Who is David Campanale?

David Campanale (Photo: Mark Pack)


I ask this question because I honestly don't know.

The first I heard of him was about 20 minutes ago, when a Lib Dem friend sent a message asking why the party has selected a homophobe as a PPC. My friend shared a link to twitter, where I discovered that a Labour activist has uncovered some history on Mr Campanale, who has today been confirmed as the new Liberal Democrat PPC for the target seat of Sutton and Cheam.

I say "uncovered", but it is basically little more than the findings of a quick Google search. Some of what the Labour activist in question has alleged is quite speculative and I would dismiss it as being pretty desperate. However, there are specific and verifiable facts that raise questions to which I believe answers are needed. 

The official press release from the Sutton and Cheam Liberal Democrats and Mark Pack's blog are keen to emphasise Mr Campanale's extensive journalistic experience with BBC World Service and his charitable work. They even mention that he won a council seat in Kingston at the age of 22, although it is not clear exactly when this was or which party he was standing for at the time. The strangest thing about these contributions is that they say very little about Mr Campanale's political activities other than the mention of a council victory which, judging by the fact he has 30 years of journalistic experience, may well have taken place three decades ago.

In the internet age, if Liberal Democrats don't look into their candidates' histories then supporters of other parties - or, indeed, anyone with the presence of mind to ask some questions and the knowledge of how to conduct a Google search - will. And that's exactly what has happened. Within minutes of the announcement a Labour activist had already taken to twitter to point out that Mr Campanale had previously served as chairman and as federal president of the Christian People's Alliance, and was happy to produce evidence of the kind of policies the CPA supported during his oversight of the party. 

What can be found in a few minutes is that David Campanale stood for the CPA in the 2006 and 2010 local elections, for elections to the Greater London Authority in 2008 and was instrumental in recruiting candidates for the 2010 General Election. During that time the CPA actively campaigned against the legal right for abortion, against same-sex marriage and against the building of a new mosque in West Ham. The CPA, unsurprisingly, favoured a return to "Christian morality". In 2010 it accused Barack Obama of "anti-life imperialism" on account of his pro-choice stance, while its manifesto of the same year talked of fighting "the LGBT lobby" and expressed opposition to "limiting the freedom of doctors not to execute abortions". The same manifesto stated the CPA would "seek to repeal the 1967 Abortion Act" and that the party would attempt to bring "an end... to the use of the morning after pill." These were the views of his party rather than his own, but Mr Campanale was listed within the acknowledgements of David Alton's 1998 anti-abortion work, Whose choice is it anyway? and it would seem strange if someone so senior within the CPA disagreed with much in its manifesto. 

Mr Campanale's membership of the CPA can hardly be dismissed as a brief dalliance - after all, he was on the leadership team when the party was making these statements and compiling the manifesto. Basically, the CPA was taking up these kinds of extreme positions on his watch.

Mr Campanale was, according to Wikipedia, a founder member of the CPA. He had previously been active within the Movement for Christian Democracy (founded by David Alton, Derek Enright and Ken Hargreaves) and, in 1999, the CPA emerged from the MCD as a fully-fledged political party with Dr Alan Storkey as chairman and Mr Campanale serving as vice chair. He was certainly an active CPA member in 2003, when he published a letter in a local newspaper condemning the Lib Dems' policy on church schools, and remained a leading figure until at least 2011, when he was Paul Pickhaver's agent in the Surbiton Hill by-election. The CPA's return to the Electoral Commission in 2012 confirms Mr Campanale as federal president and a facebook post (right) shows he was present at the CPA's annual conference in that year. He is pictured with Dr Christina Summers, who was expelled from the Green Party after opposing same-sex marriage. In his facebook post, Mr Campanale is keen to claim that she was expelled "for her Christian beliefs", rather than (as the Green Party maintained) for violating an agreement for councillors to  uphold "equality for all people, regardless of race, colour, gender, sexual orientation, religion, social origin or any other prejudice".

