Lord Walker’s experience
as a Conservative Candidate
Edited extract from the “House
Magazine”
Is this the way we treat
applicants to become a Parliamentary Candidate? The Party members are entitled to hear his
views and if unacceptable turn him down.
It should not be an elite in CCHQ that impose their own views in
determining whether an applicant should be on the Candidate’s List!
Until the last election, he (Lord Walker) had only ever
voted for the Conservatives, to whom he donated £10,000 in 2020.
In a letter to Rishi Sunak in 2023, he said it was his
“most fervent wish” to become a Tory parliamentary candidate, having “given my
all to earning that privilege”.
By that point, Walker says he had spent two years
door-knocking and leafleting for the party in the hope of being selected for a
constituency at the general election.
“I did feel I was being given the endless runaround by
CCHQ [Conservative Campaign Headquarters],” he says. “This was a long,
committed process. I was not so arrogant to think I could just parachute in and
bag a seat.”
Walker says his candidacy was repeatedly deferred, as the
party told him he was being too outspoken on issues like sewage in Britain’s
seas. But he says he had also become disillusioned by the Tories’ ideological
direction.
“I just did not like the aping Reform kind of way that
the politics was going. I could see the writing on the wall, and I think I’ve
been broadly vindicated in them becoming a bit of a tribute band and this
existential crisis they’re now having.”
There was nothing opportunistic, he insists, about his
decision to switch his support to Labour in early 2024, and he points out that
he has “never donated a penny” to the party.
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