A while ago I wrote a blog post asking why so many of my
fellow Labourites did not feel optimistic about our party, our electoral
chances and the direction we were moving in. More recently, I discussed the
need for Labour to show greater courage of their convictions. After this year’s
Labour Party conference, both blog posts no longer seem relevant. I left
conference unsure of my opinion on party conferences, but so sure of my opinion
of my party, its leader and its vision; so filled with optimism that was now
shared by far more people than when I wrote a blog post calling for the party
to cheer up.
This was my first year attending conference, and beforehand
I read the occasional conference tips blog post, as well as following the
little labourlist debate over whether conference is even worth having…but
mostly I was excited to go but didn’t do much to really plan or structure what
I was doing to do, and I didn’t really know what to expect. So what do I think
of conference, post having actually done it myself? I’m not sure. I guess the
one thing I’d say is it’s kind of what you make of it. I had a really great
time at conference, but when I go again I’ll be sure to plan more, to structure
more; to really fill my time, try and meet more new people (however lovely it
is to keep bumping into old friends), attend more training sessions (two of the
highlights of conference, for me, were Young Labour’s speech writing training
and a workshop on using contact creator for community organising)…or maybe I’ll
just apply to be a steward and ensure I’ll be productive during conference that
way. Because, yes, I did have a lot of fun, but the length of conference is a
long time to kind of just be milling around for a lot of it.
And, really, it was worth going to conference just for Ed
Miliband’s speech; I’m not going to go into depth about how amazing it was…that’s
been done enough, but if the only purpose of conference was to give this speech
the media attention it deserved (which I don’t think is the only purpose of
conference, by the way) then that would be more than enough of a reason for it.
It was phenomenal (I may have been teary eyed throughout; in fact I may have
been teary eyed before it even began, having welled up when I realised David
Tennant was narrating the montage of Labour’s achievements shown before Ed took
the stage).
And the optimism after this amazing speech was just
wonderful. A party maybe still a little dubious about its leader before was now
no longer. The Fabian’s Spin Alley fringe after the speech was required to do
very little spinning (the whole panel went something along the lines of: “how
good was it?!” “I know; it was SO good!”. It was very enjoyable). Cheers of “Ed,
Ed, Ed!” as Ed walked into the Young Labour reception illustrated a mood felt
throughout conference; our leader is amazing, his vision is there and it’s a
vision we believe in and want to fight for and we can win in 2015. One Nation
Labour, reused and echoed throughout other conference speeches, and also just
in everyone’s conversations, is a really rather brilliant framework for the
Labour Party to move forward within.
“One Nation: a country where prosperity is fairly shared. One Nation: a country where we all feel part of a shared endeavour. One Nation: a country that we rebuild together”
Reading my free copy of Total Politics on the train home
from conference, I was happy to be getting back to politics. But wow, was I
excited about the politics I was going back to.