My colleagues at Total Politics are compiling a feature on the most memorable moments from party conferences gone by. We all remember David Steel's plea in 1981 to "go back to your constituencies and prepare for government, Margaret Thatcher doing the Dead Parrott sketch and Neil Kinnock's Derek Hatton moment.
What would you say were the most memorable moments from party conferences over the past two decades? Pick some funny, moving or game changing moments.
What's a Party Conference?
ReplyDeleteMargaret Beckett slaughtering 'House of the Rising Sun' on a karaoke machine; it's seared itself into my consciousness with white-hot pain, yet I've never met anyone else who has seen the clip, and the clip has never resurfaced on TV. No, it wasn't my imagination.
ReplyDeleteIf any vid librarians or TV researchers are reading, please unearth this - it's just too good to be lost to posterity.
Sorry Iain, not from a party conference, but from McDoom's press confereence.
ReplyDeleteBrown says that he thinks voters in Norwich and Glasgow by-elections will recognise which party has the best policies for the recession.
What will he do when Labour are wiped out?
Peter lilleys singing was pretty awful
ReplyDeleteOr did I dream that?
"Go home and prepare for government"
ReplyDelete"We're aaaall riiight"
Kinnock, Sheffield 1992.
ReplyDeleteHow to lose an election in thirty seconds.
You question makes me realise how many great moments there were before 1989, and how few there have been since.
ReplyDeleteTony Blair's first conference speech as Labour leader, I think - when he sprang the change to Clause 4 on the party and few people understood what he meant at first.
Yes. This one.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nExMONA_-Lg
Labour Party 'red' in tooth and claw.
I second Peter Lilley Singing. God it was embarressing
ReplyDeleteRaedwald, do you mean this?
ReplyDeletehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dGrmwjX8Hvg
Oh God - yet ANOTHER list. Try to blog for just ONE week without a list, Iain.
ReplyDeleteI remember attending my first ever LibDem conference, in Eastbourne in 1997. I went to the Glee Club not knowing what to expect. I guess I didn't expect to see two new MPs singing "Tony Blair can f*** off and die" to a packed room. Much fun.
ReplyDeleteThe last two decades is somewhat limiting. But it does allow in John Redwood's "singing" the Welsh National Anthem at the Welsh Conservative conference.
ReplyDeleteLilley's execrable songs were certainly memorable; less memorable was Tony Blair's first platform speech as Shadow Energy Secretary when he turned over two pages at once and lost his way completely.
Others: IDS's claque in 2003, Portillo's SAS moment in 1995, Blair's swansong in 2006, John Prescott's end of conference specials, Charles Kennedy attempting to speak while clearly very ill.
Tell you what, I'll run my blog the way I want. If you don't like it, you have plenty of others to visit. It's not as if you are paying for it, is it?!
ReplyDeletedidn't heseltine do a silly walk - 'left left left' or sometnig?
ReplyDeletePortiloo's awful "Who Dares Wins" guff, complete with pudding bowl haircut.
ReplyDeleteKinnock falling in the sea at Brighton (as immortalized in the Spitting Image titles).
William Hague at 16...
P.S. The Kinnock Sheffield Rally, much as I loved him for it, was an election rally, not a conference).
Didn't Kenny Everett do an amusing skit about bombing the Russians?
ReplyDeleteAnonymous at 1.21pm: "Oh God - yet ANOTHER list. Try to blog for just ONE week without a list, Iain."
ReplyDeleteOh $Deity - yet ANOTHER self-entitled whinger. Try to read free stuff for just ONE week without ungrateful whinging, Anonymous.
P.S. WV - minanuts - most apt!
I'd go for John Prescott barnstorming performance in support Tony Blair's plans to scrap Clause 4.
ReplyDeleteNot only an outstanding speech, but a pivotal moment in the emergence of New Labour as a political force.
Mick: "Didn't Kenny Everett do an amusing skit about bombing the Russians?"
ReplyDeleteOh yes, that was a good one - what shall we do with Michael Foot? Kick his stick away! :-)
"Game changing" - would have to be Osborne on Inheritance Tax.
ReplyDeleteWithout that we could well be in the second year of Brown's government rather than the last.
