Louise Burfitt-Dons is a Conservative Party Activist on the Candidate’s List. Learn more of her initiatives visit www.louiseburfittdons.com and follow her on Twitter.
The differences in lifestyle between a young Muslim girl and
a five-year-old white child whose parents were both born in Hertfordshire are
stark. The similarity between the two is that both are loved to bits by their
parents. I was born and brought up in Kuwait, so I know this first hand. Traditional
family values are global; they cross all cultural and economic barriers and for
good reason. They are deeply conservative – and that is our common link with
ethnic voters.
Talk about respect, tolerance, or compassion and you can engage with anyone. Next to the rising price of household essentials and how to pay for them, the welfare of our loved ones comes next. But how do you get that conversation going?
The recent move to modernise in every area possible has alienated not just much of the party faithful but also much of our ethnic population. Traditional values are the bedrock of the Sikhs, the Jews and even the atheists. Somalis deeply value family, as do the Irish, the Poles, the Indians, and the Nigerians. There’s no country or creed ignores the life-shaping influence of the family unit for a stable society.
Voters are ripe for traditional conservative messages. Ordinary mother and fathers are maxed out on liberal living. Sex, drugs and the internet are pushed at an increasingly younger age to their children. Single parent homes, despite being glamourised in the media by wealthy celebrities, are often lonely and angst-ridden. Traditional homes, wherever possible, are invaluable to us all. You can’t replace basic family training with state intervention; the thousands of things that children learn over time at home: communication, compassion, responsibility, punctuality, the work ethic, or just simple tasks like changing a light bulb or peeling a potato.