bannerbanner
The Times Guide to the House of Commons
The Times Guide to the House of Commons

Полная версия

The Times Guide to the House of Commons

Язык: Английский
Год издания: 2018
Добавлена:
Настройки чтения
Размер шрифта
Высота строк
Поля
На страницу:
4 из 17

S

Sanders, Adrian Torbay LD Sandys, Laura Thanet South C Sarwar, Anas Glasgow Central Lab Scott, Lee Ilford North C Seabeck, Alison Plymouth Moor View Lab Selous, Andrew Bedfordshire South West C Shannon, Jim Strangford DUP Shapps, Grant Welwyn Hatfield C Sharma, Virendra Ealing Southall Lab Sharma, Alok Reading West C Sheerman, Barry Huddersfield Lab Shelbrooke, Alec Elmet & Rothwell C Shepherd, Richard Aldridge-Brownhills C Sheridan, Jim Paisley & Renfrewshire North Lab Shuker, Gavin Luton South Lab Simmonds, Mark Boston & Skegness C Simpson, Keith Broadland C Simpson, Thomas David Upper Bann DUP Singh, Marsha Bradford West Lab Skidmore, Chris Kingswood C Skinner, Dennis Bolsover Lab Slaughter, Andy Hammersmith Lab Smith, Sir Robert Aberdeenshire West & Kincardine LD Smith, Nick Blaenau Gwent Lab Smith, Henry Crawley C Smith, Chloe Norwich North C Smith, Andrew Oxford East Lab Smith, Angela Penistone & Stocksbridge Lab Smith, Owen Pontypridd Lab Smith, Julian Skipton & Ripon C Soames, Nicholas Sussex Mid C Soubry, Anna Broxtowe C Soulsby, Sir Peter Leicester South Lab Spellar, John Warley Lab Spelman, Caroline Meriden C Spencer, Mark Sherwood C Stanley, Sir John Tonbridge & Malling C Stephenson, Andrew Pendle C Stevenson, John Carlisle C Stewart, Bob Beckenham C Stewart, Iain Milton Keynes South C Stewart, Rory Penrith & The Border C Straw, Jack Blackburn Lab Streeter, Gary Devon South West C Stride, Mel Devon Central C Stringer, Graham Blackley & Broughton Lab Stuart, Graham Beverley & Holderness C Stuart, Gisela Birmingham Edgbaston Lab Stunell, Andrew Hazel Grove LD Sturdy, Julian York Outer C Sutcliffe, Gerry Bradford South Lab Swales, Ian Redcar LD Swayne, Desmond New Forest West C Swinson, Jo Dunbartonshire East LD Swire, Hugo Devon East C Syms, Robert Poole C

T

Tami, Mark Alyn & Deeside Lab Tapsell, Sir Peter Louth & Horncastle C Teather, Sarah Brent Central LD Thomas, Gareth Harrow West Lab Thornberry, Emily Islington South & Finsbury Lab Thurso, John Caithness, Sutherland & Easter Ross LD Timms, Stephen East Ham Lab Timpson, Edward Crewe & Nantwich C Tomlinson, Justin Swindon North C Tredinnick, David Bosworth C

T

Trickett, Jon Hemsworth Lab Truss, Elizabeth Norfolk South West C Turner, Karl Hull East Lab Turner, Andrew Isle of Wight C Twigg, Derek Halton Lab Twigg, Stephen Liverpool West Derby Lab Tyrie, Andrew Chichester C

U

Umunna, Chuka Streatham Lab Uppal, Paul Wolverhampton South West C

V

Vaizey, Ed Wantage C Vara, Shailesh Cambridgeshire North West C Vaz, Keith Leicester East Lab Vaz, Valerie Walsall South Lab Vickers, Martin Cleethorpes C Villiers, Theresa Chipping Barnet C

