Leader
The X factor
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| VOTE WINNER: Emily Christer, who was voted Youth MP for Darlington earlier this year, feels many young people are not well informed about politics |
With voter turnout not expected to exceed 40 per cent
in tomorrow's local elections, Julia Breen talks to
two aspiring politicians who hope to reverse the trend
by getting young people interested in politics
EMILY Christer was tickled pink last week
when she was recognised in McDonalds.
The new youth MP for Darlington says:
"They said to me, are you the Mayor?
And I said no, and they said they'd seen
me in the paper. Then they started telling me that
they needed more bins in their area."
You wouldn't look at Emily and think "politician" - and so much the better.
Now just embarking on her GCSEs, she was voted
in as Youth MP for Darlington earlier this year. Her
campaign was far from the traditional electioneering.
Instead, she made 500 Rice Krispies cakes and
handed them out around her school, Hummersknott
in Darlington.
"It wasn't bribery or anything," says 16-year-old
Emily. "It was just a bit different and it meant people
were aware of my campaign and it gave me a
chance to speak to them.
"Other candidates had a massive poster campaign,
and took a very serious, grown-up approach
to it all. But a poster campaign wasn't really me. I
didn't want to come across as a boring politician."
Instead Emily, who hopes to be a political journalist,
tapped straight into her peer network by
using MSN and MySpace to do her campaigning.
"I had a massive list of 100 things that young people
might want, and I got people to vote for five
which they thought were important. Then I put
them in my manifesto."
The UK Youth Parliament is all about getting
youngsters more interested in the whole political
and decision-making process, in the hope this
might, in the future, increase voter turnout. Local
elections, in particular, suffer from a low turnout,
usually not creeping above 40 per cent, and tomorrow's
council elections are not expected to be any
different. So engaging young people is crucial.
"Many young people are scared by the word "politics","
says Youth Parliament chief executive Andy
Hamflett.
"We don't really use the word politics, we'd rather
talk about change. If you look at all the coverage of
politics, even people who have been studying it for
years, right now it is difficult to spot the differences
between the parties.
"Many of the people who don't vote, say it is because
they don't really know what they are voting
for. But it doesn't mean they don't care what is happening
in their area, because they do."
The Youth Parliament has been going for eight
years and is starting to make a difference in the corridors
of power. Campaigns the MYPs (Members of
Youth Parliament) have been running about sexual
health education has led to a Government review
- which will be co-chaired by an MYP.
And on Friday, 300 MYPs from across the UK will
descend on the House of Lords to debate national
issues, which will be screened on BBC Parliament,
and streamed to the main news channels.
Eighteen-year-old Joe Kirwin, of Stanhope, has
been interested in politics since he was 12, when the
council refused to mow his grandmother's lawn.
He had hoped to stand as an independent candidate
in the local elections tomorrow, but was told
he was ten days too young to be nominated, as he
only turned 18 this month.
A Labour party member, he says: "My friends did
think I was a bit weird when I got involved in politics.
But what I have really enjoyed is that now people
come to me and ask questions. It gives me great
pleasure to get young people more and more
involved.
"It is very difficult to get them involved. But I
think you just have to make it real for them, make
them realise that the decisions that are made effect
their everyday life.
"The problem is, it is actually very difficult for
anyone to get involved in politics. You can join a
political party, but where I live there is no organised
Labour party so it is very difficult for someone
like me to stay in contact and involved.
"Hilary Armstrong came to our school, but she
only spoke to the politics students. Really she
should have spoken to all the students."
JOE, who is taking his A-levels at Wolsingham
School this summer before going on to study
European Politics at university, has tried to
get politics more on the agenda in Citizenship
lessons at his school, but teachers are hard-pressed
to squeeze everything on to the curriculum.
"We do need to get more political education in
schools," he says. "When I hear people of A-level age
say Who is the Prime Minister? Is it still that Tony
Blair dude or did he hand over to Gordon Brown?'
it makes me despair."
Emily feels young people are not well informed
about politics because political TV programmes are
on late at night and are aimed at an older audience.
She admits that she is not party-political. "I used
to support the Lib Dems, just because I felt sorry
for them because they didn't get many votes," she
says. "But then as I became more aware of politics
I realised that was very naïve. I am just in the middle
really."
Joe, on the other hand, believes that Punch and
Judy' politics is to be encouraged because it makes
the whole process more interesting.
"I think a good debate is crucial," he says. "We
have too many nice, centre ground politicians. But
if you look back at history, we were at our most political
when we had strong parties with differing
views."
11:31am Wednesday 30th April 2008
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