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How many A-listers have applied to your local Association?

We know that about fifty A-listers have chosen to apply to both of the 'safe' Tory seats of South Northamptonshire and Folkestone & Hythe.  Some of the other 35 seats scheduled to choose their candidates first (particularly those held by the LibDems) have been given a very limited choice.  This is despite the fact that we need most of these seats in the Tory column in order to gain a parliamentary majority of one at the next General Election.

On this post we'll try and keep track of the number of applications certain target seats are receiving through the A-list process.  This is what we think we know so far...

  1. Broxtowe - 12 applicants - o/w 8 are probably A-listers
  2. Central Devon - 21 applicants (unknown distribution)
  3. Ealing Central and Acton - selection likely to be postponed because CCHQ failed to consult local association officers about inclusion in first tranche of 35
  4. Eltham - unconfirmed report of 6 applicants o/w 4 are from the A-list
  5. Finchley and Golders Green - unknown number of applicants but apparently aborting selection schedule
  6. Folkestone & Hythe - 45 applicants (unknown distribution)
  7. Lewes - two applicants (unknown distribution)
  8. Mid-Derbyshire - 31 applicants - o/w 27 are probably A-listers
  9. Oxford West and Abingdon - two applicants - one A-lister and a local
  10. Richmond Park - three applicants (unknown distribution) - selection postponed
  11. Pendle - 8 applicants (unconfirmed) o/w 4 are A-listers
  12. Sefton Central - 5 applicants: three A-listers and two locals. Using open primary selection.
  13. Selby and Ainsty - 16 applicants - o/w 11 are A-listers
  14. South Northamptionshire - 50 applicants - o/w 48 are A-listers
  15. Stockton South - five applicants (unknown distribution) - selection going ahead
  16. Telford - two applicants - one A-lister and a local
  17. Truro and Falmouth - three applicants (unknown distribution) but selection now postponed after local association asked for six people with Cornish connections to be allowed to attend parliamentary selection board before they would make a decision.
  18. West Worcestershire - selection very slightly delayed to allow two local candidates to attend parliamentary selection board.

If you can provide more information on other seats please email tim@conservativehome.com.

Most A-listers achieved below average results

Largely using this site's A-list the Taxcutter blog has listed the swings achieved by those 68 A-listers* who have fought seats at previous elections.  'Taxcutter' finds that 22 achieved swings above the national average swing of 2.21% and 46 achieved below-average swings.  12 of the 22 achieving above average swings were men.

The analysis is crude but will be seized upon by A-list critics as proof that many of the party's best vote-winners are not being promoted to be future MPs (anyone volunteering to compile a list of high swingers not on the A-list?).  Reasons why the analysis is crude include:

  • Candidates in non-target seats (which many A-listers fought in previous elections) are encouraged to devote their efforts to help target seats and so they were part-time campaigners in the seats they were selected for.
  • An individual who achieved a strong positive swing may have prospered because they were against a weak candidate rather than because of their own merits (and vice versa).
  • A good swing may reflect the fact that the seat had a particularly poor result at a previous election (and vice versa).
  • The national swing is an inappropriate benchmark for comparisons in many instances.  A regional comparison would be fairer because the Tories did very well in London at the 2005 General Election but quite poorly in northern seats.

For these and other reasons it is unfair to read too much into the past performance of individual candidates.  What does seem reasonable, however, to conclude is that the performance of A-listers as a whole is hardly remarkable.

* ConservativeHome understands that two of the names on The Taxcutters list - Matthew Collings and Caroline Flynn-MacLeod - are not A-listers but have been given a 'local passport' for South Northamptonshire.

A-listers turn their backs on tougher seats

ConservativeHome has learnt that two of the first 35 seats advertised to A-listers have received only two applications: Telford (Labour majority of 5,406) and Oxford West and Abingdon (LibDem majority 7,683).  Both seats apparently received only one application from an A-lister and one from a local candidate.  This contrasts with the fifty or so A-listers that have applied for 'safe' seats like South Northamptonshire and Folkestone & Hythe.

Telegraphpiece_1 Applications for the first tranche of seats closed on 19th May.  Today's Telegraph reports that "there was little interest in seats where an incumbent Liberal Democrat is seen to have become entrenched, such as in Lewes and Oxford West and Abingdon."

Bernard Jenkin, Deputy Chairman for Candidates, told The Telegraph:

"Any constituency is entitled to draw stumps for now and re-advertise its vacancy at a later date, and a number will choose to do so... We are certainly not going to force them into anything, and if a local association wants to look at a wider pool of candidates then that is something we can discuss."