The CPA's accounts for 2014, submitted to the Electoral Commission, confirm that Mr Campanale was a member of the party's federal council until November of that year. It is difficult to follow the course of Mr Campanale's political journey thereafter. From speaking to Lib Dems who know him it seems reasonable to believe he was readmitted around 2017, but I have been unable to clarify that. By 2019, when he was the Lib Dem PPC for Spelthorne, he had clearly made a decision not to mention his previous political affiliations. On the Spelthorne local party's official website, Mr Campanale made no mention of any political activity other than the historic election as a Kingston councillor (he helpfully clarifies he represented the Lib Dems for an 8-year period*) - confirming that that he has returned to the party after several years with the CPA. However, to read his statement without knowledge of his activities within the CPA, one would think he had been in the Lib Dems for his entire political career.

I have no problem with prodigal sons returning. I have no problem with people changing their affiliations and even their minds. People can - and often do - change. But when someone has represented a party like the CPA, whose views are the very antithesis of our own, that history cannot simply be whitewashed from CVs. I do not know how much the Liberal Democrats knew about Mr Campanale's previous political activities - but I will suggest that they should have been aware of them and that they should have sought clarifications about his current views on issues such as abortion, same-sex marriage and Islam. They should also have advised him to be very honest about his historical political affiliations and explain uncomfortable facts rather than seek to hide them.

For a PPC in a non-target seat such as Spelthorne this may not have mattered. Sutton and Cheam is a very different constituency, however, and was held by Lib Dem Paul Burstow until 2015: it is precisely the kind of seat we need to win back to rebuild the party as a parliamentary force. And for that reason the party needs a candidate who can be seen as having credibility and integrity. The danger here is that, unless Mr Campanale answers the very obvious questions soon (and convincingly) his associations with the CPA may very well come back to haunt him and damage the party's chances of unseating Paul Scully.

This could potentially become a "Tim Farron situation" if Mr Campanale is either unable, or refuses, to clarify where he stands in relation to the kinds of "moral issues" he once preached about with such relish.

I do not know how much the local Liberal Democrats in Sutton and Cheam, who have selected him as their PPC, knew about his former life. Neither do I know what he revealed during the selection process. But what is clear is that all official statements have been keen to not only play down his links to the CPA, but eradicate any mention of it. That's not a good look when, as I pointed out above, political opponents know how to use search engines. He would have been better advised to be honest about his former political activity and, with support from the party, to prepare responses for the inevitable media questioning to avoid a PR disaster further down the line.

I do not know David Campanale. It's very difficult to know who the real David Campanale is, not least as his twitter account was only created in 2019, has hardly been used in the last two years and has only 377 followers. He has not responded to any concerns expressed on that platform about his time in the CPA and nowhere does he appear to have ever addressed this, or given reasons for his change of heart. He hasn't even said he has had a change of heart as far as abortion and same-sex marriage are concerned...

David Campanale "defending Christian values" against
"secular liberalism" at Tusványos, 2019. 
Of one thing we can be certain:
Mr Campanale attended  the Tusványos summer camp in 2019, where he appears to have used a platform to "defend Christian values in Europe and the Western world" against "secular liberalism [that] threatens Europe because it cannot understand itself without reference to Christianity". This was while he was both a BBC journalist and a member of the Liberal Democrats. While Mr Campanale was not responsible for the observations made within the Christendom College article I link to above, the writer (Prof  Bracy Bersnak, pictured on the far left) seems to suggest the panel members were broadly united in their anti-secular views and that they held sympathies for Hungary's Fidesz and Poland's PiS party.  Prof Bersnak's general observation was corroborated by the KDNP website, which stated "The interlocutors agreed that the greatest challenge to the Christian world is not the 'clash of civilizations' in the Huntington sense, but the violent ideological, political, and economic spread of global liberalism." As if that wasn't sufficiently disturbing, in the image (above, right) Mr Campanale is shown seated next to Hajnalka Juhász, a Fidesz-KDNP MP. Is this the sort of company we expect would-be Lib Dem MPs to keep?

