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Wednesday, April 29, 2020

Swansea election campaign (1987)

Party News from the April 1987 issue of the Socialist Standard

This is the year Swansea Branch has felt strong enough to contest its first election. Since a number of the branch members are concentrated in one particular ward of the city — Uplands — we decided, at the end of 1986, to field a candidate in the May 1987 local elections. The branch elected Gareth Thomas as candidate and I was elected to act as his agent.

In early February, with the aid of the new Print facility at Head Office, we produced 5.000 copies of a preliminary leaflet and put this through every letter-box in the ward. The leaflet, which is reproduced below, outlined the Party's ideas in a way that we hoped would be clear to people hearing them for the first time. We wanted to give it some local interest as well so we mentioned the Singleton Hospital issue — the transfer of the local hospital's casualty service to a hospital many miles away and the protest and outrage this has provoked throughout the community. The leaflet related this to the lack of real everyday democracy in present-day society.

Leafleting was harder work and took longer than we thought. But in the end we covered the lot down to the last multiple occupation and all 10½ thousand voters in Uplands Ward would have had the chance to read what we're about.

We'd already approached the local paper and they'd shown an interest. Brian Walters, one of their reporters, interviewed Gareth and was very cooperative. He did a pretty fair write-up a couple of days later together with a photo of Gareth he'd insisted on taking. Gareth had made the point to him that we didn't go in for personalities; it was the ideas that counted and we only wanted people to vote for us if they understood and agreed with the socialist case. He seemed to get the message and did mention it in his report but he still included a fair amount about Gareth himself. Like any journalist, he was anxious for a bit of what's supposed to make newspapers sell — "human interest". He told Gareth to keep in touch with him and suggested to him that the Labour Party wouldn't be too pleased to have its "socialist" thunder stolen in the ward.

He turned out to be right. After we'd written round for debates to the other parties in the ward (Labour. Tory. Liberal. SDP, Plaid Cymru), we heard through a reliable inside source that our letter had been discussed at a meeting of the Uplands ward Labour Party and that an angry Militant member had suggested that they take up our challenge to debate and "expose" us. Our source, who knows our case well, replied that they couldn't expose the Socialist Party as we had nothing to hide. Apparently his counsel prevailed since we've heard nothing. But there were, so it seems, further mutterings about trying to get us for breaking election law by spending too much money on our campaign (that's a joke) or starting it too early. If they've taken the trouble to look into it. they'll have found out by now that we did our homework before we started.

So far. the only written reply we've had from our opponents has been a letter from the Conservatives (they usually win the seat) who were lukewarm about a debate but said we should ask them again nearer the time. But even if none of them take up the challenge. we're still going to hold our own election meetings in a local school and a community centre in the days leading up to the election.

We've had a certain amount of feedback from our first drop of leaflets, part good and part bad. A few phone and letter requests asking for information and literature, a woman enquiring what our attitude is to homosexual men living together as married couples and one of our leaflets sent back with unpleasant things written on it.

Our next task is to deliver to houses 5,000 free back copies of the Socialist Standard with a handbill stapled to the front of each. The handbill reminds people of the previous leaflet and invites them to read the magazine. In bold black letters it's headed TO READ OR NOT TO READ? THAT IS THE QUESTION and it ends with the slogan we've adopted for the whole of our election campaign "Vote For Yourself For a Change - For a Real Change". A group of members from Bristol Branch are coming over to help us give out the Standards since their bulk and weight will make it a bigger job than the leaflets. We're also hoping for help from other branches for the doorstep canvassing we'll be doing and for the final drop of literature — our election manifestos. We'll be putting out the manifestos in the last week to remind people — if they didn't know already — that a Socialist Party candidate is standing, that he's arguing for something quite different from the other candidates and that they should vote for themselves for a change — for a real change.
Howard Moss

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