FULL DISCLOSURE: I am a member of the Green Party,
having previously been a Labour voter since the1980s and former Labour Party member
and activist. I will try and be as dispassionate as possible, but this summary
will inevitably reflect my personal views. I’m not a journalist, just an
engaged citizen. I may have missed some candidates’ answers but hope to have
captured the main points.
Last night I attended the Gorton & Denton by-election
hustings hosted by Levenshulme Community Association.
The event was held at St Peters Church in Levenshulme, and even
by Leve standards, the attendance was amazing – about 300 people and standing
room only.
Ten of the eleven candidates turned up, including the Reform
UK candidate who had flounced out of a previous event in Gorton a few days
before. Sir Oink a Lot sent his apologies, as he was on holiday.
Each candidate was asked to make a two-minute opening statement
before taking questions:
Nick Buckley, MBE (Advance UK)
Leaned heavily into being a local, a former council youth
worker and founder of a charity. He name-checked some local landmarks which are
no longer there (appealing presumably to the nostalgia vote) and mentioning the
former swimming baths – “now derelict” – without mentioning the new facility
that replaced it. Or that his
party is a far-right breakaway from Reform UK with Tommy Robinson as a
member.
Charlotte Cadden (Conservative)
A former police officer, cited her work on combatting crime
and grooming gangs. She also mentioned getting a second high school in Denton
and improved train services but did not mention that her current role as a
trustee of Sex
Matters, a transphobic “charity.”
Dan Clarke (Libertarian)
A working class man, a local shopworker on a low wage.
Matt Goodwin (Reform UK)
Very slick, as you’d expect from someone with a media career
on the right-wing GB News. Still bigging up his local connections and told us
again that he is the first person in his family to attend university, which may
or may not be accurate. Sadly, he did not divulge which Gorton takeaways he
delivered pizzas to as a student.
Joseph O’Meachair (Rejoin EU)
Wants to re-join the EU. Passionate about the effects that
Brexit has had on the country.
Jackie Pearcey (Liberal Democrat)
Veteran councillor in these parts. Lives locally and knows
the constituency well.
Hannah Spencer (Green Party)
Has lived and worked in the area all her life. Says Labour
has blown it locally and the battle is between Reform and the Greens.
Angeliki Stogia (Labour)
Manchester City Councillor. Came here 30 years ago and loves
the city.
Hugo Wils
(Communist League)
Made the case for class struggle to fight against
capitalism.
The
first question to candidates was on antisemitism. All candidates rightly
condemned it, but some were more nuanced than others. To some consternation,
Nick Buckley said that he wanted “English” (corrected to “British”) integration
because “multiculturalism has failed” – to a room full of people from multiple
cultures. Advance UK is, after all, a far right party.
A supplementary question asked all candidates if they agreed
that the situation in Gaza meets the definition of a genocide. A variety of
opinions, including:
- · Goodwin thinks it’s a “tragedy” but ignores the term “genocide.”
- · Piercey states that despite any legal definition, what is happening there is "as near to genocide as I have seen."
- · Spencer echoes this and comes down firmly on it meeting the definition.
- · Stogia mentions that she has family in Palestine and has seen lives destroyed. Despite this, she does not think it is up to the Labour government to name it a genocide.
- · Buckley states that “our own problems are more important.”
- · Wils blames Hamas but stands with the Palestinians opposed to them
- · Cadden also lays the blame fully on Hamas.
The next question is on road safety, active travel, etc.
- · O’Meachair mentions that air quality has been improving due to adherence to better international standards, and this needs to be maintained.
- · Pearcey mentions that a pollution monitor on her home consistently shows poor air quality (she added that wood burning stoves add to particulate levels). She would welcome more tram provision in our part of the city, and said that we should design safety into road schemes.
- · Spencer mentions that as a Trafford councillor, she was able to get the council to commit to zero road deaths. She also said that more access to public transport is needed.
- · Stogia is keen to mention how much she had to do with implementing local traffic reductions schemes, even though the LTNs in the area are controversial due to poor implementation and massive budget overspends (they have also filtered traffic on to other roads, moving the problem rather than solving it).
- · Hugo Wils says that transport is sold as a commodity
- · Buckley says we need better, more linked-up public transport.
- · Cadden mentions that in government the Conservatives invested in transport and are not anti-car. She is not in favour of scrapping petrol/diesel cars
- · Clarke said that he would work with everyone on this.
- · Goodwin said that “levelling up” is hardly mentioned now. He is anti HS2.
- · Moore said that local cycle lanes appeared to have been designed by non-cyclists (this was disputed by others who pointed out that one of those consulted was Olympic cyclist Chris Boardman). He said that the LTNs with planters had not been consulted on adequately and were not good.
The candidates were then asked if they were members of a
trade union:
- · Buckley and Cadden think unions should be supporting women workers re: “women’s changing rooms” (transphobic dog whistle). Cadden again fails to mention her role as a trustee of a trans-hostile organisation. This seems to be their sole concern, rather than low wages, poor employment practices, etc.
