A-List_(Conservative)

Conservative A-List

Conservative A-List

Concept in the internal affairs of the British Conservative Party


The Conservative A-List, also called Priority List, was a list of United Kingdom candidates drawn up by Conservative Central Office at the behest of David Cameron following his election as party leader in December 2005, aimed as a means of broadening the number of Conservative Members of Parliament, potential peers and MEPs from minority groups and women as well as other preferred candidates for candidature. Where the preferred forums for selection were held, at least two members from the list were put to every open primary, and where these were not held the A-list were recommended directly, particularly to the top target seats.

Cameron Cutie was a term used for female candidates.[1]

History

In April 2006, a Conservative Party committee on candidates set out to deliver a promise by David Cameron to transform the Conservative party at Westminster. The committee reduced 500 aspiring politicians on the party's list of approved parliamentary candidates to an "A-list" of between 100 and 150 priority candidates.[2] The result was a list on which more than half of the names were of women. The list included the former Coronation Street actor Adam Rickitt, Zac Goldsmith, the author Louise Bagshawe (later Mensch), and Margot James.[3]

Amid controversy, the "A-list" approach was endorsed by Michael Portillo, a Conservative MP until 2005, who in 2006 said that

[based on current membership]...much of the Parliamentary Party is reactionary and unattractive to voters.[4]

Conservative chairmen and activists in seats considered potentially winnable were in the run-up to the 2010 election urged by Conservative Central Office to select candidates from the new A-list and were in many cases included in open primaries, new and preferred open-to-all selection meetings.[5]

The 2010 general election saw failures as well as successes for the "A-listers" selected for 'winnable' seats.[6]

Listed

Those on the A-list included the following: (bold marks people elected to Parliament in 2010) [7][8][9]


Notes and references

Notes

  1. PPC Croydon North 2005
  2. PPC Stockton North 2005
  3. PPC Lancaster and Wyre 2001
  4. PPC Tooting 2005
  5. PPC Hove 2005
  6. PPC Manchester Withington 2005
  7. PPC Warrington South 2005
  8. PPC Eastleigh 2005
  9. Former Camden LB opposition lead councillor. PPC Bristol West 2001
  10. PPC Northampton North 2005
  11. Westmoreland and Lonsdale MP 1997–2005
  12. PPC North Norfolk 2005
  13. PPC Portsmouth South 2005
  14. PPC Pendle 2005
  15. PPC Stevenage 2005
  16. PPC Brighton Pavilion 2001
  17. PPC Dudley North 2001; European candidate in 2004
  18. Special Adviser to Tim Yeo
  19. East Midlands MEP 1999–2009
  20. PPC Holborn and Pancras 2005
  21. PPC Broxtowe 2001
  22. PPC Knowsley South 2005
  23. PPC Blaenau Gwent 2005
  24. Leader of Brentwood Borough Council
  25. PPC Sedgefield 2005
  26. Bristol councillor
  27. former deputy Leader of Westminster Council
  28. PPC Twickenham 2005
  29. Vale of York MP 1997–2010
  30. PPC Wirral West 2005
  31. PPC Selby 2005
  32. PPC Nottingham North 2005
  33. PPC Nuneaton 2005
  34. PPC Normanton 2005
  35. PPC Makerfield 2005
  36. PPC Aberavon 2005
  37. PPC Gedling 2005
  38. Macclesfield councillor
  39. PPC Birmingham Ladywood 2005
  40. PPC Calder Valley 2005
  41. PPC Dewsbury 2005
  42. PPC Coventry South 2001 and 2005
  43. Leader of Trafford Council 2004–2009

References

  1. "Are the Tories only looking for 'cutie' candidates?". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 27 June 2023.
  2. Will Woodward and Tania Branigan, "The A-list: new leader's drive for women and minority candidates" in The Guardian, 19 April 2006
  3. Will Woodward, chief political correspondent, "Former soap star on Cameron's A-list of Tory candidates" in The Guardian, 11 May 2006
  4. A-list 'not snubbing' NE England dated 20 October 2006 at bbc.co.uk
  5. Election 2010 Part Three 2155, vol. 44:17, retrieved 5 November 2021
  6. Rosemary Bennett, "The A-list" in The Times dated 12 June 2006, at timesonline.co.uk
  7. Who is on the A-list? at conservativehome web site
  8. Conservative A-List and selections Archived 28 March 2010 at the Wayback Machine dated 4 June 2006 at colin-ross.org.uk
  9. Robin Brant, A year on, has the A-list worked? at BBC.co.uk dated December 2006
  10. PPC Liverpool Garston 2005

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