Back in 1983 as a young whippersnapper I stalked the streets of Ealing North to try and get Hilary Benn elected as an MP. It was not a great year for Labour and we lost - big-style.
Thursday, 30 April 2009
WHAT HAPPENED TO HILARY BENN?
Posted by
susan press
at
23:49
4
comments
Labels: Hilary Benn
TOO LATE FOR STALKING HORSES.....
Labour Home ( see link below) has a story alleging that an ex Cabinet Minister is getting set to mount a stalking horse challenge to unseat Gordon Brown. Bit late, really, isn't it?
Assuming this were true, how exactly would it help Labour's election chances? If someone like John Reid or Charles Clarke did take over there would almost certainly have to be an immediate General Election. And the consequences would be even more catastrophic than they are under Gordon Brown. It is surely a sign of utter desperation that such stories are being leaked.And it doesn't help any of the MPs who are facing the grim prospect of losing their seats.
http://www.labourhome.org/story/2009/4/30/33359/7218
Posted by
susan press
at
15:01
7
comments
Labels: leadership challenges, stalking horses
GURKHAS - ANOTHER OWN GOAL
It is sometimes mind-blowing how wrong the Government can be on issues where it simply makes the wrong call. Today's papers exult over the fact there was a Commons defeat for Gordon Brown on the Gurkhas and their right to stay in Britain. Cue pictures of Cameron, Clegg and Joanna Lumley outside the House of Commons celebrating a victory for democracy which will no doubt be followed by more opinion polls showing a plummeting rating for Labour. Of course many Labour MPs rebelled on this issue and they were right to do so.
The fact they had to is a sign that somehow those at the highest levels of power have somehow lost touch with their electorate . This latest fiasco is one of a series which have undermined the Government because they have got it wrong.
One of Tony Blair's great assets was his ability to sense the mood of the nation - particularly Middle England. This led to policies which infuriated the left and much of the Labour Party. But, under his watch, it would never have been suggested that the Gurkhas should have been denied the right to stay in this country. It was interesting to read in Chris Mullin's diaries that it was Brown, not Blair, who insisted on the privatisation of Air Traffic Control.
It is likewise Brown who has pressed ahead with the privatisation of the Royal Mail, the third runway at Heathrow ( opposed by several cabinet Ministers and backbenchers) and the Welfare Reform Bill. None of these is likely to win him much support so, on a purely pragmatic level, why is he doing it.
On Tuesday, as i was waiting to go into a meeting at the House Of Commons, I bumped into a friend of mine who is an assistant general secertary of one of the rail unions. He had just had a meeting with Geoff Hoon and was appalled at his lack of insight and concern on the issues relating to his members. His take was this is a Government which knows it is on the ropes and lacks the will or the sense to turn things round with policies which would appeal to its core vote. I'm afraid I can only agree.
Posted by
susan press
at
09:00
5
comments
OUT OF THE CHAIN GANG....
Last meeting tonight as Chair of Hebden Royd Town Council and just a couple of weeks to go before I hand over and step down as Mayor. One goal remains. That's to raise the £500 left to reach my target of £4000 for the local hospice. It's been an enjoyable 12 months and I have met so many people in the local community that I hope it's been a positive for everyone and in particular my freinds and comrades in the local Labour Party. When I started out in May last year, I did not expect to be ivolved in two Parliamentary selections and obviously it's been a real disappointment not to have ended the year as a PPC candidate in either. That's politics.
I have no idea what will transpire in tbe next 12 months but I will carry on doing my bit on the local Town Council, campaigning for the LRC and hopefully continue to fight my corner in the Labour Party. I had a chat with the Keighley MP Ann Cryer yesterday in Parliament and she has asked me to share my experiences of being on an all-woman shortlist at a conference to be held soon. I don't think I will be short of things to say.........
Posted by
susan press
at
00:27
0
comments
Monday, 27 April 2009
LRC MEETING IN MANCHESTER
I've spent the weekend in London at the LEAPhttp://leap-lrc.blogspot.com conference which gave more very useful insight into the economic crisis we're in and what should be done to address it. Welcome though the Chancellor's tax hit on the rich was it's just the tip of an iceberg where the rich are getting richer, tax avoidance is in the billions, and four million people are still waiting for council homes.
Tonight I'll be with fellow LRC National Committee member Jenny Lennox at an open meeting at the Friends Meeting House in Manchester where all are welcome at 7pm.
