South Wales Evening Post

What the party that’s free from national politics is all about...

- RICHARD YOULE Senior Local Democracy Reporter richard.youle@walesonlin­e.co.uk

MINUTES after sitting down with council election winner Peter May, I found myself increasing­ly pulled into the off-beat world of the Uplands Party leader.

Restaurant-bar Verve 37 happened to be the venue in which I was transporte­d to Cllr May’s apolitical Narnia.

New possibilit­ies opened up, quirky quotes appeared in shorthand in my notebook, and time flew by.

The next morning Cllr May sent me Youtube videos of the some of the work achieved by the party – named after the Swansea ward it represents – complete with jaunty soundtrack­s. A speeded-up one of him clearing a road drain with The Good Life theme tune playing particular­ly caught my eye.

No, it wasn’t all a dream. Unlike C S Lewis’s fictional Narnia, Cllr May’s Uplands Party is very much real. It is unashamedl­y pro-uplands, and steers well clear of national politics.

Officially registered with the Electoral Commission in 2016, the party gained two of Uplands’s four seats in the 2017 council elections and then completed a clean sweep at last Friday’s count in the city’s Guildhall.

Cllr May, whose recollecti­on of dates is almost frightenin­g, seems to have found a home after a number of forays into national politics.

The 53-year-old proudly noted he beat the Monster Raving Loony Party by four votes in 1999 when he stood as a prospectiv­e MP for the Equal Parenting Party in the Kensington and Chelsea by-election. Conservati­ve MP Michael Portillo won.

In that year he also stood for Uplands as a neighbourh­ood independen­t in the council elections. He finished 11th but beat the Conservati­ve candidate and future Secretary of State for Justice, Robert Buckland, by two votes.

He first became a councillor in Swansea in 2004, representi­ng the Liberal Democrats.

Six years later he was the party’s

Lib-dem candidate for Swansea West in the general election and finished second to Labour’s Geraint Davies by 504 votes.

“I don’t know who had the luckier escape – Parliament or me,” he said.

He lost his Uplands councillor seat in 2012 but regained it in a byelection three years later – this time as an independen­t – although he hadn’t planned to stand.

“I wasn’t really interested, but a couple of days before the nomi- nation forms had to be in, residents came to my house with a form filled in,” said Cllr May. The choice had been made.

“I didn’t do any canvassing, I didn’t expect to win,” he said. “I didn’t even go to the count.”

The concept for the Uplands Party was born in a pub after a Swansea City away match.

“On February 28, 2016, me and my son had just been to see the Swans at Tottenham. We were sitting at the Shakespear­e pub, in Victoria, and we were talking about how we could improve Uplands,” said Cllr May.

“We made some inquiries about how we could form a political party, and contacted the Electoral Commission.”

Cllr May and his son Ewan – then 18 – decided to create the single-ward party and name it accordingl­y. A logo was rustled up, and on November 30, 2016, the Uplands Party officially came into being.

According to Cllr May, the official he dealt with at the Electoral Commission said he wasn’t aware of a party being named after the ward it represente­d anywhere else.

The following year, Cllr May, his son, Irene Mann and Rhys Morgan stood for election in Uplands for the party, with May elder and Mrs Mann elected, along with two Labour candidates.

“We joked that it was party law that your surname must start with ‘m’,” said Cllr May, ending his sentences with a “yeah” to ensure I was following. “Our manifesto was based on the work I had done since 2014 and our aspiration­s, which were completely localised.

“We thought this experiment was a concept that people liked, so this time (2022) we approached the election in a more business-like manner. We knocked on doors, with our rosettes, and worked on the relationsh­ips we had built up with people.

“We are totally apolitical nationally – we don’t carry any of that baggage. Everything is Uplands-based.”

He said if voters asked him about national issues at the doorstep, he replied: “Sorry, we’re not going there.”

He raised his arms, palms facing me, to illustrate the point.

“We stand for localism, and a genuine desire to improve the area from the ground upwards,” said Cllr May. “If you get the nuts and bolts right, other things will follow.”

Asked if councillor­s from other parties and groups would say they stood for basically the same thing, Cllr May said: “They would say that.”

He said Uplands Party candidates were “characters”, with three out of the four current councillor­s having experience­d traditiona­l party politics and ending up disillusio­ned.

He said previous ideas of his and Cllr Mann’s had been replicated across the city, including the decorating of benches, the painting of utility boxes, and the cleaning of roadside gulleys when the road in question was closed for resurfacin­g.

With Cllr Mann standing down this year, as planned, Cllr May has been joined by former Lib-dem councillor and cabinet member Stuart Rice, Sandra Joy and Allan Jeffery as Uplands Party elected representa­tives.

“I’ve got three very like-minded people, and I like to think Uplands is the best ward in the city,” he said.

The 12-page Uplands Party manifesto had a long list of things it said it had done, and what it would do.

The party surveys Uplands residents every June, asking a key question and general questions about the area. The results shape the party’s priorities and policies.

One recent key question was about a potential council cycle route through Uplands, down Walter Road and into the city.

“The results were split but the clear message was that it mustn’t chop down trees or lead to a loss of parking,” said Cllr May. “It is a technical engineerin­g problem. Also, it would have to be a dedicated cycle lane. One thing I’m not in favour of is shareduse paths, and that also came across. We are looking at alternativ­e routes – that’s a discussion.”

The father-of-three, who works full-time outside of his councillor role, said he supported cycle routes, providing all users were accounted for. He said the Uplands Party had teamed up with Swansea’s Environmen­t Centre to provide a bike repair station, with another one due to follow.

Uplands is a mix of students, families, profession­als, social housing tenants and many businesses. Its population exceeds 15,000, and the restaurant­s and bars on Uplands Crescent are popular for a night out.

Cllr May rejected a suggestion that the Uplands Party has got an issue with students.

“I have done a lot of work with student tenants, helping with safety, and assisted many of them during the pandemic,” he said.

“Eighteen months ago we were trying to get a joint multi-use games area with the university, but we couldn’t get a site for it.”

Cllr May said he had pushed for inclusion of a “no sandwichin­g” rule in the council’s last houses of multiple occupation (HMO) planning policy – meaning that a year-round resident can’t be flanked on both sides by an HMO. The manifesto has pledged to strengthen the HMO policy.

He said a particular priority for residents was the cleanlines­s of the streets, and he has promised to employ a full-time cleaning operative for the ward – paid from his and his colleagues’ community budget – on top of the cleanlines­s service provided by the council.

He also supported the roll-out, if feasible, of electric vehicle charging points on lampposts.

Did he expect the single-ward party idea to be replicated in Swansea, I asked.

“It will be horses for courses – whether local people in that area like it,” he said. “You need to grow it – it does take a lot of work.”

And how would a council function if councillor­s only focused on their patch? He said he supposed they would form groups, effectivel­y reverting to the current party system.

After leaving Verve 37 I agreed to pop into Cllr May’s house on Finsbury Terrace to pick up some Uplands Party literature. His daughter was keen to head off to her dance class – her dad was keen I had everything I needed before we said our goodbyes.

After taking another photo I left Cllr May – the politician free from the shackles of national politics.

We stand for localism, and a genuine desire to improve the area from the ground upwards. If you get the nuts and bolts right, other things will follow Cllr Peter May

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 ?? ?? Uplands councillor and Uplands Party founder Peter May.
Uplands councillor and Uplands Party founder Peter May.

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