Council faces legal stoush over taylor point nod BelfastTelegraph.co.uk A tribunal has ruled that councillors on the council have breached legal requirements by not accepting a chance of winning taylor points for their ward as promised. https://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/northern-ireland/taylor-point-nod-belfast-council-faces-l대전 출장 마사지egal-stoush-over-taylor-point-nod-35357921.html https://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/incoming/article35357921.ece/fdd3b/AUTOCROP/h342/taylor-point.jpg
A tribunal has ruled that councillors on the council have breached legal requirements by not accepting a chance of winning taylor points for their ward as promised.
On Friday lawyers representing the Conservative-dominated South Down council sent a written application to the high court.
It accused them of breaking two principles in the European Convention, Article 13(2) and Article 16.
The council’s legal representatives, Richard Fylke of Sennel and Reis of Ouseley, and Michael Taylor, general manager of administration, the South Down city government, wrote: “Your representations are highly defamatory, grossly offensive, insulting and likely to have a damaging effect on council members in their role.”
In the application the solicitors say the council’s failure to consider the proposal before making it was a “negligence in good faith” and one not designed to allow for a fair decision “to be re울산출장안마 울산출장마사지ached”.
They claim council officials must have been persuaded by information from solicitors for Tullow Point that Taylor, a local partner of a company whose chief executive was a former leader of the Scottish Government, would win the nomination.
And it says: “There was not a sound basis for your representations.”
Mr Fylke said the failure to accept the nomination was a breach of the principle that “the council cannot be guided by people who are not fit and proper to represent the council.”
In a출장n interview, he said: “It is not about winning taylor points. The council cannot force you to do anything.”
The solicitor wrote the argument about the Taylor points is “somewhat less persuasive.”
Mr Fylke is seeking permission to appeal the decision.
Earlier this month it emerged that the mayor of Liverpool,