Everything about Christian Peoples Alliance totally explained
The
Christian Peoples Alliance is a political party operating in the
United Kingdom, linked to other
Christian parties around the globe. It has 5 elected councillors in
England and its best election result was in 2000, when nearly 100,000 people in
London gave the party a vote. Although its vote of 3.4% warranted the party a seat in the
London Assembly under the
D'Hondt method, the party failed to cross the 5% threshold and didn't win representation.
Party history
The Christian Peoples Alliance describes itself as a party in the
Christian Democratic tradition that stands for the social teaching of the churches. It emerged in 1999 from the non-party
Movement for Christian Democracy (MCD), that was founded in 1991 at a rally of Christians in Westminster attended by 1,500 people. The MCD was founded by 3 Christian MPs -
David Alton (
Liberal),
Derek Enright (
Labour) and
Ken Hargreaves (
Conservative) and during its existence the Christian press featured reports about it becoming a fully-fledged political party. It never did so, but its Chairman Dr
Alan Storkey and Vice-Chairman,
David Campanale, led an internal consultation of MCD members that led to the formation of the Christian Peoples Alliance by leading MCD activists.
Ideology and issues
The founding MCD principles, adopted in 1991 as the Westminster Declaration were then adopted by Christian Peoples Alliance council in Sept 2001 as the
Mayflower Declaration (after the Mayflower Family Centre in London's Canning Town). The use of the term "Mayflower Declaration" as a statement of the CPA's Principles must be regarded a controversial because the Mayflower Family Centre (of which, at the time of the declaration Alan Craig was Director)was a Community Centre registered with the Charity Commissioners. As such it was required to conform to Charity Commission rules, which preclude party political bias or association.
All the policies of the CPA are linked to these policies and are summarised as:
- Recognition of Christ's sovereignty over the nations and in politics.
- Respect of God's law as the basis for constitutional government and a stable society.
- Reconciliation among nations, races, religions, classes, gender and communities.
- Respect for human life given by God.
- Social Justice to address wrongs and provide restitution to the wronged.
- Careful economic stewardship of God's creation.
- Commitment to the fairness of markets and patterns of exchange.
- Peacemaking, by addressing the causes of wars.
- Open, transparent government, which subjects itself to debate and critique.
Campaigning issues
The party has campaigned on a wide range of issues, winning success in 2000 when it organised a petition against government plans to require Asian visitors to the UK to place a £10,000 'bond' before seeing relatives. In 2000 and 2004 in London it put inner-city regeneration and fighting discrimination as its top policy priorities. Its policies to cut energy-use and road congestion through a motorway coach-network won acceptance at government level. Its policies in support of marriage and church schools have become popular currency among secular parties.
The CPA has also taken a firm stand against the reclassification of cannabis, in favour of linking Christianity to the European Union constitution, building more church schools and supporting traditional Christian morality. CPA Newham's campaigning against the building of Abbey Mills '
mega mosque' in West Ham won support from local Muslims and prominent Muslim leaders.
Alan Craig received what he alleges were death threats as a result of his stance over the mosque. However to date no individual has been convicted of making these alleged threats. He also has led campaigns backing the UNISON steward at Newham Council who faced disciplinary action; against plans to build London's large casino in Newham, against the Excel Arms Fair; against what he claims are Labour's plans to move local families out of Canning Town in support of yuppie housing. In fact this is a regeneration scheme and any families who move have been guaranteed a right to return by Labour Newham Council. Ironically though, last year, and before the recent reported fall in property prices,Craig himself sold a property close to the regeneration area and moved to Forest Gate.
He has also campaigned against proposals to demolish parts of
Queen Street Market in favour of "non-invasive refurbishment" environment..
In 2008, the CPA forged an electoral pact with the Christian Party (which was founded by Rev George Hargreaves after leaving the CPA), in order to contest the GLA elections Hargreaves advocates liberal rehabilitation and non-custodial measures for gun criminals.
Since its inception, the CPA has fought local authority elections at parish, borough, city and county level in London, Glasgow, Sheffield, Leeds, Rotherham, Middlesborough, Ipswich, Gloucester and Suffolk.
