• Support Wokingham Today
  • Get the print edition
  • Sign up for our daily newsletter
Thursday, January 22, 2026
Wokingham.Today
  • HOME
  • MY AREA
    • All
    • Arborfield
    • Barkham
    • Beech Hill
    • Binfield
    • Bracknell
    • Charvil
    • Crowthorne
    • Earley
    • Emmbrook
    • Finchampstead
    • Grazeley
    • Henley
    • Hurst
    • Lower Earley
    • Norreys
    • Reading
    • Remenham
    • Riseley
    • Shinfield
    • Sindlesham
    • Sonning
    • Spencers Wood
    • Swallowfield
    • Three Mile Cross
    • Twyford
    • Wargrave
    • Winnersh
    • Wokingham
    • Wokingham Without
    • Woodley
    • Woosehill
    • Yateley
    MP Clive Jones

    What does Wokingham’s MP really think about banning kids from social media?

    Wokingham Youth Theatre members enjoyed creating gory wounds. Picture: Emma Merchant

    Wokingham Youth Theatre members go home with horrifying wounds

    The Dukes Head in Denmark Street, Wokingham town centre. Credit: Google Maps.

    Food van plan could change this Wokingham town centre pub

    A decline in Berkshire payroll figures indicates continued pressure on jobs. Picture:

    Is Berkshire’s jobs markets slowing? New payroll data reveals all

    c

    Berkshire readers are helping shelter families worldwide through their love of books

    Alexandre Lomondais, 15, the first Black Belt Code Ninja. Picture: Code Ninjas Wokingham

    Wokingham teen achieves first ever coding black belt

    An artist's impression of the new woodlands avenue route. Picture: WBC

    Work to begin on Woodley walking and cycling infrastructure

    this location will also be the eighth store in the UK offering ta breakfast menu..

    Five Guys reveals opening date for Winnersh Showcase restaurant

    A petition calling for additional parking at Twyford station has received nearly 2,000 signatures. Credit David Sleight, Wokingham Conservatives/Change.org,

    Commuter anger grows as Twyford station car park hits capacity every morning

  • CRIME
  • SPORT
    • All
    • Binfield FC
    • Reading FC
    Reading FC

    Reading sign defender on permanent deal from Bristol City

    Reading FC

    Reading FC sign Derby County defender on loan deal

    Rob Couhig and Todd Trosclair Picture: Luke Adams

    Cajun food, pyrotechnics,prizes and football: Reading FC’s Louisiana Day explained

    Ronan Hale, Reading FC

    Reading FC unlikely to sign striker Ronan Hale despite transfer request — here’s why

    Wokingham Rown FC.

    Sumas’ tribute to supporter Brian

    Reading FC - Dom Ballard

    Former player returns with hat-trick to defeat Reading FC

    Reading FC's Charlie Savage Picture: Luke Adams

    Oxford United set to launch improved bid for Reading FC’s Charlie Savage after first offer rejected

    James Beauchamp. Pic: Andrew Batt.

    Sumas in the semis

    Reading FC, Charlie Savage

    ‘It’s pathetic’: Reading FC fans react as rivals launch bid for Charlie Savage

  • READING FC
  • COMMUNITY
    Wokingham Youth Theatre members enjoyed creating gory wounds. Picture: Emma Merchant

    Wokingham Youth Theatre members go home with horrifying wounds

    The Dukes Head in Denmark Street, Wokingham town centre. Credit: Google Maps.

    Food van plan could change this Wokingham town centre pub

    c

    Berkshire readers are helping shelter families worldwide through their love of books

    Alexandre Lomondais, 15, the first Black Belt Code Ninja. Picture: Code Ninjas Wokingham

    Wokingham teen achieves first ever coding black belt

    Jayne Worrall entertained members of Wargrave Local History Society with her tales of The Bull. Picture: courtesy of WLHS

    Wargrave club hears a story spanning six hundred years

    A thief with a passion for potatoes visited Norreys Church at the weekend to make off with Share Wokingham supplies.

    Man steals sacks of potatoes from Wokingham charity — but fails spectacularly

    Wokingham Town Hall

    Wokingham tops England for life expectancy – could this be the secret to longevity?

    Lovesong, a heart-warming look at life. Bring hankies by all means, but expect to be uplifted. Picture: Simon Vail Photography

    Wokingham Theatre’s Lovesong is simply beautiful

    Wokingham Rown FC.

    Sumas’ tribute to supporter Brian

  • LIFESTYLE
    • All
    • Food
    • Health
    • Obituaries
    • People
    The Dukes Head in Denmark Street, Wokingham town centre. Credit: Google Maps.

