If there were 50 hours in the day, it still wouldn’t be enough for our Conservative European parliamentary candidates to visit everywhere and do everything they wanted covering the six counties in the East of England during the election campaign.
To me, their daily programme seems exhaustive, but they do it because they are 110% committed to meeting as many people as possible. That is even more important now when politicians are tainted as greedy, grasping bad guys as they want to reassure voters that there are many decent, honourable ones out there too.
Inevitably, there are occasions when candidates can’t attend a local hustings because the invitation arrived at short notice or they have already made firm plans and don’t want to let other people down. It means that regrettably, candidates can’t accept every invitation, and I would imagine that is true for all political parties.
This week I was sent an email by a local journalist complaining about our lack of attendance at a couple of hustings, so I forwarded it to our candidates who I know have been working flat out round the clock and asked for their responses. Here is one of the replies from John Flack. I doubt it is humanely possible to do more in a day.
John also makes an excellent suggestion about local newspapers becoming actively involved and getting local candidates on a political platform to debate issues in front of as many voters as possible:
I have gone everywhere that I have been asked to go. In the last couple of weeks I have spoken at meetings in Brentwood (against David Campbell-Bannerman ) Felixstowe, Peterborough and Southend. I (like my fellow team members) have driven thousands of miles criss-crossing the region (all at my own expense) and as per the Party’s pre organised programme have knocked on thousands of doors in dozens of constituencies in all six counties, participated in “walk abouts†through town centres and have attended many “special interest†briefings and meetings.
Last Saturday I spent the morning (along with Claire Strong) on a street stall in Berkhampsted High Street, being seen by hundreds of voters, and yes, many raised the issue of Westminster members expenses.
Yesterday, after the Newmarket launch, I drove all the way to Lancashire to represent the Team at the national launch with David Cameron and I signed the candidates pledge in front of the T.V cameras on behalf of the whole Eastern Candidate Team.
I am working full time every day between now and the election (with the exception of Sunday 24th) and will be in Peterborough and Cambridge City tomorrow, Rochford, Southend and Billericay the day after and so on. Each day meeting hundreds of voters.
Many of the invitations to “hustings†meetings we have received have been at short notice and/or will be attended by a handful of people, the vast majority of whom have already entrenched political views. If we were to re-arrange our pre planned programme to attend these events, it would mean breaking commitments elsewhere where we meet many more genuinely uncommitted voters.
Perhaps the Eastern Daily Press and the wider Archant Group would like to arrange one or more genuine large hustings meetings, publicised well in advance in all its papers, so that they might attract a broad cross section of the genuinely interested public, including hopefully some floating voters. That way candidates could debate the real issues and choices that the UK and the East of England face in its relationship with mainland Europe. Hopefully, the papers would also give full coverage in their pages to the debate. That would be a genuine public service by Archant which other news media organisations could follow.
Pic: From left to right, Geoffrey Van Orden MEP, and our excellent candidates Clare Whelan, Vicky Ford and John Flack.
“…debate the real issues and choices that the UK and the East of England face in its relationship with mainland Europe.”
We may just get to vote in a referendum on a constitution in a Union which none of us were given any choice about joining. But even this now seems unlikely.
Why not be more generous let the people decide about our continued membership ? That would be real choice. And when they’ve voted ‘Yes’ then I’ll shut up about it.
It must be very hard going at the hustings right now.
… especially after what Harriet Harman has just said – that the resignation of Speaker Martin will heral a new era of probity and that this marks the end of the ‘gentlemens’ club’.
Tactics deployed here are:
a) Find a scapegoat to satisfy the public and shift blame away from politicians
b) Blame it all on men when many of the worst offenders were women
Muddy the waters … draw a line under … promise a long hard look … voters will get bored and forget about it all soon enough.
Worst of all I think she’s right. Britain is becoming a banana republic only worse …
… we don’t have any bananas. Plenty of AK47s slipping over our European borders though !
How is it that after so many years the EU is so unpopular? Maybe we just like to complain and moan.
The benefits of membership are enormous. Yet the EU has totally failed to convince the people of Europe.
And the politicians whip up support for themselves by rubbishing the EU.
I think this is called biting the hand that feeds you.
At least Libertas wants to reform the way the EU is governed. Maybe, just maybe, it will win enough seats to execute its agenda. Perhaps that will do the trick.
Otherwise we are in for years of slow, negative development of an organisation that nobody wants (or so they say).
Bit like that other Union that failed to reform- the Soviet Union.
With an eventual collapse and a massive drop in living standards.
And a vote for the mainstream UK parties at the EU election- Conservatives, Labour and even Lib- Dems is wasted. They are powerless at the European level.
They shout and scream but can do nothing. And pretend to object then send their failed politicians as Commissioners. In reality the EU is in a cozy relationship with our politicians.
As for UKIP and BNP they are prepared to take the money as MEPs from an organisation that they say we should leave. So much for their integrity.
It is very hard work campaigning and getting messages across at election times.
That’s a good idea he has about the local papers. One of the things that bothers me about Britain is how apathetic so many people are about politics. Italy may have lumbered itself with Berlusconi but with an 86% average turnout for general elections, at least Italians are not apathetic!