How polling day went

Polling day begins at 4am meeting in M & S car park to doll out our ‘Good Morning’ leaflets to bleary-eyed volunteers. I am amazed by the turnout. We have never tried to do a Good Morning leaflet constituency-wide before and we worked out to deliver it all in three hours we would need at least 150 people. We didn’t quite make it – but jolly nearly.

After I finish my own delivery I take a car boot full of Crouch End leaflets to HQ for Monica to give to anyone who comes free. As I depart Hornsey a bloke in the street says ‘Oy Lynne! I’m voting for you – gonna give you lot a chance. Fed up with the other two’.

And so the day went, knocking on doors and lots of cheery greetings – fantastic atmosphere. Funniest thing was that I met quite a few residents who said they had voted Labour but that they wanted me to win! Clearly tapped into the schizophrenia that has grabbed Labour (and the Guardian) between wanting to send Blair a message and having been got at by the Labour spin of vote Lib Dem let a Tory in. No chance in my view – but can well understand the nightmare vision of Michael Howard as PM.

Lots and lots of ‘good lucks’, ‘I’m voting for you’ and waves, hoots and shouted greetings as I go out and about knocking up. Don’t know how much you can read into such things – but atmosphere all very, very positive.

An Observer journalist comes to interview me whilst I am banging on doors in Cranley Gardens. I take a welcome break to talk to him. Nice guy – looks at me sceptically when I say I think we can win but that it is very close. I explain the background results over the last seven years that have made this even possible – and he says he will text me later when the result comes through.

More knocking and delivering around the constituency. Endless rounds of endless doors and endless leaflets. Day is uneventful. We hear that Labour are out in force in Woodside ward. My last knock up of the day is in Muswell Hill where it seems everyone virtually is voting Lib Dem – whether lifelong Lib Dems, Labour or Tory – all voting for us! Amazing.

As the polls close – everyone except me and my sister go off to Ally Pally to the count. I go home and watch the coverage on TV!

About 11.30pm my agent, Neil Williams, phones to say we’ve done it with a majority of between 2-3000. How sure? Pretty sure – although Labour apparently think they have squeaked it. Knowing my campaign manager who inputs the count tallies as each ballot box is open and verified – I know that the figures will be spot on.

As I go back into the lounge Dimbleby is just saying that it looks like Hornsey & Wood Green has gone.

I get the call to go to the count about 1.30am and off we go. A reception of Lib Dems, cameras and journalists – cheers and happiness all-round. In the count room it is silent and waiting for the official figures.

Eventually the Chief Exec calls agents and candidates to the table and gives us the result – and it’s official.

We go through for the announcements – and the speeches. And then – Lib Dems back to my house for a bit of a celebration. Although the hallway is packed out with people celebrating when ITV comes to film, it’s only a tiny proportion of those who have helped elect me – our 300+ strong team of volunteer deliverers who do their own street, the 700-odd people who have donated in the last year, my 15 colleagues in the Lib Dem council group, the list goes on … not to mention the most important group – the many thousands of people who voted for me.

I gave a little speech – and finally thanked my campaign manager Mark (a genius) and my agent Neil (equally brilliant). They are extraordinary – both of them – and together with a team of activists and helpers that most candidates can only dream of – we did it!

I had had it by 5am and went to bed leaving about 20 or 30 happy but wrecked Lib Dems downstairs. It was a fantastic result.

The final stretch

I’ve now lost 10lbs (Bridget J would be jealous). Forget dieting – get into politics!

Sorry about lack of blog last couple of days – for obvious reasons. But I am feeling reflective as I write this in the early morning hours. I suppose the thing that has struck me most on our campaign here in Hornsey & Wood Green is how angry my opponents are as power comes under threat.

It’s not a pretty sight – and perhaps because I came very late to politics – the depths to which people will sink still shocks me.

But I’m not naive – I just think you see mirrored in Hornsey & Wood Green the same negative campaigning by Labour and Tory as you see in the national campaign. It seems to be having the same effect here – our ratings going up!

Canvassed in Noel Park and Highgate today – both good. Several Tories in Highgate commented on a particular nasty letter sent out by the Tory candidate – to say that they were now voting for me. Lots of people switching from Labour and Tory to Lib Dems – so everything to play for.