Mr Campanale was instrumental in establishing the Tusványos festival in 1989 as a "summer university" to faciltate music, arts and political education - as well as to further cultural ties between Romania and Hungary. Fidesz, a more socially liberal party at the time, has also been involved from the early days. Since the early 1990s Tusványos has grown from 200 attendees to something around 80,000 and during that time, like the Fidesz party, it has developed into something quite different to what it was 30 years ago. The Orbán régime became more heavily involved from around 2010 onwards and used the event to advance Fidesz's politics, to the point that Viktor Orbán gives a speech at the event every year. A report produced by Hungarian news media outlet Székelyhon in 2019 gives a useful idea of the nature of the political speeches given at Tusványos.  Fidesz's domination alienated the Romanian media and Romanian participation in the event fell off rapidly. While senior Romanian politicians were at one time happy to be present at Tusványos, generally speaking they realised that attending a Fidesz-inspired version of Glastonbury would no longer be politically astute.  

Mr Campanale's historic associations with the event do not particularly worry me even if I don't fully understand why he has continued to be involved since the Fidesz takeover, which undermined the original (and laudable) aims to develop links with Romania. However. it is concerning that 2019 is not the first time he has expressed anti-secular views at Tusványos: in 2017 this Hungarian article in Vajma, which I've been able to read in English thanks to Google Translate, reported: "During the podium discussion, British journalist David Campanale expressed his passion for giving hope to Europe as a whole, for Hungary clinging to faith, for God and the example of Poland." I'm not too sure many other Lib Dem PPCs will be praising the example of Poland at present.

At Tusványos in 2016, Mr Campanale spoke about Christianity becoming the "common language" of Europe. He is quoted as saying: "The challenge is to 'rediscover' Christianity and 're-evangelize' Europe...a hurricane is sweeping across Europe, and the real question is what kind of leaders can help us stay on their feet in this storm... The biggest unspoken mass manipulation in decades is taking place: our identity, our morality, the boundaries between right and wrong are blurred. We do have to question this regulated system. The Christian faith has always been the anchor of Europe." His contribution was followed, and to some degree echoed, by fellow panellist Peter Krajňák, the Slovakian education minister, who said he was "afraid of extreme-liberalism, which has put all democratic principles first but has completely displaced Christianity"  In another report from 888.hu (a pro-Fidesz site that proudly calls itself "Soros' opposition") Mr Campanale is quoted as saying: "The question was how we work together on the continent and how individuals relate to religion. The liberal state suppresses identities."

David Campanale (front row, left) pictured with
Viktor Orbán (front, fifth from left) and Tusványos personnel.
I understand that Mr Campanale has a historic relationship with Tusványos, but that does not excuse or explain why he feels the need to attend the event to speak against secular liberalism. In additon, these historic associations with Fidesz seem to be unwise to maintain in the current political landscape. I would also imagine that, whatever history Mr Campanale has with Tusványos, it's probably not a good idea for a Lib Dem approved candidate to be pictured with Viktor Orbán (as Mr Campanale was in 2019, right). At the very least this leads me to question his political judgement. 

I suspect this photograph will not be appearing in many Focus newsletters in the near future. It may well, however, be used by opposition parties.

I do not know who David Campanale is, but it is quite clear who he once was. Unless he stands up, explains his past and distances himself from it, and makes assurances that his current views are very different from the policies he was happy to stand for election under between 2006 and 2010, the media and the public will be asking very pertinent questions about his commitment to liberal democracy. At the very least we need a comprehensive statement from him distancing himself from the values and attitudes he once espoused. An apology wouldn't go amiss either.

Please, Mr Campanale, if you want to be the next Liberal Democrat MP for Sutton and Cheam, be honest enough to talk about (and take responsibility for) your past, apologise to anyone you may have hurt and reassure members that you're on their side. We don't want any further unnecessary focus on unorthodox candidates' views on abortion or LGBT+ rights, let alone the suggestion of sympathies for authoritarian regimes.




* A Liberal Democrat member has confirmed that Mr Campanale was first elected to Hook Ward in Kingston in 1986. 


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ADDENDUM, 10.1.22

There has been a lot of interest in this blogpost - over 3,500 hits within the first 24 hours. 

There has also been a lot of discussion about it on social media, and inevitably there have been some calls for me to "substantiate my allegations". 

