Baroness Pitkeathley is preferred candidate for presidency of NCVO

The appointment of the Labour peer is expected to be approved at the umbrella body’s general meeting on 20 November

The Labour peer Baroness Pitkeathley is set to be the next president of the National Council for Voluntary Organisations.

Pitkeathley, who has worked in the voluntary sector for more than 40 years and recently chaired the House Of Lords Select Committee on Charities, has been announced as the NCVO’s preferred candidate to replace Lady Grey-Thompson, who has served five years in the position.

Pitkeathley’s appointment is expected to be approved by NCVO members at its annual general meeting on 20 November.

The umbrella body also announced that Sally Young, chief executive of Newcastle Council for Voluntary Service, has been appointed as vice-chair, replacing Matt Hyde, chief executive of the Scout Association.

Pitkeathley, who is also chair of the Big Society Trust, which oversees the social investors Big Society Capital and Access – the Foundation for Social Investment, said she had been closely involved with the NCVO for many years and had always been a great admirer of its work.

“If my appointment is approved by the membership, it will be a particular pleasure to hold this important office during the centenary anniversary celebrations in 2019,” she said.

Peter Kellner, chair of the NCVO, said: “Jill’s decades of professional experience, initially as a social worker and then in the public and voluntary sectors, make her the ideal candidate for the role. She has always been clear about her dedication to civil society.

“As chairman of the House of Lords Select Committee on Charities, she has worked with peers from all political parties to challenge both the voluntary sector and the government to ensure that the sector plays a greater and more effective role in British society.

“She will prove a crucial champion during an era of uncertainty and the continuing squeeze on public services, when demand for those services is certain to grow.”

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Baroness Pitkeathley preferred candidate for presidency of umbrella body

The appointment of the Labour peer is expected to be approved at the NCVO general meeting on 20 November

The Labour peer Baroness Pitkeathley is set to be the next president of the National Council for Voluntary Organisations.

Pitkeathley, who has worked in the voluntary sector for more than 40 years and recently chaired the House Of Lords Select Committee on Charities, has been announced as the NCVO’s preferred candidate to replace Lady Grey-Thompson, who has served five years in the position.

Pitkeathley’s appointment is expected to be approved by NCVO members at its annual general meeting on 20 November.

The umbrella body also announced that Sally Young, chief executive of Newcastle Council for Voluntary Service, has been appointed as vice-chair, replacing Matt Hyde, chief executive of the Scout Association.

Pitkeathley, who is also chair of the Big Society Trust, which oversees the social investors Big Society Capital and Access – the Foundation for Social Investment, said she had been closely involved with the NCVO for many years and had always been a great admirer of its work.

“If my appointment is approved by the membership, it will be a particular pleasure to hold this important office during the centenary anniversary celebrations in 2019,” she said.

Peter Kellner, chair of the NCVO, said: “Jill’s decades of professional experience, initially as a social worker and then in the public and voluntary sectors, make her the ideal candidate for the role. She has always been clear about her dedication to civil society.

“As chairman of the House of Lords Select Committee on Charities, she has worked with peers from all political parties to challenge both the voluntary sector and the government to ensure that the sector plays a greater and more effective role in British society.

“She will prove a crucial champion during an era of uncertainty and the continuing squeeze on public services, when demand for those services is certain to grow.”

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Mosque told to remove video allegedly endorsing Labour candidate

The Charity Commission has told the Central Jamia Masjid Southall, in London, to take down from YouTube a video that apparently endorsed Virendra Sharma

The Charity Commission has told a west London mosque to remove a YouTube video in which it apparently advocated voting for a local Labour Party candidate.

The regulator received a complaint alleging that the Central Jamia Masjid Southall posted a video on YouTube of a meeting in which an endorsement was made of the local Labour candidate, Virendra Sharma, before today’s general election.

The complainant alleged that the video, which has been taken down, showed a political event at the mosque in which the trustees allegedly endorsed Sharma, with Pakistani media in attendance.

Sharma has been the MP for Ealing Southall since 2007, when he won a by-election after the death of the area’s previous Labour MP, Piara Khabra.

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The Charity Commission’s guidance on campaigning and political activity for charities states that political campaigning can be carried out only in support of the delivery of a charity’s charitable purposes.

The guidance says charities must stress their independence and ensure any involvement they have with political parties is balanced, which means they must not give support or funding to a particular party, candidate or politician.

A spokesman for the Charity Commission said: “The commission received a complaint in May 2017 regarding Central Jamia Masjid Southall breaching the commission’s guidance on campaigning and political activity. The commission contacted the charity and requested that the charity immediately withdraw its endorsement of a political candidate.

“The commission’s guidance is clear that charities must not and cannot endorse political candidates. The commission’s case is ongoing.”

Central Jamia Masjid Southall could not be contacted for comment on Thursday morning.

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