The team is being absolutely fantastic – funny, good humoured and exhausting every ounce of energy. The good atmosphere (possibly partly produced by having HQ above the Three Compasses pub) makes the grind much easier to bear – but we are all flat out.

Maybe the Conservatives don't want to win?

Help, help! Canvass, canvass! That was my day yesterday. In the afternoon it became clear that the latest boxes of envelopes and the boxes of letters in our HQ were unlikely to get together without extra help. So – I sat on the phone doing what candidates do: telephoning people and asking them to come down to HQ to get them stuffed! This was really the first time I had called for extra help to get a task done – and people just said yes. It was amazing really – and people are incredibly kind.

Canvassing in Crouch End in the evening. One road was virtually solid Lib Dem and the others pretty good. The reason people gave on the door step for voting for me was overwhelmingly the hard work fighting for the local area. Iraq was occasionally raised – but not nearly as much as in other areas I have canvassed and Hornsey Town Hall came up a couple of times. I asked one woman who raised the issue if she had come to the ‘hustings’ on the Town Hall the night before. She said she hadn’t because she could not bear the group organising it. There seems to be a real split in the community over the ‘who’ – not the ‘what’ – of the Town Hall.

John Stevens, an ex Tory MEP who came over to the Lib Dems some years back, had come over to help for the evening. Two passers by stopped to talk to us – both Tories, both voting Lib Dem. They said that the Tories didn’t want to win this election because there was such financial trouble going to hit in a couple of years time – that Tories wanted Labour to be in government for that downturn – and then they could march in to save the day at the ensuing election. We all have our theories…!

Hornsey Town Hall

Early morning station leafleting at Harringay Station. Get opportunity to see how the clear up I got done is holding up. Things are better – but still not good enough. I wish we could persuade Haringey Council to relay the little bit of road coming down to the station entrance and improve the paving – so that the little shops would feel better and smarten themselves up – and then people would feel great as they came for their morning train. A benign circle!

Lots of people saying they are voting for us. Lots of waves. Lots of smiles. Lots of leaflets taken. Hope it augers well!

Then paperwork and stuffing are the order of the day, followed by Crouch End for People hustings in the evening. Fantastic turn out – CEfP are very professional at marketing and always good at organising big meetings.

Hornsey Town Hall and its future is the key local issue in the Crouch End area and people care passionately about its future. But there are two ‘groups’ with very similar visions – but disagreements over who should be in charge of the process taking it from council ownership to independent trust.

The vision is for a cultural/educational and community use and a beautifully restored building – possibly an anchor tenant such as the National Youth Theatre, and a cinema, community facilities and so on.

On the one hand there is a Trust set up by Crouch End for People and on the other a Community Partnership Board who are made up of representatives of the community (including a couple of people who have been involved with Crouch End for People, but no formal CEfP rep).

I just want them to work together and put their weapons down. If all the skills and talents and commitment on both sides were put into delivering the Town Hall future that people want – and less on having a go at each other – the better the community would be served!

Fun and games with the TUC

Getting a new school for Crouch End is a big issue in the area. The background – the TUC are closing their Crouch End site and it’s now due to become a local school instead.

Good news in the end – but at first the TUC were looking into selling off the site to developers instead. Now – at the time, I campaigned with my colleagues and residents to pressure them to look at the school option rather than just sell the site to the highest bidder. We also had numerous meetings with council staff to push this issue along from their end too.

I’ve pointed this out, and it seems to have got under Labour’s skin!

First I knew of this was when the press get in touch saying the TUC’s general secretary (Brendan Barber) is claiming I’d never lobbied him. That’s easy to put to rest – out from the files comes my letter to him and the reply back from the Assistant General Secretary.

Then the story changes. Now the press say the TUC are saying, yes I may have been in touch – but they’d already made up their mind by then to go for a school. So – out come the files again, and this time it’s the official email from the TUC at the time saying they hadn’t made up their minds which gets dusted off.

Bit careless of the TUC all this forgetting what they did and said at the time. I await the next claim from the TUC with interest!

Mobile phone mast protest

In the evening – go to a mobile phone mast protest meeting. Barbara Roche (incumbent Labour MP) and I have both been invited to speak – and the residents are out in number. Yet another mast application – this time in Palace Gates Road – and, yet again, residents feel they are not having a fair change to have their say.

The answer is to change the law – it was under the last Conservative government that mobile phone companies were given the ability to put up many of their masts with only minimal control.

