Home >> News >> 2010 >> May >> CNJ EXCLUSIVE - ELECTION 2010 - Behind the scenes of the Lib Dem plot that failed to oust Glenda Jackson from Hampstead and Kilburn seat
CNJ EXCLUSIVE - ELECTION 2010 - Behind the scenes of the Lib Dem plot that failed to oust Glenda Jackson from Hampstead and Kilburn seat
Richard Osley was given exclusive access to the biggest ever Lib Dem operation to capture Hampstead, with its endless mail shots and battle rooms. But where did it all go wrong?
Published: 20 May 2010
EXCLUSIVE
THIS is the story of the fall of Glenda Jackson, her final days representing Hampstead at the House of Commons.
It tells how the Oscar-winning actress was thrown off course by a choppy Conservative attack and drowned by a Liberal Democrat tidal surge so steep that no Labour MP would have survived, let alone one accused of that greatest sin: not living in the constituency.
In her place, the story would have it, Ed Fordham, a man with a photographic memory of every street in NW3 and NW6, walked through the Commons front door this week, ushering a new era for Camden’s parliamentary politics.
Except, except. It didn’t happen. For all the Liberal Democrat confidence and the goodwill towards the party on the doorstep in the final days before the general election, the story didn’t pan out as they had dreamed it would.
Instead, Chris Philp held firm for the Tories in the redrawn constituency of Hampstead and Kilburn and Glenda held even firmer, defiantly clinging onto her place in Parliament as if it was her handbag in a street mugging.
In the most unpredictable general election in memory, the bookies and the pundits got it woefully wrong and Glenda could afford a few told-you-so smiles when she was declared winner – by 42 votes – a few hours after birdsong the morning after voting. She still has an office at the House of Commons,
Fordham, meanwhile, is picking through the bones of defeat, trying to establish where a meticulous game plan went awry.
On May 6, just past five in the afternoon, I was photographing Philp, the Conservative candidate, and his wife Lizzie voting Dave-and-Sam style at Heath Library. “Who do you think will win this?” Chris asked. I looked at my scuffed shoes: “Sorry Chris, I think it’s between you and Fordham now but I think he might win it.”
Chris: “I don’t – and watch out, the Labour vote is holding up much stronger than anybody expected.”
Here we were chatting in a sun-dappled, affluent part of the constituency, a road wilting under a poster war between Lib Dem stakeboard and water-blue Tory posters. It seemed for all the world as if everybody was queuing up to vote against Glenda. It’s clear now that, once with pencil in hand, they were acting very differently.
For the final five weeks of the general election campaign – a contest which this neck of north London is unlikely to see so fiercely contested by so many again – I was given exclusive, behind-the-scenes access to the Lib Dem offices where hundreds of volunteers launched their biggest-ever assault on the seat.
There they were seemingly stuffing envelopes at all hours, accepting orders from Fordham or his campaign manager Janet Grauberg. I hovered like an overweight fly on the wall in their offices in Kilburn for several afternoons, saw inside secret battle rooms and met the canvassers who were trying to propel Fordham first past the post.
From this vantage point, it is hard to see what else they could have done. The kitchen sink was ripped from the pipework, loaded with yellow leaflets and thrown at the electorate, and yet Hampstead still chose somebody else.
This was where Nick Clegg launched his battle bus, Vince Cable visited, heck, even Miriam Gonzalez Durantez, Clegg’s Spanish wife who had ruled out interviews, came to Fortune Green and allowed the New Journal’s Dan Carrier to ask her questions.
Chris was 42 votes short, but Fordham was only 841 behind. Whatever the recriminations about what happened next and the coalitions that were formed, there won’t be a campaign that invested so much shoe leather only to end up with a third place.
Drakes Courtyard was the main base, rented offices that became a leaflet factory.
An education, the orchestration of deliveries I saw was conducted like a symphony. Canvassers stop at your door and if you indicate you will vote for any other candidate, the deliveries are tailored accordingly.
So, say “I’m thinking about sticking with Glenda” and the leaflets through your door will be bright yellow, Lib Demmy but concentrate on Gordon Brown’s weakness.
