Author Archives: Natalie Bennett

Shattered of Kentish Town

Well I spent about five hours canvassing today, and three hours running a stall on Kentish Town High street, battered by a squally wind, and I think I could fairly say I’m shattered.

I’m feeling pretty happy with how the by-election campaign has gone – there are always things you would have done differently in retrospect, and there’s always the feeling that if you knock on one more door it might make all the difference, but overall I think the Camden Green Party did a good team job. And personally I finished the night by converting two Lib Dem voters, which made a nice final flourish.

Now it is up to the voters, whose verdict will be delivered about 24 hours. The fallout from tonight’s final bit of excitement – the arrival of a Tory leaflet that is flat-out wrong – it claims that Sian isn’t a school governor when she is, and that was clearly stated on several of our leaflets – could take longer. They have been contacted – and the media knows about it, so that one could run and run.

And it will be interesting to see how many voters turn out, after a pretty intensive campaign by four parties. (Even the Tories did a lot of phone canvassing and leafletting even though they haven’t got a hope.)

I’ve got a small bet riding on the turnout: I reckon it will be more than 40%, even though that is generally considered impossible in a by-election. (The general election in May in Kt was about 42%.)

One certain outcome is that a lot more “no junk mail” stickers have gone up on Kentish Town letterboxes, so you might call that a bonus.

An ethical Christmas

The Telegraph today has a good round-up of suggestions for ethical Christmas presents. Mostly on the web – UK, but the goats for Africa etc are all there for purchase from anywhere.

‘Losing £1,000 a month’

I haven’t dug up the post, but I’m sure in the past I said that what we’ve got to do against “Chelsea tractors” is ensure that the bottom falls out of the second-hand market and then people will stop buying them.

And it is happening – prices and plummeting and sales are following:

Glass’s Guide, the leading guide to second-hand car prices, said that 4x4s were depreciating much faster this year than in previous years. A one-year-old BMW X5 is now worth only £38,800, compared with a purchase price of £63,397. A year ago a one-year-old X5, which cost £62,542 new, was worth £40,450.
Ian Archer, owner of Harringtons of Fulham, West London, said the high cost of fuel was also a factor.“It is always a difficult thing to tell an owner that their car is losing £1,000 a month.

And that Sian Berry, our Green Party candidate in tomorrow’s Kentish Town by-election, is quoted in The Times front page story is only icing on the cake…

POSTSCRIPT: Sian also appeared on Channel Four News and on Radio Two on the same subject today.

Women of history still at risk

The good news is this particular woman, Mary Hamilton, courtier and one-time amour of the Prince Regent, is, hopefully, going to be saved for British history,. The bad news is that her papers could ever have got close to escaping the country.

The ‘sub-governess’ was an accomplished diarist and letter-writer and attempts are now being made to keep her extraordinary, largely unpublished letters and journals in this country.
A month ago David Lammy, the Arts Minister, put a temporary block on private plans to sell the archive abroad and last week the John Rylands university library in Manchester expressed an interest in buying the documents from the owners at the recommended price of £123,500 so that historians could have access to the fascinating picture she painted of court life in the late 1700s and early 1800s. The government decision on the export licence application for the archive will be deferred until 12 January, but this could be extended until early April in the light of a serious attempt to raise the money needed to buy it.

The Congo nightmare

Over on Comment is Free I’ve a piece on the horrific, beyond-nightmare, indeed beyond any adjective, violence being inflicted on tens of thousands of women in the Congo.

I argue there that empowering women – so cowardly attackers think twice – is the only solution.

Who needs a beauty salon?

Walking the streets of Kentish Town tonight – yet more canvassing, or at least visiting Green voters we haven’t yet seen this time around – I was enjoying the pleasure – and it actually was quite pleasant, of wind-driven but very small rain droplets. Micro-abrasion for the complexion anyone?

But visiting Greens is a pleasant job – they’re a nice, characterful bunch, almost without exception.