W

Walker, Charles Broxbourne C Walker, Robin Worcester C Wallace, Ben Wyre & Preston North C Walley, Joan Stoke-on-Trent North Lab Walter, Bob Dorset North C Ward, David Bradford East LD Watkinson, Angela Hornchurch & Upminster C Watson, Tom West Bromwich East Lab Watts, Dave St Helens North Lab Weatherley, Mike Hove C Webb, Steve Thornbury & Yate LD Weir, Mike Angus SNP Wharton, James Stockton South C Wheeler, Heather Derbyshire South C White, Chris Warwick & Leamington C Whiteford, Eilidh Banff & Buchan SNP Whitehead, Alan Southampton Test Lab Whittaker, Craig Calder Valley C Whittingdale, John Maldon C Wicks, Malcolm Croydon North Lab Wiggin, Bill Herefordshire North C Willetts, David Havant C Williams, Hywel Arfon PC Williams, Roger Brecon & Radnorshire LD Williams, Stephen Bristol West LD Williams, Mark Ceredigion LD Williamson, Chris Derby North Lab Williamson, Gavin Staffordshire South C Willott, Jenny Cardiff Central LD Wilson, Sammy Antrim East DUP Wilson, Rob Reading East C Wilson, Phil Sedgefield Lab Winnick, David Walsall North Lab Winterton, Rosie Doncaster Central Lab Wishart, Pete Perth & Perthshire North SNP Wollaston, Dr Sarah Totnes C Wood, Mike Batley & Spen Lab Woodcock, John Barrow & Furness Lab Woodward, Shaun St Helens South & Whiston Lab Woolas, Phil Oldham East & Saddleworth Lab Wright, Iain Hartlepool Lab Wright, Jeremy Kenilworth & Southam C Wright, Simon Norwich South LD Wright, David Telford Lab

Y

Yeo, Tim Suffolk South C Young, Sir George Hampshire North West C

Z

Zahawi, Nadhim Stratford-on-Avon C
The new Parliament

An ordinary beginning to an extraordinary campaign

Roland Watson

Political Editor

After asking the Queen to dissolve Parliament, Gordon Brown returned from Buckingham Palace to Downing Street and declared: “I come from an ordinary family in an ordinary town.” As the opening line of the 2010 general election, it was designed to draw attention to the privileged background of his Eton-educated Conservative rival, David Cameron. It ill served as a guide for what followed, though, which was, by any standards of modern British political history, extraordinary.

None of the three leaders had led their parties into a general election and each faced a monumental task. Mr Brown was seeking an historic fourth term for Labour against the backdrop of the deepest recession for 60 years. He was also looking to overcome the memory of the election-that-never-was in October 2007 when, five months after inheriting the job from Tony Blair and revving up Labour’s campaign machine, he ducked out of going to the country at the last moment.

Mr Cameron needed to achieve the biggest swing since the war to gain the 116 seats required for a Commons majority. His party had endured a jittery few months in which questions about its economic policy and a tightening in the polls fed off each other to spread deep unease through Tory ranks. He was beginning the campaign with a seven-point lead, well down from the double digits the Tories had enjoyed for most of the past year and not enough for an outright win.

Nick Clegg, the Liberal Democrat leader, needed to capitalise on the prospects of a hung Parliament. He also had the first televised debates between the leaders to look forward to. They would offer him a stage never before enjoyed by his predecessors: equal prime-time billing with his two rivals. Initially, though, the campaign conformed to type, focusing on the two established parties. Mr Cameron pre-empted Mr Brown’s return from the Palace to stage a rally on the south bank of the Thames, across from Westminster. Waving his finger at the Houses of Parliament, he vowed to “make people feel proud again of that building over there”. He was, he said, campaigning for “the Great Ignored”, a group that encompassed black, white, rich, poor, town and country folk. It was a slogan he ignored for the rest of the campaign.

The styles of the Tory and Labour campaigns differed starkly from the start. As Mr Cameron tore round the country on a leased private plane, Mr Brown made political capital out of financial necessity, travelling by rail in standard class. Labour had raised less than half the Tories’ £18 million war chest, and had spent much of it during the phoney war since the start of the year. Once at his campaigning destinations, Mr Brown rarely delivered speeches, preferring to meet small groups of voters in supermarket canteens or the living rooms of Labour supporters, fuelling questions about whether he was reaching swing voters. Mr Cameron, boasting a campaign team with a sharper eye for “optics”, was pictured repeatedly, sleeves rolled up, in warehouses or stock rooms surrounded by workers and clearly visible logos of well-known brands.