Although Labour MPs (like our one here!) like popping up and backing protests against particular masts – Labour still haven’t changed the law to ensure all applications have to go through a proper application procedure. I believe local authorities should have the power to block mobile phone masts on the grounds of the “precautionary principle”, where that’s appropriate.

That’s the only real solution – there’s no point backing protesters if you’re not going to back changing the law to give them a fair say. The Lib Dems proposed in Parliament changing the law – but sadly didn’t get support from the other parties. Something to return to after the election!

We all agree to work with residents to fight this application – and an action committee is formed. One woman says to Barbara that she keeps seeing her at meetings but what does she actually do about it? I couldn’t possibly comment!

Kennedy visits

Charles Kennedy comes to Hornsey & Wood Green! Visiting Weston Park Primary School on – incidentally – the 10th anniversary of the school council, who had democratically chosen questions to ask him.

Charles swept in – but on the way stopped to talk to Sue Hessel from the Save Red Gables campaign group, which we support. Hope that adds to pressure – then in to the school.

Whilst the original plan was for Charles to meet ten children, we decide with the head, that it wouldn’t be fair to have CK in school and for the other children not to have even seen him. So we go into every classroom to say hello. Good morning Charles Kennedy – they say. So sweet.

Then into the room with the School Council who ask a question from each class. ‘What will you do if you don’t get picked?’, ‘How will you save pandas?’ and ‘What is your favourite food?’

Charles handled it all really brilliantly – good balance between substantive answers but put in a friendly way without being condescending.

Then after about 20 minutes the children went back to their lessons and the media had their way with him. ‘Why had he come to Hornsey & Wood Green?’ Well – there’s an election … and we can win here! That’s what leaders do – turn up in top target seats! One journalist asked what I would do that the current Labour doesn’t? Charles immediately referred her to the Evening Standard poll of London MPs where LibDem MPs took first, second and third place for hard work etc. Then the leader’s tour sweeps on to the next seat and we get back to our normal campaigning.

Labour seeks help

Hornsey Station 7am – bright and cheery. Then solid paperwork and emails until the afternoon when I change to phoning people to ask for various help, support etc.

News comes in from Camden Labour that Labour here has sent out an email for urgent help from Camden activists to come into Hornsey & Wood Green on the Wednesday afternoon – promising that they will be back in their own constituency by 6pm. Obviously worried!

Latest odds from the bookies on me winning – cut again, hurrah! Then phone canvassing in the evening.

Getting ready for leader's visit

Highgate station at 7am, pouring with rain and not too warm. However, heart much lightened by response from would be passengers on the Northern Line. Ah – the Northern Line – dreadful since the PPP and not improving. One passer by asks if I will attend a public meeting on the state of the Northern Line. More than happy to. Contributed to the Chief Exec of Metronet being sacked for appalling performance – and am more than happy to continue to rail against the PPP! And so a warning to the Chief Exec of Tubelines if performance doesn’t improve – look what happened to John Weight!

A woman comes out from a house in Priory Gardens near the station to ask if I have any anti-war vote LibDem posters rather than pure LibDem – as the household is voting for me tactically to oust the ‘pro-war MP Roche’. Winging their way as I write!

Lots of friendly ‘you’ve got my votes’ – almost made the cold and wet acceptable.

Go to Neil’s house (agent) ahead of Charles K’s office visiting (preparation for his own visit latter in the week). Neil has his mum staying with him – been helping address envelopes (she is fantastic!), but has scribbled on his postal ballot paper some information she was taking down whilst on the phone. Ballot paper ruined. Happily – you can apply for a replacement! Every vote counts…

Around 11am head of to the school where Charles Kennedy is visiting on Wednesday to check the layout, procedure, etc. Men from Charles’s office, men from special branch (looking and behaving very like Men in Black) – I quite enjoyed it. All organised for Wednesday. Am hoping that despite the time constraints, Charles will have time to meet the campaigners from Red Gables – LibDems want to save it from Labour’s closure – but the team explain that Charles’s visit is very constrained time-wise and if possible will do – but no promises. Either way – I will raise it with Charles.

Masses and masses of casework, election enquiries and questionnaires from various lobby groups pouring in. Spend rest of morning trying to stem the tide.

Then canvassing with Don Foster MP in the afternoon in Crouch End. Neck and neck with Labour in this street and still no sign of any Conservative support whatsoever.