Category: Kate Green

Posts relating to parliamentary politics

  • Stressing the agent

    Stressing the agent

    Another occasional post on being agent for Kate Green

    This Monday was in effect the start. Trafford issued their notice of election. If feels as though we’ve been in election mode for a while but Monday was the start.

    Do we downplay the civic aspects of an election these days? I have vague memories of the notice going up in the windows of post offices when I was young, but I might be wrong. Nevertheless, the wording of the notice is almost worthy of the an announcement on the steps of the town hall. Instead it’s slipped out onto the council’s website.

    The notice is an invitation for candidates to be nominated, and voters to be registered assuming they’re not already on the register. It gives the dates for when these have to take place.

    No one wants to leave the nomination until the last day, so for most candidates it really gives two days to have the papers submitted.

    There’s two vital forms, the nominations and the consent to nomination. Providing these are in order and submitted on time the candidate is on the ballot paper. There’s authorities from the political party and appointment of agent that we also submit but technically they’re of secondary importance. We elect the candidate, not the party and you don’t actually have to have an agent.

    If you have an agent, it’s the agent who goes to jail if the rules are breached rather than the candidate. So most candidates appoint an agent.

    The nomination paper is interesting. We used to put in a great deal of effort in inviting community leaders and respected figures across the constituency to sign the nomination papers. It was quite a thing. The names of the persons nominating the candidate definitely were published in those post office windows, so it mattered. These days you’ve got to go looking on the council website to even find the papers. It’s lost its impact. It’s a shame really.

    Having said that, the decline in public curiosity as to the persons nominating Kate made it easier for me. I had sufficient nominations signed and verified in one sitting of the Labour Group instead of cycling round the constituency to get the signatures.

    Even if it was less of a task I’m still mightily relieved they’re checked and submitted.

    So, Kate Green is now Labour Party candidate for Stretford and Urmston!

  • Being Agent

    Being Agent

    I’m delighted Kate Green has asked me to be her agent for the forthcoming election. It’ll be my fourth time. At least I’ll know what I’m letting myself in for. It’s a generally thankless role. You’re really there to make sure everything’s legal and accounted for and to step back into the shadows.

    My first time as agent was 2010. Kate was stepping in to fill the shoes of Bev Hughes. Labour were facing a difficult election nationally and the Tories were targeting the seat as winnable. Kate was (and still is) an absolute force of nature. We had a great team with Antony McCaul directing the campaign. Together we smashed that election.

    It was a fantastic team effort. I took the role incredibly seriously. I still do. You’re always a missed signature away from a disaster that lets down so many people. At the same time you’re trying to be a grounding force, keeping the campaign focused and together. There’s so many external provocations not to mention those from within the campaign.

    The two subsequent elections in 2015 and 2017 were somewhat different. We didn’t see any serious campaign from the Conservatives really, or anyone else for that matter. They rather abandoned their candidates to get on with it on their own. It meant we had to generate our own energy. Given we took Kate’s percentage of vote to 66%, the other parties probably took the correct decision.

    So we’re back again. We have the same team, we’ve had for the last two with Tom Ross in the Anthony McCaul role. It’s a winter election. I genuinely don’t have a problem with that. We do what we do and it’s the same for all parties. The political dynamics are different, but they always are. From the agent’s point of view it’s a logistical challenge as much as anything. I aim to come through it in one piece and so far, I have always managed to end the election with more friends than when I started including from the teams of other parties.

  • Agent

    Agent

    18th April 11am – Anne Duffield calls me “Have you seen the news? Theresa is going for the 8th June!”

    “Oh ****!”

    We’re already campaigning hard for Andy Burnham for Mayor and over in Altrincham for a council by-election. The polls are abysmal; and worse… I’m on record as wanting an early General Election.

    I’ve been the lone voice arguing for months that Labour should be on the front foot demanding Theresa May calls an early election. The Tories haven’t got a mandate for the Brexit they’re pursuing and the electorate needs to speak. Theresa May is effectively using the same argument, except we’re on the back-foot. The polls are just about as bad they could be.

    As parliament is still sitting, we won’t see Kate until the weekend. Meanwhile the media are on hyperdrive, searching for stories of discord, or making them up. We don’t yet know how the party will confirm candidates. The assumption is that it’ll be straight-forward, but the press are hoping for something more messy. It turns out that even losing candidates from 2015 will be able to be a candidate again in 2017 without a full selection. Not totally convinced that this is the right approach. Clearly we haven’t the resources or time to go through a full selection everywhere. but where the candidate lost, I think it’s reasonable to ask the question whether someone else could do better. The Tories strangely seem to be in the same predicament. I use the word ‘strangely’ since they called the election, yet they don’t seem ready for it.

