So the MP wrote back and asked how I suggest political parties fund themselves and just what would interest the electorate. I answered with the following:
Hi Mr Loughton,
Might I suggest that perhaps the mainstream political parties could elect to live within their means, then, if they can no longer sustain current levels of spending? Much like individuals should choose to live within their means without recourse to taxpayer largesse. A pretty conservative idea, I might add.
The USA puts a £2300 cap on political donations and the Democrats and Republicans seem to be doing all right.
As for issues that matter to the voting public, I suspect that if the Conservatives adopted some of the following policies as planks in their platform they might actually find themselves endeared to people who feel disenfranchised from the current political system (rather than having to fight for and spend so much money on the 100 or so key marginals):
1. Europe - re-establish British sovereignty by pulling out of further political union, and reversing past moves toward political union. I think you could probably bring at least 60% of the potential electorate with you on that alone.
2. Home Office & legal system - root and branch reform of the Criminal Justice system along with CLEARLY re-establishing the private citizen's right to self-defence. Reform of the Police. Elected Police Commissioners would be a good start. How about elected judges?
3. Military - I will give credit to Dr. Fox, here; he has been a respectable Opposition when it comes to the Defence Ministry; however, re-establishing a proper Navy and building the rest of the forces back up should be a main priority of any party pretending to the throne. The way the amputees were treated in the Leatherhead Leisure Centre would not have happened in a country that truly valued its forces (of course, a country that truly valued its forces would never send its wounded to a public leisure centre for therapy, either). And the unprecedented success of the Help for Heroes charity should give an indication of how much people really do support our troops. A strengthened military capacity would bring back a sense of national pride in general. It is not fascistic to be patriotic, and people are dying for an excuse to be proud of their country again. [James's Note: Although I abhor most forms of Keynesianism, I see the political utility of Military Keynesianism.]
4. Welfare Reform - why is it that the only place I hear about Cameron's Wisconsin-based plan is in the Spectator?
5. Localism - Reintroduce true democratic accountability and responsibility as far down as you can. Decentralise as much of Whitehall as is possible. The current hospitals crisis and the state of the A27 here in Worthing are perfect examples of the centralising tendency being a spoils system for the political party that is in control. But one point to ponder: how can any party be for localism and still be for greater political unity with Europe? It is impossible to be in Europe the political entity and not of Europe.
6. Green stuff - abandon this. Almost everyone who is not part of the Chattering Classes gets the feeling that this is just another excuse to shake us down for more money. And if the BBC has to remind us of global warming in every story it does, chances are there probably isn't much to the story. Consider the source.
7. Education reform - As much as I like my daughter's local school, we've been primarily responsible for teaching her how to read and how to do her sums. We will probably be opting out of the state system by the time she is ready for high school because we just can't leave her education to chance, particularly as the education system is now being used as a substitute for the dole (how meaningful is a British university degree when 50% of people get to go?) In my professional life, I've certainly encountered graduates who couldn't write a coherent paragraph using Microsoft Word.
And when Jeremy Paxman or John Humphreys sneers something like "You can't seriously be suggesting that we [fill in the blank]," the leader unapologetically will say "Yes, I seriously mean it, and we've had enough of you socialist morons telling us what to think..." (Using more diplomatic words, of course... :-) )
Just about everywhere I go, if the conversation turns to politics, and unless the person I speak to is a Labourite/Socialist, there is a lot of anger or cynicism at how it appears that the political classes are lining their own pockets (and selling themselves pretty cheaply, at that) at our expense. Many people get the feeling this isn't the same country it was 10 years ago; that it has gotten worse.
Might I add, as well, that I think both yourself and Mr. Bottomley have been outstanding constituency MPs to our area, possessing an excellent sense of customer service. Compare and contrast with Labour and Liberal MPs that represent the London constituencies in which I lived before, and on that alone, the Conservatives would pretty much get my support. However, I have real problems with the national party, and the prospect of a Conservative government does not strike me as being anything significantly different from what we have endured over the past 10 years.
As a private citizen, I would have no problem donating money to a mainstream party that would take on even half of my shopping cart above. I suspect a few others who currently do not donate to parties would do the same. For the record, I kick a significant bit of money to both charities in the UK (Church and the British Legion) and political groups and campaigns in the US...I'm a dual citizen and take my role as an informed citizen of both countries seriously. I do not currently contribute to any British political parties because the fight over the middle ground is meaningless...The "middle ground" should be redefined based upon the way the electorate really thinks, which is farther right than either Labour or the current Conservatives, not what the BBC tells us we should be thinking.
Regards,
James G.
As a Conservative Councillor within Tim's constituency, I could not agree more with your sentiment.
As I wrote on BBC's HYS today, state funding of political parties is wrong and the amount of political funding currently in place is unacceptable too. If David Cameron succumbs to the Labour government's taunts about "not entering the debate" then he will bring on himself what he will.
Posted by: Cllr Gavin Ayling | 04 December 2007 at 23:23