Voice of experience

Jonathan Lord

Jonathan Lord

Last week, my post on Jonathan Lord’s selection was taken down by someone hacking into my WordPress account. Very petty. It also raised hackles that I appeared to “forget” that there was an election for us to fight if he was to become the next MP for Woking. No, I haven’t forgotten that, hence my many, many posts on the next election. The point about elections, for those who haven’t forgotten that they are happening but have perhaps forgotten how to win them, is to convince as many people as possible that a candidate is the person who will best represent their views and interests.

I am confident that in Jonathan, we have a candidate who is experienced in campaigning, who is an excellent performer on the doorstep and who talks with people easily and fluently about the issues that concern them. Hence, I believe he will be the next MP for Woking – if you can’t say that about the candidate you are campaigning for, why on earth would you be campaigning for them?

Today I went to a very enjoyable lunch event at the house of Cllrs Michael Smith and Anne Murray, which was well-attended and at which Jonathan spoke eloquently and spontaneously about the challenges we face as a party and a country. It reminded me again of the reason that he was selected – at the Open Primary he captured the imagination and support of the hall and was a clear winner on the night.

His CV is impressive – he has been a deputy leader of Westminster City Council, one of the country’s foremost local authorities and ran Anne Milton’s successful campaign to re-capture Guildford in 2005. All the evidence based on recent electoral history told us that the Liberal Democrats should have held onto Guildfordbut they didn’t because of Jonathan’s excellent campaign and those involved in it. In June, he was heavily involved in the Guildford county campaign where the Liberal Democrats were pushed out of two Guildford seats and a third, Worplesdon, was turned from a marginal into a safe seat.

He is a proven campaigner, a superb speaker and is excellent one-on-one with people. He is localI know that won’t stop his opponents trying to place Guildford as 40 miles away instead of four – and he will become more so as the campaign progresses. We know that the Liberal Democrats are targetting Woking, having given up in Guildford not in small part due to Jonathan’s efforts. I don’t blame thembut we will be ready with a candidate who they are going to have to work harder than in Guildford and South West Surrey combined if they are to beat.

Today, the Horsell and Woodham branch that saw Ben Carasco elected in Horsell pledged it was 100% behind Jonathan Lord in Woking and I am confident that with a smart strategy and dedicated teamwork we will be able to put Woking out of reach of the Liberal Democrats. But whatever the result, it should be one hell of a campaign and I for one am looking forward to it.

Candidates for Woking

The notification for the candidates selected for the Woking Open Primary was issued last night and picked up by ConservativeHome and will, one assumes, be in the local press later on this evening (for subscribers like me) or tomorrow.

I’m very happy with the four names that we have ended up with and particularly that we sidestepped a few potential landmines on the way! The Woking selection process has been pretty drawn out and has taken much, much longer than it should have done. It leaves us with just seven months to get our candidate known.

But whoever wins (and more of that in a moment), I’m convinced they will become known very soon. All four have  personal charm and the ability to connect with people and all four have the local connections that I insisted were so important. Not perhaps, the nooks-and-crannies knowledge that I envisaged – but none have been “parachuted in”.

My views on the candidates are not intended to sway opinion and I will not be lobbying on anyone’s behalf ahead of the open primary on September 30, although I considered doing so. I would encourage everyone with an interest to come along and take part - including political opponents. If you are looking for a weak candidate to try to get elected, you won’t find one in Woking.

Fiona Kemp, my preferred candidate - but they are all good!

Fiona Kemp, my preferred candidate - but they are all good!

I will be voting for Fiona Kemp because I think her experience, broad knowledge and personality are not only perfect for the constituency but are potent weapons with which to fight Rosie Sharpley. I think she will be someone who can connect easily to people on the doorstep and whose expertise on the NHS will prove valuable to the Conservative Party and the country if she is elected.

The same could be said of Dr Lynne Hack too, who has a great record with the county council and in Reigate and even garnered praise from Private Eye. Jonathan Lord, current chairman of Guildford Conservatives, has an enviable electoral record and is very highly thought of, while Stephen Phillips has an astounding intellect coupled with gracious humour that make him anything but a stuffy lawyer.

In short, I’m very proud that we as a constituency and a party have been able to attract candidates (and there were many, many, applications) of such calibre and it’s very encouraging to think that the complete shambles currently residing in Whitehall will be replaced in 2010 by people of real ability, fresh thought and committed duty. I know too, that none of them would forget Woking, nor the electorate that put them where they were.

Roll on 2010.

Six of the best

I know it’s a bit spurious of me to blog of the Woking PPC selection because I can’t mention details on here of who’s involved etc.

What I can say is that it was a pretty intensive experience that gave me an good insight into what people who want to be MPs have to go through and it must have been pretty nervewracking for them. A few were obviously very nervous and some showed it less although must have been inside.

At the end of the initial selection, we have going forward six excellent candidates, any of whom I think would make a superb MP for Woking and would be in a good position to keep Rosie Sharpley safely out of reach of that honour. She has a decent record as a councillor but is in no way suited to being Woking’s next MP.

During the county elections, we only won in the Woking constituency by 1,609 votes – 5,000 short of Humfrey Malins’s current parliamentary majority. That kind of figure simply won’t be good enough in 2010.We need a candidate who is not only electable, likeable and normal but one who has a proven connection with the area and who is a top-notch campaigner. With the exception of 2007, the Conservatives have largely underachieved in Woking during the past 15 years. That’s not the fault of individuals, it’s a collective issue. We need greater coherence, better messaging and sharper tactics to respond to a very real Lib Dem threat. We need a PPC who is prepared to come in and lead from the front to shape and operate a smarter campaign and who has the track record to show they can.

If they aren’t that person, or don’t inspire that campaign, what looked like a superb opportunity to occupy a safe seat in parliament could turn into a bitter disappointment and one of election night 2010′s “shock” results.

Six gets narrowed down to four this Saturday.

First thoughts

I’ve just moved this blog from Blogspot because everything’s just a bit more polished here. This weekend is the selection panel for the next Conservative PPC for Woking. Obviously I won’t be allowed to discuss details of this process but we are following the open primary model, with the executive panel meeting after the selection panel and an open primary on September 25 for all Woking voters.

It should be an interesting couple of days judging by the signs so far. I’ve already outlined my priorities for the candidates going forward, we’ll have to see how it goes.