    Food van plan could change this Wokingham town centre pub

    this location will also be the eighth store in the UK offering ta breakfast menu..

    Five Guys reveals opening date for Winnersh Showcase restaurant

    Wokingham Town Hall

    Wokingham tops England for life expectancy – could this be the secret to longevity?

    Ken Livett

    Cllr Lou Timlin

    Mayor Lou gets set for Wokingham half marathon

    Twyfor Together.

    Do you know someone who is making a difference in Twyford?

    MP Clive Jones

    MP: Cancer patients and families deserve better

    Koush Miah Picture: Tamarind Tree

    Family pays tribute to Tamarind Tree’s Koush

    UK charity Independent Age urges older people in the borough to check their eligibility for Pension Credit. Picture: Gerd Altmann via Pixabay

    Older people in the borough urged to check Pension Credit eligibility

  • WHAT’S ON
    • All
    • Arts
    • Entertainment
    Lovesong, a heart-warming look at life. Bring hankies by all means, but expect to be uplifted. Picture: Simon Vail Photography

    Wokingham Theatre’s Lovesong is simply beautiful

    Corpus Christi Parish Panto has previously performed Mother Goose. This year audiences can enjoy their production of Snow White. Picture: CCPP

    Mirror mirror on the wall, Parish panto open to all

    Millie Manders and the Shutup Picture: Andrew Merritt

    RaW Sounds Today: Millie Manders and the Shutup, Tom Robinson, Attila the Stockbroker

    Solo violinist Elizaveta Tyun will perform at Crowthorne Symphony Orchestra?s next concert in Wokingham. Picture courtesy of CSO

    Earlybird booking opens for Mendelssohn Violin Concerto

    Tom Robinson and Adam Phillips will perform at All Saints Church, Wokingham. Picture: David Owens

    Celebrate the music of Tom Robinson with Adam Phillips

    It will take place at Black Swan lake.

    Glide, kayak or paddle under the moonlight

    Forlorn Picture: Andrew Merritt

    RaW Sounds Today: Featuring Forlorn, Leoni Jane Kennedy, TRASHCAT, Akin S

    PREVIEW: Agatha Christie’s “Towards Zero” at South Hill Park Arts Centre

    Reading FC Women Picture: Neil Graham

    Reading FC Women set for home league action to start 2026

  • BUSINESS
  • ADVERTISE
  • CONTACT
No Result
View All Result
Wokingham.Today
No Result
View All Result
Home News Politics

VOTE 2021: Wokingham Labour aims to be the moral voice on the borough council

by Phil Creighton
April 11, 2021
in Politics, Vote 2021, Wokingham
Wokingham labour

Wokingham Labour's candidates in the 2021 Wokingham borough elections

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

As May 6 comes closer, our manifesto series sees Andy Croy from Wokingham Labour set out his party’s principles to PHIL CREIGHTON

A VOTE for a Labour councillor is a vote for a local person who puts the interests of the residents first. That’s our strongest manifesto commitment.”

That’s the promise from Cllr Andy Croy, the leader of Wokingham Labour at Wokingham Borough Council

He says that any Labour candidate elected on Thursday, May 6 will not be forced to vote as directed by Labour party whip, but by putting their ward first.

“Residents want councillors who speak up for them, they don’t want one who has to explain why they have voted along party lines. This is very important.

“(Putting party first) has been a problem for many Conservative councillors and probably some of the Lib Dem councillors. The way the council operates means that people are saying we don’t want this in my ward, but my councillors voted for it.”

He adds: “If you vote for a Labour candidate, and you get a Labour councillor, that person will be around for the next four years. They won’t disappear until the next election.

Related posts

VOTE 2024: Live blog from the Wokingham Borough Council elections count

VOTE 2024: Labour can be an effective opposition says its Wokingham leader

“People who don’t normally vote Labour vote Labour because they know that our councillors are there working for them all through the year. Labour councillors represent excellent value for money: they will always stand up for the area, they will always be around, working for the area.

“In Norreys ward, Cllr Rachel Burgess had dealt with more than 200 individual resident queries in the past couple of years – a huge number. It’s not the glamorous stuff and rarely makes the papers.”

Cllr Croy also pledges that his team will cap their councillors’ expenses to the 2010 levels.

“We have never voted for a pay rise, we have never taken a pay rise. We’re the lowest funded local authority in the country, we’ve had 10 years of austerity and the other councillors are happy enough to take the pay rises.

“There’s a moral voice there.”

