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By-election 2007

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Surprised by Blair's departure

  • Posted by Chris Haine
  • 17 July 2007

Tony Blair, even in retirement, conspired to screw up my summer, writes the Green candidate in Sedgefield

After Tony Blair’s prolonged departure as PM, the suddenness of his quitting as MP took many people by surprise. Not least the Green Party.

We should have known better of course and had a contingency plan tucked away somewhere. As it is, our campaign to contest the election - the first time we have stood in Sedgefield - sprang into life on the evening of Blair’s final goodbye to the Trimdon Labour Club.

The sentiment of many of Sedgefield’s voters sums up the mood of the North East: Tony Blair used Sedgefield for his own ends and his hasty retirement proves that he had no more commitment to the good folk of Sedgefield than he had to the traditional values of the Labour Party.

Knackered by the end of the first full week of campaigning, my main thought was how Tony Blair, even in retirement, had conspired to screw up my summer.

As happens in most parliamentary by-elections, a lot of voters were tired of the constant knocking at their doors by the 11 candidates and their supporters by the end of the second week.

Add in the deluge of leaflets - including one from the Green Party - and despair often turns to anger. For someone who believes in the high ideals of democracy this is a frustrating mood to encounter on the doorsteps, but I can understand it.

One result is a peculiarly high level of unanswered doors. Either everyone is out working, or they are spending their money in the shops and fuelling the consumption boom. There is a third possibility that is revealed if you step back from an unanswered front door, stand really still for a couple of minutes, and watch for a rustle of the blinds as weary electors check that we have moved on.

Another frustration has been the lack of any hot issues. The grey parties have got themselves in a tizz over the state of Newton Aycliff’s dilapidated shopping centre and all promise to revitalise it. But there is little real concern about the state of the roads, the schools or the hospitals.

For a largely rural constituency that was once decimated by the closure of the coal mines, there is considerable wealth in Sedgefield. I am constantly amazed by the number of 4x4s parked on the driveways of very smartly dressed former council houses.

We have been working hard to take the Green message - a clarion call to tackle climate change and build a more sustainable society - to voters. How successful we have been, from a standing start, will become clear in the early hours of Friday 20th.

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3 comments from readers

PeterCranie
17 July 2007 at 16:46

Keep up the good work Chris. I know you and Derek Wall will be door knocking for the rest of the week. Our first result in Sedgefield will definitely have a (+something) attached, so thanks for standing.

meggythehorse
18 July 2007 at 15:35

However small your team was Chris ( and we improved on that yesterday didn't we?) it was a pleasure to work with you. It was even more of a pleasure as that was combined with meeting the excellent voters in the Sedgefield Constituency, particularly those in the Golden Lion, Sedgefield! Continuously on the doorstep and in the shabby offering of the Newton Aycliffe Shopping Centre/ Market Place, I was told that no way would the people vote for Labour! They told me that in all the ten years that Tony Blair' was their MP, no one in the Labour Party came to talk to them in their homes. Now they do: funny that! Elizabeth Barclay Harrogate and District Green Party ( helping Chris in this election)

soundjat keita
20 December 2007 at 16:45

Result: the elitist "Green" Party got just 1 % of vote.

Despite all the talk of global warming.

What a waste of resources.

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About the writer

Chris Haine

Chris Haine, 37, is a Humanist Officiant. He is a prominent member of the Green Party in the North East where he has been working for the past few years to raise the profile of the Greens across the region.

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