The new Parliament will look very different – and the younger the better

By Alastair Campbell

Funny old world…I was just arriving at Wimbledon, trying to find a telly that would be showing the Lions match, saying to my son that when we came here last year we were with Alan Milburn…when in pings a text from Alan saying he has told his local party he won’t be standing at the next election.

Politics being politics, the UK media being the UK media, there will be a few conspiracy theories flying around, and lots of overblown interpretation, as there was when he stepped down from the Cabinet.

Sometimes, when people say they are leaving a job to spend more time with the family, they mean it. I know I did, and though I still get about a bit, and pursue new interests as Alan will, I see more of my family than ever I did in frontline politics, which is why I was at the tennis in the first place.

I always got on well with Alan. In part because of his family, and his commitment to them, he always stayed in the real world. One of the few rows we had was when I was trying to get him to do a Sunday TV interview at a difficult time for the government. Though I was hacked off on one level that he wouldn’t do it, and knew I would have to give up more of the weekend trying to cajole someone else onto a tricky wicket, I rather respected the fact he said he had promised his kids he would be home all day, and that was that.

We worked very closely during the last election campaign, which was a bit tricky at times, but Alan never stopped being a real team player.

What is clear is that almost regardless of the overall outcome when the election comes, there is going to be a lot of churn in Parliament in the run up.

The expenses scandal has already ensured some MPs will not be standing next time, and there will be more. Even without that extraordinary situation, there are always announcements of departures towards the end of a Parliament, and I think there will be more than is usual.

So we are going to be looking at a lot of new faces on all sides. That may be no bad thing. It may well take a new generation – including people in their 20s and 30s – to rebuild politics after all the hits it has taken.

One of the reasons I supported Georgia Gould for the Labour candidature in Erith and Thamesmead was precisely because it would send that signal.

Despite all the opprobrium heaped on politicians, plenty of people will want to replace MPs who leave. Of course experience, both of politics and of other aspects of life, will be important.

But a bit of youth could go a long long way.

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