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[Closed] 'doorstepped' by a politician...?

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Anyone ever been doorstepped by a politician? In all of my 38 years I have never once had a politician knock on my door. Yet all they ever harp on about is that when they 'knock on doors people are always telling me.....' blah blah blah....

I can't help thinking that they just use anecdotal evidence to back up ideas they know are bollox and the people couldn't give a toss about.


 
Posted : 13/09/2011 10:31 am
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Never happens, at least not in my 'hood. Perhaps this kind of thing goes on in Knightsbridge though.


 
Posted : 13/09/2011 10:33 am
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yep. My local MPcampaigned to the doors in 2010. She was always going to be a shoe-in since she took over Michael "1922" Spicer's seat (and he's been in parliament since the Whigs were in). But she listened, and Ive since met her at another event (business networking thingy at the Morgan Car Factory) and she remebered my wife and I. Affable enough and seems to have a good handle on what her constituents want out of her.


 
Posted : 13/09/2011 10:34 am
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a few months ago i would've said the same thing, but then i got 'doorstepped' by the local tory party. figured i'd waste the chaps time by pretending to be interested in the answers to the long drawn out questions i asked him.

as he left the lady tory over the road waved as if she knew me, so i flashed a nipple.


 
Posted : 13/09/2011 10:34 am
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The councillors come round quite a lot around election time, we had the MP round once although I didn't recognise him. Do you live in a rough part of town? 🙂


 
Posted : 13/09/2011 10:35 am
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In my old constituency the Labour party had a 'you could stick a dogs arse up for election, if it had a labour rosette on it" attitude. So complacency was the order of the day. The Tories wouldn't even bother contesting it, as it was a lost cause. So we never used to see anyone.

2 elections ago it went to the Lib Dems with an 18% swing! Now you can't move for the campaigners when it comes to elections. There's a whole rain-forests worth of party political letters/leaflets/flyers through the door every day. And there was always someone knocking on your door

So I moved 😀


 
Posted : 13/09/2011 10:45 am
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When I was a student we got doorstepped by Barry Sheerman MP. A house mate saw him and his entourage walking up the road so he decided to open the door naked apart from a cowboy hat.


 
Posted : 13/09/2011 10:47 am
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It very much depends upon your MP/Councillors and where you live.

We're a pretty safe Labour council ward, but still get visits before elections and pretty frequent 'Street Surgeries'. Met one of our ward councillors in Asda car park this morning while dropping the kids off at school and had a chat.

If you really want to see councillors, find out where they drink. There are two pubs in town where you can guarantee seeing them.

Our MP is very visible locally, and I know her reasonably well via Twitter. We also have a few mutual friends. It helps that she's local; we didn't see Alan Milburn anywhere near as much. if the changes to boundaries come in, I suspect we'll see even more of her, as we'll probably be more marginal.


 
Posted : 13/09/2011 10:48 am
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Oh, okay, I thought this thread was about politicians using the excuse that they 'listened to what the people of Britain are saying' to justify a political argument, not about election doorstepping. Hence comment ^^^^.

Yeah, they come around at election time too. Our MP's a shoe-in even in tough times for Labour. She will never lose. Ever. It's such a certainty that hardly anyone comes out to vote. Liverpool Riverside has one of the lowest turnouts in the UK.


 
Posted : 13/09/2011 10:49 am
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Yep, a few times by the Deputy Speaker

Lindsay Hoyle is our MP, comes round to say hello every now and again.


 
Posted : 13/09/2011 10:52 am
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Has anyone who lives in Salford ever seen the most hateful woman in parliament, and quite possibly the country - Hazel Blears?

I certainly never saw the slightest evidence of her ever having been there, all the time i lived there. I get the impression she'd rather be force-fed poo than encounter any of her constituents. Preferring one of her other many homes - all a safe distance away - she financed by defrauding the taxpayer.

You could tell from her condescending, patronising condemnation of the riots that she clearly didn't have an effing clue about what life was like in the area she apparently represents.

I ****ing despise that woman!


 
Posted : 13/09/2011 10:55 am
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Binners, yep I used to see her ridding the mean streets of Salford one crook at a time, or was that StreetHawk!?


 
Posted : 13/09/2011 10:58 am
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I live in a 'you could put a blue rosette on a dog's arse and it would get in' constituency now so I suppose our MP [s]needn't bother[/s] devotes his time to other issues important to his constituents. I have been to the pub with the wonderful and proper-ale drinking David Jamieson (labour, Devonport, some sort of transport under-secretary) but I was in a band with his son so that probably doesn't count.

I wonder how much doorstepping you get to do if you are further from London? I be MP's round our way spend half their lives on the train.


 
Posted : 13/09/2011 11:00 am
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@binners

I'll see your Hazel Blears and raise you a Louise Ellman.


 
Posted : 13/09/2011 11:08 am
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Loddrick, do you always vote? If not, there's not much point in talking to you, is there?

The political parties are given official lists showing who's voted, by post or at the polling station - but obviously not [b]how[/b] they voted. However, they also maintain records of your voting preference, based on what residents tell them.