2000 Election
In 2000, the CPA was the only political party to adopt an ethnic minority party candidate for
London Mayor,
Ram Gidoomal CBE. His campaign was notable for winning support from both prominent bishops and leaders across the faiths. Former Editor of
The Times, Sir
Simon Jenkins, wrote in the Evening Standard that he gave Ram Gidoomal a vote. Gidoomal beat every minor party candidate in the mayoral race, including the Green. However, he failured to cross the 5% threshold on the London-wide list vote. The 55,000 votes won by CPA for the London list placed the party ahead of the
United Kingdom Independence Party and the
British National Party, and ahead of all the
far left groupings put together.
A social entrepreneur and described as "one of the best-connected Asian businessmen in the UK" Ram Gidoomal fought the election committed to winning more jobs for London. This led to an article in The Times which reported results from fantasymayor.com, a website run by
New Statesman magazine: "IF LONDONERS elect a mayor purely on how his or her policies match the electors' views,
Ken Livingstone would come in last by miles. Instead, the surprise winner would be Ram Gidoomal, the Christian People's Alliance rank outsider, according to a new website."
2002 Election
In 2002, the CPA ran 69 candidates in a third of London's boroughs, winning an average 5% of the vote. CPA Executive member and Director of the Mayflower Centre, Alan Craig, became the first Christian Democrat elected in British political history after gaining a seat in
Canning Town South from Labour. He became sole opposition councillor to 59 Labour councillors in the London
Borough of Newham.
In November 2002, the annual conference of the party passed a resolution opposing prospects of war in Iraq as "illegal, unwise and immoral". In
doing so, it became one of the first parties in Britain to oppose the use
of military action to topple Saddam Hussain.
2004 Election
The party fought the London elections again in 2004 and also London and the South East of England for the European elections. It chose not to contest Scotland, where it had a fledgling group, because the
Pro Life Party were running EU candidates. Although holding its London Assembly List deposit, the CPA won a smaller percentage of the vote than in 2000. Ram Gidoomal stepped down as party leader, to be succeeded by Cllr Alan Craig.
2005 General Election
In 2005, the CPA entered candidates in 9 General Election constituencies, winning 3,500 votes. A 'blind candidating' contest run by BBC's
Newsnight programme placed the party manifesto commitments second, above all the major UK parties (see )
2006 London wide Election
In London-wide elections in May 2006, the CPA won all 3 seats in
Canning Town South ward, with Alan Craig joined by
Simeon Ademolake and
Denise Stafford.
2007 Election
In May 2007, the CPA won two parish council seats in
Rotherham in
Yorkshire. It also contested elections to the Scottish Parliament on a platform of abolishing Trident, free school meals and higher pensions. CPA Scotland won endorsements from two prominent Roman Catholic bishops for its stance backing marriage, the unborn child, support for Church schools and opposition to gay adoptions. CPA Cymru also contested elections to the National Assembly of Wales. The party is led in Wales by Cllr Canon
Steve Morgan, from
Merthyr Tydfil Council. Alan Craig regained the federal party leadership in Autumn 2007, after a brief spell during which
Michael Elmer held the reins.
2008 Election
In 2008, the CPA forged an electoral pact with the Christian Party, led by Rev George Hargreaves, and which had previously split from the CPA, to contest the GLA elections. Alan Craig ran as the CPA and Christian Party candidate for London Mayor. He also topped the London List for the two parties, using the name The Christian Choice. Although he failed to keep his deposit in the Mayoral race, the Christian Choice held its vote in the Assembly List contest, winning 70,284 votes compared to 55,000 in 2004. The 2.86% of the London-wide poll placed the party ahead of
United Kingdom Independence Party (UKIP), and
Respect.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Christian Peoples Alliance'.
|
External Link Exchanges
Do you know how hard it is to get a link from a large encyclopaedia? Well we're different and will prove it. To get a link from us just add the following HTML to your site on a relevant page:
<a href="http://christian_peoples_alliance.totallyexplained.com">Christian Peoples Alliance Totally Explained</a>
Then simply click through this link from your web page. Our crawlers will verify your link, extract the title of your web page and instantly add a link back to it. If you like you can remove the words Totally Explained and embed the link in article text.
As long as your link remains in place, we'll keep our link to you right here. Please play fair - our crawlers are watching. Your site must be closely related to this one's topic. Any kind of spamming, dubious practises or removing the link will result in your link from us being dropped and, potentially, your whole site being banned. |