our Parliament, we are no longer Remain or Leave, but residents of a great nation wishing to work with others for a free global trade area and secure borders, whilst respecting national traditions. If elected I will work with all the residents of Warwick and Leamington to get the best deal for the British people.”

Current statistics suggest that 1 in 4 people suffer from mental health problems during their lifetime, with students reporting to be particularly vulnerable. Given the financial and social crises facing the NHS, how would you ensure adequate provisions were made to support this proportion of the population and, if so, what would they be?

“Merging health and social care is a priority to enable more joined up integrated patient management. [Reforms could include] directing patients diagnosed with a debilitating long-term condition or terminal illnesses to mental health professionals when appropriate, and recognising there is often a link between addiction and mental illness and offering appropriate treatment where this is the case. [We could also] offer direct access to specialist mental health treatment for pregnant women and mothers of children under 12 months of age, fight the stigma around mental illness and support those seeking to get back into work.

Patients experiencing distress or exhibiting mental ill-health issues when admitted to hospital should have both their physical health and mental wellbeing assessed. We will end the postcode lottery for psychiatric liaison services in acute hospitals and A&E departments. We will end unfair ATOS-style Work Capability Assessments and return assessments to GPs or appropriate specialist consultants.

To fund these initiatives, we will increase mental health funding by £170 million annually. We will fund the investment by capping NHS management executive and administrative salaries, plus perks for five years from 2008 levels; Renegotiate interest repayments for the hastily signed PFI contracts saving up to £1-2 billion.”

The local bus services have largely failed to meet the demands placed upon it by both students and local residents, continuing to raise prices above the rate of inflation whilst failing to increase the volume or reliability of services to meet demands. What would you do to improve the state of public transport within the constituency, both for students and local residents?

“To make transport work for people and the economy, it needs to be better planned, managed and funded. It means an effective MP working with Transport companies, local councils and government. To incorporate regulations for a transport charter linked to performance & targets (Quality, Service, Reliability, meeting demand, Punctuality) with heavy fines, and no fare increases until they met.

To lead the world in Modern Day Transport we need to invest in the whole of the country. HOW: by Scrapping HS2 £100 billion project and investing in a Great Britain infrastructure Project for the many not the few. A project that won’t necessarily work as well as the Government would have us believe and be a blemish on the countryside.”

Despite a clear and distinct issue with homelessness within towns such as Leamington Spa, significant cuts have been made to homelessness shelters and support services in the area. Is this justifiable? And if not, what can be done to alleviate the situation?

“Homeless – safety nets exist, but they can be weak. Many private renters might assume that housing benefits would cover their rent if they weren’t working – but there are over 5.5 million ‘renters at risk’ – those whose rent would not be covered by housing benefits if they became ill and were unable to work, or lost their job through no fault of their own.

Like poverty, homelessness is real, but it’s not inevitable. As a nation, we can have offer better solutions.These could include all Locals councils setting aside housing, for what I call a Homeless Needs Charter. To provides homeless people who have additional complex needs with rapid access to settled rented housing, coupled with intensive and flexible support, provided on an open-ended basis. It enables people to choose to live in mainstream housing, integrated with society, rather than being institutionalised in hostels, which homeless people often strongly dislike.

Local councils should also increase supply of secure, low-cost rented housing, through a Living Rents development framework. They should also give a right to meaningful assistance as soon as tenants receive a notice to quit from their landlord, rather than having to wait up to four weeks for help.

This can be funded by removing Council sell offs at 40% discount, any sale to be used by councils to improve housing facilities and tax on companies with more than five buy-to-let properties.”

A large proportion of students reside within Leamington Spa and the surrounding area, and there’s been a upsurge in student housing and rental properties in recent years to accommodate. This has caused some concern with the local residents, who view it as something of a takeover and worry it could affect their own rent costs. How would you intend to balance the demands of students with those of the local residents?

“Students accommodation expansion in Leamington over the last 10 years has played a key role in the development of the town and has benefited the local economy. I believe over the next 10 years university and College accommodation expansion plans will ease the need for more HMO in the town. Although a limit must be set by councils and accommodation should be spread around the areas adjoining the educational faculties.

I strongly believe in abolishing tuition fees funded by a bankers tax (a tax which over time will destroy learning & creativity of the nation, as debt fear will lower numbers) and capping student rents to 0.5 percent below the inflation rate.

This will help to stem the high rent increases by landlords and re-balance the housing market with a common-sense approach.”

Listen to his interview with RaW here.

Read our other interviews with candidates for Warwick and Leamington:

In case you missed it: here’s our guide to the General Election! 

Comments (2)

  • ah yeah, no-one’s getting jobs in media. books? films? tv? profitless garbage.

  • Do you really think that most taxpayers want to fund students to study for degrees such as media studies, when they are highly unlikely to get jobs in this field? Far better to offer at least some funding to nurses and engineering degrees where there are actual skills shortages, which would benefit everyone?
    You have not even mentioned dementia in your interview, yet this is a cause for great concern. Do you have any ideas on how to fund dementia care which can run into tens of thousands £’s for the care of just one person so afflicted?
    Ukip should perhaps look at nationalising care homes for the elderly?

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