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Labour to paint Cameron's target seats green

By Jane Merrick, Political Editor

Labour is to step up its attack on the Conservative Party's climate change divisions by targeting 31 "green seats" that David Cameron needs to win the election.

A list drawn up in Downing Street and seen by The Independent on Sunday shows crucial constituencies with strong support for the Green Party among the 112 target seats the Tories need for a majority. Senior Labour strategists believe that they can target the 31 seats – mainly in central London, Brighton and university areas – with environmental messages and attempt to deny Mr Cameron victory.

Most of the constituencies are Labour's most vulnerable, but a handful are Lib Dem seats.

One option is to target voters with leaflets quoting some prominent Conservative climate change sceptics. It follows Gordon Brown's denouncement of "flat-Earth" environmental sceptics, including the former Tory chancellor Lord Lawson and ex-shadow home secretary David Davis.

In the 31 seats, the Green Party or Scottish Green Party had a 2 per cent or higher share of the vote – which could make the difference between the Tories winning or losing on a marginal swing. The Tories need to win Tooting – target seat number 112 - with a notional Labour majority of 5,190, to win an outright majority. In this south London seat, the Greens won a 4.1 per cent share of the vote in 2005.

One problem with the strategy is that the Green Party could benefit by the extra focus on environmental issues – making no difference to the battleground. Greg Clark, the shadow climate change secretary, has insisted that Mr Cameron and the party remain committed to policies tackling climate change.

The 31 'Green' Tory targets

Finchley & Golders Green (L); Croydon Central (L); Battersea (L); Milton Keynes South (L); Hove (L); Cheltenham (LD); Stroud (L); Carshalton & Wallington (LD); Hastings & Rye (L); Calder Valley (L); Hereford & North Herefordshire (LD); Colne Valley (L); Brighton Kemptown (L); Swindon South (L); Milton Keynes North (C, notional L due to boundary changes); Watford (L); Birmingham Edgbaston (L); Worcester (L); Bradford West (L); Richmond Park (LD); Brentford & Isleworth (L); Edinburgh South (L); Leeds North West (LD); Ochil & South Perthshire (L); Stirling (L); Devon North (LD); Oxford West & Abingdon (LD); Poplar & Limehouse (L); Reading West (L); Waveney (L); Tooting (L)

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BROWN HAS LOST CREDIBILITY:
[info]bgarvie wrote:
Sunday, 6 December 2009 at 07:30 am (UTC)
Labour are desperate to try anything to hold onto power. With their 'class warfare and class envy' credentials this will naturally be called the 'green with envy' project. After 12 years they have proved they have abandoned the working class and the electorate in general. These policies demonstrate Brown is more interested in survival using bias, discrimination and betrayal. Soon there will be no country left with an abandoned working class facing unemployment escalating at its quickest rate in history.

As a working class supporter of Cameron, his policies do have some merit. He offers a breath of fresh air and gives hope for the future. DC knows full well he cannot be complacent; he must continue to work hard to demonstrate he has policies that will provide jobs and encourage investment in the UK and will thus convince the electorate he is worth voting for.
He will bring this country together, not divide it like Brown.
Re: BROWN HAS LOST CREDIBILITY:
[info]vhawk1951 wrote:
Sunday, 6 December 2009 at 01:13 pm (UTC)
oh, surly not - is he not a truly wise, determined, quasi Churchillian saint?- or am I just too stupid to see it- us flat-earthers are so daft; any resemblance between him and Ramsay MacDonald is purely coincidental
Strategy
[info]pilsden wrote:
Sunday, 6 December 2009 at 09:26 am (UTC)
If I understand this Labour are planning to campaign against themselves about sums them up
Re: Strategy
[info]vhawk1951 wrote:
Sunday, 6 December 2009 at 01:08 pm (UTC)
very wittily put, bravo
Re: Strategy
[info]midwinter1947 wrote:
Sunday, 6 December 2009 at 04:19 pm (UTC)
Good point, though I welcome any conversion no matter how late in the day. For me the Conservative Party do not stack up on environmental issues - especially (but not only) climate change. I have the misfortune to have David Davis as my MP and any attempt to discuss this matter with him is a waste of effort - though I have tried. I am perhaps doubly unfortunate to have Godfrey Bloom as my MEP (UKIP) who agrees with Davis and is (and I quote) 'Too busy to enter into correspondence'.

Right-wing politics do not offer any sensible response to climate change or any other area of life that requires concerted, social action. Remember what Margaret had to say about 'society' - that stupid idea lingers on.
Re: Strategy
[info]snotcricket wrote:
Sunday, 6 December 2009 at 08:35 pm (UTC)
Labour panicked as they saw the poll which showed they might just be re-elected & have to sort out the mess they created & as they haven't a bloody clue came up with the strategy of losing an election by begging people not to vote for them.

Labours masterstroke will be to drop the song 'Things can only get better' & had hoped to honour the PM with the indicative 'All by myself' however it is rumoured Gordon Brown favours the much stronger & unmistakable message of 'Please Release me, let me go'.
reminds me of a carton
[info]vhawk1951 wrote:
Sunday, 6 December 2009 at 01:06 pm (UTC)
green party chap on doorstep of a Jehovah's witness, which latter is saying " goodness gracious, is that the time?"
green with envy
[info]vhawk1951 wrote:
Sunday, 6 December 2009 at 01:17 pm (UTC)
green with envy more like

porr old Gobbo he's totally lost the plot

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