So if you're identified as a non-voter, or support "the other side", they'd be wasting their time knocking on your door.


 
Posted : 13/09/2011 11:14 am
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A non-voter is a good person to visit, surely, because they don't have an existing partisan alignment and they might be so floating as to be swung by a doorstepping?

As an aside, the current Washington DC Mayor Adrian Fenty was elected after his campaign involved his campaign knocking on every residential door in Washington DC. My mate wasn't at home when he came by...so Fenty came by a second time and caught him.

!!!


 
Posted : 13/09/2011 11:17 am
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discussion sort of about this on Radio 4 right now.


 
Posted : 13/09/2011 11:18 am
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To give him his due, I believe David Cameron regularly knocks on the door of his constituents, and takes a great deal of time to address the individual issues they raise. James Murdoch, Rebecca Brooks, Andy Coulson, Elizebeth Murdoch....


 
Posted : 13/09/2011 11:20 am
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I was doorstepped by our labour candidate before the General Election. She denied that there are grammar schools in the area and told us to send our kids (in 10 years!) to the local Academy for 'a brilliant education'.

The next day there was a gang knife fight outside the Academy gates and, that summer, the (closer!) local grammar schools both got in the national top 10 independent schools.

She didn't get my vote and she didn't win.


 
Posted : 13/09/2011 12:00 pm
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...Clarkson...


 
Posted : 13/09/2011 12:01 pm
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I always vote and have never seen a councillor, MP or other canvasser in my locale. Would be very interested in discussing a few things with them too.


 
Posted : 13/09/2011 12:22 pm
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So if you're identified as a non-voter, or support "the other side", they'd be wasting their time knocking on your door.

If you're identified as a supporter of theirs, they'd be wasting their time knocking on your door.

Everyone else is a much better investment of time.


 
Posted : 13/09/2011 1:00 pm
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I asked one of them about this. They don't bother with safe seats.


 
Posted : 13/09/2011 1:02 pm
 Esme
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In an ideal world, with lots of party members to help with canvassing, then yes, you are right, Konabunny, it's a good idea to talk to non-voters. But in the real world, there just aren't enough resources to do this.

And Miketually, the big problem is getting your "supporters" to actually vote, so strangely enough, that's not a waste of time.

I wonder what sort of political system we'll have in the UK, when democracy finally dies through lack of interest? 🙄


 
Posted : 13/09/2011 1:39 pm
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Liberal democracy is based on a market model of politics. If none of the choices are attractive enough for a rational consumer to bother making a choice, that says something about the quality of the offering.


 
Posted : 13/09/2011 1:54 pm
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I think we have finally reached a point where you seriously have to ask what the Labour party is actually for? Why does it even exist? Its just a pointless anachronism. The Lib Dems are now just the beardy wing of the Tory Party. And the Tories... well, they're just what they've always been. ****s!!!

The country is run by a PR man. Tells you everything you need to know really

I think we've reached the next step, where we admit that ideology is dead, disband the whole of the political system and just hand over the running of the country to Tesco. At least they'd sort the logistics out


 
Posted : 13/09/2011 2:00 pm
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Our local (Tory) councillor is in charge of the local planning committee and decided to refuse our much needed extension on the grounds that it was out of character for our cul-de-sac - a street where no two houses look the same and are notable for the varying sizes and styles of extension on every property except ours.

She then turned up three weeks later and kept gibbering "caravan... caravan... caravan..." in response to every question we put to her about our housing situation - namely we need to find room for my partner's children and her mother in our modest home. The councillor was somewhat surprised when we all told her were she could put her vote too.

As for my local MP, he's a Tory in a very safe Tory seat and as such he's quite useless. There's no harder working MP than one in a marginal seat.


 
Posted : 13/09/2011 2:40 pm
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Yep, got doorstepped by a Lib Dem a few years ago

Asked her what her position was on hunting and vivisection - T'was fun watching her descend into a flat spin trying to develop an answer that would appease either side, realise she couldn't, and give a fairly anti answer

She picked wrong - and got an edumacation on both 😆


 
Posted : 13/09/2011 2:41 pm
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think we have finally reached a point where you seriously have to ask what the Labour party is actually for? Why does it even exist? Its just a pointless anachronism.

As much as it pains me, I have to agree. The Labour Party used to stand for something and has many proud achievements in the past. Now all the barstewards want to do is Tory impersonations and wars.


 
Posted : 13/09/2011 2:45 pm
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ideology is dead, disband the whole of the political system

It might not be a bad thing if the market-oriented right wing of the Labour Party and the Eurowet left of the Tories both pissed off and joined the Lib Dems.


 
Posted : 13/09/2011 2:51 pm
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zulu, couldn't you have asked her about something a bit more important?


 
Posted : 14/09/2011 11:30 am
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My MP just recommended the Bill Hicks book Love All The People. And she rides a bike and likes The Levellers.

🙂


 
Posted : 14/09/2011 8:53 pm