I make no allegations. I have written about what we currently know from what is already in the public domain, and I also stress that there is much we do not know at this time. I will not apologise for seeking answers or explaining why I believe Mr Campanale (and, potentially, also the party) must answer some serious questions.

But I think it will be helpful if I outline the facts we can be reasonably sure of:

* In 1982 David Campanale, then aged 18, joined the new Social Democratic Party. He may well have been a founder member

* He fought his first council election in 1986, standing for the SDP/Alliance in Hook Ward. He won, aged only 22, and was re-elected in 1990.

* The SDP merged with the Liberal Party in 1989, and the young David Campanale became a member of the Liberal Democrats.

* In 1989, Mr Campanale established Tusványos with help from Zsolt Németh (now a Fidesz MP), Tibor Toró and Zsolt Szilágyi.

* In either 1998 or 1999 Mr Campanale left the Lib Dems. Various sources suggest he founded the Christian People's Alliance (CPA), meaning he would have been involved with the CPA from its inception in 1999.

* Mr Campanale held various leadership roles within the CPA until 2012/13. He was a candidate at local and national level in various elections. He served as an agent for others. He was also the party's chairman and federal president. 

* During the time Mr Campanale was a prominent figure within the CPA, his party 
  a) supported "traditional marriage",
  b) opposed the reclassification of cannabis,
  c) favoured building more church schools,
  d) opposed same-sex marriage and campaigned against the Marriage (Same Sex Couples) Act 2013,
  e) proposed repealing the Abortion Act 1967, essentially making abortions illegal, 
  f) advocated ending availability of the morning after pill,
  g) proudly talked of fighting "the LGBT lobby",
  h) called Barack Obama an "anti-life imperialist" on account of his pro-choice views. 

* Mr Campanale attended the CPA's annual conference in 2012. The CPA's accounts for 2014 list Mr Campanale as a member of the federal council until October 2014. After 15 years with the party, he disappears from the record after this point.

* In early 2017 he rejoined the Liberal Democrats. By the end of the year he had become the local organiser for the 2018 local elections in an area that included his old ward. 

* In 2018 he was a key organiser for Kingston Lib Dems, and helped run a successful campaign. He was later appointed vice chair of the Kingston Liberal Democrats, according to a selection video in which he introduces himself as such.

* By 2019 Mr Campanale had become an approved candidate and contested Spelthorne constituency in the General Election - taking a respectable 15.1% of the vote. A few months before the election he attended the Tusványos event, where he spoke against "secular liberalism" on a panel that included a Fidesz-KDNP MP and was photographed with Viktor Orbán.

* In late 2021 Mr Campanale was shortlisted for the Sutton and Cheam constituency. On 8th January 2022 it was confirmed that he had secured the Lib Dem candidacy for the constituency.

* Mr Campanale has worked for BBC World Service and was an assistant producer of Radio 4's Today in Parliament. He also served as a regional director of TearFund. I cannot be precise in relation to the dates of employments and charitable work. 


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UPDATE, 12.1.22

Mr Campanale has written a piece for Lib Dem Voice in which he seeks to explain his political journey.

It can be read here: https://www.libdemvoice.org/focus-on-tories-in-sutton-and-cheam-69599.html

There is one correction I'd like to make to his contribution. In his article, Mr Campanale states: "I quit the CPA almost a decade ago when it was infiltrated by extremists. I fully repudiate the offensive and divisive campaigns the people using the name now pursue."

Now, aside from whether he repudiates the offensive and divisive campaigns the party ran during his time on the leadership team, there is a factual inaccuracy within this statement. The CPA's financial returns to the Electoral Commission for 2014 show that Mr Campanale was a member of the party's federal council until October 2014 (see image, right). 

If he left at this time then that is a little over 7 years ago - not a decade. I don't know whether this misinformation has been provided deliberately or otherwise (and I'll give Mr Campanale the benefit of the doubt here) but it matters for two reasons:

a) it shows that, far from leaving under the new "extreme" leadership, Mr Campanale served under it for 2 1/2 years, and

b) Mr Campanale was active within the party when it was opposing the Marriage (Same Sex Couples) Act 2013. 