This moral voice extends to issues such as climate emergency where, he says, the other parties voted in favour of a third runway at Heathrow – “an utterly appalling thing to do”.

“If you’re serious about cutting your carbon dioxide emissions, we have to be reducing air transport, not encouraging it. It probably took us about 10 seconds as a group to decide how we’d vote.

“We want the message to go back very clearly: the priority must be carbon dioxide emissions. That third runway will generate a massive amount of extra carbon dioxide.”

He also berates the Conservatives and Lib Dems for arguing over the number of trees planted, with the ruling group pledging 250,000 and the Lib Dems wanting 300,000.

“It’s an absurd race to see who can put the biggest number of a leaflet,” Cllr Croy says. “We need to take the politics out of the climate emergency response, which is why all our candidates are committed to the idea of a citizens assembly, just one part of our environmental package.”

He says that Wokingham Labour councillors would push for the local plan update that would support sustainability in every single way, including building design, transport provision and energy.

“We as a borough council actually have a chance to influence what our new buildings will look like for the next half-century. This will be our last chance to realistically design a plan that will have an influence on housing.”

Housing numbers is a sore point for many in the borough. Cllr Croy says that the national Conservative government’s manifesto made it clear that they were going to increase housing numbers.

“The much bigger train coming down the track is the changes in planning laws,” he says. “The redesignation of the country of areas of protection, redevelopment and growth will effectively open up the whole borough to housing and it will be a disaster.

“There is no point having a plan where we’ve had buildings or settlements concentrated in several areas around the borough because the whole borough will be up for grabs.

“We have a government committed to ripping up so-called democratic control of planning in the name of making it simpler – it will be a developer’s charter.”

Cllr Croy wants there to be more democratic controls for local people, with councillors able to stand up for their residents.

“Having Labour councillors means you’ve got a much larger body of people willing to look for the planning reasons to oppose unwanted developments,” he says.

On transport, Labour would do what it could to encourage people to get out of their cars and on to bikes, walking or public transport.

“Because of covid, public transport is quite hard, but it’s the easiest one to ramp up, it’s just a question of engaging with and supporting Reading Buses.

“The main reason why people don’t cycle is because the roads are dangerous, or they feel unsafe on the road. So you have to prioritise cyclists. That’s a trade-off we have to make if we want to get people out of their cars and onto the bikes.

“Greenways are not a cycle superhighway. They’re nice, but pseudo bridleways I’m not sure are the answer to our community problems.

“One of the frustrating things we seem to have is a culture of trying to do the minimum: we’re not making our new roads as good as they can possibly be for cyclists or buses. That’s what we need to aspire to.”

Labour would also be pushing for more resourcing for school transport, calling for a joined-up approach on everything from walking to school, parking restrictions and enforcement and supporting home learners.

On adult social services, Labour would be looking to end ‘demand management”.

“It’s a policy of the borough to manage demand for its services,” he says. “We don’t want that. The demand must be driven by need not by the borough’s managing of need. There are some areas of care that aren’t regulated, we’re looking at a licencing scheme.”

This would make it easier to ensure council services were run to a gold standard.

Just before the council broke up for the elections, it passed an equalities policy, but Wokingham Labour would be seeking immediate changes.

“The first thing we would do is rewrite it so that people can actually understand it,” he says.

 “We’re also selecting a slate of candidates that actually looks a little bit like the borough. I was appalled to see the Lib Dem slate (of candidates) and every single person is white. We’re getting into a quarter of the way through the 21st century in a borough that is a mixed population and it’s increasingly diverse and they haven’t managed to find themselves a single black or minority ethnic council candidate. It’s a terrible state of affairs.”

Labour says it would also seek to take concerns from ethnic minorities seriously. Last summer, Cllr Croy called on councils to fly a Black Lives Matter flag in honour of George Flloyd, who died at the hand of US police officers. “But neither council would do it,” he says.

Wokingham Labour wants to boost recycling rates and adds: “No one is threatening to cut weekly bin collections apart from the Conservatives. It’s almost like a straw man they’re raising unless they know something we don’t. The threat (of removing it) is imaginary and made up by the Conservatives so they have something to talk about.”

On education, Labour would seek to help pupils learn in a safe environment.

“One of the issues seems to be the appalling sort of misogyny that’s going on in our schools and does not seem to be reported. The first thing we’d want to do is have an overview with the schools and see what was going on,” he says.

“We have been trying to get a system to report hate crime, but haven’t been able to do this yet. At the moment, we’ve got no idea what is going on because the schools all use or have different standards for reporting, you can’t compare one school to another.

