UK opposition woo ‘Stevenage woman’ to nail victory at polls

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A pedestrian walks across the Town square in Stevenage, north of London, on June 6, 2024. UK main opposition leader Keir Starmer is hoping "Stevenage woman" can propel him to election victory. (AFP)
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Pedestrians walk down the High Street by Westgate shopping center in Stevenage, north of London, on June 6, 2024. UK main opposition leader Keir Starmer is hoping "Stevenage woman" can propel him to election victory. (AFP)
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Updated 27 June 2024
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UK opposition woo ‘Stevenage woman’ to nail victory at polls

  • Labour Party strategists believe the archetypal working mother in her early 40s in a commuter town north of London is the all-important floating voter

STEVENAGE, UK: “Mondeo man” — a social type named after a popular Ford car — helped Tony Blair win the 1997 British general election. “Workington man” did the same for Boris Johnson in 2019. Now the UK’s main opposition leader Keir Starmer is hoping “Stevenage woman” will propel him to power.
This archetypal working mother in her early 40s in a commuter town north of London worried about the cost of living and Britain’s creaking public services, is the all-important floating voter, according to Starmer’s Labour Party strategists.
The party believes winning women like her over is critical to Starmer securing the keys to 10 Downing Street after 14 years of Conservative rule.
Experts caution, however, that the UK electorate has become increasingly fragmented in recent years, with voters less likely to fall neatly into categories.
Mother-of-three Irene, who works in accounting in the Hertfordshire town, said she was indeed a floating voter but only partly recognized herself in the “Stevenage woman” stereotype.
“Keir Starmer? I don’t really like him — he’s not very effective,” she told AFP, preferring not to give her full name.
As for super-rich Conservative Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, she didn’t think he could “understand what the average person is going through on the cost of living.”




Pedestrians walk down the High Street by Westgate shopping centre in Stevenage, north of London, on June 6, 2024. UK main opposition leader Keir Starmer is hoping "Stevenage woman" can propel him to election victory. (AFP)

Stevenage, a town of 94,000 people around 45 kilometers (27 miles) north of London, is seen as a bellwether seat.
It was held by the Conservatives during the years when Margaret Thatcher and John Major were in power before going to Labour under Tony Blair and Gordon Brown.

The Conservatives reclaimed it in 2010 and held it in 2019 with a majority of around 8,500.
Although Irene said she had not been badly hit by the UK’s economic woes, the decline in policing and the state-funded National Health Service (NHS) was a big concern for her, as was Gaza.
She said she wouldn’t be giving either of the two main parties her vote and would instead decide between the smaller opposition Lib Dems and Greens.
“I have a son who is an asthmatic and I fear the day there is no ambulance. That is terrifying,” she said.
“Also I don’t think that if something happened the police would turn up. The whole thing has gone utterly downhill.”
Philip Cowley, professor of politics at Queen Mary University of London, said each election threw up at least one of these stereotypical voter types.
But he said they were in fact of limited use to politicians, especially as the electorate had become “much more volatile.”
“Very occasionally, they have some merit, but often they don’t. For the most part, these groups behave pretty much like the rest of the population,” he added.
“The old split between the bulk of aligned voters and a small number of floating voters is no longer so valid.”
Undecided Amie Matthews, a 24-year-old mother of two children under three, said she would vote for one of the two main parties, her main concerns being housing and education.
“I don’t think I’m ever going to get a mortgage in my life because I can never save up for one and it’s a lot harder now to be approved,” said the former children’s special needs worker.




Labour Party leader Keir Starmer speaks during a live TV debate, hosted by The BBC, in Nottingham, on June 26, 2024, in the build-up to the UK general election on July 4. (POOL/AFP)

Starmer may be leading in the polls, with some predicting a landslide victory, but voter apathy could still pose a problem.
“I just don’t get involved in politics, it’s just more headache and stress, so I don’t vote,” said Anna Monareng, 39, a dental nurse with two children.
Another Stevenage mother, Sarahjane Cotton, 33, said she wouldn’t vote because she didn’t understand it and “there’s no point.”
Her main worries were the threat under Sunak’s Conservatives to reduce certain benefit payments for mental health conditions.
Dealing with the cost of living was also an ongoing struggle, the former care worker said.
Jane Green, president of the British Polling Council, said “Stevenage woman” was the latest in a long line of monikers aimed at helping parties focus on winnable votes.
“Mondeo man” singled out by Blair’s campaign team was typically middle class and the owner of a Ford Mondeo car.
“Workington man,” from the coastal town in northwestern England, was a white, working-class Brexiteer who enjoyed rugby league.
But polling expert Green said even if they were a little cartoonish, they could still be helpful in pinpointing people “on the cusp, almost as likely to vote Labour as they are Conservative... the quintessential people who might decide the election.
“They are the places you watch out for on (election) night and say, ‘Ah — we’re there.’“
 