Posted by
susan press
at
12:07
0
comments
Labels: LRC Manchester
PPC RESIGNS IN EASTLEIGH
Dan Clarke, a Labour PPC in Eastleigh, Chris Huhne's constituency, has resigned and is joining the Liberal Democrats. He's made the wrong decision.
Dan's disillusionment with Government policy is one shared by many others, including myself. When Gordon Brown became leader two years ago I hoped the Party would change direction. It was never going to implement the LRC's manifesto but one hoped for a decisive move away from New Labour ideology,
Events have ordained the Government had to step in and bail out the banks - but the same people remain in charge and the billion we have spent doing so are clearly not available for other deserving cause ie people on welfare benefits, people facing soariung utility bills, rocketing tuition fees. Et etc etc. Ay thr weekend Stephen Byers said it was time for the Government to consider scrapping ID cards and Trident because of the cost involved. We should also consider scraping them because it would help restore faith in the Party, mean cash could be diverted towards social justice, and maybe, just maybe, stop people tearing up their Party cards.
I have several friends standing as PPCs in unwinnable seats. They are the only ones left candidates don't get stitched up in. But I know that Gary Heather in Tunbridge Wells and John Wiseman in Westmorland and Lonsdale will use their candidacy to contiunue to fight for the policies they believe in and give people faith that one day things will change. Closer to home, I have friends who are now considering leaving Labour right across the political spectrum. I won't be one of them. But I fully understand why they feel they can no longer stay.
Alicde Mahon, I'm glad to say, will still be campaigning with us in the LRC. Dan Clarke's reasons for leaving are below
http://www.labourhome.org/story/2009/4/26/123957/105
Posted by
susan press
at
10:58
1 comments
Labels: Eastleigh, Parliamentary selections
Friday, 24 April 2009
100,000 READERS - AND COUNTING......
Just noted this week that GuN has passed the 100,000 landmark. Thanks to all who have read the blog in the past two years. Hits have been on the up againm recently and will endeavour in the months ahead to up that even more. .......
Posted by
susan press
at
19:19
1 comments
Labels: blogging
Thursday, 23 April 2009
WILL DARLING'S GAMBLE PAY OFF?
Last night I attended a meeting in the House of Commons where the Budget and its impact was discussed .More in the link below. And thanks to Graham Turner for giving me a copy of his book on The Credit Crunch .
http://leap-lrc.blogspot.com/2009/04/30bn-worth-of-cuts-and-privatisation.html
Posted by
susan press
at
15:26
3
comments
PROUD TO HAVE MET HIM.....
I was asked recently who my political heroes were and one person I most definitely should have mentioned is trade union leader Jack Jones. To the end of his life, Jack embodied the finest virtues of the labour movement - eschewing the House Of Lords and gravy trains for life in a modest council flat in London and tireless campaigning for those who were vulnerable. After he "retired" Jack was one of the leading lights of the National Pensioners' Convention. He also attended Campaign Group rallies every year at Labour Party Conference and never lost his fighting spirit. In Manchester three years ago, I was proud to say hello and shake his hand - Though clearly frail, he was able to stand up and be counted as one of the heroes of the Labour Left. It's a shame there are not more like him today. An exemplary human being .
Posted by
susan press
at
14:57
4
comments
Labels: jack jones, labour heroes
Tuesday, 21 April 2009
LLOYD GEORGE KNEW MY FATHER
Away from matters local to the national picture and Polly Toynbee has a piece in today's Guardian calling for a "Peoples Budget." Hmmm...... I await with interest what tomorrow will bring as I'm going to be in London but leaked news of £15billion in public spending does not augur well for the Keynesian pledges ......let's see what happens and I'll leave it to the experts to do the analysis tomorrow
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2009/apr/21/peoples-budget-darling-2009
Update: 10.20 The PCS union is already commenting on this....
http://leap-lrc.blogspot.com/
Posted by
susan press
at
09:52
1 comments
Labels: Budget, Polly Toynbee
Monday, 20 April 2009
HOLDING THE LINE AND DRAWING A LINE....
It has been a very strange week up here in Calder Valley and I think that events are far from over. The row continues in Erith and Thamesmead and it remains to be seen what will transpire here. The media frenzy we have had over the Georgia Gould issue would probably not have happened without the internet -nor the revelations regarding Damian McBride.
