Friday, 24 April 2026

Sandwell Labour’s 2026 Pledge Sheet — The Party That Broke the Windows Now Wants Praise for Buying a Broom

Sandwell Labour’s 2026 Pledge Sheet — The Party That Broke the Windows Now Wants Praise for Buying a Broom

Sandwell Labour has launched its glossy 2026 pledge sheet.

Bright red background. Big yellow promises. CCTV cameras. Fly-tipping teams. Anti-social behaviour officers. More bins. Pop-up recycling centres. Crisis funds. Food banks. Roads. Parks. Play areas.

At first glance, it looks like action.

Look again.

What it really says is this:

After years in charge, Labour has finally discovered the problems residents have been shouting about for years.

Fly-tipping. Anti-social behaviour. filthy streets. Poor enforcement. neglected town centres. residents left battling systems that do not answer, do not explain, and do not learn until election season arrives with a camera, a leaflet and a slogan.

This is not a party of renewal.

This is the management team asking for applause because the building is on fire and they have found a bucket.

The Big Trick: Council Budget Dressed Up as Labour Pledge

The first red flag is the way Labour presents these promises.

The leaflet says “Sandwell Labour Pledges for 2026.”

But many of the headline items are not fresh party promises. They are already part of the council’s 2026/27 budget: 62 new CCTV cameras, 34 pop-up recycling centres, new litter bins, doubled anti-social behaviour funding, £1 million for play areas, extra roads and pavements money, and road safety investment. Sandwell Council itself published those budget priorities after the February 2026 budget decision.

So let us call this what it is.

Taxpayer-funded council decisions are being politically gift-wrapped as Labour election pledges.

Residents pay. The council budgets. Labour campaigns. Then the leaflet arrives pretending it is all a generous party offering from the people who have been running the place for years.

That is not bold leadership.

That is incumbency marketing.

Fly-Tipping: Labour Discovers Rubbish Exists

Labour now promises a new fly-tipping enforcement team, Environmental Enforcement and Rapid Response Officers, and two new vehicles.

The council says it will invest close to £1 million, create eight new posts, buy vehicles and launch a rapid response to fly-tipping incidents.

Fine. Good. Long overdue.

But why now?

Fly-tipping has not suddenly appeared in Sandwell. It has been blighting streets, alleys, entries, green spaces and neighbourhoods for years. Council papers have described fly-tipping as a significant issue, with 8,000 to 10,000 incidents reported each year, and more than 8,000 reports already recorded in the first three quarters of 2025/26.

That is not a minor nuisance.

That is a borough-wide failure of deterrence, prevention and enforcement.

The council has also said that since October 2025 enforcement action led to 20 fixed penalty notices, with several cases pending prosecution.

Twenty fixed penalty notices against thousands of fly-tipping reports is not exactly Judge Dredd in a hi-vis jacket.

Residents should ask:

Where were the enforcement teams before the election year?
Where were the prosecutions?
Where was the prevention strategy?
Where was the ward-by-ward hotspot data?
Where was the grip?

Labour now wants credit for sending a team to clear up a mess that grew under Labour’s watch.

CCTV: Cameras Are Not a Strategy

Labour says it will install over 60 new CCTV cameras, with 30 deployable.

Again, the council budget confirms 62 new CCTV cameras to help tackle fly-tipping and anti-social behaviour.

But CCTV is not magic.

A camera does not issue a fine.
A camera does not knock on a door.
A camera does not prosecute.
A camera does not comfort a resident who has spent two years reporting the same alleyway, the same nuisance neighbour, the same street-corner problems.

CCTV is useful only if it is part of a serious enforcement chain: monitored, reviewed, acted upon, linked to prosecutions and reported back to residents.

Otherwise it becomes the perfect political prop.

Big enough for a leaflet.
Small enough to avoid a proper explanation.

The question is simple: will the council publish where these cameras go, why those locations were chosen, what outcomes they produce, and how many offenders are actually caught?

If not, this is not accountability. It is theatre with a lens.

Anti-Social Behaviour: Doubling Staff After Years of Complaints

Labour says it will create a brand-new Anti-Social Behaviour Team, doubling frontline staff.

The council says its dedicated anti-social behaviour officers will increase from 17 to 39 as part of a £1 million-plus investment.

Again, good.

But again, why did it take this long?

For years residents have complained about nuisance, intimidation, noise, street drinking, drug activity, harassment, repeat offenders, neighbour disputes and people being bounced between housing, police, environmental health, community safety and councillors.

Now, in an all-out election year, Labour has discovered “frontline staff.”

Residents should not be blinded by headcount. They should demand outcomes:

How many ASB cases are opened?
How many are resolved?
How many repeat offenders are dealt with?
How many complainants are satisfied?
How many cases are closed because the council says “no further action”?
How many victims are left feeling abandoned?

A bigger team is only meaningful if it ends the culture of delay, deflection and departmental ping-pong.

Bins, Pop-Up Recycling and the Politics of the Obvious

Labour promises more than 100 new street bins with segregated recycling in high-volume areas.

The council budget also promises new litter bins and 34 pop-up recycling centres across the borough.

Again, this tells us something important.

If Sandwell now needs extra bins, pop-up recycling centres, CCTV and a fly-tipping enforcement squad, then Labour’s own leaflet is basically admitting the current system has not been working well enough.

The borough does not need a photo opportunity next to a bin.

It needs:

proper collection capacity,
clear street cleansing schedules,
real enforcement,
transparent hotspot data,
ward-level reporting,
and proper scrutiny of whether waste policy changes have increased pressure on already struggling communities.

A bin is not a strategy. A pop-up recycling centre is not a waste revolution. And a leaflet is not a clean street.