The contrast carried through to their manifestos, in which Labour offered a “smarter” State, the Tories a smaller one. Mr Brown unveiled a traditional-looking pitch in a newly built and soon-to-be-opened wing of a Birmingham hospital. It promised to tailor public services to people’s needs, giving them guarantees on rights of redress against schools, hospitals and police forces if services failed to reach certain standards.

The Tory manifesto was unusual and innovative, and not just for being presented in the semi ruins of Battersea power station. A hard-backed blue book on A5 paper titled An Invitation to Join the Government of Britain, it urged people to take more control over their workplaces, children’s schools and how they are policed and ruled, offering a glimpse of life in what Mr Cameron billed the Big Society.

Mr Clegg chose the City of London as his launch pad, an attempt to show that the party often criticised for having uncosted policies was serious about its finances. The signature policy was to raise the starting threshold for income tax from £6,500 to £10,000, costing £17 billion. The document even included tax tables at the back to show that the sums added up, calculations immediately disputed by Labour and the Tories.

The choice between an empowered individual in a smaller Tory State and a smarter Labour State that provided service guarantees offered the central intellectual dividing line, although both sides fought surprisingly shy of their offering on the stump. Instead, the debate revolved around the economy, in particular whether the £6 billion of immediate savings the Tories were proposing to make in Whitehall, and subsequently used to ease Labour’s proposed rise in national insurance contributions, would help or hinder the recovery.

So far, so normal. The campaign was turned on its head from the moment Mr Clegg stared into the cameras of the first TV debate, hosted by ITV in Manchester, and told the 10 million viewers that he was offering something other than business as usual. Presenting himself as a fresh alternative to the tired old parties he was fighting, he spoke crisply and directly about bringing fundamental change to politics. Mr Brown, sensing the early mastery of the medium shown by Mr Clegg and keen to isolate Mr Cameron, used the words “I agree with Nick” half a dozen times. (The following day, the phrase was appearing on Lib Dem badges, posters and banners.) But Mr Clegg would not be caught in a Labour bear hug. Mr Cameron, expected to shine on a stage apparently made for the ease and informality of his communication skills, tried to look prime ministerial but instead appeared stiff and awkward.

Mr Clegg ran away with the verdict of viewers. In the course of 90 minutes he had wrested from Mr Cameron the mantle of change, in which the Tory leader had cloaked himself for the past four years. Within days, the Lib Dems shot up ten points in the polls. One found Mr Clegg to be the most popular political leader since Churchill. And so the game changed. Although campaigning continued, the oxygen sucked up by the first debate in effect suspended the state of the race while all sides waited for the second debate. Hosted by Sky in Bristol, it saw Mr Cameron recover some of his poise. Mr Clegg, despite his first success, refused to play safe, showed that his first offering was no fluke and cemented his place as a contender.

Shortly before the third debate, Mr Clegg, in an interview with The Times, said that the Lib Dems had replaced Labour as the progressive force in politics and that the election now boiled down to a two-horse race between him and Mr Cameron. Two weeks previously such an assertion would have been laughed out of court. With many polls showing the Lib Dems nudging ahead of Labour, it now carried weight.

Mr Clegg’s success, or Cleggmania to give it its official media term, forced Labour and the Tories into tactical switches. They both turned their guns on Lib Dem policies, such as an amnesty on some illegal immigrants, softer sentencing and a refusal to guarantee the future of Britian’s nuclear deterrent. The Tories did so with menaced warnings whereas Labour, with an eye on the possibilities of a Lib-Lab deal if voters returned a hung Parliament, were less harsh.

Mr Brown also re-wrote his personal campaign. Labour strategists, faced with selling a leader who was unpopular with voters, had kept the Prime Minister to a routine of small meetings largely behind closed doors. It had left Mr Brown frustrated. He would spend the final ten days meeting more “real people” and making more speeches. The new style made a calamitous start. In Rochdale, Mr Brown was accosted by a Labour-supporting grandmother, Gillian Duffy, who took him to task on issues ranging from student fees to immigration. She walked away happy to have had her say and quietly thrilled to have met the Prime Minister. He got into his official car and branded the mild confrontation a disaster, called her a bigoted woman and blamed an aide. The remarks were picked up by a radio microphone he had worn for his walkabout and had not yet taken off.

На страницу:
4 из 17