R56
I'd go for John Prescott barnstorming performance in support Tony Blair's plans to scrap Clause 4.
ReplyDeleteGood call, but wasn't in support of John Smith's OMOV?
Manny Shinwell's last conference speech was a good moment too.
David Cameron's leadership winning audition in 2005, or maybe Alan Duncan's televised thumbs-down to David Davis's speech that year.
ReplyDeleteTony Blair's schmaltzy fairwell to labour...
The white witch who raised a point of order about satanic symbols on display at a Lib Dem conference a couple of years ago.
IDS's Quiet Man turning up the volume.
"Oh God - yet ANOTHER list. Try to blog for just ONE week without a list, Iain."
ReplyDeleteHow about Iain runs his blog how he likes and if it`s not up to your standard then leave.
Schimples isn`t it "Anonymous"
Cameron's speech in 2005 - effectively secured him the Party leadership. Kinnock falling over on the beach in 1983. Hague in 77 (yawn, yawn, but memorable). Heseltin's "left, left, left" speech. Peter Lilley in 1990-something, but I can't remember why!! Callaghan 1978 - "my wife..won't let me..." (his tease about the Election - how he must have regretted that!!)
ReplyDeleteRaedwald, your wish is my command!
ReplyDeleteMargaret Beckett murders House of the Rising Bile. Sorry! I mean Sun!!!
your getting a bit stroppy these days iain
ReplyDeletepeople have opinions don't take it personally if a few comments get you stressed i'd suggest you need a holiday.
Onto the topic
So many to choose from i would suggest either TB clause 4 or Neil Kinnock's millitant speech both had significant impact in politics and i doubt labour would have won three general elections without them.
Walter Wolfgang being invited to leave the labour party conference in 2005
ReplyDeleteThe absurd "the quiet man is turning up the volume" speech from IDS - most lobbyists, journos and all but the diehard loyalists who were present just fell about laughing.
ReplyDeleteInteresting though that IDS has turned out to be one of the most interesting social policy thinkers.
A few that come to mind: Kinnock's anti-Militant speech in 1985;Dennis Skinner raging at the coal-pit closures in 1992-Margaret Thatcher(you turn if you want to...),Norman Tebbit savaging the Maastricht Treaty in 1992,Gordon Brown making an abortive putsch attempt in 2003 and David Cameron successfully bluffing Gordon Brown in 2007.
ReplyDeleteInteresting though that IDS has turned out to be one of the most interesting social policy thinkers.
ReplyDeleteThinkers is probably stretching it a bit, no?
Cameron's noteless speech was quite something in 2007, with both Brown and Clegg having to respond in kind in 2008
I thought Brown did it reasonably well in a first-day economics session but Clegg's leader's speech just felt contrived.
William Hague's gag about the Prescotts taking a car 100 yards to conference.
ReplyDelete"I sympathise with the Prescotts. I know what the sea breezes can do to your hair. Look what they did to mine."
Poor little teenage Hague's barking performance as a True Blue Boy. Raving retro 1920s ultra-Toryism complete with mad eyes and AC/DC school clothes. He is only marginally less bonkers now, aged 48.
ReplyDeleteHovedan - IDS is more of a copyist than an original thinker. He is just rehashing Bushite "Compassionate Conservatism" (actually just the old Roman classic - bread and circuses at home, hard-screwed foreigners abroad) - which Tony Blair did so very much better. Hence IDS's dismal performances.
ReplyDeleteFor pure political theatre it has to be Kinnock and THAT speech.
ReplyDeleteMuch as I dislike the troughing old Taff wind-bag, he stood up and delivered that day. Kicked Hatton and Militant right in the fork.It was a tremendous performance.
If only there a was a principled socialist who could do the same with the current bunch of Labour traitors - civil rights abuses/corruption/incompetence/jobs for the boys/wasteful extravagance on self-indulgence...New Labour 2009 or Liverpool Militant 1985?
Can YOU tell the difference?
