By Donald Lyven,
If you’ve been paying even a casual attention to recent
current affairs you may be vaguely aware there is a General Election coming up
next Thursday; I think it’s even been mentioned on TV and radio once or twice!
This one has been a long time coming; what with that 5-year-term
malarkey foisted upon us back in 2010, we’ve been looking at its approach for
ages, like an express train far in the distance that looks so small and hardly
moving, until it roars noisily through the station at colossal speed.
Well likewise, this election is speeding up and before you
know it, it’ll be the week after next, and we’ll all be wondering what the fuss
was about. A bit like Christmas really; much
anticipation, a bit of excitement on the day, and then the drudgery of the tidying,
mountains of washing up and then the debts to juggle with over the weeks that
follow.
Of course, in the General Election’s case, after the excitement
of the count, the days that follow will be all the juggling of loyalties,
back-street deals and shaky alliances between the flotsam & jetsam of MPs
from the various parties, who would have won their seats in this harsh
political fight we’re witnessing, but still wonder whether they’ll end up in
government or opposition.
Have you made up your mind yet? It really does astound me the way some people
seem to be fearful of voting for a particular party for fear of inducing the
wrath of the gods and bringing back some displeasing past experience.
I’m referring to the odd conversation on the doorstep like:
‘Well, the last time I voted that Labour lot in, they went to war with Iraq, they
didn’t fully repeal union laws, and they brought in Academy Schools; I don’t
want to make those mistakes again’.
Time moves on.
People, aspirations and priorities change. It’s this constant evolving of a political
party’s internal dynamics that make the next term of office different from the
last, or should do. Nothing surely gets
the backs up of the electorate than a leader saying: ‘Vote for my party and
we’ll carry on as before!’ Because
chances are they will have pissed off more folk, than those that have
benefitted from their past doctrinaire reign.
I welcome and always look forward to positive change.
If Cameron had promised something really different, he may
even have persuaded some new voters to go his way. Their campaign has been mostly negative, boring
and gaffe-ridden; and seems to perpetuate the undercurrent of the nasty party;
and only really benefitting the better off.
For Cameron to say Russell Brand was a joke also seemed unnecessarily
mean-spirited and evidently a very stupid thing to have said.
Personally, I have become poorer over the past five years
like no other time in my life and yet never worked harder. I have been directly affected in an adverse
way by Tory implemented policies. So
sorry Cameron, like your once air-brushed posters I don’t believe what I see. And what is it with the local chap Freer; why
does he think blocking local residents from his Twitter account will do his
cause any good at all? We all know what
eventually might happen if you choose to keep your head in the sand!
Labour too have made some errors but their campaign has been
the livelier, more fun, positive and the one full of much needed hope and
potential change. For many voters
currently, and I include myself in this, hope is all we have left. Removing the cruel and barmy bedroom tax is a
good enough reason on its own to vote Labour.
The Twitter sensation that is #Milifandom started by @twcuddleston has
shown everyone that being positive is the better way to behave during a
political campaign.
Poor Nick Clegg; one only wishes he and his FibDem ilk
receive better treatment at the Job Centre the following week than unemployed people
currently do. For completeness, I feel
the need to disclose I am also a quarter Scottish….
Democracy as we have it in this country is never perfect. Until a change to true PR is implemented; we
have to work with what we’ve got. But
don’t be afraid to make a change. The truth
is the voting booth is not a time machine.
By voting Labour, you won’t be summoning up the governments of Tony
Blair, Callaghan or Wilson. Similarly
those voting Tory can’t bring the Thatcher era back no matter how neatly they
mark their cross on the ballot paper! If
Miliband wins, he’ll either grow into the job as Prime Minister, as incumbents do,
or in due course be replaced as even Thatcher ultimately was.
I have voted in 10 General Elections so far and contemplated
carefully who got my vote on every occasion, due to reasons I thought correct
at the time; and that has included tactical voting. There was also the spell I married into the
green party, with whom my then wife was heavily involved and I felt duty bound
to switch; but that allegiance ended more than three years ago when I could see
the destructive shift to the right Barnet Tories were heading, and I returned
to the Labour fold, the only party in Barnet capable of deposing them.