As far as my constituency goes, i think it's now best for others to answer the questions we have put. I can only say there are going to be others. For now, I think it's best to draw a line. But I'm also holding the line that the whole process of how we select our candidates must be looked at by the NEC and I would urge people to contact their CLP representatives . This week, the grassroots have risen up and said enough is enough. I'd like to thank everyone who has phoned or e-mailed me and I'd like to hope that in the end the result will be a posiitve one for Party democracy and for all those of us who want to see politics be more open, honest and transparent. The smearing , and the tactics used by those who do it, cannot go on.
Posted by
susan press
at
12:47
2
comments
Labels: Calder Valley, Parliamentary selections
Sunday, 19 April 2009
STAYING IN......
I spent much of yesterday with Alice Mahon while she was doing media interviews in the idyllic environs of Hebden Bridge. In the evening, it was my civic dinner over in Mytholmroyd and someone asked me had I thought tof resigning from the Labour Party.
Quite frankly, if I'm not going to do it now then I probably never will. But I must say I feel more disillusioned than ever before. As Alice said yesterday, the old ways of changing policy just aren't there any more. And, after what has happened to me as a candidate in Keighley and Calder Valley, I honestly think left-wingers do not stand a chance of beating the machine. The selection process would have to change radically to maje it a fair contest with a level playing field.
I think the only way forward would be possibly a truly OMOV process, an upper limit on campaign spending of around £1000 and an end to the "nomination" process by trade unions which to be honest is an uter stitch-up for favoured candidates. In both Calder Valley and Keighley, UNITE actively campaigned against me. As someone who has spent 25 years as an active trade unionist, I think that's a disgrace.
I used to have faith that the unions would help us "re-claim" Labout but the truth is they do their damndest to stop the left having a voice in the Party. Last yar at Labour Party conference, their cabals joined forces to ensure our resolution on leadership challenges was defeated. I was actually told by a senior union official that they did not want candidates like John McDonnell, someone whose voice is among the strongest in Parliament for trade union rights, having a chance. The resolution was actually one suggested, not by the LRC, but by the Campaign For Labour Party Democracy. Didn't matter - they trashed it
The truth is that at the moment democracy is not something we have, either as Party members nor as PPC candidates.It's all decided in rooms which may not have smoke any more but which still serve to block anyone who might not toe the line.
I've come to the conclusion that nothing will change until after the General Election. If it doesn't, then even lifetime Labour members like me may well vote with our feet. I am truly sorry Alice Mahon has left Labour, but I understand why she did.
Posted by
susan press
at
17:42
18
comments
Labels: Labour Party democracy
Saturday, 18 April 2009
ALICE - STILL A COMRADE
I've known for some time that Alice Mahon was considering leaving the Labour Party. At Labour Party Conference in Manchester, I spent a considerable amount of time persuading her to stay and I hope my thoughts helped keep her with the Party a bit longer.
Posted by
susan press
at
10:40
9
comments
Labels: alice mahon, dirty tricks
Friday, 17 April 2009
ERITH AND THAMESMEAD CANCELLED
I'm astounded to learn that the selection tomorrow in Erith and Thamesmead has been cancelled. Apparently, a ballot box has been tampered with.This raises fundamental questions about what on earth is going on with the selection processes for PPCs. Clearly, in Calder Valley, we have been right to raise issues and I'm expecting some serious answers from the Labour Party.
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/politics/article6115915.ece
Posted by
susan press
at
23:13
4
comments
Labels: Parliamentary selections, postal votes, shenanigans
POSTAL VOTES - A VIEW FROM THE NEC
Six years ago I joined a group called Save The Labour Party which was set up to improve Party democracy and call for greater accountability to members. It would be nice to report that since 2003 we have made great inroads into the processes which, since Partnership Into Power was agreed in the early 1990's, have only closed down democracy and taken the decision-making processes further and further away from the grassroots.
The sad truth is that things are worse than ever. In 2006, the Party Conference was persuaded, thanks to a deal with the unions, to abolish contemporary motions. This year's Conference must, as a matter of urgency, restore the right to vote.
But all that frankly pales into insignificance with the current furore over the way in which postal votes are being used to outweigh democratic hustings at Parliamentary selections. One achievement STLP can be proud of is electing Peter Kenyon to the NEC. Peter is one of the most rigorous and fair-minded people I have met in my many years in the Party.