__________________________________________________________________________________

UPDATE, 14.1.22

The writer Ethan Gutmann has posted something on facebook and for reasons of fairness it should probably be copied here:   https://www.facebook.com/ethan.gutmann/posts/10160093408173179 

Aside from the obvious disrespect Mr Gutmann shows to people "yammering on twitter" or "the barking dogs of Twitter who would never ever dare to stand up and speak like [he did]" (in fairness, Mr Gutmann has no idea what any of us have done or said on public platforms) it is interesting because he provides a first-hand account of Mr Campanale's speech at Tusványos in 2019. 

He says Mr Campanale "suddenly, without any warning, turned on the conference, declaring that these Christian values, so precious to him, to them, to all, were absolutely incompatible with the fear and loathing of the foreigner, the black, the brown, the refugee, the travelling stranger, even perhaps, the Jew Soros."

He doesn't provide any verbatim quotes but if that's true then I'll happily congratulate Mr Campanale on the content of that intervention. I can only say I wish I'd been there to hear it. 

But...

Mr Gutmann surely understands that any information anyone (other than the panelists and the reported 50 people gathered to listen) have on the event is what is reported afterwards and is available online. Two of Mr Campanale's panel members (Prof  Bracy Bersnak, in his personal account, and Hajnalka Juhász on the KDNP website), state that he was in agreement with them on the dangers of secular democracy. What are we supposed to think? I would say that if they have wilfully lied and given false impressions about Mr Campanale's contribution then, while that kind of dishonesty is unacceptable, it shows the nature of who Mr Campanale is (arguably naively) dealing with at Tusványos. Why debate and challenge people who then claim that you agreed with them all along? For me, if what Ethan Gutmann says is true, then it underlines that Prof Bersnak and Ms Juhász are so untrustworthy that they're not good people to share a panel with. Or to be SEEN sharing a panel with.

A speech can hardly be - as Mr Gutmann suggests - someone's "finest moment" if that speech is misrepresented and framed as an agreement with the people being spoken out against. 

It's difficult to know what Mr Campanale actually said. Sometimes differing accounts of the same event can be easily harmonised, but not here: either Mr Gutmann is correct or Prof Bersnak and the KDNP report are. Someone is clearly lying, and I am not able to determine which of them it is. I'd like to believe Mr Gutmann's story but, while I would hardly be surprised at the KDNP being less than honest, I don't see why Prof Bersnak would need to lie. I don't share his perspectives but, as he is an Associate Professor of Political Science and Economics at an American institution, I don't see why he would need to be dishonest about Mr Campanale's contribution. He has no overtly political agenda. So what actually happened is as clear as mud and seems to be a question of which narrative we choose to believe. Personally, I don't want to accuse either a Professor of Political Science or a Senior Research Fellow in China Studies of lying, but it's clear their accounts don't tally: either Mr Campanale was in agreement with his fellow panellists or else he used the platform to boldly express an opposite view. 

If Mr Gutmann is correct, perhaps he should turn his ire on those who deliberately report falsehoods rather than those who  have to make sense of situations with only these reports as evidence. Perhaps he should also understand that most of us he dismisses as "yammering on twitter" are actually party members seeking to settle uncomfortable questions, so that we feel sufficiently reassured that we can go out and campaign for Mr Campanale. Seeking to understand people, rather than dismissing them, would be a much better approach here.

Even if we uncritically accept Mr Gutmann's version of events (which is perfectly plausible), there remain questions about what Mr Campanale has said at Tusványos in previous years - in both 2016 and 2017 he is reported by Hungarian language websites as having been critical of "secular liberalism". Whatever he said in 2019, it's also reasonable to wish to get clarification from Mr Campanale on these previous contributions - and, indeed, his wider views on secular liberalism. I do not apologise for seeking answers, especially when the optics are so terrible.

(Apologies for the multiple updates, but it only seems fair to Mr Campanale that I should post evidence I've gained later, especially if it may show him in a positive light.)

___________________________________________________________________________________

UPDATE, 6.11.22

In relation to news that the Sutton and Cheam constituency party is considering deselecting Mr Campanale, I have received a couple of messages on twitter.