Adam Rickitt seeks to succeed Michael Howard

KentonsundayToday's Kent on Sunday reveals that former soap star and gay icon Adam Rickitt hopes to succeed Michael Howard as Tory MP for Folkestone & Hythe.  At the last General Election Mr Howard doubled the seat's Tory majority to 11,680.

A F&H source told Kent on Sunday: "He's a very good-looking boy and anyone between the ages of 18 and 25 will find him deeply vote-able for."

The source also reveals that "a good sprinkling of councillors", "some local applicants" and "some quite high profile celebrity applicants" are also in the chase.   One of those local councillors is reportedly Julie Rook (an A-lister who has also been connected with Thanet South).

Constituency chairman Jonathan Holborow told KoS:

"We have received the list of applicants and there is now a sifting process.  Later in June there's a full executive council meeting at which the last six appear.  We hope to have it at the middle of July."

***

If you would like to report on this or any other constituency selection race please email tim@conservativehome.com.

Vanessa Gearson and Mark MacGregor

This morning's Daily Telegraph reports that David Cameron faces a backlash from parliamentary supporters of Iain Duncan Smith if "two ex-party officials accused of triggering the [former leader's] downfall" are readopted as Tory candidates.

The Telegraph "understands that an internal party inquiry has now found "no evidence" of wrongdoing against Vanessa Gearson and Mark MacGregor".

Editor's personal comment: "It is at this point I should declare an interest.  I worked for Iain Duncan Smith at the time of the 'Betsygate' allegations as his Political Secretary.

I am fully aware of the behaviour of the two individuals and of their unsuitability to be Tory candidates.  Whether or not it was right for the parliamentary Conservative Party to no-confidence IDS it could never be right for him to be attacked by making unfounded allegations about Mrs Duncan Smith's parliamentary work for her husband.

The behaviour of Vanessa Gearson and Mark MacGregor during that period was completely at odds with the high standards that should be expected from people who aspire to be Tory MPs.  Just as the A-list became public knowledge it is also likely that details of the two individuals' own behaviour will become public knowledge.

The Betsygate inquiry cost the party hundreds of thousands of pounds and I witnessed the completely unnecessary pain caused to Mrs Duncan Smith during that time.  The whole inquiry was completely avoidable if basic internal procedures had been followed.

The candidates' committee that must now assess the suitability of the two individuals will be working on a very different basis to that of the internal party inquiry.  The internal inquiry had to prove wrongdoing.  The candidates' committee has to make an assessment of suitability and competence.  ConservativeHome expects that the compromise will be this finding of 'unproven' together with barring them from the candidates' list."

AS WITH ALL POSTS ON THE GOLDLIST - BECAUSE WE ARE DEALING WITH THE REPUTATIONS OF INDIVIDUALS - COMMENTS WILL ONLY BE PUBLISHED AFTER THEY HAVE BEEN CHECKED BY THE EDITOR OR DEPUTY EDITOR.

A-list won't rule in Bromley & Chislehurst

CCHQ has confirmed that standard by-election procedeures will apply in the selection of the Tory candidate to fight for Eric Forth's seat of Bromley and Chislehurst.   The party's candidates committee will present the local party with a shortlist of suitable candidates after extensive consultation with the B&C Conservative Association.  This list will almost certainly include A-list candidates but it may also include local candidates such as GLA member Bob Neill.

CCHQ insist that this involves no climbdown - as has been suggested by today's Times newspaper - and that no precedent has been set for other constituencies to insist upon negotiating their own shortlists.

Faragenigel_1 Nigel Farage is expected to be UKIP's candidate for B&C.

The LibDem campaign got off to a poor start after the party began mobilising its campaign activists ahead of yesterday's funeral for Mr Forth.  Sir Menzies Campbell then promised that no campaigning would begin until after the by-election writ had been moved.  Such a promise, if kept, would severely limit the LibDems' efforts to get a bandwagon of support behind their candidate.  Waiting until after the funeral would have been deemed respectful enough.

Assuming a Tory victory (but expecting some erosion of support given that numerous parties will contest the seat) these are the factors by which ConservativeHome will be judging the contest:

  1. Will Team Cameron succeed in persuading the local party to choose a candidate who is in tune with the party leader's 'modern compassionate conservatism'?
  2. Will Ming be able to revive his failing leadership by being associated with a campaign that eats into the Tories' share of the vote?
  3. How low will Labour go?
  4. Will the BNP stand and how will they fare?
  5. Will the Greens stand and put in a strong showing on the back of the increasing interest in environmental issues?
  6. Can UKIP benefit from any right-wing unhappiness at the Cameron project?