He wouldn't mind me saying that , though we differ on many issues, we have always shared a quest for fairness and accountability. His take on the postal votes issue is here:
http://petergkenyon.typepad.com/peterkenyon/2009/04/labour-ppc-selections-and-postal-voting.html#comment-6a00d8354c43ba69e201157025cfbe970b
Posted by
susan press
at
15:29
4
comments
Labels: Parliamentary selections, postal votes, STLP
OFF TO PARLIAMENT......
Next week the LRC has a Day of Action planned to coincide with the Budget Day and on the evening of Wednesday April 22 I will be chairing a meeting in the House Of Commons.
Our campaign - Their Crisis Not Ours! - is calling for a fairer tax system, a crackdown on tax avoidance, full nationalisation of the banks and an increase in pensions and unemployment benefit.
The campaign is also supportive of the People's Charter, backed by trade unions and a broad swathe of groups in the labour movement, which includes calls for more council housing, an end to repossessions, a cap on energy prices. and the return of the utilities to public ownership.
If you want to join in the day starts with a protest at 11.30am on Whitehall along the route the Chancellor will take from No. 11 Downing Street to address Parliament. At 5pm, there is a another protest outside the Treasury on 1 Horse Guards Road - then at 7.30pm a Budget Question Time event in Committee Room 10, House of Commons with panellists including John McDonnell MP, economist Graham Turner and Clara Osagiede (RMT Cleaner’s Grade Secretary).
Posted by
susan press
at
10:10
2
comments
Labels: LRC Day of Action
Thursday, 16 April 2009
LOOSE ENDS.....
This year of civic duty is coming to an end and there are a few loose ends I have to tie up between now and May 20. First, just over a thousand pounds more is needed for the Overgate Hospice to reach my fund-raising target of £4000 so I'll be doing my best at the Civic Dinner on Saturday to do that . Thanks to the friends who are turning up, including a gang from London, to boost the coffers with a three-course meal, traditional Irish music band and disco Then there's the Mayor's Report to write for the Town Meeting on May 13 before handover on May 20. And that's it.
By the time I've finished I will have done about 80 engagements and I'd like to thank all the schools, groups and individuals who have invited me to events or supported the fund-raisers I organised. It's really now time for a new chapter to begin. But, given the dearth of journalistic work in the north, it's going to be anything but easy.
Posted by
susan press
at
11:31
3
comments
Labels: civic duty
Wednesday, 15 April 2009
STORIES IN THE MEDIA.....
There is wall to wall coverage on the internet today about the fact that members of my CLP are calling for an investigation into procedural aspects of the recent Parliamentary selection.
In normal circumstances, no-one would be interested. But the circumstances in Calder valley have been anything but normal in the past 12 months.
Some of the stories which have appeared are way off the mark - all correctly state that in the voting on the night of the hustings I won two-thirds of the vote. The hard fact is that even if I had won 100 per cent of the vote it still would not have been enough because it was the postal votes which won it.
Postal votes are on the media radar because of a furore over the selection in Erith and Thamesmead . And many in the Party are concerned at the fact they are open to abuse - and manipulation - everywhere.Let's not pretend otherwise
Let me make one thing clear. I did not , nor did anyone quoted in the story, approach the Yorkshire Post. Their enquiry was the result of a piece of correspondence from a Party member upset at the latest proceedings. I have no idea who.
When Chris McCafferty announced her decision to stand down two years ago , all any of us wanted was a similarly left-of-centre candidate with roots in the local community.
We did not want tabloid coverage and lurid stories dreamt up by those who had a problem with the chosen PPC. Those who, unfortunately, succeeded in forcing a second contest via poison pen letters to the NEC and an orchestrated media campaign. The tragedy in all this is that they were listened to by people who should have known better.
Posted by
susan press
at
17:28
14
comments
Labels: Parliamentary selections
CONCERN GROWS IN LABOUR PARTY ABOUT POSTAL VOTES
Concern about postal votes and the way they have overetaken the traditional democracy of hustings has been growing apace. This is John Harris's take in yesterday's Guardian.If Georgia Gould wins in Erith and Thamesmead, it could well be a selection too far.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2009/apr/15/damien-mcbride-georgia-gould-labour
Posted by
susan press
at
10:13
1 comments
Tuesday, 14 April 2009
BREATHING SPACE....
Having spent most of the weekend ill with bronchitis am down to the doc's for some antibiotics then off to Saltaire for some fresh air and lunch with an old friend and his family.