“After the Black Lives Matter campaigns, one of the things we can do to make sure that black, Asian and Latino children feel safe in our schools is for them to know that if they report something as racist, or homophobic, or any other forms, then it’s taken seriously. At the moment we cannot give that assurance.”

Cllr Croy adds that Labour would switch the free school meal voucher system, used during holidays, to a cash payment system.

“We’re disappointed the Conservatives went for the easy option. It’s a typical Conservative way of doing it: get a company to sort it out, let somebody else make a bit of a profit off it. We would much rather give the cash straight to the parents.”

And moving on, a Labour-run council would be looking to work specifically with poverty-facing charities to tackle the issues being faced.

“It’s a big issue. You have to engage with those charities specifically with the aim of alleviating or taking people out of poverty and alleviating the impact of poverty. Conservatives, every time there’s an answer they don’t agree with they hide (it) in something else.”

He adds: “We are standing up for the most vulnerable people across the whole borough.”

Andy Croy is standing for election for Labour in Bulmershe and Whitegates. His opponents are Shahdid Younis (Conservative) and Shelia Jordan (Lib Dem)

This piece was originally published in Wokingham.Today’s print edition of April 8, before the news that the Duke of Edinburgh had passed away. We are publishing it to ensure that the three main parties contesting Wokingham borough have pieces outlining their vision for the council ahead of May 6, and acknowledge that campaigning for the local elections has been paused during the national period of mourning

Keep up to date by signing up for our daily newsletter

We don’t spam we only send our newsletter to people who have requested it.

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

Tags: Wokingham Labour
Previous Post

Fun activities at Dinton Pastures during Easter holidays

Next Post

Rams RFC delighted as training commences

FOLLOW US

POPULAR THIS WEEK

Members of CLASP will be cheering on their fitness teacher James McBride (r) when he takes part in the Wokingham Half Marathon in February. Picture: CLASP

Fitness trainer James to run for CLASP

January 17, 2026
Ronan Hale, Reading FC

Reading FC unlikely to sign striker Ronan Hale despite transfer request — here’s why

January 20, 2026
Sit & Sip, Wokingham will reopen as Saviour this month. Picture: Emma Merchant

Sit & Sip to undergo rebrand

January 16, 2026
Night work has reduced daytime disruption.

Overnight work to minimise daytime disruption

January 18, 2026
A thief with a passion for potatoes visited Norreys Church at the weekend to make off with Share Wokingham supplies.

Man steals sacks of potatoes from Wokingham charity — but fails spectacularly

January 20, 2026
PHOTO BY STEWART TURKINGTON
 www.stphotos.co.uk

Former beautician launches oven cleaning business in Caversham

January 18, 2026

ABOUT US

Wokingham Today is dedicated to providing news online across the whole of the Borough of Wokingham. It is a Social Enterprise, existing to support the various communities in Wokingham Borough.

Wokingham.Today is a Social Enterprise and aims to ensure that everyone within the Borough has free access to independent and up-to-date news. However, providing this service is not without costs. If you are able to, please make a contribution to support our work.

CONTACT US

[email protected]

Keep up to date with our daily newsletter

We don’t spam we only send our newsletter to people that have subscribed

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

  • Support Us
  • Book Advertising
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Get the Print Edition
  • Sign up for our daily newsletter

The Wokingham Paper Ltd publications are regulated by IPSO – the Independent Press Standards Organisation.
If you have a complaint about a  The Wokingham Paper Ltd  publication in print or online, you should, in the first instance, contact the publication concerned, email: [email protected], or telephone: 0118 327 2662. If it is not resolved to your satisfaction, you should contact IPSO by telephone: 0300 123 2220, or visit its website: www.ipso.co.uk. Members of the public are welcome to contact IPSO at any time if they are not sure how to proceed, or need advice on how to frame a complaint.

No Result
View All Result
  • HOME
  • MY AREA
    • Arborfield
    • Barkham
    • Beech Hill
    • Binfield
    • Bracknell
    • Charvil
    • Crowthorne
    • Earley
    • Emmbrook
    • Finchampstead
    • Grazeley
    • Henley
    • Hurst
    • Lower Earley
    • Norreys
    • Reading
    • Remenham
  • CRIME
  • COMMUNITY
  • LIFESTYLE
  • SPORT
  • READING FC
  • OBITUARIES
  • WHAT’S ON
  • BUSINESS
  • PHOTOS
  • ADVERTISE WITH US
  • CONTACT US
  • WHERE TO GET THE PRINT EDITION
  • SUPPORT US

© 2022 - The Wokingham Paper Ltd - All Right Reserved.