11 May 2005

Back in the real world 

Spent the last few days catching up with the rest of my life. None of it, unfortunately, has meant resting. John and I managed to clean the whole flat which we had both neglected for weeks. I also ordered internet shopping (I've developed an aversion to supermarkets in recent years) but the only delivery slot was between 7 and 8 am so I was putting away food at 7.30.

Flat is sparkling and tidy now and there's lots of food in the fridge, and not much dirty washing. Amazing the things that give you satisfaction.

I'm also getting a lot of satisfaction from our result. We now think we can build Respect everywhere and lots of people are joining. In Newham we're getting people back together to plan future activity and next year's council elections.

Labour seem completely shellshocked by their defeat in Bethnal Green. They are trying to portray it as a completely illegitimate result and Oona King was even on the Today programme this morning. Why? What other loser would be on the BBC's flagship radio programme?

Labour is in turmoil it seems to me. Blair is just carrying on regardless ( his listening lasted all of ten hours until he appointed David Blunkett), the appointment of Andrew Adonis is a real provocation, and as usual Labour's left hasn't been able to put up much of a fight. Let's hope Blair keeps on like this until he is dragged off kicking and screaming.

Meanwhile in the real world, 70 people died in Iraq today. Hundreds died during the election campaign. I've been in Birmingham today talking about the chances of legal action to force a public inquiry over the war. These are the real issues which Blair will not be able to dodge, regardless of his compliant backbenchers.

08 May 2005

What a night 

A good second in Newham. Brilliant second in Birmingham for Salma Yaqoob. Third but nearly 20% of the vote in Poplar and Canning Town. And of course a win for George Galloway in Bethnal Green and Bow.

We also picked up very good votes in a number of other places: Preston, Slough, Walsall, Tottenham, Hackney South, Leicester South, Birmingham Perry Barr.

Our results are really historic. George won the seat against all the odds and with everything thrown at him by the Blairites. In Newham, Abdul Khaliq got just over 20% and I got just under 20% _ an incredible achievement for our campaign. I got nearly as many votes as the Tory and Libdem combined. We cut straight into the Labour majorities in a way that has never been done before.

Out of the top ten election swings in the country, Respect had four_ George, Salma, Abdul Khaliq and me. Mine was 19.1%.

None of this has made much news, apart from a middle class revulsion at George's win, epitomised by Jeremy Paxman's low grade and insulting interview with him early on Friday morning. Spoilt dinner parties in Chiswick and Fulham this weekend then.

Our results in Newham have been largely ignored. Yet to achieve these figures over two constituencies should be worthy of comment, especially since there has been much space devoted to BNP votes of 16.9% in Barking.

East Ham and West Ham are next to Barking, we did much better than the BNP (in Dagenham, they got under 10% because they were concentrating on Barking) we stood on a platform of anti racism and in defence of immigrants and asylum seekers _ but nothing.

Even so, these results are making waves in Britain and internationally. The Greens (around for 30 years) neither won nor came second in any seat, although their Brighton candidate got over 20 %, the sectarian left flopped badly, and the SSP had a disappointing result, usually coming behind the Greens and losing their deposit.

We are on the map and are gearing up for next year's local elections. We're also going to challenge postal voting which has clearly been the subject of fraud and disenfranchisement.

Overall, the election result is very good for us. Blair lost over a million votes because of the war and lost a number of seats to anti war parties. The Tories didn't do well, and the LibDems under the appalling Charles Kennedy failed to take advantage of the anti war sentiment to make a real breakthrough.

The anti war movement has done for Blair and Respect is beginning to get the benefit of our role in the movement.

Our people are very happy about the result (catch the lovely picture in Socialist Worker of us at the Newham count) and we know we have a lot of support in Newham.

I'm going to keep posting for a bit to assess the post election fallout. But let me just return here to Ken Livingstone, who had a very bad election. Labour lost to the Tories in west London seats like Putney and Hammersmith, and lost large numbers of votes to us in east London.

Both these things create problems for him come the next mayoral election and he has certainly lost a lot of credibility and dare I say respect among the left. His support for Oona King, flanked by police and sneering at an anti war demo in Brick Lane, will stick in people's memories.

In addition, his protegee Yasmin Qureshi lost his old seat of Brent East to the Libdems, despite his campaigning efforts. Perhaps next election he should stay at home.

04 May 2005

And now, the time has come 

Well, here we are. It's late and I have to be up very early tomorrow. We've all been to our eve of poll rally in the Genesis Cinema in Stepney. Had to finish by 9 or we would have clashed with the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy.

Four hundred people crowded in and we heard great speeches. Now it's all (nearly) said and done and we will find out what people think. I hope we win.

It's hard at the end of a campaign _ or at least it is for me _ to know exactly what to do. My mind was partly made up by my trip to Downing St yesterday where I met more families of soldiers who had died and the solicitor who is representing them, Phil Shiner. He was really great, as were the families, but the press are all too ready to spout the Downing St line.

