Friday, June 16, 2006

New Poll: Who Should be Tory London Mayoral Candidate?

This week David Cameron announced that the Conservative candidate to fight Ken Livingstone for the London mayoralty would be chosen by an open primary. A brave move by any standard. But will it be a wise one? The bigger the risk the bigger the reward. As a Yorkshire friend of mine would say, you don't get 'owt if you don't risk 'owt. My hope is that CCHQ have a star name lined up already because I think we will need someone who is very well known already. I don't know him, but I suspect that Nick Ferrari would walk it, if he stood. He's doing a series of 'An Evening With...' shows at the moment and they're selling out. Thousands are attending. Would he do it? Stranger things have happened. Anyway, get voting the new poll featured down the left hand column.

26 comments:

Archbishop Cranmer said...

Why do you say 'I don't know him'?

You clearly haven't absorbed the primary purpose of the A-list - more women.

It's a discussion we're having in the CofE as well. I've asked Rowan to draw up an A-list of women to enforce their selection to bishoprics...

The Pope is not best pleased.

But that's okay by me.

Bob Piper said...

Who want's to lose to Ken? Will the next contestant step this way... (as Michael Miles used to say- ask your mom if you don't understand).

Anonymous said...

There is only one person who can win againt Red Ken .. thats Lord Coe ...

Croydonian said...

I still think Shagger Norris would be a terrific mayor. Anyone, almost, rather than Portillo.....

Anonymous said...

I've never heard of the Ferrari guy and several of the others on your list. Are they all disc jockeys? I only ever listen to Radio 4 in the morning and switch off as Woman's Hour approaches. (Jenni Murray is even worse than pop music). I digress...
Justme suggests Seb Coe, but he's tied up with the Olympics in London. A good Olympics and he's a shoe-in afterwards.
Two others spring to mind:
Simon Jenkins is made for the job. A bit PC, or was. (I remember being angry at one of his columns in The London Evening Standard in the 1970s, when he suggested after a Notting Hill Carnival, which turned out to be an orgy of mugging and purse-snatching, it's the victims who were at fault for not taking precautions and not tempting these vulnerable, er, knifemen.
But I forgive him. He's written intelligently about London and is definitely a "small government" man.
Who else? Step forward Ray Mallon, Robocop and present Mayor of Middlesborough. Yeah, maybe we need a tough, no nonsense provincial to clean out the Augean Stables of the Wicked City. Seriously, bring big Ray down and give hime control of the Met. Commisioner Blair's feet wouldn't touch the ground.
I don't know what else a mayor does, but if Mallon could reduce crime, as far as I'm concerned, he's got the gig.

Anonymous said...

It's got to be Steve Norris. He has the name ID, the charisma, the executive experience and the mix of enterprising economics and social tolerance that is just right for London.

Anonymous said...

Fatty Ferrari - a walking, talking contradiction in terms! Might appeal to the (minor) old school tie brigade but he's hardly housewife's choice is he?

'Daz' might have given the game away when he talked up the chances of an 'able' (Anyone But LivingstonE)candidate. This must mean someone with no obvious connection to the Tories.

Step forward Mr Branson...

Anonymous said...

bebopper- There is no hope of reducing crime in London because the Labour Party does not will it. Intimidation of the citizens and illegal immigrants and "asylum seekers" is the name of the game.

Don't people have to be citizens to vote in Britain? They do in every other country in the world.

- Anonymousette

Paul Linford said...

Aren't you ignoring a rather obvious candidate, you know, that chap who the Standard recently named as the one of the most influential in London and all that...;-)

Anonymous said...

Three candidates: Iain Dale, Greg Hands, Seb Coe.

Bob Piper said...

(Livingstone) "is widely seen for what he is, a megolamaniacal loose cannon" ...."he might win the mayoralty again."