Tomorrow I'm going to start considering my options for gainful employment - today 24 hours away from financial and other cares.
Posted by
susan press
at
10:49
1 comments
Labels: blogging break
Monday, 13 April 2009
A DIRTY GAME......
There was a time when comments to this blog weren't moderated. Then I started getting abusive and sometimes obscene messages so censorship had to prevail. But I still get anonymous messages from people whose role in life is seemingly to sneer and be nasty.
None, however, are on a par with Damian McBride, forced to resign over the weekend.
His tale of smears and dirty politics is one which brings shame on the Labour Party and one which could cost us all dear at the General Election.
In the Calder Valley, our previous PPC was targetted and smeared in a disgusting campaign of lies and personal allegations - those who did it achieved their result in getting the NEC not to endorse her - and force a re-run. It remains to be seen how that will play with the wider electorate. But here in Hebden Bridge, many people were disgusted. Several have already left the Party. One or two stayed to vote for me last week but I know the resignation letters are in the post and others are considering it. Me? I'm too bloody-minded and stubborn to even consider packing it in.
I often get comments which sneer at Hebden Bridge but the plain fact is that Labour needs Hebden if it is to hang on in Calder Valley. So I would suggest to those who are disparaging that they have a re-think if they seriously want to win. Charm offensives rather than snidey comments just might be the order of the day....
Posted by
susan press
at
09:28
3
comments
Labels: Damien MacBride
Sunday, 12 April 2009
ERITH AND THAMESMEAD
Last night I had a phone call from a comrade in Erith and Thamesmead. A middle of the road kind of person who has been in the Party for many years. She rang me because she is distressed about what is happening in her constituency.,
Georgia Gould, a 22-year-old who is the daughter of Blairite guru Philip Gould, has glossy leaflets, lots of money, and a PR consultancy headed up by Margaret McDonagh, former General Secretary of the Labour Party, working on her behalf. In Erith and Thamesmead, the selection process is in chaos due to the number of postal votes. People are threatening to resign from the Party, and they are disgusted at the way in which the system has been manipulated .I think it's time to stop this malpractice and I'm not keeping quiet about it.
Posted by
susan press
at
10:22
4
comments
Labels: Parliamentary selections
Saturday, 11 April 2009
SMEAR TACTICS....AIDE RESIGNS
I've never been asked to contribute to LabourList, Derek Draper's blog of Important People. Too left and too far away from London, I suspect. But I did get a largely positive mention from my NUJ colleague Paul Routledge in this week's Tribune, for which thanks. A right of reply will be filed over Easter.
Tomorrow, all hell is apparently going to break loose about plans by Draper to set up a scurrilous blog called "Red Rag" with help from one of Gordon Brown's advisors, Damien McBride, with whom he exchanged some rather damning, allegedly obscene, e-mails . There is the usual talk of resignations and unacceptable "spin" from the leading players in the Westminster village. So we'll see what the papers say tomorrow. UPDATE : McBride has now resigned.
Allegedly, the plan was to use personal smear tactics to have a go at the Tories. If that's true, it is unacceptable and inane. Exactly the kind of tactic used in the Crewe and Nantwich by-election - with dire results. If we can't win elections on policy and principles, we shouldn't be in the business. The problem is , of course, that smear tactics sometimes get results. But that is never an excuse to use them. Here in the Calder Valley, we know that more than most.
Posted by
susan press
at
15:58
1 comments
Labels: Bloggers, spin doctors
POSTAL VOTES INQUIRY LAUNCHED IN EROTH AND THAMESMEAD.....
The following story appears in this week's Tribune
DEMANDS for an inquiry are to be made into an unusually high number of postal vote applications in the selection of Labour’s candidate in the safe Westminster seat of Erith and Thamesmead.
Figures obtained by Tribune suggest that more than a third of the 279 eligible voting members in the south east London seat being vacated by sitting MP John Austin have applied to vote by post rather than turn up in person at the hustings on April 18.
The calls for an official investigation from at least two members of the National Executive Committee follow concerns expressed by Mr Austin, who held the seat at the 2005 election with 11,500 votes, over the level of postal applications.
There are also suggestions that members are being deterred from attending in person in order to affect the outcome of the ballot by ensuring that some candidates are not heard “live”. Party rules allow postal votes only for those unable to attend for legitimate reasons “not for those who choose not to attend”.