“I’m probably going for the Conservatives” leads to a daily diet about the Tory threat. It’s not as blindly blunderbuss as you might think.
In Drakes Courtyard, Fordham slipped from room to room, doling quick orders, issuing tactics, his phone never stopping.
The first time I went inside, he was rapping off the list of African nations he wanted to target around the Kilburn High Road, hoping to draw people to the ballot box for the first time.
I asked whether they would even be registered. “They will be,” he said – and off went a couple of helpers with another mailshot.
Fordham said confidently that he knew “for a fact” he had covered parts of the constituency his opponents didn’t even know existed.
Like an Olympic sprinter training towards a far off 100metres final, Fordham had been gearing towards the events of May 6 2010, for five years. He appeared to have memorised every street and with it every neighbourhood concern. He irritated the established political clique in Camden when he seemed to arrive from nowhere (nowhere = Stoke via Watford).
Too cocksure, they reckoned, but he threatened to outflank them all by going hyperlocal. He could tell you minute details about every street. He tweeted how much he loved Kilburn, and matched Philp in a billboard war, national weapons in a local conflict.
“We were thinking back to when the thrust of me having a lead role in the Lib Dem group in Camden was and I remember it clearly: we were canvassing in Ravenshaw Street and we got the call that Jonathan Simpson [a councillor] had defected to Labour,” he said.
He told me that in the shock of the defection and the tears over a fish-and-chip dinner, the group fought despair.
Later, Lib Dems drew up a battle plan to win the local elections of 2006, galvanised by what they felt was the heftiest pokes in the eye. And they did win, short of a majority but the largest group on the council.
If Jonathan Simpson, who will become Mayor of Camden next week, had lost his seat in King’s Cross in the most recent council elections, as many Lib Dems figured he might, you would have been able to hear the yellow cheer from miles from here. It’s a scene from an alternative history of events.
The day after Nick Clegg’s first TV debate appearance and the birth of so-called Cleggmania, I met Fordham at the Coffee Cup in Hampstead, where he brimmed with excitement. Clegg, a close friend (Fordham was at Nick and Miriam’s wedding), had an unprecedented new profile. We walked to another “base” – Hampstead councillor Linda Chung’s offices – where a YouTube video celebrating this new exposure was made. In hindsight, you wondered if hopes were unfairly raised for Lib Dem supporters that morning.
That said, more than one Lib Dem told me how they felt they had been on course to win in H&K before the excitement over Clegg. “People will just say it’s because of that,” said one. “And we could have won anyway.”
The people in the offices I met were of all ages, the retired teamed with gap-year students. Only one collected an income from it. Some appeared to simply walk off the street and offer to help. A filmmaker came in one afternoon I was there, suggested an idea for a viral video and a couple of days later it was online.
One of the big secrets in Fordham’s campaign was a hidden vault. At the Rosslyn Hill Chapel, where hustings events were often held – events where Chris Philp would often stand up to say he got married in Hampstead and loved the place – a leaflet printing industry was chugging away in the crypt below.
So when Chris took to his feet, little did he know that below him photocopiers were splurting out yellow messages. The machines in there were named after vanquished by-election candidates: one was called Lucy, after former Labour Kentish Town councillor Lucy Anderson.
Other days, I saw Fordham and Co doorknocking on the Rowley Way Estate, and canvassing in West End Lane, the confidence never dulled. Car horns beeped him like a local celebrity. If Labour members had heard a man on a street stall speaking about the overall Lib Dem majority in the Commons that would soon be upon us, their conviction that the Lib Dems had begun to “believe their own spin” would have been reaffirmed.
Certainly, some people who actively said they would vote for Fordham were lying (out of politeness?) or chickened out in the crush of the national election shootout.
By the time Vince Cable arrived the day before the election, even the Daily Mail was calling for a tactical vote for the Lib Dems – just so Glenda would lose her seat.
