|
|||||||
![]() |
|
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Search this Thread | Rate Thread | Display Modes |
|
||||
|
Sunday Times exposes Curran
A pretty fair assessment from a non-partisan source
They would have employed a monkey - Times Online From The Times Literary Supplement July 20, 2008 They would have employed a monkey Brendan Perring suspected Labour’s election machine had spun off the tracks. What he saw at campaign HQ proved it has Brendan Perring I’ve never been a member of a political party and I’ve only voted once, in the 2005 general election. Until last week, I’d never set foot in the east end of Glasgow. I was brought up in Swaziland, where my parents were little concerned with politics, and I only moved to the UK five years ago to study at Edinburgh University. So my knowledge of west of Scotland Labour politics is nil. But that’s still more than enough qualification, it seems, to entrust me with a role in fighting for the party in the Glasgow East by-election, and, by implication, to help save the prime minister’s career. I spent a good part of last week posting flyers and canvassing at the doors of the constituency’s beleaguered populace. For several weeks they’ve been at the eye of the latest political storm to rock Gordon Brown, following the surprise resignation of David Marshall, the sitting Labour MP. I’d read, like everyone else, how the once-slick, surefooted Labour spin machine had spun-off the tracks and crashed, and how the party’s campaign was laughably shambolic. I wanted to see for myself. An air of desperation was apparent as soon as I went to offer my services at the Shandwick Centre, the drab campaign office of the Labour candidate, Margaret Curran, in the centre of the constituency. As I walked in unannounced, I was braced for a battery of cross-examination. Who was I? Where was I from? Was I a member of the Labour party? What were my views on Scottish independence? None of these questions were asked. Instead I was welcomed into the open arms of the handful of volunteers and immediately sent out canvassing. There’s an oft-repeated dictum that if you were to pin a red rosette to a monkey, it would get elected in Glasgow. I suspect that, had I been a monkey, I’d have been handed a pile of leaflets and pressed into action. Such is the sense of desperation in the Labour camp at the prospect of a Scottish National party victory next Thursday, that frankly, they can’t afford to be choosy about who campaigns for them. It should be a sure thing for Labour. With a 13,500 majority at the last election and poverty and health rates among the worst in Europe, the people’s party regards it as its own. The seat hasn’t slipped from its grasp for the past half century. Yet something is happening. With a recession brewing and a resurgent SNP, suddenly Labour is no longer trusted in Scotland. Last week the nationalists polled higher than Labour in Westminster voting intentions for the first time and the only by-election poll to be conducted — last week-end for two Sunday papers — showed a 15% swing from Labour to the nationalists who need a 22% swing to capture the seat. Maureen Burke, one of Curran’s personal assistants, ushered me into the cramped office with smiles and effusive thanks and introduced me to “the team” — three parliamentary assistants and a couple of bemused octagenarians making up canvass packs. She lead me through the campaign headquarters to the hub of the operation. From what I’d seen so far, my expectations were modest — a couple of computer screens, a telephone or two, perhaps a coffee machine to keep the troops sustained during the long nights ahead. Not for the last time was I to be disappointed. Walking through the door, I met with a sea of rickety tables, dirty plastic cups and piles of promotional leaflets covering every available surface. On one wall a supposedly motivational plea penned by Curran smacks of desperation. It is flanked by two more posters, reminding activists that “Proper Planning and Preparation Prevents Piss Poor Performance” and “Team Work Makes Dream Work.” Some chance! Charts covering the dingy off-white walls showed every registered voter in the constituency for the purposes of voter ID planning and leaflet drops. On the wall next to them was a list of the areas covered — only a few paltry ticks at this stage. I learn that canvassing now all has to be done manually after it was discovered that the English computer system, which produces printouts of constituents who have voted Labour in the past, doesn’t work in Scottish constituencies with tenements because it doesn’t recognise the slashed, double-digit addresses. This was hardly the Mandleson-esque efficiency I had come to expect from the party’s early years in power, when it was at the cutting edge of election technology and organisation, spin and rebuttal were elevated to art forms. I was handed a large bunch of flyers and a map and despatched out onto the streets to save Brown’s skin. The mood among my fellow, largely inexperienced canvassers, dressed in hoodies and grubby jumpers — most of whom have been drafted from constituencies south of the border — was defeatist and downbeat. Of the three staff I went out with, the eldest was just a year out of university, their only taste of a by-election before this being the disastrous Crewe and Nantwich contest of last May, when the Conservatives snatched the seat from Labour in a by-election, overturning a 7,000 majority. There is little Braveheart spirit on this side of the political divide. One of our first tasks is going into a “difficult” area of the east end, which a previous team gave up on. The young volunteer plotting our course through the tenements and former council houses describes the experience as “a living hell” and seems hopelessly out of her depth. A young twenty-something leading another expedition simply gave up on whole streets after being unable to make sense of the map issued by headquarters. “Talking to people on the doorstep over the last few days, I was sure that this one was going down the pan as well — nobody even knew who the candidate was going to be,” says one. Their despondency was understandable. The first weekend of the campaign passed with Labour still struggling to find a candidate, when local councillor George Ryan failed to turn up for his selection meeting and mysteriously withdrew from the contest. When Curran, a hard-edged, machine politician schooled in the rough-house tactics of Scottish Labour, agreed to take on the challenge, she slipped-up almost immediately. Seeking to ingratiate herself with her prospective constituents, she described herself as someone who has “lived all her life” in the city’s east end. In fact she and her husband Robert, a former council official, live in a £600,000 villa in the exclusive Newlands area of the city’s southside. Subsequent gaffes have included mailing a personalised appeal for support to the SNP candidate John Mason and enlisting the support of John Michie, an actor in the detective series Taggart, who was later revealed to have filmed a television appeal for Scottish independence. The following day I was sent out to canvass with Cathie Craigie, the MSP for Cumbernauld and Kilsyth, and Greg McClymont, the party’s prospective parliamentary candidate for the same area. We piled into my car and set off, but things started to go wrong almost immediately. We drove around for 45 minutes trying to find the area in which we were supposed to be canvassing but the maps supplied by the party were blurred and inaccurate. Exasperated, I grabbed the map from Greg and had us finally at our destination, a bleak housing estate overlooking Glasgow. During the journey, the subject of Wendy Alexander’s recent resignation as Scottish Labour leader following a donations scandal was raised. McClymont conceded it was having impact on the campaign, adding: “In all the time I have been doing this I have never had so few people be home or not want to speak to canvassers on the street. The vote in this area just isn’t quite as safe as it was before.”
__________________
![]() (Two can play at George Orwell quotes) "In this country I don’t think it is enough realized—I myself had no idea of it until a few years ago—that Scotland has a case against England." |
![]() |
«
Previous Thread
|
Next Thread
»
| Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
| Display Modes | Rate This Thread |
|
|
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 05:43.




Linear Mode