Remember the interview with Charles Kennedy the morning after the birth of his child
ReplyDeleteHe was totally pissed and could not answer any question period
That sealed his fate as Leader of the Ludicrous Democrats
Neil Kinnock's attack on Millitant in Bournemouth in 1985 is a defining moment for me. Plus John Prescott supporting OMOV for Labour in 1993, which proved timely given John Smith's death some eight months later
ReplyDeletein response to comments about my earlier comments on IDS - i think despairing liberal would be advised to re read IDS's body of social policy papers - he is far from a rehash of "compassionate conservatism" - whilst i may disagree with a central tenant of the IDS approach - that disfunction leads to poverty (rather than poverty leading to disfunction)- he has pushed the boudaries of debate for left and right - and for that he should be congratulated.
ReplyDeleteHere we go: The one legged army speech by Tarzan
ReplyDeletehttp://news.bbc.co.uk/player/nol/newsid_7020000/newsid_7023700/7023725.stm?bw=bb&mp=rm&asb=1&news=1&ms3=20&ms_javascript=true&bbcws=2
And this classic Balls put down:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/player/nol/newsid_7020000/newsid_7023900/7023973.stm?bw=bb&mp=rm&asb=1&news=1&bbcws=1
If you can't open the above the videos can be found on: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/the_daily_politics/6967366.stm
and more classics.
Hovedan is right about IDS - and Despairing Liberal needs to go back to the shed and carry on pasting his collection of Polly Toynbee op-eds into his scrapbook.
ReplyDeleteWalter Wolfgang, the 82 year old Labour activist who was dragged from the conference hall in 2005, for a heckle. He was later held under section 44 of the terrorism act.
ReplyDeleteOr how about Bournemouth, September 2007, when the words "I want a referendum" were writ large in the sand outside the conference venue - only to be erased by a troop of police horses...
It wasnt a party conference but Callaghan singing at the TUC conference 1978 which ruled out his autumn election.
ReplyDeleteor at the 1976 Labour conference when he made that speech stating
We used to think that you could spend your way out of a recession and increase employment by cutting taxes and boosting government spending. I tell you in all candour that that option no longer exists
Wilsons "white heat revolution" speech.
Thatcher in 1981 saying "U Turn if you want to"
Portillo saying "We Dare, We will win"- 95 Tory Conference.
Tony Blairs farewell speech to the 2006 Labour conference.
Tony Blairs joke about Cherie in 2006 I think - "at least there's no danger she'll run off with the bloke next door".
ReplyDeleteIn the same conference I think she stormed out shouting "that's a lie" when Brown talked of his friendship with Blair.
The 2007 Conservative conference is the best one I can think of. Camerons keynote speech and Osbourne on inheritance tax turned the opinion polls upside down, stopped the election and put Brown into the duldrums.
There's a case to say that Brown's "No time for a novice" jibe in 2008 was strong. The Tory lead went from 20%+ to single figures the following week, though that it has obviously rebuilt since.
2005 Tory Conference, Camerons leadership bid speech sealed the deal with the party.
The one where IDS said "don't underestimate the resolve, of a quiet man" in the most threatening tone I've ever heard him speak with!
Thatchers self depricating joke at a conference in about 2000 "The mummy returns" is up ther as well.
Sadly I'm not old enough to remember the '92 Kinnock Sheffield Rally, but wasn't that a one off election event rather than regular party conference speech?
I must admit to laughing at some of the sneering at Kinnock. Were it not for him, there would have been no Blair, and were it not for Blair, the Tories would have been condemned to an eternity of being led by the likes of IDS, Michael Ancram and their ilk.
ReplyDeleteHistory, I believe, will judge Kinnock very kindly.
The "don't underestimate the resolve of a quiet man" line by IDS (and written by Julian Fellowes) was very good. When he said "the quiet man is back and he's turning up the volume" a year later (again thanks to Fellowes) he ruined it.
ReplyDeleteAneurin Bevan - Naked in the Conference Chamber
ReplyDeleteHugh Gaitskell - The end of a thousand years of history
William Hague aged 16 - You won't be here in 30 or 40 year time.
James Callaghan - There was I, waiting at the Church.
Michael Heseltine - Left, Left, Left.
Peter Lilley - I've got a little list
Paddy Ashdown - Hubble, Bubble, boi land trouble reduce the Tory party to rubble.
David Cameron - The one that caused Brown to bottle his election