Comments
No secret
Submitted by Anonymous on Sat, 2010-05-29 16:33.The article says that one of the ‘big secrets’ of the Liberal Democrat general election campaign was a ‘hidden vault’ (i.e. actually the old furnace room in the basement of the Rosslyn Hill Unitarian Chapel) where Lib Dem election leaflets were being printed. The fact is that a variety of local charitable, educational, cultural, artistic and other organisations rent space in the chapel for use during the week. Among these has been the Conrad Print Society whose clients have included the Liberal Democrats (the Society has rented the basement room for storage and occasional work).
The article notes that hustings also take place at the chapel and as co-chair of the lectures committee responsible for organising the political question time events, as well as a member of the chapel’s Management Committee, I would like to make it clear that the chapel does not support or favour any political party. As Unitarians we seek not to be bound by dogma and to provide a space that is open for people to explore and express different views and beliefs.
James Chiriyankandath
Real
Submitted by Anonymous on Wed, 2010-05-26 06:59.Glenda SHOULD be outsted from the Ward. In 16 years, she has never once raised issues relating to Kilburn and Cricklewood in the House of Commons. Anyone who has ever attended her sessions at the Kilburn CAB can bear witness to her rude, dismissive, offensive, and unhelpful demeanour. She is also WAY past the age of retirement. Forget smear campaigns, anyone who wishes to criticise her should stick to facts - attending local fairs in Southend Green, Hampstead, does not constitute representing the people who voted for her. She is nothing but a narcissistic fame seeker who has contributed nothing to the area - only Jo Shaw, Lib Dem, protested against the closure of the Whittington. Glenda was nowhere to be seen, as per usual, and yet she'll turn up to the opening of an envelope if it boosts her false public persona. Fair play she wasn't part of any expenses scandal but this is a woman who publically states she no longer supports Nu-Labour policies - so why is she working for a party she no longer believes in. She also announced the reform to private rented Tenancy Agreements (the abolishion of Assured Tenancies) at the beginning of Labour's reign which dramatically undermined the ability for anyone to feel secure living in a rented home. People need to remember it was LABOUR Central Government directive and LABOUR Local Government policy to sell of council housing and stop providing Social Housing and Housing Association street properties and homes in favour of putting up low cost, high density huge blocks which are nothing but a reflection of the 60s and 70s built conctrete jungles - lowering the quality of life for families and of poor quality materials. They may look 'modern' now but let's see how they look in 20 years time? Now they try to blame this on the Lib Dem split in our borough in the last local elections. Utter rubbish, those policies were well underway before the Lib Dems became involved. If she had any integrity, she would have come out and opposed the Nu-Labour policies and quit the party she no longer believes in. She's never done anything good in her time as an MP and she doesn't deserve her seat.
Lucy
Submitted by Anonymous on Sun, 2010-05-23 18:14.Lucy Anderson didn't lose her seat in a by-election, she resigned causing one
Election 2010
Submitted by Anonymous on Thu, 2010-05-20 19:04.So, Mr. Osley, what's your take on why the LibDems didn't take the seat?
Dirty campaign
Submitted by Anonymous on Thu, 2010-05-20 18:27.I found it a huge relief that the Lib Dems came third here. It showed that the electorate didn't like their dirty campaign.
The above article only hints at the cynical targeting and spinning that they engaged in. For example, Fordham admitted keeping a separate list of Jewish voters, and targeting them with flyers showing him on holiday in Israel, implying (but never specifying) support for that country, despite the party and its leader having very anti-Israel policies. Of course their leaflets in other parts of London told a different story on the same issue, if they felt it'd help them get elected (see http://is.gd/c7wKc).
Among the reasons the Liberals moved Sarah Teather to the other constituency when the new boundaries were created must have been the small but significant Jewish population here in Hampstead and Kilburn. Teather had made no secret of her animosity towards Israel, even yelling about it in Trafalgar Square.
This might explain Ed Fordham's particular efforts to woo the Jews in Hampstead and Kilburn. He even implied support from members of the Israeli government in his leaflets, and mis-captioned them to imply a greater connection to London Jewry.
Dirty campaign? Absolutely. Lucky Hampstead and Kilburn put them third. So much for 474 votes to win!
Chris Philp, however, ran an honest and straightforward campaign, rather than trying to be all things for all people. For that he was rewarded with a good share of the vote. Sadly not enough to beat Glenda, but pretty close.
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