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Election thoughts, then and now. Friday 2nd May 1997, I found myself on an early morning train from Bristol to London. I was working in a comic store chain and a friend had engineered a trip up to visit him at the head office. This had been booked months before the 97 election was called. -1
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I was slightly hungover and the Labour landslide victory had barely penetrated. I got into the head office, met my friend and it started to sink in. For the first time in my living memory I was not living under a conservative government. I was 23. -2
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The office mood was jovial, people were obviously happy. But it was time to work, to sit through boring meetings that I, a 23 year old raver, was not particularly into. Then I was taken out to lunch and to visit the flagship store on New Oxford Street. Lunch was obviously in the pub. -3
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What struck me was how friendly people were. I’ve never seen London so upbeat. I’d been up regularly for gigs and visiting friends and I’d never experienced London like this. Then it dawned on me. London was pissed. Properly shitfaced. -4
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As the enormity of the Labour victory filtered through radios and TVs the inebriation seemed to increase. After a boozy lunch we went to stagger around the flagship store. My friend was a club DJ and he suggested hitting up the record distribution outfits he used to score free records and CDs. -5
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This was getting on for 4pm, people were openly staggering around. People were smiling. One section of the tube journey we encountered a mariachi band, as if scripted by Richard Curtis. I’d never seen London in this light without the aid of chemical stimulation. London was partying. Hard. -6
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We visited a few of the record distro places. “Are you a DJ?” “No, I’m with him” “Ah fuck it, never mind, hold out your hands…” My shoulders and arms ached with the records and CDs I’d just scored for free from some blatantly wasted folk. -7
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It was heady and intoxicating. We headed back to my friend's place in Finsbury Park to drop off swag & freshen up, then out clubbing. It was a BIG night. Probably the only time I’ve been to London and not felt psychic damage welling up between arriving and stepping onto a departing train home. -8
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So what’s the point of this recollection? I doubt we’ll collectively wake up on Friday 5th July and be dancing in the streets. At best many of us will breathe a resigned sigh. It’ll be more “Thank fuck the Tories are out, now what?” And I just don’t know. It’s hard to be optimistic. -9
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Some of that’s down to what happened with 97 New Labour, some is down to the current party leadership embracing culture war bullshit. Many of us will have voted, holding our nose, hoping for the best possible outcome. We’ll need to hold feet to fire though & I worry it won’t be enough. -10
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So how do we stand up and make a government take notice? Writing to your MP? I mean… It’s nice when they reply but it feels ineffectual. Mass mobilisation? Cool story bro, but unlikely. No revolts please, we’re British. How do we become the prick it’s hard to kick against? I’ve no idea. -11
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But it’s something we have to consider if we’re to see better times. Sniping from a keyboard isn’t going to help. Only action. Only getting out and about, making change, becoming a thorn in the side while spreading love. -12
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I’m not judging anyone for how they vote (unless it’s Tory or Reform in which case fuck off). The options are not stellar. And I get why people will vote Labour, in spite of distaste at much of their messaging. The fatigue of 14 years is real. But “getting the Tories out” is just the beginning. -13
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I expect a lot of us will be relieved come Friday morning. And that’s totally fine. But we need to be prepared to do more, be vocal, and speak to those in power. We can’t just chill after marking an X and sit back. -14
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And this is the main thrust of this post, ok the Tories may be gone (and I certainly hope they lose power), but now we need to collectively protect the rights of the minorities who’ve become punching bags. Asylum seekers, immigrants, the disabled, benefit claimants, our Trans brethren and more. -15
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I doubt the UK will be partying in the same way as 97 come Friday. There’s too much work to be done. -End
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Apologies for the length, needed to get it out of my system. -Actual End.
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Beautifully put and very insightful Martin. I have l kept my own counsel as I WAS a member of the Labour Party for decades and am VERY concerned about their direction but I don’t want to rain on the parade of people desperate for change. I’ll be glad to wake tomorrow relieved the Tories are gone.
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Great words, Martin. I’d repost them but I’d probably fuck it up somehow and get the order wrong. Here’s hoping for better days.
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Absolutely this. There will be happiness tomorrow, but it’ll be relief at what we’ve got rid of not any (however misplaced) ‘97-ish sense that we’re getting something good in its place. But the getting-rid-of part of the celebratory mood is earned. We can be angry again on Saturday.
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I agree completely, but also cognizant that 1997 was a different time in world politics and economics, and also I was 21 and nothing ached, and this election was never going to recapture that spirit. I will, however, be opening a bottle of something nice if we get shot of R-M, Lopresti & Fox later.
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"becoming a thorn in the side while spreading love" This is amazing, such a wonderful sentiment. I'm going to an activist event on Saturday and this feels like the vibe to take with me.
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A great read, I was working at a day centre for adults with learning disabilities on the dawn of the last Labour win. I was 22, and was not into politics, but every service user came in that day jubilant, happy that Labour had won. It was the first time I truly saw a difference between parties.
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They all knew their beloved day centre where they could be safe, be looked after, learn how to cook, go on day visits, play board games and be with their friends was going to be Ok.
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Been charity lobbyist. MP says "no letters from the constituency, so not an issue." deprive them of that argument. Force them to contact the minister. It's not that 'writing letters' is a solution. It's that 'not writing letters' is not a solution. (I'd never picket an MP until I'd written.
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Great advice. My own MP is pretty good at responding to personal (ie not premade) letters/email to be fair. But I've heard this is not always the case.
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Spread rumours the UK has oil & wait for the US to invade