    By the first weekend, we’re pretty much set. Kate had indicated who her campaign team would be long before the election was called. Me as agent, Tom as campaign manager, Ita and Bernice running members/distribution and Morris Hall. We just need to settle on a campaign budget. I’m figuring that as things stand, it’s going to have to be more than last time (2015) when we were twinned to help Warrington South and additionally the general election coincided with local elections. The polls are far worse and we’re on our own as far as a twinning strategy is concerned. Kate is extremely popular, Tory run Trafford Council is extremely unpopular, and deservedly so, particularly in the north of the borough. We’re hearing some voters saying they won’t vote Labour because of Jeremy Corbyn, others are enthusiastic because of him. The bottom line is that the polls put us at our lowest for a generation, which suggests we’ll have to work for every vote.

    Our membership is huge, we’ve got recently joined members who are full of energy and determination. We’ve got a common goal of winning as many seats as possible. Labour is an incredibly powerful force when it pulls together, so there’s a real onus on the campaign to be inclusive and not to operate in cliques.

    We need to get Broadheath by-election out of the way, so we can begin a bit of canvassing. Tom can begin drafting and getting the orders in for our leaftlets etc.

    I’m keen that we start using the doorstep app which is a canvassing tool for smartphones. I’ve been on a few canvass sessions in Broadheath where we have had so many helpers that I’ve found I’ve spent most of the time waiting to be allocated a door to knock or waiting to have the info recorded. It just seems obvious to me that having the info on a phone means I could just be getting on with it.

    Others are sceptical. I get consent to try it out in Gorse Hill Ward.

    First time on the Doorstep App, it doesn’t work. I can’t log in.

    Second time, it’s me and Kate on Auburn Ave in Lostock. We operate like overlapping fullbacks and the app works perfectly. If we’d had to share a clipboard, it would have been slow going. Too big a team and it’s easy to just chat to other canvassers. Too small and it’s the person with the board with nothing to do.

    It’s good that Kate is an early adopter of the technology. Without her blessing I doubt we’d have used it to such good effect throughout the campaign. The ‘App’ became a big thing here in this campaign, in other constituencies, less so.

    By election Broadheath / Andy Burnham Mayor May 4

    Suddenly everything looks a little bit rosier. The election of Andy Burnham has been overwhelming across Trafford. He’s won every ward in Stretford and Urmston by a landslide. Amy Whyte has had a fantastic victory in Broadheath. There’s a spring in everyone’s step.

    The Launch

    My next task is to get the official nomination of Kate submitted. But first we need to launch the campaign. A handy place to get the ten signatures we need. I’m dead keen to include newer activists who’ve been working hard both here and in Broadheath. I think we only had one Councillor on the list. I was pleased with the list of people nominating Kate.

    By the way, who’s the Conservative Candidate?

    As nominations open, we still don’t know who the Conservatives have chosen to be their candidate. We know it’s not going to be Sean Anstee because we’ve asked him. We know that at least one Trafford Conservative councillor applied to be their candidate in Tatton, and another is candidate in Liverpool Walton but nobody will tell us who their candidate is in Stretford and Urmston. I wouldn’t say we’re panicking over it, but this is new. Kate tells me that there’s a feeling amongst colleagues that the Conservative campaign is going to be largely under the radar. We know the Conservatives outspent Labour massively in 2015 on Social Media. Perhaps that’s going to be the nature of this campaign although it seems strange that there’s nothing going on on their local websites.

    Even Thursday’s Messenger hasn’t been given the name of the Tory Candidate although it’s got both the Lib Dems and ours. We eventually confirm that it’s Lisa Cooke who’s been chosen. It’s someone we know since she fought the seat back in 2015 but I’d not heard anything from her since to suggest she was still active in the Conservative Party politics.

    Edit with the Benefit of Hindsight

    Over the next few days, we come to realise that this tactic of making the campaign all about Theresa May rather than individual candidates was pretty much universal. There’s images from all over the country of direct mail sent in the name of the prime minister asking for support. The actual local candidate just gets a brief mention. Given that Theresa May wouldn’t debate or even meet ordinary voters, it is a great relief to myself as a democrat that the tactic would eventually prove so abysmally unsuccessful.

    The mood lifts…

    I guess everyone has their own moment where it began to change. This was mine. Emily Thornbury visibly demolishing and diminishing Michael Fallon on prime telly was the point where I began to think we’re coming back into this.

    Our manifesto has gone down well, the Tory manifesto is a disaster. Unprecedented for U-turns on a manifesto before election day. ‘Nothing has changed, Nothing has changed!’ Theresa May is sinking with her ship.

    Everything gets put in Perspective

    Leaflets, stuffing, sorting, Delivering, Phoning

    The pause in the election brought home how much work we’d all been doing. An election campaign is a huge operation even at constituency level. So many people working hard for change. We had an incredible amount of people helping Kate and Labour and Jeremy. It was a fantastically unified campaign amongst those who were taking part in the campaign. It didn’t matter what wing of the party, or what was the political motivation, we worked together.