So this time, as I have done in the past, I will be voting
Labour, and locally for Sarah Sackman, who I have met and seen speaking on
several occasions, and like everyone who sees her, has been mightily impressed
with her depth of knowledge and experience.
And some people just have it, that ability to captivate, enthuse and
inspire.
Those who steadfastly vote for one party throughout their
life are similar in a way to the intransigent non-voter; they probably don’t
really care about issues, fail to understand their individual responsibility
and unable to read the political mood locally or of the nation. It would be like only ever shopping at Tesco’s
or Sainsbury’s; sometimes it’s good to see what another shop or brand of
politics may do for you and your fellow citizens.
Locally, with all the daft and expensive shenanigans our
local Tory party got up to, with the Future Shape/easycouncil /One Barnet privatisation
scheme they and their council officer overlords wanted, would any rational fair-thinking
constituent have voted them back in last year?
Course not. The Tories relied on
the careless voter and apathetic non-voters who drift through life without a
thought, yet probably curse at any unfair parking ticket they received, not
realising their part in letting NSL blight our streets. The expensive mistake of paying Crapita to
ru(i)n our services is already coming home to roost, as the ever-observant
Barnet Bloggers are weary in keep reminding us.
Last year’s council elections were close mind; with the
Conservatives losing many seats to be eagerly picked up by aspiring Labour candidates
with the help of intelligent empathetic voters, who could see the bigger
picture and how the Borough of Barnet was being ruthlessly dissected and hived
off for profit.
Remarkably this Thursday is special for Barnet in a way much
like in 2010, when the General Election coincided with the Local Council
elections; there is a by-election! Five
years ago all 63 council seats were up for grabs and the count took forever
with several close recounts. This time
Barnet Council could change hands on the throw of one seat in Hampstead Garden
Suburb. It’s an all-or-nothing opportunity
for Labour to wrest control with the help of the one Liberal Democrat
councillor, after 13 years of Tory misrule, a time for all concerned people in
the Ward to do the right thing, and show compassion for those in less
prosperous districts of the Borough and vote Labour.
Miracles can happen, but a fly in the ointment makes matters
harder; the local Greens, bless em. With
the current knife-edge situation at Barnet Council with the slimmest of
majorities of just one seat, is there any Barnet citizen facing library
closures, or resident of West Hendon, Sweets Way, Grahame Park and Dollis Valley
estate facing eviction, who is thrilled the Greens are standing in the Hampstead
Garden Suburb by-election? I don’t think
so.
Please vote next Thursday, but please be mindful too of the
good and the damage that can result in countless people’s lives by putting that
seemingly simple cross in the correct or wrong box. You have the power; use it!
On Election Day, march forth, change history and forge the
future….
Thank you,
Donald Lyven
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Guest blogs are always welcome at the Barnet Eye
Donald Lyven is a resident of the London Borough of Barnet since
its formation in 1965 and has lived in Finchley in all that time. He
knows all parts of the borough through his work as a decorator and is a member
of several local committees and a keen allotment gardener. This Thursday
will be the 11th General Election he will have voted in….
4 comments:
Well done Donald well written , I like you have been through a number of Elections & always voted for those that I believe would do the best job ! But I think this one is different, in the past I voted for things that affected me . But now I am voting with my conscience . I cannot vote for a party that has & will take from the least able & leave alone the most able financially . Can it be right to take money from sick children & the disabled & the poor while Leaving alone Billion heirs & multi nationals . Look at Mapledown special school & sweets way evictions ! Just wrong . I am by nature a Torie voter , but I will be voting for Sarah sackman .
Mr Lyven
There is simply no realistic chance of Labour winning the by-election in Garden Suburb. You refer to it as an “all or nothing” opportunity to win control of the Council. Labour had that opportunity last year, but due to the insane decapitation attempt in Child’s Hill ward, Labour allowed the Conservatives to win two seats by splitting the left-wing vote.
The Labour leader should have resigned as a result of this catastrophe, but it doesn’t matter how many elections she loses, the Labour councillors stick with her. She is a specialist in failure. However much you may dislike the Conservative led council, if Labour can’t get their act together, they don’t deserve to hold office.
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