Thailand-Cambodia fighting rages on as Trump signals intent to intervene 

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Thailand-Cambodia fighting rages on as Trump signals intent to intervene 

  • Clashes raged at more than a dozen locations along their 817-km border
  • “I hate to say this one, named Cambodia-Thailand, and it started up today, and tomorrow I am going to have to make a phone call,” Trump said

BANGKOK/PHNOM PENH: Thailand and Cambodia traded accusations of targeting civilians in artillery and rocket attacks on Wednesday, as US President Donald Trump said he would try to intervene to stop the fighting and salvage a ceasefire he brokered earlier this year.
Clashes raged at more than a dozen locations along their 817-km (508-mile) border in some of the most intense fighting since a five-day battle in July, which Trump stopped with calls to both leaders to halt their worst conflict in recent history.
The Southeast Asian neighbors have blamed each other for the clashes that started on Monday.

’IT CANNOT BE AS SIMPLE AS PICKING UP THE PHONE’
Trump at a rally in Pennsylvania late on Tuesday said he would try to stop the renewed hostilities, after enumerating the conflicts he said he had helped stop, such as those between Pakistan and India, and Israel and Iran.
“I hate to say this one, named Cambodia-Thailand, and it started up today, and tomorrow I am going to have to make a phone call,” he said.
“Who else could say, ‘I’m going to make a phone call and stop a war of two very powerful countries, Thailand and Cambodia?’“
Thailand’s army has made clear it wants to cripple Cambodia’s military capabilities and Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul on Tuesday said operations would not stop.
He declined to comment on Wednesday on what the military’s end-game was. Asked about Trump’s remarks, he said the conflict was a matter between the two countries involved.
“Other national leaders may have good intentions in wanting peace,” Anutin told reporters. “It cannot be as simple as picking up the phone and calling. There must be proper appointment and agreed talking points. We still have time to prepare these issues if such discussions are to take place.”
Cambodian government spokesperson Pen Bona said Phnom Penh’s position was that it wanted only peace and had acted in self-defense. A top adviser to Cambodia’s prime minister has signalled the country was ready to negotiate.
Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim, who helped Trump broker the ceasefire, said he had spoken with leaders of Thailand and Cambodia on Tuesday and, though no definitive resolution was reached, he appreciated “the openness and willingness of both leaders to continue negotiations in order to ease tensions.”

ROCKETS, JETS AND DRONE-BOMBS
Thailand’s army said fighting took place on 16 different fronts on Wednesday, including both ends of the border. It reported an onslaught of BM-21 rockets fired by Cambodian forces, some of which it said landed near a hospital in Surin province, forcing the evacuation of patients and staff.
The army said Cambodian drones were being used to drop bombs and BM-21 rockets, and tanks were used at other border areas, including near the contested 11th Century Preah Vihear temple, a flashpoint for previous diplomatic and military conflicts.
Cambodia’s military said Thailand used artillery fire and armed drones and fired mortars into homes, while F-16 fighter jets had entered Cambodian airspace on multiple occasions, some dropping bombs near civilian areas.
“Cambodian forces have been fighting fiercely against the advancing enemy and have stood firm in their role of protecting Cambodia’s territorial integrity,” the defense ministry said in a statement.
In July, Trump used the leverage of trade negotiations to broker a ceasefire. Thai Foreign Minister Sihasak Phuangketkeow on Tuesday told Reuters that tariff threats should not be used to pressure his country into talks.
Last month, Thailand suspended de-escalation measures, agreed at an October summit in Trump’s presence, after a Thai soldier was maimed by a land mine that Bangkok said was newly laid by Cambodia, which rejects the accusation.

HEAVY TOLL ON CIVILIANS
The three days of clashes have taken a heavy toll on civilians, with nine people killed in Cambodia, including an infant, and 46 people wounded, according to its government. Five Thai soldiers had been killed in the fighting and 68 people were wounded, the Thai army said.
On Wednesday, Cambodia withdrew its athletes from the Southeast Asian Games in Thailand, citing safety reasons and their families’ concern.
Hundreds of thousands of people have been evacuated from border areas, though some people have chosen not to leave.
“I have to stay behind,” said Wuttikrai Chimngarm, as he hunkered down behind a makeshift bunker of tires stacked six high while shelling shook Thailand’s border province of Buriram.
“I’m the head of the village, if not me, then who? Who will be safeguarding the houses and belongings of the villagers from looters?“
As soon as Monday’s fighting erupted, residents fled the disputed village of Kaun Kriel, about 25 km (15 miles) northwest of Cambodia’s city of Samraong.
“This is my second run because the place I live ... was under attack both times,” said Cambodian Marng Sarun, a 31-year-old harvester, who left with his wife and two children.