Related link: The battle for Bromley & Chislehurst

The battle for Kensington & Chelsea

Rifkindmalcolmspeaking_3 The fight to be the Tory candidate for Kensington & Chelsea is becoming a fixed event in every parliament.  Before 1997 we saw Alan Clark succeed the disgraced Sir Nicholas Scott.  When the great diarist died Michael Portillo became the plum seat's MP.  When Michael Portillo stood down the denizens of K&C chose Sir Malcolm Rifkind.  It now appears - according to Dean Godson in this week's Spectator - that the former Foreign Secretary is in trouble with those same denizens:

"The charge-sheet of his opponents includes allegations that he is not as assiduous a constituency MP as he might be, considering the proximity of the Commons; he did not attend ward AGMs in the run-up to the local elections as often as they think he ought; and he did not campaign enough.  Others grouse that Rifkind neither lives in the constituency in the week nor at weekends nor in recess, residing as he does in Westminster and Inveresk, East Lothian; that he concentrates too much on foreign affairs; that he focuses too much on extensive outside business interests such as his non-executive chairmanship of ArmorGroup International plc. Critics also cite the website monitoring MPs’ performance, TheyWorkForYou.com: Sir Malcolm has attended just 48 per cent of votes in the Commons, making him 602nd out of 646 MPs; he spoke in 18 debates in the last year, and thus was 413th."

Mr Godson lists the defences that Sir Malcolm makes against these charges but he believes that his greatest fault has been to fail to live up to the very high expectations that K&C Conservatives have for their MP(s).

None of this would probably matter in normal circumstances.  There is not the unhappiness to initiate a deselection attempt but because of boundary changes Sir Malcolm will face some sort of selection contest.  Most of Sir Malcolm Rifkind's seat will become a new Kensington seat but much will transfer to a new Chelsea and Fulham seat.  Greg Hands, the widely-respected MP for the current seat of the Hammersmith & Fulham who helped design the campaign that saw the Tories take control of the H&F borough council, will be the frontrunner to contest that seat.

If you would like to report on a constituency selection race please email tim@conservativehome.com.

The 'talent spotting' letter

MaplesletterClick on image to enlarge >>>

The letter on the right was circulated to Tory MPs by John Maples last week.  Mr Maples has been given the task of increasing the pool of talent from which the Conservative Party draws its candidates.  It is good to see that he isn't just seeking women, people "from an ethnic minority" or "candidates who are disabled" - although this face deep diversity is the bias of the letter - but also people from "industry, the NHS, the voluntary sector and education".  It is also encouraging to read Mr Maples' suggestion that age should not be a barrier.

It is perfectly proper for Mr Maples to be asking Tory MPs to help him in his task but it must also be hoped that the lack of northern candidates is being addressed.  Most Tory MPs represent southern constituencies and the number of A-list candidates with northern identities is disappointing.  I will ask CCHQ for an insight into how they intend to recruit some individuals who can help us win our target seats in Lancashire, Yorkshire and beyond... and report back.

The battle for Bromley and Chislehurst

Today's Times reports that local association "allies" of Eric Forth will "attempt to honour Mr Forth’s memory by seeking out another independent thinker to represent them".  Yesterday Guido thought that "it would be something of an insult to select a touchy-feely, tree-hugging A-lister for his seat."  "No doubt," he continued, "his true-blue Bromley and Chislehurst constituency Conservative association will make up their own minds and honour his memory with an appropriately Thatcherite successor."

There are some Thatcherites on the A-list.  Howard Flight stands out. 

Bromley and Chislehurst (Tory majority 13,342 with Labour and LibDems close to each other respective second and third places) may be inclined to seek a local candidate, however, and ignore the A-list.  The Times mentions GLA Bexley and Bromley member Bob Neill.  Mr Neill reportedly has "a strong local following" but he's not on the A-list.  CCHQ, The Times continues, wants a female candidate and Elizabeth Truss’s name is being mentioned.

If you have intelligence on Bromley & Chislehurst and would like to report on the selection race for ConservativeHome please email tim@conservativehome.com.

AS WITH ALL POSTS ON THE GOLDLIST - BECAUSE WE ARE DEALING WITH THE REPUTATIONS OF INDIVIDUALS - COMMENTS WILL ONLY BE PUBLISHED AFTER THEY HAVE BEEN CHECKED BY THE EDITOR OR DEPUTY EDITOR. 