- · Stogia states that she has been a member of Unite for 15 years (about the time she became a council candidate, where it is expected of you to have union affiliation/endorsement?)
- · Spencer says that as a self-employed plumber she doesn’t belong to a union but adds that trades are poorly represented in parliament (a comment from the floor indicates that plumbers can be trade union members).
- · Clarke says that he is a member of GMB, as this is the only union recognised by his employer. Union membership seems a bit at odds with libertarian thought, but if I worked for Asda I’d want to be a member of a union.
The next question was on LGBTQ rights and transphobia. Only Spencer
and Pearcey express support for trans people. Stogia very weak on this and says
that the Labour government cannot change the law after the Supreme Court ruling
in April 2025. (They can – they have chosen not to). It sounded as if she may
not personally be trans-hostile but was scared not to tow the party line.
A worrying amount of apathy, and trans-hostility from other
candidates and members of the audience. This is what a moral panic looks like.
(MORE DISCLOSURE: This was my question, so I was quite invested in the answers)
The next question was on services for young people.
Solutions, as you’d expect, vary. Goodwin says that we need to give young people
aspiration again. Spencer points out his recent statement that young women
should be producing more babies…
The discussion then moved on to fly-tipping:
- · Stogia mentions that the council has received £160m funding from the government and wants that to come to our area.
- · Hugo Wils indicates that this was a product of capitalism
- · Spencer wants more money for enforcement, and would hold Andy Burnham to account on dodgy landlords and to enforce standards.
- · Pearcey added that fines are too low
- · O’Meachair noted the difference between national legislation and local enforcement
- · Moore said that we should be ashamed of the level of fly-tipping, but that residents have to start looking after areas as well
- · Goodwin blew some more dog whistles. I think he means that it’s all the immigrants’ fault.
- · Cadden cited “broken window” theory.
- · Buckley stated that this is a Labour council problem and it’s “much cleaner in Denton”. Thanks, Nick!
With the time reaching 9pm, the Chair noted that some of the
candidates had to leave for other events and asked them all to give a 2-minute
closing speech.
- Goodwin wished to address the ‘misinformation’ about him and re-stated his Mancunian credentials. He’s a Manc, speaking for the “silent majority.”
- Stogia says that this is a very important election and to give her our vote.
- Spencer says this we are not a poor country or city, but we are not feeling the benefit of our wealth. She added that we need more ordinary people in politics – voting Green will send a message and result in a good MP.
- Pearcey starts to make her closing speech, only to be drowned out by the loud exit of a number of the audience (possibly Goodwin supporters?). The Chair forcefully reminds those present of the need to be respectful of all candidates and remain in place to hear all their statements. She concludes by saying that we should celebrate this community.
- Cadden reiterates he background in public service and cites ‘Kemi’ (it genuinely took me a few seconds to remember who she was talking about).
- Clarke speaks honestly, if hesitantly, about his beliefs
- Buckley states that it will make no difference if any of the three main parties win and urges people to vote for the candidate rather than the party.
- Hugo Wils states that the post-WWII order is disintegrating and that while working class people want peace we are driven towards war.
- Moore clearly loves Manchester, although it’s not entirely clear what his policies are.
- O’Meachair starts his closing address by stating that all the major parties’ candidates had left (Pearcey and Cadden take exception to this) but it is taken in good spirit and O’Meachair gracefully acknowledges his mistake.
The meeting then closed. The vicar thanked everyone for attending
and asked that we respected to local residents as we left the building.
My utterly subjective take on the evening and the candidates:
The candidates:
Nick Buckley: made Matt Goodwin look reasonable and may therefore
take some votes off Reform. Good.
Charlotte Cadden: Wrong on all points, but Conservative, so
no chance in this constituency.
Dan Clarke: lovely man, but parliament would eat him alive.
Matt Goodwin: slick (as you'd expect from someone with a
media career) and plausible if you haven't read Reform's actual policies.
Sebastian Moore: nice lad but still not sure what he stands
for.
Joseph O'Meachair: he's probably right about Europe, but
somehow this feels very "detached." A knowledgeable and witty
speaker, though.
Jackie Pearcey: an old hand at this. Took it seriously and
was strong on the genocide and transphobia questions.
Hannah Spencer: a strong performance and largely well received. Not fazed by Goodwin.
Angeliki Stogia: Oh dear. In such a vital seat, this is the
best Labour can offer? I know several Labour councillors who would have made
better candidates. No real passion, just the party line.
Hugo Wils: while we know capitalism is the problem, we could
do with some practical ideas on how to crush it.
Democracy is pretty robust in Levenshulme. We are engaged
and vociferous and this may have surprised some of the candidates. The event
was well-run, with all candidates being given the opportunity to engage with
the local electorate and it was largely respectful to all concerned.
It was great to see so many people there, and thanks to St
Peter's for hosting and LCA Secretary Jeremy for chairing very efficiently.
It's a Reform/Green contest. I hope after tonight, some Labour supporters will
lend Hannah their vote to see off the threat from Reform, who really don't
belong here.
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