    It’s something the Tories will never match

    The Count

    Finally got to see some Tories. Just a few turned up from Stretford and Urmston. We’re pretty sure that they did nothing apart from a single leaflet posted by the Royal Mail. Hugely annoyed that their vote went up by a 1000 votes. It sticks in my craw that a party that took so little notice of its own voters during an election should increase its vote.

    Thankfully, Jeremy Corbyn’s/Kate’s/Labour vote increased by nearly 9000 votes. Everyone deserves a share of this. It was similar across Greater Manchester and the North West. The picture on the other side of The Pennines seems totally different. My own view is that within Labour, we have many on that side of the country legitimising the Brexit/Ukip message when we should be challenging it. It’s a risky game because the chances are that the east of the country will be worst affected by Brexit.

    swing

    After the election

    The expenses are tallied and submitted. Thankfully we were never a marginal seat with shadow Ministers and Battlebuses dropping in. Thankfully too, I don’t have to reimburse the shoe leather sacrificed by our members and supporters. If we did have to repay all the volunteers I think I’d have been overspent before a single letter was printed. Many thanks too everyone and I’d wholeheartedly recommend it if you ever get the chance to be agent.

  • Andy Burnham’s speech on Whole Person Care

    Moving the debate forward

    One Nation Labour is beginning to find its voice in new policies as we prepare for the General Election in 2015. Kate Green has already written in praise of Andy Burnham’s take on what health care will look like under One Nation Labour. I can only echo the points she makes. And post an embedded version of the video of his speech. Not the best sound quality – but the quality of the content more than makes up for this

  • Kate’s Blog 13th January 2012

    kategreen.jpg

    Happy new year! Parliament resumed this week, and the holiday seems a long time ago.

    I spent the first day back dealing with a backlog of emails. But by Wednesday, I was up and out of the office very first thing to attend a breakfast meeting. I met businesses and campaigners to discuss the alarming number of households living below the official poverty line, even when at least one person in the family’s got a job.

    It was a good day to be discussing the subject. The campaign to End Child Poverty had just published figures that morning showing Greater Manchester has the third highest rate of child poverty in the country. Many of those children have a parent in work, but on wages too low for them to be able to meet household bills.
    The government wants people to take work as a route out of poverty. But it is freezing the working tax credit that helps people on low wages to make work pay. It’s also cut help with childcare costs. It simply doesn’t make sense.

    Prime Minister’s questions were a bit subdued. A rush of agreement broke out between Ed Miliband and David Cameron on the subject of Scottish independence. The Scottish Nationalists want to hold a referendum for people in Scotland to decide if they want to leave the UK, but not till 2014. I have to say the Prime Minister asked a good question when he wanted to know, if the SNP are in such a hurry to leave the UK, why they want to delay a referendum.

    Thursday saw a debate on progress on recommendations made in the last parliament to improve the diversity of backgrounds of MPs. Despite a higher proportion of women and BME MPs than in any previous parliament, we’re still far from representative of the country. Less than a quarter of MPs are women, and the number of disabled MPs is shamefully low – they continue to experience extra hurdles in parliament.

    I was very pleased to respond to the debate on behalf of the opposition as our spokesperson on equality. It’s an issue I feel very strongly about. I don’t think we can do the best possible job unless we have people from a wide range of backgrounds in parliament. MPs draw on their own life experience when debating new laws. If we all have similar backgrounds, we’re bound to miss ideas, misunderstand problems, and simply miss the point.

    But the lifestyle and the yah-boo atmosphere in parliament put off lots of potentially excellent MPs, and for many people, the cost of standing for parliament, especially if they have to give up a job or travel to another part of the country to find a seat is just out of the question.

    There were some really good ideas to address these problems, but progress is painfully slow. At present rates, it will take another 14 parliaments to get equal numbers of men and women MPs. That’s another 70 years. It isn’t good enough.

    There was however some good news for our first week back. The government were defeated on important votes in the house of lords, on cutting benefits for disabled children, and on restricting access to benefits for people with long-term health problems or disability. The government’s plans would mean cancer patients for example could be forced back to work while they’re still receiving treatment or feel too unwell. Ministers say they will reverse the decisions of the house of lords when the bill comes back to the commons, but we’re determined to fight back to prevent this. They’re way out of touch with the public on this one.

    And we also won a vote in the commons to defeat a bill that would restrict paid time off for trade union reps to carry out their union duties in the workplace. Tories seem to think unions are ripping off businesses, but the truth is that union reps use the time to help solve workplace problems, deal with health and safety issues, and represent employees who may be facing redundancy or need time off to care for an elderly relative or their kids. In fact, no employer has asked for this change in the law, because they know it helps the workplace work more smoothly. I’m pleased to say the bill was heavily defeated – let’s hope that’s one mad idea that won’t be coming back.

    Best Wishes

    Kate

  • Kate Green interviewed at Labour Conference

    Kate Green interviewed by ‘Winkball’s Conference Reporters’ at Labour Party Conference in Liverpool.

    Don’t forget to follow Kate on twitter (@KateGreenMP) or Facebook (Kate Green)