We met a man outside no 10 who was kind of hanging around _ not allowed in this particular location. Andrew Burgin asked him who he was and he admitted he worked inside. We asked him why he was there _usually there is no one except the police and the press_ and he said it depended on the number of press and the issue.

In other words, he was spinning the government line against the families two days before an election. Andrew asked him if Tony was worried. He said, I couldn't tell you. I said, sounds bad then.

He was like something from Yes, Minister.

In West Ham I feel we are gaining all the time. One Labour supporter told me my opponent Lyn Brown spent a lot of today at the hairdresser. Hope it's worth it!

Seriously, their campaign is non existent, which shows how little they want to engage with real politics. This is a disaster for them in the longer term _ and maybe in the shorter term as well.

Anyway I must end because I need some sleep. I am very proud of our campaign, our principles, and having involved some of the best people in Newham. By the time I post again we will know the result. Wish me luck. Not just for me but for everyone who wants change.

03 May 2005

Do mention the war 

It's the war, stupid! Who could have thought that this election was about anything else? Despite all the main parties agreeing to keep it under wraps, and a complicit media, the war now dominates all the news. I don't see that changing before Thursday and that is a disaster for Blair.

The widow of the soldier killed in Iraq yesterday has attacked him. There must be such bitterness in the military about the war. I am seeing some of the military families this afternoon. It's a break from campaigning _and for them, because Rose Gentle and Reg Keys are also standing in this election_but it's important.

We have to think beyond this election about how we continue our campaigning and we are planning, with the families, legal action over the war. So it's down to Whitehall this afternoon which will be strange after Newham.

The seat of government is so remote from ordinary people's lives that you could be in another world, not just a few miles and a half hour on the tube away. That's just one thing we want to change if we get elected.

I was in the lift of a tower block yesterday after visiting a potential voter so I asked the man in it if he'd heard of it. 'Oh yes I've already voted for you'. I'm getting a lot of people saying that.

We've had a very big holiday weekend. Labour are really rattled now and have had to take their campaign onto the streets. I knew this would happen and that they couldn't just sit tight as was their original aim. They are losing a lot of votes and we are gaining a lot. There are still a lot of unsures but we are gaining some of them.

Labour gave up soon after we set up our stall in Green Street so then we got on our campaign bus _ not the most luxurious of vehicles_ and went over to East Ham where Labour's Stephen Timms was there with his agent and some councillors who must be very worried people. We gave them a hard time and a big crowd gathered outside Primark while our bus was parked.

Our office is really buzzing all the time. Even at 8 last night there were still around 20 people and everyone was reporting a very good day. I went to a meeting of Somalis where they told us that the community had decided to back us. Some of the young women want to come and help in the campaign.

I think that whatever happens in this campaign we are doing something very important in uniting the different forces of the coalition. You would be amazed at the different people who go through the office every day and work very hard. Food now arrives in industrial quantities _ samosas from the cafe round the corner, pakora made by one of our supporters, M&Ms bought by my agent Abdurahman, chocolates, cakes and pastries brought by helpers from west London, big bags of popcorn. Delicious but not exactly a balanced diet.

The children are also great _ if they could vote we would win a landslide everywhere. I sent a card to the candidate standing in Stratford school mock elections for Respect. I bet he wins.

01 May 2005

Exit stage right 

Feeling a bit bruised this morning after falling off a stage while sitting in a chair. I pushed my chair back and there was nothing there so toppled over. Luckily it wasn't a high stage and I wasn't badly hurt.

I was waiting to adress a meeting of Muslim men who were watching a slide show on the massacres in Gujerat three years ago. The meeting was fascinating and I spoke about the war, Respect and how we can change things. I talked about how the East End was the cradle of the trade unions _with the strikes of the match girls, the dockers and the gasworkers in Beckton.

I said how many of the workers involved in the strikes were immigrants _mainly Irish or Jewish at the time _ and about how Keir Hardie was elected as MP for West Ham in 1894 and how that led to the founding of the Labour Party.

People like to hear this history, which they don't hear many other places, because they want to feel part of a wider community and because there is a remarkable similarity of interests between different ethnic minorities and the white population of Newham.

A lot of it comes down to how working class people are treated with houses, schools and hospitals. You can see that every day the different components of Respect are learning from each other and finding a unity of interests.

We are finding now that we are really on a roll. Canvassing in areas where we did less well last June, people come back and report a very good response. That is my feeling, especially with the white working class, where we are getting a good response to Respect.

Over 100 people out in Newham on Saturday, with stalls everywhere, loads of canvassing teams and speaker cars. Friday the mosques were very good and so were the primary schools.

Only 5 days to go now.

28 April 2005

Back to school 

It's not often that I post twice in one day but there are two reasons why I am: my weekend is already chockfull _my first meeting tomorrow is at 8.30 and my last at 9pm, and so it goes on all weekend, with no bank holiday for us _and I've had a very good day.

My highlight was a visit to the civics class of year 9 at Stratford School. Labour didn't turn up, nor the Liberals, so it was me, the Tory and the Green, just as it was at last night's hustings. We had questions asked by named school students to all three of us which were as usual with young people some of the most intelligent that I have been asked.