Katie Perrior: Cash for quality candidates

Katie Perrior of The Research Shop writes here in a personal capacity.

Katie_perriorNever before have women in politics had it so good. Politicians these days are falling over themselves to attract the female vote – photo calls at children’s nurseries, promises over child tax credits and pledges to help mothers get back to work. The Labour Party was the first to be seen to be female friendly when they came to power with a series of ‘Blair babes’ in 1997.

However it is the Conservative Party that has most recently reached out and appealed to women. David Cameron has laid firm his desire for female friendly polices on childcare, the environment, education and healthcare. His plans to include more women within the Conservative Party shows he is taking this issue seriously even within his early days of the Tory leadership. Cameron is a supporter of the Women2Win campaign which I have been involved in. Driven by Theresa May, Bernard & Anne Jenkin and Shirine Ritchie amongst others, it has had tremendous success in last 6 months. The priority list which we know isn’t everyone’s cup of tea - but necessary to put women on an equal footing with the men within the party - will have its teething problems but is a positive step forward. The plan is to get an even balance between women and men and then bin it – a sunset clause on the priority list is what we should all be aiming for in the long run.

The female candidates I have been working with through Women2Win have actively been encouraged to participate in a series of events including speaking engagements, tv and radio appearances, networking evenings, local association dinners – the list is endless and many are grateful to be included in this new political world they have found themselves in. A few of us have nicknamed the new  women our ‘political virgins’. Not only do I like some of the new breed that I have met, they seem to me as a genuine breath of fresh air who will become real assets to the Conservatives in the future, unlike some of the Blair babes who just didn’t live up to their much publicised arrival. What we have learnt from the Blair babes is that it is no good just being female – you have to be female and bloody good at your job to succeed in politics.

We can all understand the grumbles of those who think the women got there through their gender but those I have met so far are genuinely there by merit. Many are very impressive.

Perriorquote So all is well with Tory ladies then?

Not quite. Do you know how much one female possible candidate spent last month on attending all these things she was told were vital to success within her party? Nearly two grand. This is all very well for the daughters of current MPs trying to make it big (not knocking them as some of the rich sloanies I’ve come across in the last few months are great and would make fab MPs) but what about the mother with three children who is now weighing up the merits of spending a day out with her kids at Chessington during half term or spending the money on a train journey to another ‘vital to be seen at’ tory shindig instead. Not to put too finer point on it -  these things cost money. For a party that fundamentally believes in the free market you would have thought someone internally might have worked this out by now. However, I can’t take credit for this new moan. I’m told it goes back many years. There’s a recent story about a new female Tory MP in 2005 who nearly gave up the seat she was fighting because her exhaust fell off her car as she was driving up the M1 and she didn’t have any money to get it fixed.

To even get an interview as a candidate these days it will set you back £250. £250 and you might not even get picked! How many job interviews do you know where you have to pay the company for the pleasure of being interviewed? 

The only solution to stop the financial disparity amongst candidates is to be up front about costs and make bursaries available to those who put a strong business case forward for financial help. As the age old saying goes within the Conservative Party – it would be ‘a hand up, not a hand-out’. These bursaries are needed to create an even playing field – currently a candidate with vast amounts of money could buy any kind of help they wanted and then impress the constituencies at interview stage with their professionalism. Media training? No problem. Researchers on tap? Just a phone call away. If you don’t come from a background of money, you are more than likely to be on the phone begging your supplier to not cut you off. Again.

The tactic Lord Ashcroft deployed with his dosh was spot on at the last election. Rather than throwing a vast amount of money into a central office piggy bank (which we now know was raided to pay out for the likes of the bills of Chairman Lord Saatchi’s firms and strategy guru Lynton Crosby’s rather large wage packet), Ashcroft paid cash sums to individual candidates in target seats who could satisfy him with a detailed action plan to win the seat. It now makes sense to set this kind of unit up at Central Office and open a fund where donors can contribute anonymously so to save any kind of ‘cash for influence’ questions in the future.

Before male candidates start writing in complaining about this idea, I think this scheme should be applied to both men and women and the Conservative Party has a duty to help set it up. However, I continue to harp on about the female cause because it is they who are more likely to find it difficult to pay out candidate costs if they are mothers without an income of their own.

Bringing money into politics instantly makes an already badly perceived career even more grubby. But how can stay at home mums, nurses and teachers afford to represent us otherwise? Conservatives are nothing if they are not realists – they should wake up to the fact that as a party it will never attract the very best from all walks of life until it puts its money where its mouth is. Balls to loans for peerages, how about cash for quality?

