Halifax Courier

Q&A: ‘I wanted a chance to make a difference’

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We asked readers for their questions for Halifax MP Holly Lynch. Here are the answers to some of the most common and unusual.

Why did you decide to get into politics?

I certainly didn’t have ambitions of becoming a politician growing up, but I became increasing­ly involved in the Labour Party after university.

I’m someone who won’t let it go if things are unfair or if you can see how something could be and should be changed for the better, and so when the opportunit­y came up to put myself forward to be Labour’s candidate in 2015, just three months before the election it, I decided to go for it.

It was a big decision and I was 27 at the time, which is still young to be an MP, but it was a chance to be able to make a difference for my hometown and so I got over the nerves and got stuck in.

What are the best and worst bits about being an MP? There is no job descriptio­n for an MP, which is both a gift and a curse.

It means you have some flexibilit­y to focus on the things you think are important and do they job in the way you think it should be done.

However it also means people can tell you you’re doing it wrong!

I represent just over 100,000 people in Halifax and needless to say, everyone has slightly different views and opinions, and the rise in social media can make navigating some of that a challenge.

I think if you are transparen­t, accessible, work hard and have integrity to your decision making and recognise that you won’t please everyone (some views you are there to challenge!) then you can hold your head high.

But it also gives you the chance to do things you never thought possible. I have been to meetings at the White House and the Pentagon for example and every day my team and I solve problems for local people.

Who is your political hero? It’s a cliché but Bobby Kennedy. I think he was fearless in his campaign for social justice.

Not someone who enjoyed the limelight or craved power like some of the other notable members of his infamous family, but someone who recognised that to be in power was the only means of delivering social justice, equality and fairness.

How did you feel the first time you stood up to speak

in the House of Commons?

Terrified! You sit there for hours waiting for your turn to speak.

It’s actually worse the second speech you make because it’s etiquette that no-one intervenes on maiden speeches but after that you’re fair game for interventi­ons from MPs agreeing or disagreein­g with what you say. The same can be said for your first speech from the despatch box.

You represent the whole of your party on an issue when you speak from the despatch box as a shadow Minister, with MPs opposite intervenin­g and ‘heckling from a sedentary position’ as the Speaker would say!

Why did you vote to try and stop Brexit when the majority

of constituen­ts voted to leave the EU?

I very much understood that 58 per cent of people in Calderdale voted to leave the EU which in any democracy really matters.

The votes for MPs in the House of Commons weren’t on whether we should leave or not, but on whether the terms of the deal after leaving the EU were good enough and if they were what was promised to the country, by those who wanted to leave.

The deal wasn’t good enough and it wasn’t what was promised.

I couldn’t hand on heart vote to say that it was when I could see that the deal before us would negatively impact on Halifax businesses and jobs.

Every week, even now, Halifax

businesses contact me to say that their costs have gone up and they have more barriers to trade since Brexit.

We all have a responsibi­lity to make Brexit work, but so much for ‘oven ready’ and £350 million a week for the NHS.

Would you even consider joining the Conservati­ve party?

Quite simply – definitely not!

What are your views on the plans for the new swimming pool in Halifax, and the fact thatthesyn­chroniseds­wimming team say it is not deep enough for them to train in any more? It’s really sad that the requiremen­ts of the synchronis­ed swimming team were not able to be met with the plans for the new pool.

However, I’m acutely aware of how prohibitiv­e the timeframe and the budget for the project are as the council has strived to meet Government’s demands.

The rapidly increasing cost of building materials combined with inflation will be a constant challenge as we move to build the new sports centre at pace and an issue we still might need to return to with the Government.

I really hope the synchronis­ed swimming team are able to find alternativ­e venues and continue to compete.

What do you think about the recent increase in parking charges in Halifax town centre?

I know Calderdale Council undertook a full analysis before introducin­g the parking charges which they feel are competitiv­e when compared with other towns. Halifax has a lot to offer and encouragin­g people to use public and active transport wasapartof the reasoning. In an ideal world, it would be nice to do away with parking charges but funding to councils from central Government has been cut by nearly 40 per cent since 2010, so every penny the council is able to make is desperatel­y needed.

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 ?? ?? CONSTITUEN­CY: Holly with pupils of Whitehill Academy
CONSTITUEN­CY: Holly with pupils of Whitehill Academy

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