In one of these I am blamed for creating the situation and was impolitely requested to remove this post. This I refuse to do. I make no accusations of Mr Campanale - I merely had questions I wished to be answered, most significantly in the case of his involvement with the CPA and his current attitudes towards the party's policy during his time as a senior CPA figure. I have no connection with the Sutton and Cheam local party and I am certainly not in a position to influence them one way or another.

Another message accuses me of being "anti-Christian" and involved in a "globalist" plan to "destroy Christianity". For those who have no understanding of my personal faith journey, may I suggest that accusing someone who has served for several years as a church elder of being "anti-Christian" is more than a little ridiculous.

I am not going to comment on what is happening in Sutton and Cheam - to be honest, I don't really know. I very much doubt that it is Mr Campanale's personal faith that is the issue here but I cannot speak for them other than to say the decision is theirs to make. 

What I can say is that my problem with the CPA was never with their Christian faith but their political values. I don't care which church Mr Campanale attends or what his personal theology is - but I am interested in what his current political values are, which is why I wrote this post back in January. And no - I was never seeking to "cancel" him, or his beliefs, merely to gain some satisfactory answers to the kind of questions opposition parties will inevitably ask.





Comments

nigel hunter said…
Is he a Trojan horse put there by the right to cause disruption?Agree,he MUST come clear as to where he stands today AND be open about his past for as you say he can be shot down like Tim Farron
Anonymous said…
Thank you for this. Very informative. He seems a very strange Lib Dem.
Andrew said…
I think I know what you're saying but my personal view is that we need more "strange" people in the Lib Dems. And in politics more generally.

Sure, in some respects Mr Campanale is unconventional. That doesn't trouble me.

What worries me are the questions to which we have very few clear answers at present.

I've been talking elsewhere about this, and I'm very much of the view that it would be utterly brilliant if David could openly, honestly and publicly address these questions and explain how his political journey has taken him from the Lib Dems to the CPA and back again. As with Dominic Carman, who shared his personal experiences of being in the BNP and was open about his reasons for moving to the LDs, personal stories of changed attitudes can provide real credibility and a view of the struggles someone has been through.

There is a lot I don't know about Mr Campanale - but here is one thing I do know. He is a quality journalist. He knows how to communicate effectively. If he wants to clarify matters then he's more than capable of doing it.

There's an opportunity here and if anyone has the communication skills to resolve this situaiton it's him! I hope he takes it.
Andrew said…
Mr Campanale has written something for Lib Dem Voice and I would recommend that anyone interested reads it. As I said yesterday, he has an opportunity to resolve the situation and I am pleased he has been willing to engaage with party members.

You can read his piece here: https://www.libdemvoice.org/david-campanale-rejects-labour-accusations-as-the-new-sutton-cheam-parliamentary-spokesperson-69599.html

Unfortunately, it does raise more questions than it answers.

On same-sex marriage, Mr Campanale says he "supports the law on same-sex marriage" - not the same thing as actually supporting SSM of course but at least we know he won't be making any attempt to reverse the law or argue against it. Within the comments Mr Campanale takes the same line Tim Farron did on the "gay sex" question - it didn't work then and it won't work now. I'm not convinced he has a sufficiently convincing answer for the inevitable media questions and opposition criticism.

On the CPA, he simply refuses to address the issue of the nature of the party during the time he was active within it. He claims that extremists took over the party "almost a decade ago" but he doesn't acknowledge the fact that, in his 13 years with the CPA, the party he founded had an extremist policy platform. He does not acknowledge the hurt CPA campaigns caused on his watch. He does not apologise. Nowhere does he admit he was wrong. The idea that the CPA was some moderate Christian Democratic party until these nasty extremists came along in 2012/3 does not really stack up, not least as it was led by Alan Craig. If he was a moderate, I'm Mother Teresa.

He doesn't really address the question I have about why he appears to have made several contributions at Tusványos criticising secular liberalism and liberal democracy. Neither does he explain why he feels it is appropriate to have his photograph taken with Viktor Orban, or share a platform with Fidesz-KDNP MPs (especially when he admits he wouldn't do so with the BNP).