***
RELATED LINK: Robert H Halfon argues that 'Action is needed to help candidates meet the costs of standing for parliament'.

The 'rejection letter'

It's not quite a rejection letter.  Those wannabe Tory MPs who did not make it on to the first 100 members of the A-list are tantalised with the possibility of being part of the July top-up.  Click on the image to enlarge the letter.  I've erased Zoe Healy's direct dial phone number for obvious reasons.
Rejectionletter_2

Who is on the A-list?

As promised this is ConservativeHome's rolling update of those people who have been accepted on to the Conservative Party's A-List of parliamentary candidates.  Without access to the official list (which CCHQ isn't publishing) we cannot guarantee that this list is 100% accurate but all names are double-sourced or come from an impeccable source.  ConservativeHome's reasons for publishing the list in this form are set out hereIf you know of other people who are on the list please email tim@conservativehome.com.

Additions in the week beginning 15th May are in red.  Added on 1st June in purple.

PLEASE NOTE: THE DESCRIPTIONS FOR EACH CANDIDATE ARE PRIMARILY INTENDED TO IDENTIFY INDIVIDUALS.  THEY ONLY OFFER THE BRIEFEST OF INTRODUCTIONS TO A CANDIDATE'S QUALIFICATIONS FOR THE A-LIST.

  1. Carolyn Abbot (Barnsley East & Mexborough PPC in 2005)
  2. Tariq Ahmad (Croydon North PPC in 2005)
  3. Amar Ahmed (Manchester Blackley PPC in 2005)
  4. Clive Allen (Devon North PPC in 2001 and Somerton and Frome in 2005)
  5. Louise Bagshawe (Author)
  6. Harriett Baldwin (PPC in Stockton North)
  7. Steve Barclay (Lancaster & Wyre PPC in 2001)
  8. Gavin Barwell (Former Director of Campaigning at CCO)
  9. James Bethell (A founder of the Ministry of Sound and Tooting PPC in 2005)
  10. Nicholas Boles (Head of Policy Exchange and Hove PPC in 2005)
  11. Karen Bradley (Former CCHQ policy officer and Manchester Withington PPC in 2005)
  12. Angie Bray (Member of the Greater London Assembly)
  13. Steve Brine (Runs Hampshire PR business)
  14. Fiona Bruce (Small Businesswoman of the Year 2003 and became Warrington South PPC after winning open primary)
  15. Sharon Buckle (East Midlands European candidate in 2004)
  16. Dr David Bull
  17. Conor Burns (Twice PPC for Eastleigh)
  18. Martin Callanan MEP
  19. Pam Chesters (Bristol West PPC in 2001)
  20. Timothy Coleridge (Kensington & Chelsea councillor)
  21. Damian Collins (2005 candidate for Northampton North)
  22. Tim Collins (former Tory MP)
  23. Mark Coote (Candidate for Hastings & Rye in 2001 and 2005)
  24. Peter Cox (PPC for Exeter in 2005)
  25. Caroline Dinenage (PPC for Portsmouth South 2005)
  26. Antonia Dunn (PPC for Cynon Valley 2005 and Wandsworth councillor)
  27. Jane Ellison (Pendle PPC in 2005)
  28. Wilfred Emmanuel-Jones (Entrepreneur of the Year at the Black Enterprise Awards 2005)
  29. Dr Richard Evans (Hendon PPC in 2001 and 2005)
  30. Suella Fernandes (Candidate for Leicester East in 2005)
  31. Howard Flight (Former MP)
  32. Vicky Ford (Birmingham Northfield PPC in 2005)
  33. Jackie Foster (Former MEP)
  34. George Freeman (Candidate for Stevenage in 2005)
  35. David Gold (Candidate for Brighton Pavillion in 2001)
  36. Zac Goldsmith (Co-Chair of the Environment Policy Group)
  37. Ashley Gray (PPC for Cornwall SE in 2001 and 2005)
  38. Andrew Griffith (PPC for Corby and East Northants 2001 and 2005)
  39. Andrew Griffiths (Chief of Staff to Hugo Swire MP, PPC in Dudley North in 2001 and European candidate in 2004)
  40.  Laetitia Gunn (Salford PPC in 2005)
  41. Sam Gyimah (CBI Entrepreneur of the Future in 2005)