Cost of Living: Compassion in a Box, Council Tax in the Post

Labour promises a crisis fund, extra council tax support, free welfare advice, and investment in food banks and pantries.

That sounds warm. It also sounds revealing.

If the Labour-run council needs to campaign on food banks, crisis funds and extra welfare support, then it is admitting many Sandwell households are struggling badly.

At the same time, the council has increased council tax for 2026/27, while presenting the increase as modest for Band A and Band B households.

But struggling residents do not live in a press release. They live in weekly budgets.

For some families, a few pounds more is not “modest.” It is another squeeze.

So Labour’s message becomes:

We will take more from you, then campaign on helping you cope with having less.

That is not social justice. That is a political washing machine.

“Protecting Services” — Protected From Whom?

The leaflet lists what Labour claims it has been protecting: libraries, community centres, leisure centres, youth services, green spaces, meals on wheels, public health activity, dementia care, animal welfare, family hubs and more.

Fine. Let us ask the obvious question.

Protected from whom?

Labour runs Sandwell Council.

If services are at risk, residents are entitled to ask who set the budgets, who made the choices, who designed the consultations, who controlled the cabinet reports, who voted the decisions through, and who has been in power while public confidence has eroded.

“Protecting services” is a lovely phrase. But it needs evidence.

Are services protected in budget?
Protected in staff numbers?
Protected in opening hours?
Protected in access?
Protected in quality?
Protected in outcomes?
Or merely protected as a line in a leaflet?

Because in Sandwell, too often, residents see the brand, the slogan and the press release long before they see the delivery.

The Governance Shadow Labour Wants Everyone to Forget

Sandwell Council was placed under Government intervention in 2022 after serious governance concerns. The Government’s Sandwell intervention collection exists because there was a formal best value intervention into the council.

The intervention ended in March 2024, with ministers saying the council was no longer failing its Best Value Duty, but the ministerial letter still referred to the need to sustain improvement and build further resilience.

That matters.

Because Labour now wants residents to move straight from “intervention ended” to “everything is fixed.”

No.

Ending intervention is not a gold medal. It is not a civic knighthood. It means the council was judged capable of continuing improvement without commissioners breathing down its neck.

The proper question is not: “Did the commissioners leave?”

The proper question is:

Has Sandwell Labour genuinely changed the culture that allowed the intervention to happen in the first place?

Or has it simply learned to write shinier reports?

Complaints: The Public Are Still Telling Them Something Is Wrong

Sandwell’s own Customer Feedback Annual Report for 2024/25 says Stage 2 complaints increased by 75% to 378.

The council’s housing complaints material also refers to 890 housing complaints received in 2024/25.

That is not just noise. That is feedback from the real world.

Behind every complaint is a person, a household, a tenant, a resident, a family, or a councillor enquiry that did not disappear because a corporate strategy said “learning lessons.”

Residents are sick of councils that “learn lessons” with the speed of a glacier and the memory of a goldfish.

Sandwell Labour should stop asking for praise for promising improvements and start explaining why so many improvements are still needed.

The Blackheath Leaflet: Fourteen Years Is Not Just Experience — It Is Evidence

The Blackheath candidate leaflet says Kerrie Carmichael has worked hard for residents for the past 14 years and points to improvements in Britannia Park, Blackheath town centre, Sons of Rest Community Centre and the Lench’s Memorial.

That is the classic incumbent pitch: local, familiar, experienced.

But 14 years cuts both ways.

If you have been there for 14 years, you do not just inherit the record. You are part of the record.

So when the same leaflet talks about fly-tipping, lighting, CCTV, roads, cleaner streets and anti-social behaviour, residents are entitled to ask:

After 14 years, why are these still headline problems?
After 14 years, why is Labour still promising basics?
After 14 years, why does every election leaflet sound like the council has only just found the map?

Experience is only an asset if it produces results. Otherwise it becomes a very long receipt for unfinished work.

The Real Red Flags

This Labour pledge sheet exposes more than it intends.

It shows a party that wants to campaign like an insurgent while governing like an incumbent.

It wants to be thanked for fixing problems it presided over.

It wants to call council spending “Labour pledges.”

It wants to use taxpayer-funded budget choices as political campaign material.

It wants to talk about CCTV without publishing outcomes.

It wants to talk about enforcement without showing years of failure.

It wants to talk about protecting services without explaining who put them under pressure.

It wants residents to forget the governance intervention, the complaints, the consultations, the waste problems, the town-centre decline, the service frustration and the endless culture of “we are learning lessons.”

The problem is not that every pledge is bad.

Some of them are necessary.

That is exactly the point.

They are necessary because the borough has been allowed to get into a state where more enforcement, more cameras, more bins, more crisis support and more basic street-level action are now election material.

Final Word

Sandwell Labour says it is “a caring council that gets things done.”

Residents may have a different version:

A council that waits until the problems are unbearable, packages the obvious as a pledge, spends public money, prints a red leaflet, and asks for gratitude.

The people of Sandwell do not need more slogans.

They need clean streets, safe neighbourhoods, honest consultation, transparent spending, competent services, proper enforcement, open governance and councillors who remember that public office is not a family heirloom, a party entitlement or a four-year photo opportunity.

Sandwell has had years of promises.

Now residents should ask the only question that matters:

If Labour is the answer, why are so many of Sandwell’s problems still the question?



#Sandwell #SandwellCouncil #SandwellLabour #LocalElections2026 #SandwellPolitics #FlyTipping #AntiSocialBehaviour #CouncilTax #WasteManagement #CCTV #Governance #PublicServices #Accountability #Vote2026 #SandwellVotes

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