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Appealing in Ealing: Ken Livingstone and Ed Miliband woo the Labour

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  • Appealing in Ealing: Ken Livingstone and Ed Miliband woo the Labour

    Appealing in Ealing: Ken Livingstone and Ed Miliband woo the Labour vote

    Posted by
    Dave Hill
    Saturday 28 April 2012 18.32 BST
    guardian.co.uk


    Ken Livingstone and Ed Miliband campaigning in Ealing Broadway.
    Photograph: Dave Hill "Is that Boris?" cried a young female voice as
    Ken Livingstone, Ed Miliband and a big bunch of red balloons
    promenaded through the Ealing Broadway shopping centre.

    "No, it's not Boris," replied her friend.

    "Oh."

    I couldn't see her but I could hear her disappointment - the sound of
    what Ken is up against. By this time next week either a Labour Mayor
    Livingstone will be on the eighth floor of City Hall already
    implementing policies that would be good for most Londoners and London
    as a whole, or a Conservative Mayor Johnson will be embarking on four
    more years of doing no such thing.

    Seems like a simple choice. Opinion polls, though, suggest that too
    few London voters are looking at it that way and that too many see
    "good old Boris" and not much else - which is, of course, exactly what
    the Johnson campaign and its many press proxies have wanted all along.

    Team Boris gives every impression of protecting its boy from
    potentially unwelcome scrutiny in order to protect his lead: a no-show
    at a recent hustings, an opt out from BBC Radio London's breakfast
    show. Tomorrow, it's his turn to be grilled on The Sunday Politics. My
    strong advice is that you shouldn't hold your breath.

    But the polls still allow for a tight outcome. Ken's rating foot-drags
    behind general support for Labour in London, but mud that sticks to
    the Tories nationally is still soil in which his prospects grow.
    That's why Ed Miliband was on the trail with him this morning, not
    only singing his praises as the Labour candidate (that's "the Labour
    candidate," for pity's sake) but also dirty up David Cameron and that
    good friend of Boris and various mutual media chums, Jeremy Hunt.

    If they're fretting about Thursday's vote, it didn't show. Ken greeted
    my arrival at Ealing Broadway station by offering me a freshly-fried
    chip and saying how much he'd enjoyed my calling him "stubborn" in a
    recent article.

    "A 'stubborn git,' actually," I pointed out. (A lot of thought went
    into that "git".)

    Ken guffawed, forgivingly.

    I nattered with some of his entourage - a very nice woman from Labour
    HQ, another from the office of Ed Balls - and then Miliband showed up,
    looking shiny and enthused. Together they sailed off through light
    drizzle accompanied by Onkar Sahota, Labour's London Assembly
    candidate for the GLA constituency of Ealing and Hillingdon, which a
    recent poll suggests Sahota has a chance of snatching from the Tory
    incumbent Richard Barnes. A flotilla of activists framed the
    politicians' progress with "Ken's Fare Deal" placards. Up ahead,
    apparatchiks scouted shoppers for photo-op material.

    This seemed in good supply, despite Ken's utter failure to be Boris.
    There were all sorts of stop-starts as Labour candidate and Labour
    leader posed and bantered with assorted Ealing citizens, ignored a
    passing fellow who crossly shouted, "Support the workers! Support
    strikes!" and talked to Sky News, PA and the Beeb about reducing
    London's cost of living. They went into a sweet shop - Mr Simms Olde
    Sweet Shoppe to be precise - and a shoe repairer's, presumably not
    drawn there by the highly intoxicating smell of glue.

    Once back in the fresh air Ken was hailed by a man attending a sombre
    tree-planting ceremony at the edge of Haven Green. Would he join it,
    please? The gathering, I later learned, was to commemorate the
    Armenian Genocide, which Ealing Council has recognised thanks to
    efforts of Stephen Pound, the Labour MP for Ealing North. I was told
    that there are around 10,000 people of Armenian descent in Ealing.

    Ken seemed very game, and had taken several paces across the sodden
    grass before he was hauled back. Miliband, you see, was already in a
    car waiting across the way to whisk him to his next destination. Ken
    was meant to be beside him. "We're already 20 minutes late," an aide
    said, breathlessly.

    Ken apologised and did what he was told - not something that happens
    every day. He and his party's leader have a common interest in getting
    along and in being seen to do so. Expect further sightings of them in
    each others' company before 3 May.

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