The first question was, what is the first thing you would do for us if you got elected. I said I would give Tony Blair a big headache and they all cheered. The teachers said they didn't want them to clap but they still did from time to time. I would say most were Respect. When we canvassed in Forest Gate later that day several households had school students who had been in the class and were supporting Respect.

At the end they brought up Respect broadsheets and asked me to sign them. They were lovely.

It is a problem for Labour that it has little support among young people.

Afterwards we went to a school in a part of West Ham which I would say is not our natural territory and which we have leafletted but not canvassed. Several people said they were voting for us, one had my poster on his car. No hostility and lots of maybes.

Everyone in our campaign feels that the evidence of legal advice has hit Blair and Labour hard. Our tube leafletters report many people calling him a liar. Our street canvassing has been great and our car cavalcade made a big stir. We've got six days to pin this on Blair and on Lyn Brown and Stephen Timms here in Newham.

By the way, the Green candidate told nme she was berated at a hustings by a woman who said why haven't you got a campaign. She protested that she had, and eventually it became clear that the questioner thought she was Labour!

Bliar Bliar 

All those people who said we shouldn't call Tony Blair 'Bliar' must be pretty shamefaced today. The leaked legal advice from the attorney general shows that he did not believe the war was legal.

Labour candidates around the country must really wish Blair would just disappear. He is a complete liability to his party, is slated in most of today's press _and his agenda has been totally pushed off course by this news. Everyone is now talking about the war. A young black woman who works in a care home but lives in west London, and who intends to vote Labour, feels they need to be taught a lesson. She is totally scornful of Blair's claim on television that he told the truth.

Where does this put the election campaign? It must be good for us and the other anti war parties _ and it must utterly demoralise Labour people, who felt they could put this behind them. We said from day one the war would be an issue. We said Blair was a liar. George Galloway was expelled from Labour for saying troops should not obey illegal orders.

How right he was. I see Rose Gentle has, like Respect, called for Blair's resignation. These courageous parents of soldiers who died in Iraq _she and Reg Keys are both standing in this election_have behaved with nothing but integrity and honesty throughout. It's a pity the same can't be said of our government.

The government has been greatly helped by the attitude of the other parties (the LibDems support the occupation and the Tories supported the war outright) and of the BBC. Craig Murray, who is standing against Jack Straw in Blackburn, spells out in the Guardian today how the BBC has ignored his campaign. In Respect we know how he feels. He seems to be doing alright though. I hope he does.

Here in West Ham we've had an interesting few days. I addressed a lovely meeting of Gujerati women who were very anti war, a meeting of Afghan men in a restaurant who all supported Respect. There have been two hustings. The Liberals have turned up to neither. Lyn Brown, my Labour opponent, didn't turn up to the second. She seems worried about going out without Stephen Timms, the former East Ham MP.

I really feel that Labour, having held this seat for so long, should at least send a representative to these meetings. It sums up this election. Labour is frightened to debate for fear of reminding people how unpopular they are. Tories and LibDems know they can't win and have other priorities. The other smaller parties don't have the people on the ground.

On the other hand we have loads of people out working for us all the time. We know that we are winning people over and that we have a lot of support. We have no 'no go areas' and we are aiming to do the whole constituency. We are planning an eve of poll rally in Forest Gate and we will be almost certainly the only party to hold a public meeting.

We're now in the last week of the campaign and it's getting very exciting. We're meeting new people all the time. Campaigning is very tiring but very rewarding because you talk to people about all sorts of things you would never talk to them about normally.

Tonight there is a Stop the War protest because Blair, Bush and Kennedy are on Question Time from Stratford. Bliar Bliar.

25 April 2005

Before the flood 

You know how you feel when it's Monday morning, you're back to work and the rain is bucketing down? Well imagine if you were going on an open top bus in the bucketing rain with low visibility and no heating.

That was my start to the week. The idea was brilliant but the execution didn't take into account the British weather_and these weren't just April showers. We were going to do a tour of historic east London and its radical tradition from the match girls' strike to Cable Street. We invited the press and got the east London candidates on the bus.

But we got no further than a photocall with London Tonight on top of the bus before we repaired to a cafe for a cup of coffee and a dry out.

We've had a marvellous weekend across east London and today we had a lot of people out. Went to a school in an area which isn't our best and found a very high recognition factor. People voting for us and more considering it.

I see that it has been decreed that the war is an issue in this campaign! Tories and Libdems are obviously finding it a huge issue on the doorsteps. We know now that the attorney general thought it should go back to the UN and Britain and the US couldn't just start a war.

Kennedy is trying to make it an issue but he is too timid to really take advantage of Blair's dilemma. Apparently he was asked would he have preferred Saddam in power and din't have an answer. My answer is, was overthrowing Saddam worth more than 100,000 Iraqi dead? Or let's put it another way, what about all the other Middle East dictators supported by the west? Such as the Saudi and Jordanian royal families or Egypt's Hosni Mubarak.

The switch to the Iraq war will help Respect. I'm looking forward to the next week.

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