It's sad that Mr Campanale dismisses people like myself as "float[ing] slurs on social media attacking our own candidates." I have made no attacks and attacking the emssenger is an nunhelpful tactic. Everything I say is referenced, and all those references relate to articles and photographs already in the public domain. There is no need to take aim at fellow party members seeking answers.

But it is a start and it's positive that he is engaging with members and supporters. I said within the blogpost that I do not know who Mr Campanale is and I feel I have a little more of an idea now, but I remain of the view that much of this will be used against him by opponents and that there are still some questions that need to be more satisfactorily answered.
Patricia said…
Good work Andrew - I hope I’m wrong but with the far religious right’s machinations globally, I fear a trojan horse. Keeping a close eye.
Unknown said…
I am staggered by the political naivety or stupidity of this post.

You begin by saying your "friend shared a link to twitter, where I discovered that a Labour activist has uncovered some history on Mr Campanale,..." In other words, a Labour activist laid out some bait that you swallowed hook, line and sinker.

In fact, Labour tossed a grenade, which if it is allowed to explode on Saturday in Sutton & Cheam where Mr Campanale will face the Sanhedrin, it will definitely lose the Lib Dems any chance of winning Sutton & Cheam and cause Sir Ed Davey huge embarrassment. Here's why:

If Mr Campanale is not immediately affirmed as PPC for Sutton & Cheam on Saturday, a massive religious discrimination news story will break. Fuelled, of course, by the Labour initiators of this debacle.

This will be just days before Federal Board Representative, Cllr Simon McGrath, seeks to extricate himself from another case of religious discrimination, this time in the London Central Employment Tribunals, on Tuesday (1 Feb).

So within four days, two cases of Lib Dem religious discrimination, emanating from constituencies neighbouring Sir Ed Davey's Kingston seat, will emarge.

In the wake of Liberal Democrat comments to the Tories about Nusrat Ghani and Islamophobia, I can hear the cries from the Blue Wall of "Liberal Hypocrites! Liberal Hypocrites! Christianophobia! Christianophobia!"

Well done Andrew; what a mess you have gotten your party into.
Andrew said…
I am asking questions, nothing more. If the party has not asked those questions, then it is not me who has got us into "a mess".

As for "religious discrimination", please note that I am a Christian and for many years have served as a church elder. It is not anti-Christian prejudice that motivates me. Neither do I see Mr Campanale's personal faith as an issue.

What I am concerned about is that he founded the Christian Peoples Alliance, and was an active member of its leadership team for 15 years, during which time it could be described, in policy terms, as having an extremist platform. I would be satisfied if Mr Campanale would distance himself from the policies his former party advocated during that time, but so far he has refused to do that - he has distanced himself only from the leadership that took over the CPA shortly before he left. I would feel more ressured if he could distance himself from, for example, the CPA's 2010 General Election manifesto (which is a perfectly reasonable thing to ask, given he was party responsible for the content of that manifesto).

"In other words, a Labour activist laid out some bait that you swallowed hook, line and sinker." No. far from it. I didn't swallow it all, and in fact some of it clearly was highly speculative. But what these tweets did was encourage me to establish the truth of the matter and to ask my own questions. As explained, there is much I do not know - but Mr Campanale could put our minds at rest. I am not sure why you feel it is wrong to ask questions of Mr Campanale's past, especially if those questions lead to him providing credible answers. Let's be realistic - the opposition are going to be doing the sanme, only with far more intensity and hostility, so he's going to need to provide reassuring answers.

If you believe this is an example of "Christianophobia" I would ask you to read what I've written again. As a Christian who has had the misfortune of having to fight an election against the CPA in the past, it is not the CPA's "Christianity" that is the issue here.

Nowhere am I calling for Mr Campanbale to step down as PPC. If "the Sanhedrin" in Sutton and Cheam were not previously aware of the nature of the CPA and Mr Campanale's role within it, then it certainly should have been. It seems to me that Labour are exploiting an unwillingness to talk openly about this.

Mr Campanale may well be a brilliant PPC and potentially a great MP. But we really do have to talk about this and he is going to have to learn how to address the inevitable line of questioning that will come from sources a lot more hostile than I am.