The contest has been fraught with controversy, with allegations that one candidate, Georgia Gould – the 22-year-old daughter of Tony Blair’s polling guru Phillip Gould – has been “parachuted” in
with the help of a Blairite machine involving Alastair Campbell and former party general secretary Margaret McDonagh.
Party members have told Tribune that supporters of Ms Gould have been canvassing the use of postal votes, but Ms Gould has not responded to Tribune’s emailed questions.
The selection process has been taken over by party head office which cancelled a scheduled shortlist meeting in order to prevent any of eight candidates being eliminated; the procedures secretary has been relieved of his post; and Mr Austin has released an impassioned plea to every party member for a local candidate, Teresa Pearce, to be selected.
It has now emerged that the Westminster branch of Unite (Amicus) has challenged the choice of Rachel Maskell as the union’s candidate in the race. Barry Spate, secretary of 0693 branch – whose delegate to Erith and Thamesmead is the MP Mr Austin – has written to union joint general secretary Derek Simpson claiming the process of selecting Ms Maskell was “anti-democratic” and against union rules.
The rules state that: “Any branch’s nomination in any selection process shall be decided by the Regional Political Committee and the National Political Committee, in conjunction with the branch delegate(s) to the relevant Constituency Labour Party”.
However, Mr Spate was informed by head office that Ms Maskell, a national officer of the union, had already been chosen as Unite’s candidate before the Westminster branch’s scheduled meeting to discuss a nomination.
Posted by
susan press
at
13:45
0
comments
Friday, 10 April 2009
CONSIDERING OUR OPTIONS....
There is an interesting piece in today's Guardian by Eric Hobsbawm on how capitalism has failed - and socialism in his view found wanting. Which isn't to say that the collective ideal is not the way forard. I found it raised some very pertinent points
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2009/apr/10/financial-crisis-capitalism-socialism-alternatives
Posted by
susan press
at
16:14
2
comments
Labels: economic theory, Eric Hobsbawm
I LOST......
Welcome back to grimmer upnorth. I lost the vote tonight but two-thirds of the people who turned out tonight voted for me. 35 votes to 22. A huge swathe of postal votes did not. I wish Stephenie Booth the best in her fight to retain Calder Valley.. But let's be clear. The current process in the Labour Party is wrong. I lost because I had very little time to defeat the machine. I won the populat vote with the people who were there to make a considered decision based on what I said and what I stood for. No doubt some will say I have sour grapes. I do not.I'm going to bed safe in the knowledge that the comrades in Hebden Bridge did their very best to see a socialist candidate standing up for them. We didn't win. But I think we won the argument. I'll get back to day job covering the General Election in Manchester 2010.And at least my house will be rather more pristine than it has for the last four months.
Posted by
susan press
at
01:25
30
comments
Labels: Parliamentary selections
Wednesday, 8 April 2009
THE FUTURE PARTY.....
So that's it. I've written the speech ( thanks to those who helped with comments). I'll state my case, I'll make it clear, and of one thing I am now certain.
Win or lose, I will continue to state the case for a Labour Party untrammelled by neo-liberalism, one which has room for all points of view, and one which at some point in the future will re-engage the many who currently are not motivated to take part.
Yesteday I was chatting to someone who used to be very active in the Party but who for years has felt her contribution would not make a scrap of difference . It DOES of course make a difference if you contribute to the few democratic processes left - one of which is choosing PPCs. But, both in Keighley and Calder Valley, it has been a Herculean task persuading people they need to be there to make that difference. And , without a re-democratisation of the Party, those kinds of perceptions will still hold sway - and cost us dearly at the next election.
Posted by
susan press
at
16:21
7
comments
Labels: Parliamentary selections, Party democracy
Tuesday, 7 April 2009
YOU'VE GOT A FRIEND......
To any member of my generation, there are iconic songs which recall one's earlier self in a youthful and perhaps more hopeful incarnation. You've Got A Friend, by Carole King, is a biggie. I've dragged it out at key moments in my life so it was good to see her looking fab and performing the lovelorn anthem on the Jools Holland programe just now. Especially coupled with The Specials, who emerged a bit later in the Thatcherite years which - let's hope - are never coming back. Trouble is it doesn't half make you feel a little raddled round the edges. But quite a good filllip for the next 48 hours......thanks to my friends in Calder Branch BTW for positvie suggestions this evening re my Big Speech on Thursday.
