Thursday 19 May 2011

Did Victory Just Wash Up On The Beach?

From the way the media and unfortunately many people in the Labour Party itself are talking about the local elections, you'd think that such novel things as campaigning had nothing to do with election results. “Labour did well in the north because the north is Labour and the south is Tory.” “Labour did well against the Lib Dems because their national poll share collapsed but the Tory vote held up.” These comments look correct if you're being remarkably lazy, like most of the media – but that is no basis for learning lessons about how to successfully gain the trust of the electorate and therefore win.


Blackpool's a town where there's a strange flow to events that just seem to happen – it can be unpredictable, spontaneous but nearly always with a kind of absence of control. This is encapsulated in many things - the weather, the fortunes of our football club or what you might get up to on a night out. It also usually applies to politics. For many years now Blackpool has been a marginal town that's swung with the tide of who is doing well nationally. We had two Tory MPs before 1997, then Labour won both and held them until 2010 where the hung parliament nationally translated into 1 Labour and 1 Tory MP in Blackpool.


These local elections have been different. This has been about us taking back control of our own destiny. Blackpool's a seaside resort that's seen great decline and with no alternative to the tourism industry, deprivation has increased massively – exasperated further by the out-of-touch and incompetent Tory council that ran the town between 2007 until now combined with the more recent cuts. Government statistics revealed in that period the town had risen from 12th to 6th worst area for deprivation, whilst the charity Save the Children's research rated us 9th worst local authority for child poverty.


It couldn't be more clear that we need a new economic and political direction. One that doesn't just prop up a declining tourist industry and the low-wage, seasonal labour that reliance on such an industry dictates for a lot of people working outside the public sector (of which 4,500 jobs are being axed locally).


Such a future relies on Labour winning elections, and for the first time ever Blackpool Labour genuinely campaigned as if that was in their hands, not just a question of how well we were doing in the polls. From the day the general election campaign ended, the local election campaign began. Every week outside the short campaign had 2 or 3 centrally organised doorknocking sessions, with activists and candidates directed towards target wards selected the previous summer.



What people said to us on the doorstep fed into our local policies, we vastly increased our voter ID and it changed the perception to us being the party of the community. The result was us taking control of the council by a large margin - 15 gains, 14 from the Tories, only one was off the Lib Dems (who are traditionally weak in Blackpool anyway). This was one of the best results in the country but we didn't do anything particularly special – we just campaigned hard all year round and took the time to talk to people about their issues.


We've by no means completed the changes we need to make organisationally. We need to build our membership up, better organise our grassroots, improve our ties to the local unions, get more young blood involved and find more ways of fundraising. The point the local party here has learnt however is (and we looked at the successes of places like Oxford who made gains against the trend), as much as socialists like me would like to see a more significant political change nationally, you can't blame Ed Miliband for your own failure to organise properly on the ground. You can wait for a supposed messiah to sweep us to victory or you can make it happen yourself.


The truth is Labour didn't do better in many places because we weren't organised enough to change the public's perception through grassroots campaign work. The party needs to change the way it thinks about how exactly victory comes about, the central party could help by providing more local organisers or by enthusing the members with greater party democracy but ultimately it comes down to local activists doing the donkey work at local level.

Tuesday 10 May 2011

The Pramble is over, but the campaign is not.


Well what an experience it’s been. It’s easy to underestimate the sheer scale of what we’ve put into action over the last 2 weeks of March. The planning stage began back in the summer as a follow on from the re-launch of the maternal mortality blanket at Manchester Cathedral. The original launch of that blanket was around 3 years ago. Back then the number of women dying was 1400 a day compared to the current 1000. At least some progress has been made, even though there’s a long way to go….

When we questioned under-secretary of state for international development Stephen O’Brien in parliament on the penultimate day of the Pramble, I’m glad he said that“women and girls are at the heart of our development plans”. This is as discrimination against women is a huge barrier to development in a lot of the poorest countries. Furthermore the reason why our Manchester Oxfam Group chose to campaign on maternal mortality rates is that it is the least performing of theMillennium Development Goals set by the United Nations.

I can honestly say being involved with the Pramble has been a great experience. I’ve met lots of new people, seen lots of new places and developed a lot of skills. All of which has been part of an enjoyable and worthwhile campaign. There is nothing like taking positive action for what you believe in.

This has been recognised for thousands of years, indeed Aristotle said in the 4th century BC that ‘active citizenship’ was an essential part of the good life. Things we take for granted in our country today like freedom of speech, votes for women and most relevantly free health care would not have been achieved if hundreds of thousands of people hadn’t campaigned on what they believed in. So for me campaigning with organisations like Oxfam is more than an ‘extra-curricular activity’ or ‘a bit of fun’ it’s who I am. If we as humans don’t have our principles, then what do we have?

On the whole most people in the UK are better off than the majority of countries around the world. People’s relevant comfort is probably a reason why a lot of people don’t see the point in campaigning for a more just world. I think another reason is the habits of the mainstream media, tending to focus on stories which only affect this country and are often not significant to key humanitarian issues. However I’m confident that anyone who takes part in a charity project like this one finds it rewarding and often will go on to do more voluntary work. If everyone in the UK spent just half an hour each week doing some kind of voluntary activity for the benefit of others, I’m confident that the nation would be much happier as would the wider world.

The campaign to save the lives of women all over the world goes on. Everyone can play a valuable part in that; you don’t need any qualifications, just a heart. Our Manchester Oxfam Group will now decide what other issues we want to turn our attention to, and how we want to campaign on them. The group is open to everyone and their ideas, so please contact us if you want to get involved.

I want to say a big thank you to everyone who has made the Pramble campaign possible. It’s a great achievement that a large number of people have between them managed to walk from Manchester to London with 4 prams, 1000 cubes and lots of other equipment!

Here’s to campaigning, justice and mums…

Thursday 5 May 2011

Just Another Day

Royal Wedding: jelly beans were the secret ingredient in portrait pictures,

And 2000 children needlessly die

Gaddafi survives ‘Nato’ attack but Son killed,

And 2000 children needlessly die

Labour aiming for Clegg powerbase,

Another 2000 children are lost forever

John Paul II Beautification Live,

Another 2000 mothers mourn their loss

Sony to resume Play Station gaming,

2000 more corpses are laid to rest

Battle over AV enters final stage,

Whilst 2000 more children can survive no more.

Heads’ pension ballot vote looms,

And 2000 more children utter their last breath

Syrian troops storm Deraa mosque,

2000 more children can cry no more

EU immigrants ‘add £5bn to GDP’

2000 more fathers have lost their child

Cyber stalking laws review urged,

Whilst 2000 more children lay dead on the floor

Readknapp demands goal technology,

And 2000 more bodies are buried or abandoned

Joy as QPR are promoted,

2000 more children can live no more

Trump finally beats Ding after epic,

2000 more children should have been saved

Royals spend secluded UK weekend,

Whilst 2000 more children leave a desensitised world

Spot yourself in our high-def wedding picture,

And 2000 more children needlessly die

Superman ‘may end US citizenship’

Whilst 2000 more children needlessly die

Somebody reads a depressing poem,

2000 more children needlessly die

Just another Day. What the media wants us to focus on and what really matters are two different things. Don’t hide from the emotions this poem brings up, fully acknowledge them. Through these emotions comes pure action and living.

Peace.