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THE CONFERENCE SEASON COMETH Originally added: 28 September 2008
Start saving your money and scrabbling around behind the back of the sofa for the odd quid, book your train tickets, and put your liver on red alert, for it is the season of long political speeches, over-coiffed aspirants air-kissing each other, and nights of drunken debauchery that last until dawn. That’s right: it’s Conference! This is the time when bag-carriers traditionally go on a form of Royal Progress with their employers to whatever windswept, ruinously expensive town that public transport forgot that the Party chiefs – in their wisdom – have decided is going to play host this year to several thousand politicians, hangers-on, and journalists. Obviously attendance, for most staffers at least, is a running three-line whip from the boss. Obviously as it’s a party rather than Parliamentary affair, you’ll be expected to stump up the cash for your Conference pass, accommodation, and transport yourself. Super. For first-timers (or even seasoned professionals) the modern Conference can be a daunting time so, as always, we at W4MP have asked that old pro, Dean Trench, to produce a little guide to help you dodge the pitfalls. Applying for a pass Gone are the days when filling in your name and address and enclosing a crisp tenner would buy you the right to wander around your Party’s Conference with impunity. Nope, in the era post 9/11 (and after everyone realised that charging over the odds for a dodgy laminated photo was a useful supplement to the old finances) the application form process has become fraught with requirement. Not only do you need a PhD to fill the damn thing in, but the level of detail and fatuity is second only to those questionnaires you have to complete when you fly to America that assure the authorities that you don’t plan to bomb anything during the course of your visit, nor have you ever been a Communist. The key - in a manner similar to voting in certain boroughs – is to go early and often. Conferences start in September so start the first draft of your application in March time. Once you’ve identified three independent witnesses that can verify that you are not either Osama bin Laden or James Blunt, found the hundred quid that it costs, had the form sent back to you five times because you haven’t filled in the bit about whether you dress to the left or the right, and the party’s lost it a further six … you are in the closing days of August and cutting it a bit fine. Accommodation dos and don’ts (“busking”) Everybody knows that party Conferences have the ability to bring out the inner Scrooge in the most upstanding of hotel proprietors, so make sure that you book your accommodation early if you don’t want to end up paying an emperor’s ransom. But however early you book, you WILL get stiffed: accept the fact that you could afford a week at the Ritz with hookers and hard drugs thrown in for what you are paying for a camp bed in a room that smells of wee … and move on. Don’t, by the way, ask with faux-innocence whether you get a complimentary “special services” for the outrageous cost of your fixer-upper with the questionable stains on the bedsheets. Depending on where your party’s conference is that year, you could run into a whole world of trouble should your request be taken seriously. And on the subject of trouble, now is the time to introduce those who are blessedly unaware of the practice to the dangers of not booking a room and trying to cadge a kipping space on someone’s floor, or “busking” as it’s known in political circles. Busking is a bad idea:
Helping out your boss at Conference Members of Parliament love Conference, by and large. For them it’s the last party of the summer before the House returns (and many of them can’t wait for that either). After a summer of holidaying dutifully with the duly designated spouse and offspring, and a seemingly never-ending round of constituency engagements, Conference is the ideal bachelor(ette) reunion. However, it is your job – amidst the high-jinks and japes – to sound a note of caution. As happy as your boss might be to see his or her friends again, be aware that Conference is crawling with journalists all desperate to get an “insider” story and local party members who, whilst they smile and smile, may still be villains. Try not to let their natural exuberance (bless ‘em) or the free booze impair their judgment. No bag-carrier wants to speculatively blag their way into a reception to hear their employer at the end of a long and possibly slanderous rant that concludes with the words, “ah! Here’s my researcher. He’ll tell you all about it!” On an even less salubrious note, Conference can occasionally play host to misjudged romantic adventures reminiscent of ancient Rome when Nero was at the height of his sexual deviancy. If you get wind that your boss has done something he or she shouldn’t, attempt to dissuade them from telling their constituency representatives. As my one-time colleague once said of a scenario involving a well-known politician who was outed in such a way: “he boasted to his local Party group about it? Why didn’t he just hand the photos to the News of the Screws himself?” Tips for getting around and getting on The average Conference is a busy place packed full of young aspirants, eager-eyed pressure group workers, and sharply suited aspirants. Here are a few tips for keeping your cool in the occasionally manic and febrile atmosphere:
Blagging, free food, and not paying for stuff From June onwards your office will begin to receive invitations to various receptions, meetings, and dinners – a stream that will become a deluge come August. Get hold of a lever-arch folder and file each invite chronologically. Before Conference begins, go through the file with your boss and work out which ones he or she wants to go to. The rest? Well, they’re all yours to attend as “a representative of Joe Bloggs MP.” Spend an hour or so after you arrive in the bed-bug ridden pit you’ve rented for a week carefully deciding which ones you’d like to go to. As a guide, invites containing the word(s):
As a wise MP once said to me, it’s important not to front-load the week. There’s no sense in ruining yourself on too much Chateau North of England on the first couple of nights if you are going to render yourself incapacitated for some of the more decent stuff later on. Occasionally one of your mates will get his or her hands on an invitation to an exclusive party which is for the named invitee only. That does not mean it is not worth a crack at getting in on their coat tails. Experiment with ideas such as pretending to be their same sex partner (no organisation wants to look non-inclusive in the presence of either a potential or actual Government), but beware. Ploys such as getting in yourself and then letting forty-three of your friends in through the fire escape or attempting to sneak in through an open window can occasionally lead to a night in the cells if, for some reason, the event is subject to high security. The aftermath Spend the next month in the gym sweating out everything you’ve taken in over the previous week, trying to work out who the mystery new numbers you’ve added to your mobile phone belong to, and vowing that you’ll never do Conference again. By the time you’ve been released from the Betty Ford Clinic, the application forms for next year will start arriving. Hmmm. Well, why not, eh? What could possibly go wrong? Dean Trench September 2009 update: Our man Dean has more conference-related wisdom for you, entitled 'How to Carry Bags at Party Conference' or 'How to keep the boss sweet and manage the madness'.. It's here.
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