  42. Hannah Hall (Candidate for Luton North in 2005)
  43. Rebecca Harris (Special Adviser to Tim Yeo MP)
  44. Chris Heaton-Harris MEP
  45. Kay Hemmings (Daventry Councillor)
  46. Pippa Hill (Ex-publisher)
  47. Kevin Hollinrake (Yorkshire estate agent)
  48. Kim Humphreys (PPC Camberwell & Peckham 1997, PPC Dulwich & West Norwood 2005)
  49. Maria Hutchings (Disabled Rights Champion)
  50. Margot James (Tory Vice-Chairman and PPC for Holborn & Pancras in 2005)
  51. Syed Kamall MEP
  52. Fiona Kemp (Candidate for Truro & St Austell in 2005 and GP)
  53. Pauline Latham (PPC for Broxtowe in 2001)
  54. Andrea Leadsom (Local councillor and banker and PPC for Knowsley South in 2005)
  55. Phillip Lee (PPC for Blaenau Gwent 2005 and GP)
  56. Cllr Brandon Lewis (Leader of Brentwood Borough Council)
  57. Katy Lindsay (Hull East PPC 2005)
  58. Alan Lockwood (Sedgefield PPC in 2005)
  59. Jack LoPresti (Bristol councillor)
  60. Dorothy Luckhurst (Blaydon PPC in 2005 and Ayrshire North and Arran in 2001)
  61. Kit Malthouse (Former Deputy Leader of Westminster Council)
  62. Julia Manning (Health professional, Bristol East PPC 2005)
  63. Paul Maynard (Adviser to Liam Fox and Twickenham PPC in 2005)
  64. Cordelia McCartney (PPC in Lewisham Deptford in 2001)
  65. Anne McIntosh MP (Vale of York seat 'disappears' because of boundary changes)
  66. Amanda McLean (senior charity worker and Oxford West and Abingdon PPC in 2005)
  67. Melanie McLean (Businesswoman and Islington South and Finsbury PPC in 2005)
  68. Esther McVey (Businesswoman and PPC for Wirral West in 2005)
  69. Mark Menzies (Selby PPC 2005) 
  70. Jeremy Middleton (Member of the Conservative Party Board and by-election candidate for Hartlepool in 2004)
  71. Ali Miraj (PPC for Aberavon in 2001 and PPC for Watford in 2005)
  72. Emma Moffett (Businesswoman and voluntary worker)
  73. Julie Moody
  74. Wendy Morton
  75. Beverley Nielsen (recent Midlands Business Woman of the Year)
  76. Hannah Parker (Former Chairman of Conservative Future)
  77. Priti Patel (Former Candidate for Nottingham North)
  78. Mark Pawsey (Nuneaton PPC in 2005)
  79. Andrew Percy (Hull councillor, teacher and former Normanton PPC)
  80. Maggie Punyer (Harrogate PPC 2005)
  81. Kulveer Ranger (Former Candidate for Makerfield)
  82. Adam Rickitt (Actor and Singer)
  83. Caroline Righton
  84. Alexandra Robson (New Hammersmith & Fulham councillor and Wolverhampton NE PPC in 2005)
  85. Julie Rook (Dover councillor)
  86. Amber Rudd (PPC in Liverpool Garston 2005 and Chairman of Travel Intelligence)
  87. Laura Sandys (Chair of OpenDemocracy)
  88. Jane Scott (Leader of Wiltshire County Council)
  89. Lucy Shersby (Battersea PPC in 2001 and media executive)
  90. Pamela Singleton (Pudsey PPC in 2005 and Pontefract and Castleford in 2001)
  91. Anna Soubry (Gedling PPC in 2005)
  92. Jason Steen (PPC in Liverpool Wavertree 2005)
  93. Andrew Stephenson (Macclesfield councillor)
  94. Mel Stride (Social Entrepreneur)
  95. Philippa Stroud (Director of the Centre for Social Justice and Birmingham Ladywood PPC in 2005)
  96. Judith Symes (Brighton Kempton PPC in 2005 and Bootle PPC in 2001)
  97. Elizabeth Truss (Former Parliamentary Candidate and PPC for Calder Valley, 2005)
  98. Simon Walker (media company executive and member of John Major's Downing Street Policy Unit)
  99. Sayeeda Warsi (Tory Vice-Chairman and Dewsbury PPC in 2005)
  100. Heather Wheeler (PPC for Coventry South in 2001 and 2005)
  101. Susan Williams (Leader of Trafford Council)

NO COMMENTS WILL BE POSTED UNTIL THEY HAVE BEEN CHECKED BY THE EDITOR OR DEPUTY EDITOR.

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