Conservative Party Conference – guest post by Danny Bowman

A Guest Post by Danny Bowman who is interning for Peter Botting. This week in Birmingham was my second Conservative Party conference and the last conference before the General Election in 2015. We arrived on the Saturday - Sam, myself and Peter. We joined the councillors and activists, the blue rinse brigade, the ambitious/naive/thirsty CF'ers, the lobbyists, charities, businesses and the media. The Hyatt was busy from the first night with old friends meeting up, everyone offering their shiny new business cards (I did that a lot too!) and most people enjoying a good drink. Or two. :) The first day saw the annual "Hate the Torys" march - happily I didn't hear of any violence this year. We didn't get in the hall as Peter was focusing on the fringe events and it was my job to get him from one event to the next - which was not always easy as he keeps meeting people and I have to chase him to keep to his schedule. Mark Reckless's defection actually invigorated the conference and the mood seemed very buoyant from day one - and then improved. Dunkirk spirit etc. Then saw the start of the real action with major speeches from all the Ministers. Theresa May, George Osborne, William Hague (his last speech to conference) and David Cameron were always going to be the big ticket speeches for conference. And they were all top quality. Theresa and George were serious people giving serious speeches about serious jobs. Boris was very funny and very cheeky - teasing both Theresa May and David Cameron. William Hague was classic William Hague - funny, self-deprecating and grown up. David Cameron gave the best speech he has ever given - most notable about his speech though was the huge difference between him and Ed Miliband. One is Prime Minister material - one is not. In fact, if Miliband was a Conservative it is doubtful that he would even be a PPS. The final day saw David Cameron's speech started with referencing the successful Scottish referendum then moved onto a fierce warning to British citizens fighting for Isis/ISIL as being "enemies of the UK". He teased and praised William Hague, showed real anger about Labour's attacks on his attitude to the NHS and outlined a series of significant tax cuts for people earning less than £50 000 including no income tax for people earning the minimum wage. This was my second conference. I was working instead of playing. I drank less and listened more. This conference was very different to last year. People were much more accepting of mental health and accepting of me. In fact, for many of the people I spoke to, mental health seemed an absolutely normal and non-stigma issue to talk about. We managed to find time to go for a curry - at Sam's insistence. It was the best curry I have ever had. I asked for the mildest curry while Peter and Sam tried out something much hotter! Even Sam rated his curry as the tie-first place curry he has ever had and he is quite fussy and critical about food!

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