Posted by
susan press
at
22:50
3
comments
Labels: 1970's anthems
ACCUSTOMED AS I AM.....
I've been writing a speech. To tell you the truth, it feels like I've been writing a speech for a long, long time. After four months campaigning in Keighley and Calder Valley, I am suffering from serious speech fatigue so I shall give it a good 24 hours and then rely on my old standby of last-minute panic to spur the juices of creativity.
The other night I finished reading the Chris Mullin diaries and by the end I was amazed at the number of times he tried to wing it. There are some occasions when you can and some occasions when you can't. PPC hustings is one of them.
Various remedies have been suggested to quell the inevitable stomach-churning nerves which inflict one on these occasions. They range from homeopathic remedies to a large G and T.
However I think I will rely on that good old standby of making sure I do my homework beforehand. And, tomorrow, I'll go back to drafting the speech..,...
Posted by
susan press
at
19:29
1 comments
Labels: Calder Valley, Parliamentary selections
Saturday, 4 April 2009
PPC SELECTIONS ETC ETC
I've just not had a chance to comment on much as juggling PPC campaigning, Mayoral duties ( only six weeks to go) Town Council and organising for LRC events in London and Manchester. In short, I am exhausted. And no respite as spending all of today and tomorrow out and about around the constituency doing last-minute stuff to get people to the hustings. OMOV is a good thing, but I'm afraid mass postal voting in a Parliamentary selection is not and once this is over, whaetver the result, I intend to start a campaign about it.
How can you possibly make a choice of who you would like to be your next candidate if you have not see everyone in the field - at any stage of the proceedings. The current process is utterly skewed and needs to be re-formed in a democratic way.
Posted by
susan press
at
10:22
15
comments
Labels: Parliamentary selections
Friday, 3 April 2009
UNACCEPTABLE BEHAVIOUR IN ERITH AND THAMESMEAD
After taking part in two Parliamentary selections, I have learned an awful lot about the process and come to the conclusion along with many others that it's time we got back to basics and had old-fashioned hustings where people need a jolly good excuse NOT to go to the selection meeting. Good on John Austin MP for speaking out. The situation in Erith and Thamesmead sounds appalling.
http://www.tribunemagazine.co.uk/2009/04/02/nepotism-and-rule-breaking-claims-in-safe-labour-seat/
Posted by
susan press
at
10:34
1 comments
Labels: Parliamentary selections
Thursday, 2 April 2009
AT A CROSSROADS.......
It's nearly Easter and I am looking forward to a bit of a break after a hard few months canvassing for support as a PPC in two constituencies. The Calder Valley hustings are next Thursday and, win or lose, I will continue to be based in Hebden Bridge but the nature of journalistic remuneration these days is that I may have to cast my net wider for paid work.
On Tuesday night I headed up to the Lakes with a friend who was writing an article about a five-star hotel and needed a companion to assess its merits. Nice work if you can get it but actually on our current rates of pay a standard B and B would probably be beyond us . However, everyone goes through bad times workwise and we were lucky to start out in regional journalism more than 20 years ago in the days when it still WAS journalism.
There were daily press conferences, lots of press calls with the great and the good. We even got the chance to interview our favourite writers face-to-face and did theatre and cinema reviews. In my case as a local government reporter, hefty council agendas were a daily task to be ploughed through and we always went to important council and committee meetings in Manchester.
Those days are gone. Most regional papers these days just regurgitate press releases and everything is done over the phone - if at all. Syndicated copy is the norm and swingeing staff cuts and bad wages have taken their toll on even the best of the regional press.
The NUJ is admirably trying to find a way out of this morass but I must be honest, I am not optimistic. There may be other ways of generating news and indeed getting it to a wider public using new technology and small community enterprises but the glory days are gone. Along with most of my means of earning an income.
So, after a year putting things on hold while I carried out Town Council duties as Mayor it is probably time for a re-think.
Posted by
susan press
at
11:32
1 comments
Labels: job losses, NUJ
Wednesday, 1 April 2009
DEFENDING THE INDEFENSIBLE
Am I unrepresentative of the public mood on Jacqui Smith and her expenses claim? It would seem not.........
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2009/mar/31/jacqui-smith-mps-expenses-media
Posted by
susan press
at
17:41
1 comments
Labels: Jacqui Smith, Polly Toynbee