This article of mine appears in the London Progressive Journal:
Congratulations to the Conservative Party on
having delivered its South Shields leaflets in Jarrow. Everywhere beyond the
Mason-Dixon Line that runs from the Bristol Channel to the Wash is now just
"the North, and we know absolutely nothing about it" to the Tories,
isn't it?
Let us meander the physically short but otherwise
longer distance to leafy Lanchester. I am standing down from the Parish Council
here after 14 years, seven as Labour, seven as an Independent. Until 1995, the
Conservative Party massively dominated the Parish Council from the Dawn of
Time, while the place returned two Tories out of three to the old District
Council. Think of a smaller version of Hexham, or Altincham, or Harrogate.
Think of the North depicted on Last Tango in Halifax.
Yet Lanchester has not elected a Conservative
above Parish level since 1991. That party has not had a significant presence on
the Parish Council since the elections in 1995. It returned only one, a sound
Tory farmer, to the Parish Council in 2009, our term of office being then
extended by two years in line with that of the new unitary County Council.
The sole Conservative candidate for this
two-member County Ward comes from as far away as Gateshead, which is not even
in County Durham, never mind here in the middle of it. One of the two UKIP
candidates lives in the Ward, although not in Lanchester as one would expect;
the other does not even live here. There is no Lib Dem.
For the Parish, following the withdrawal of a
Labour candidate who is standing for the County elsewhere, there are now 15
nominations for 15 seats, and therefore no election. The only Tory is the one
who was already on. In Lanchester. A farmer, not someone from the commuting,
middle-class, once ardently Thatcherite village, where they always saw Labour
as integral to everything that they had gone up in the world in order to
escape.
One of the Independents was first elected as
Labour and is a millionaire businessman to whom the Conservative Party is
clearly of no interest even after his having broken with Labour, while another
was at least a Labour voter until the Iraq War. In Lanchester. There is a third
Independent. Plus 11 Labour. Eleven. More than two thirds. Elected unopposed.
In Lanchester.
The minimum age having been lowered, my record as
the youngest ever member has been beaten by a full two years. It had stood
since the last century. But a 19-year-old who works in the office of the local
Labour MP, who herself lives here and whose husband has also just got back on,
has now been elected. Unopposed. In Lanchester. This time last year, he was a schoolboy.
Good for him, say I. Remember the name of Philip Richardson. No Paris Brown,
he. But this would have been unimaginable in the very recent past.
I cannot believe that Lanchester is an isolated,
or even a terribly unusual, example among the many similar communities in the
North East, the North West and Yorkshire. Across the rural and the middle-class
North, including among people who even throughout the Blair era loathed Labour
as they loathed their own former accents or the people whom they had felt
obliged to invite to their children's weddings, the Conservative Party has
become only the faintest shadow of a shade, while UKIP is not really getting
anywhere, either.
In each case, if it cannot take, or even fight,
the likes of Lanchester, then it has no constituency in the North. Without
which, it simply cannot win a General Election.
You've posted this on your blog before? And why do you use the Wash as one of the geographic points? Mersey to the Humber would make slightly more sense, as the Tories returned more MP's than Labour for the East and West Midlands, or you could caveat it by saying that outside of the industrial, or formerly industrial north, the Tories seem to be perfectly fine.
ReplyDeleteWe shall see very soon.
ReplyDeleteAnd I have been told that I ought also to include Cornwall, Devon, Dorset, and Kent beyond the Medway, perhaps even closer than that to London.
This is your ninth article, mostly this year, for an online magazine featuring the cream of the British Left. You are on a roll.
ReplyDeleteWe'll see how it goes.
ReplyDelete