Put your house on it. Although I do know more about politics than I do about London, but that doesn't stop the souther softies giving me the benefit of their extensive (lack of) knowledge about the Midlands, so I probably appear the same to them. but if I were a betting man I would starty gathering in your bets now. Give us Nobber!! (but not Portillo - too bright, too popular).

Anonymous said...

How about the GLA Tory leader, Bob "Three Jobs" Neill?

Only winding you up, Iain....!!

Anonymous said...

Richard Balfe - the London Labour MEP who joinned the Conservatives in 2001?

Anonymous said...

Hm, I think Ken Clarke would be a great Mayor - and it'd keep him well away from Europe!

Like Livingstone, he has a 'fun' persona. Unlike Livingstone, he's not a Trotskyite. Perfect.

Anonymous said...

Seb Coe has already been asked and has declined since he has his sights set on the Chairmanship of the IOC and not the London Mayoralty. Portillo has also already been asked and apparently declined as well for reasons unknown.Richard Branson is far far too close to Blair and NuLab to be considered as a Tory candidate.

Whoever it is they are going to need to be pretty well known already and preferably not as a party hack. Nick Ferrari is in fact a pretty good idea!

Croydonian said...

Anonymousette,

You can vote in local elections in these parts if you are an EU, Commonwealth or Hibernian national. The latter two also get to vote in national elections. I know Eire is in in the EU but they have never lost voting rights in the UK.

FWIW, I would favour extending voting rights to any country which extends us the same courtesy.

Anonymous said...

Ferrari would be an inspired choice - but does he really want to do it?

Anonymous said...

Norris. He was in cars. Has the profile and the patter to take on Ken. His past(Jarvis, ladies etc)is less of an issue now.

Anonymous said...

Croydonian - Then how is it that all these Pakistanis are sending in great wadges of postal votes?

Incidentally, I don't like your idea of exchanging voting rights with other countries because foreigners aren't familiar enough with the issues. It would be crazy for me to move to Australia and think I was familiar enough with the history, the issues and the attitudes to put in my pennyworth.
- Anonymousette

Croydonian said...

Anonymousette - well, perhaps a modification whereby only citizens of established democracies get reciprocal rights. And heaven knows what percentage of the voting population here really understand the issues.....

Meanwhile, we have the current nonsense whereby my mother (resident in France) can vote in national elections here, but not in France, with the reverse applying to the Gauls etc I know living here. No taxation without representation, anyone?

Anonymous said...

How about Zac Goldsmith for mayor? Tories will vote Tory anyway but Zac will get Lib-Dem, Green and some of the Labour vote too.

Anonymous said...

There is another Conservative who could - would - win against Livingstone: Boris Johnson has the personality & fame that is needed. he's too accident prone to go far in the Commons. He should be persuaded to give up his seat (creating a nice by-election for Iain Dale & others to consider).

Kevin Davis said...

I do not know how he managed it but Ken has turned the post into one of celebrity. Unless we have a celebrity we have no hope!

Seb seems out so id there anyone on the "A" list we should be considering?

Anonymous said...

I hear the word from No 11 is that it has be a Scot...

Anonymous said...

"How about Zac Goldsmith for mayor? Tories will vote Tory anyway but Zac will get Lib-Dem, Green and some of the Labour vote too."

What is it about this race that causes people to leave their brains at home (including Conservative Central Office)?

Livingstone would eat him alive. He has never run for any kind of public office before in his life. He has no experience of managing the budgets, staff, contractual arrangements and government agencies that is the job of the Mayor. Voters have to see that a candidate is credible as a Mayor.

Ditto for Ferrari, and some of the others who also have zero campaigns and Mayoral-type management experience. Wake up!

Anonymous said...

Ferrari appeals to a huge audience with common sense views and a "what is this country coming to?" attitude. I can see why he would ring a bell with voters, and I think he would stand a very good chance.

However, I doubt he'll go for it. He gets paid more for sitting in a radio studio moaning instead! ;o)