Compass annual event this Saturday


5:45 pm - June 9th 2010

by Newswire    


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The UK’s most influential centre-left pressure group will host its annual conference this Saturday 12 June stage with over 1000 activists in attendance. The event will also host a Labour Leadership Husting Debate.

One of the highlights of the event will be the first major speech given by the newly elected MP for Brighton Pavillion Caroline Lucas the Green Party Leader.

Other major keynote speakers include Nick Dearden Director of Jubilee Debt Campaign; Christine Blower General Secretary of the NUT; Pam Giddy of POWER 2010; Jon Cruddas MP Labour’s most influential backbencher and Chuka Umunna MP Labour’s newest rising star.

Compass says over 500 new people have joined the organisation in the last month alone bringing its total membership to over 4500, whilst its members and supporters list has surged to over 40,000.

Compass will shortly ballot its membership on who the organisation should back for Labour leader.

The event will be the first major gathering of progressives after the election and provide the opportunity for the centre-left to come to terms with the new coalition as well as face up to the scale of Labour’s defeat.

Gavin Hayes, General Secretary of Compass said:

Things have to change. The planet burns, the poor get poorer, a rich elite get ever wealthier, and our democracy is in a sad, broken state. The rules of the game must be rewritten. We need a new progressive consensus, and a new hope.

A new hope that while there may be limits to what politicians can do in Westminster, there should be no limits to what a new progressive movement can achieve. That’s what the conference this Saturday is all about and why it is so important.

More here: http://compassonline.org.uk/conference

From a press release

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Reader comments


Define “pressure group”

The UK’s most influential centre-left pressure group

Because from the slightly more distant view of Yorkshire, the most influential centre-left pressure group in the country is currently the Liberal Democrats…

;-)

Hi Mat, haven’t you heard? According to Sunny Hundal, Donpaskini, Claude Carpentieri and the other “Liberal” Conspiracy mafia, the Lib Dems are no longer centre-left owing to the fact that they’re now in a position to implement some centre-left policies Labour had 13 years to implement but which it failed to even try to do so. According to the new “the entire left is in opposition, progressive politics is now about which middle-class middle-aged Oxbridge-educated twat will lead the Labour Party to its next electoral defeat (Abbott went to Cambridge)” wisdom, the Lib Dems are somewhere to the right of Michael Howard.

That is, if you agree with the line of this blog :)

Oh, I’m very aware that some on the “left” think any sort of compromise to stop the idiot right taking full power is disgusting, and suspect some would rather have the right in full flight, causing havoc and mayhem, because it’d be better, electorally, for them at the next election.

They also seem to think that a minority Tory administration calling a GE within a year would fall from power as the voters inevitably vote them out.

I’m not sold on either of these points.

But, y’know, this is a large, group blog, and while I’m uncomfortable with some of the posts made, that’s always been the case. And while some of the idiot partisans are making ridiculous statements on here, they’re making themselves look stupid for the most part.

I’ll continue to contribute when I’ve something to say. I’m not sure when/what that’ll be though.

I’m sure both of you are intelligent enough to know the difference between a political party and a pressure group.

Bbbut…

For yearsanyearsanyearsanyears I was told I was wasting my time with “that pressure group” and that I should join a “proper political party” (ie one with a chance of power).

The old Liberals used to be a think tank for Labour govts, then the Lib Dems got called a pressure group more often than was polite. I still sometimes refer to the Greens as such, for that’s pretty much their mission statement.

However, I’m prety sure one of my politics professors told me that the difference between a party and a pressure group was that parties ran candidates, generally you could put all parties into a venn diagram as a subset of pressure goup, if you want.

Not saying I agree with him, but… ;-)

I was told I was wasting my time with “that pressure group” and that I should join a “proper political party”

Not me :)

I like the proliferation of parties. If people want to be ideological pure, that’s up to them.

7. andrew adams

Oh, I’m very aware that some on the “left” think any sort of compromise to stop the idiot right taking full power is disgusting, and suspect some would rather have the right in full flight, causing havoc and mayhem, because it’d be better, electorally, for them at the next election.

Having been on the receiving end of some pretty unpleasant abuse elsewhere for daring to defend my decision to vote LibDem and still claim to be on the left I have to agree with this.
I think this is a good topic for the Blog Nation event.

Over whom exactly does this “influential” group exert any actual influence?


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  1. Liberal Conspiracy

    Compass annual event this Saturday with over 1000 attending http://bit.ly/aZTHRG

  2. Ayse

    Im a newbie RT @libcon: Compass annual event this Saturday with over 1000 attending http://bit.ly/aZTHRG





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