I'm Labour's candidate for South Derbyshire, following in the footsteps of Mark Todd MP.
I've been helping in South Derbyshire since 1992, both at General Elections and at by-elections in Melbourne (2000), Hilton (2005) and Church Gresley (2007).
I'm a Nottingham City Councillor, having retained the Mapperley ward in 2007's elections for the sixth time. (The ward once covered the 3rd most Tory part of Nottingham City.)
The pressure was on us in 2007. And I hope the stories conveyed during the campaign period were of interest.
I use this blog to tell stories of general political interest.
The Tories' national spokesperson has been condemned by the national statistics office for misuse of government statistics.
The decision by the Conservatives to keep claiming an increase in violent crime in Britain is deliberate and cited as the main plank of the case for a broken Britain.
Alan Johnson challenged David Cameron on the matter last November and not received a reply.
Labour changed the way it counted violent crimes offences in 2002, regarding the report of a violent crime as an instance, rather than the previous practice of letting the Police determine whether there had been an offence.
Further, Labour have encouraged people to report domestic violence, so that we might expect more reports, rather necessarily more incidents.
A more accurate way to track crime trends is the British Crime Survey which has been asking people if they've experienced crime. This shows a significant fall in the numbers of people experiencing violent crime.
The British Crime Survey shows violent crime down by 41% since 1997.
The British Crime Survey is not perfect - until very recently it didn't interview 10-15 year-olds and, obviously, it cannot talk to victims of murder.
It's to be hoped that South Derbyshire Tories won't join David Cameron and their crime spokesperson in the misuse of crime statistics.