Wokingham Today

Keep positive

- From the council leadership Stephen Conway Cllr Stephen Conway is the leader of Wokingham Borough Council and ward member for Twyford

IN a year when we have all-out council elections on new boundaries in May and a general election, probably in the autumn, we can expect the political temperatur­e – locally and nationally – to rise.

If the past is any guide, the run up to important elections usually sees politics take on a more negative flavour, with attacks on the personalit­y as well as the policies of other parties featuring more prominentl­y than positive reasons to vote for a party.

For some, especially those who have little positive to say, the temptation to do down their opponents will be irresistib­le.

For those attacked, the urge to retaliate in kind can also be difficult to resist.

It’s natural to worry that if mud is thrown at you, some of it might stick if you don’t fight back.

Before you know it, we are in a downward spiral of attack, counter-attack, and futher attack.

Calm and rational argument is drowned out by increasing­ly shrill and bitter aggression.

I dearly hope we can avoid this kind of politics, both in Wokingham and across the country. It does nothing to encourage people to vote; all the evidence we have suggests that it puts them off not just particular parties, but that it disillusio­ns them with the whole political process.

At local government level, we cannot afford for people to turn away from voting; low turnouts merely encourage central government­s to ignore local concerns and centralize decision-making even more.

Politics is inevitably about a clash of ideas and will always involve pointing out the errors of others. As long as that is done in a calm and rational way, and does not descend into crude abuse, it can be acceptable.

The political process is at its best when parties focus on what they have done and what they want to do, rather than when they try to knock lumps out of their opponents.

In my experience of 30 years of knocking on doors and engaging with residents face-toface, the vast majority of people are much more interested in what you are trying to achieve than in your criticisms of others.

One of my new year’s resolution­s, then, is to try to keep focused on the positive and avoid, as much as is humanly possible, being drawn into the negative.

I will be doing my best to carry this positive approach into the campaignin­g for the local elections that will soon begin in earnest.

I may not always achieve my ambition, but I will always try to explain what the council has done, is doing, and hopes to do, in preference to lambasting the current administra­tion’s opponents.

What the other side choses to do is not something I have any control over.

They may see the value of positivity as well, but they may take the view that a more negative form of politics will help them more.

We know that for some politician­s, tough times provide an opportunit­y to play on peoples’ fears rather than appeal to their hopes.

We have seen over the last few years how this has stoked up division in society and led not just to verbal attacks but even to physical violence.

But I remain of the view that what most people want is an honest, rational, and grown-up appraisal of problems and a constructi­ve, measured, and calm approach to solving them.

And I remain convinced that hope inspires more than fear.

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