More on the British Declaration of Independence
The following is a report received on the earlier South Molton Declaration:-
Quote
THE SUCCESS OF A SIMILAR DECLARATION AT THE 2001 GENERAL ELECTION
Of the candidates who signed the South Molton Declaration at the 2001 General Election, the most successful MP received 18,000 votes. Many Declaration Candidates came close to being elected but for the intervention of UKIP. If Roger Knapman of UKIP for example had not stood against our candidate in North Devon then the Declaration Candidate would have regained that seat for the Conservatives and for the principles of Democratic Sovereignty.
The three candidates who did the most advertising of the fact that they had signed (all Conservative) obtained swings to them of 5.9%, 6.1% and 5.1% (the average swing to Conservatives nationwide was only 1.8%).
Signatories came from across the party spectrum including Liberal Democrats whose party believes officially in the opposite of national self-government! A number of candidates of different parties reconsidered the Declaration after the election and several sitting MPs then registered their support. In all some 100 MPs or Candidates either signed or indicated their full support without signing.
We corresponded with hundreds of candidates. The SMD Campaign had 95,000 hits on our website, distributed 60,000 leaflets nationwide and had a letter of support from Margaret Thatcher the United Kingdom's most distinguished former Prime Minister.
We commissioned a MORI Poll which had the following devastating results:
30% of all voters would switch their vote to another candidate who had signed if their own
party's candidate refused to sign the Declaration. A further 12% of ALL voters would NOT
VOTE AT ALL if their own candidate refused to sign. An extraordinary 55% of Conservatives
would not vote for their preferred candidate (40% would swithch to a candidate who had signed
and 15% to "would not vote") if their candiate did not sign. No fewer than 72% of younger
Conservative voters (age 18-24) would either vote for a different candidate who had signed
(40%) or would not vote (32%) if their preferred candidate did not sign. 34% of Labour voters would
either vote for a different candidate who had signed (24%) or would not vote (10%) and 41%
of Liberal Democrat voters would either vote for a different candate (31%) or would not vote (10%)
if their own candidate did not sign.
The small turnout of 59% of the electorate (a 14% drop on the 1997 Election) shows how people refuse to vote for those who refuse to govern. This is a vindication of our Constitutional Democratic Campaign.
But most important of all we set out the strategy by which our democratic nationhood and the sovereignty of the British people will be asserted. We have provided the means by which voters and candidates can remain with their traditional politics and yet re-assert the sovereignty of the people and reclaim their parliamentary authority.
THAT STRATEGY LIVES ON - WITH EVEN GREATER POWER - IN THE NEW
BRITISH DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE
Unquote
Quote
THE SUCCESS OF A SIMILAR DECLARATION AT THE 2001 GENERAL ELECTION
Of the candidates who signed the South Molton Declaration at the 2001 General Election, the most successful MP received 18,000 votes. Many Declaration Candidates came close to being elected but for the intervention of UKIP. If Roger Knapman of UKIP for example had not stood against our candidate in North Devon then the Declaration Candidate would have regained that seat for the Conservatives and for the principles of Democratic Sovereignty.
The three candidates who did the most advertising of the fact that they had signed (all Conservative) obtained swings to them of 5.9%, 6.1% and 5.1% (the average swing to Conservatives nationwide was only 1.8%).
Signatories came from across the party spectrum including Liberal Democrats whose party believes officially in the opposite of national self-government! A number of candidates of different parties reconsidered the Declaration after the election and several sitting MPs then registered their support. In all some 100 MPs or Candidates either signed or indicated their full support without signing.
We corresponded with hundreds of candidates. The SMD Campaign had 95,000 hits on our website, distributed 60,000 leaflets nationwide and had a letter of support from Margaret Thatcher the United Kingdom's most distinguished former Prime Minister.
We commissioned a MORI Poll which had the following devastating results:
30% of all voters would switch their vote to another candidate who had signed if their own
party's candidate refused to sign the Declaration. A further 12% of ALL voters would NOT
VOTE AT ALL if their own candidate refused to sign. An extraordinary 55% of Conservatives
would not vote for their preferred candidate (40% would swithch to a candidate who had signed
and 15% to "would not vote") if their candiate did not sign. No fewer than 72% of younger
Conservative voters (age 18-24) would either vote for a different candidate who had signed
(40%) or would not vote (32%) if their preferred candidate did not sign. 34% of Labour voters would
either vote for a different candidate who had signed (24%) or would not vote (10%) and 41%
of Liberal Democrat voters would either vote for a different candate (31%) or would not vote (10%)
if their own candidate did not sign.
The small turnout of 59% of the electorate (a 14% drop on the 1997 Election) shows how people refuse to vote for those who refuse to govern. This is a vindication of our Constitutional Democratic Campaign.
But most important of all we set out the strategy by which our democratic nationhood and the sovereignty of the British people will be asserted. We have provided the means by which voters and candidates can remain with their traditional politics and yet re-assert the sovereignty of the people and reclaim their parliamentary authority.
THAT STRATEGY LIVES ON - WITH EVEN GREATER POWER - IN THE NEW
BRITISH DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE
Unquote
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