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Official Monster Raving Loony Party

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
British satirical political party
This article'slead sectionmay be too short to adequatelysummarize the key points. Please consider expanding the lead toprovide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article.(July 2024)

Official Monster Raving Loony Party
LeaderAlan "Howling Laud" Hope
FounderDavid "Screaming Lord" Sutch
Founded16 June 1982; 43 years ago (16 June 1982)
Headquarters59 New Barn Close,Fleet, Hampshire, GU51 5HU
Membership1,434[1]
Ideology
ColoursYellow and black
Website
loonyparty.com

TheOfficial Monster Raving Loony Party (OMRLP) is apolitical party[2] established in the United Kingdom in 1982 by the musicianDavid Sutch, also known as Screaming Lord Sutch, 3rd Earl of Harrow, or simply Lord Sutch.[3] It is notable for its deliberately bizarre policies and it effectively exists tosatiriseBritish politics, and by fieldingnovelty candidates to offer itself as an alternative forprotest voters, especially in constituencies where the party holding asafe seat is unlikely to lose it.

History

[edit]

Sutch era

[edit]

Starting in 1963, David Sutch, head of the rock groupScreaming Lord Sutch and the Savages, stood in British parliamentary elections under a range of party names, initially as theNational Teenage Party candidate. At that time, the minimum voting age was 21. The party's name was intended to highlight what Sutch and others viewed as hypocrisy, since teenagers were unable to vote because of their supposed immaturity while the adults running the country were involved in scandals such as theProfumo affair.[citation needed]

Sutch moved to America in 1968.[4] After being shot during a mugging attempt while living in the United States, Sutch returned to Britain (and to politics) during the 1980s. The Raving Loony name first appeared at theBermondsey by-election of 1983.[citation needed]

A similar concept had appeared earlier in theElection Night Special sketch on the television comedy seriesMonty Python's Flying Circus, in which the Silly and Sensible parties competed; and a similar skit byThe Goodies, in whichGraeme Garden stood as a Science Loony. A Science Fiction Looney candidate had also competed in the1976 Cambridge by-election.

Two others were important in the formation of the OMRLP: John Desmond Dougrez-Lewis stood in theCrosby by-election of 1981 (won by theSocial Democratic Party's co-founderShirley Williams); and Dougrez-Lewis stood in the by-election asTarquin Fin-tim-lin-bin-whin-bim-lim-bus-stop-F'tang-F'tang-Olé-Biscuitbarrel, taken from the Election Night Special Monty Python sketch. He had changed his name bydeed poll from John Desmond Lewis, on behalf of theCambridge University Raving Loony Society (Curls), an "anti-political party" and charity fundraising group formed largely as a fun counter-response to increasingly polarised student politics in Cambridge. It was responsible for a number of fun stunts. ItsOxford University equivalents were the "Oxford Raving Lunatics". Dougrez-Lewis became Sutch's agent at the notorious Bermondsey by-election, where the OMRLP banner was first officially unfurled. Reverting to his original name, Dougrez-Lewis stood for the new party in Cambridge in the1983 general election.[5]

Another serial offbeat by-election candidate was CommanderBill Boaks, a retired World War II hero who took part in sinking theBismarck. Boaks campaigned and stood for election for over 30 years[6] on limited funds, always on the issue ofroad safety. Boaks proved influential on Sutch's direction as the leading anti-politician: "It's the ones whodon't vote you really want, because they're the ones who think."[citation needed]

Boaks thought that increased traffic and more roads would cause problems, and he addressed road safety with flamboyant campaigning and a variety of tactics, includingprivate prosecution of public figures who escaped public prosecution fordrunk driving.[citation needed] He successfully campaigned with Sutch and others to pedestrianise London'sCarnaby Street.[7] While recovering from being struck by a motorcycle, Boaks was one of Sutch'scounting agents at Bermondsey in 1983. Following Boaks's death, popular opinion towards road safety has become closer to his views.

Screaming Lord Sutch died by suicide on 16 June 1999 while suffering from clinical depression after his mother, Annie, died in 1998.[8] A biography of Sutch,The Man Who Was Screaming Lord Sutch (by Graham Sharpe, the media relations manager of bookmakerWilliam Hill), was published in April 2005, describing what remained of the party as "wannabes, never-would-bes and some bloody-well-shouldn't-bes".[9]

Post-Sutch

[edit]

Sutch's funeral – organised by his lifetime friend, the session drummer and formerRolling Stones memberCarlo Little – was attended by members of the OMRLP andRaving Loony Green Giant Party, including Stuart Hughes, who with Freddie Zapp brought along a huge floral tribute shaped as an OMRLP rosette. The running of the OMRLP fell toAlan "Howling Laud" Hope and his cat,Catmando, who were the joint winners of the 1999 membership ballot for the replacement for Sutch.[10] Although Hope took over as party leader after Sutch's death, the real day-to-day running of the party has always been done by other party members.

The OMRLP fielded 15 candidates in the2001 general election, at which it had its best general election results to date.

The manifesto, entitledThe Manicfesto, for the2005 general election featured the major commitment of their long held pledge to abolish income tax, citing as always that it was only meant to be a temporary measure during the Napoleonic Wars.[11] Also included was another old staple, the "Putting Parliament on Wheels" idea of having Parliament sit throughout the country rather than solely in London – with special emphasis this time in its creation negating the need for national/regional assemblies.[11]

The OMRLP has fielded candidates since 2001, with reduced success and losing theirdeposits.

The OMRLP's official headquarters was originally the Golden Lion Hotel inAshburton, Devon, then the Dog & Partridge pub atYateley inHampshire, but this was lost shortly after the 2005 general election. Conference venues are now chosen in advance: the 2006 conference was held at Torrington inDevon, and the 2007 conference was held in Jersey.[12] The conference was held in Blackpool in 2017.[13]

The party's last elected representative was R. U. Seerius (formerly Jon Brewer) on the eleven-member Sawley Parish Council in Derbyshire, first elected (uncontested) in 2005. He was no longer a member as of May 2007, having failed to appear at no fewer than 11 statutory meetings during his time in office, due to illness.[14]

In March 2007, the party's vice-president Melodie "Boney Maroney" Staniforth left the party, although she ran in the Kirklees election in April 2007.[15] The OMRLP succeeded in standing in the two by-elections of 19 July 2007 inSedgefield andEaling Southall, but again achieving derisory results: Alan Hope acquiring 129 votes (0.46%) and John Cartwright taking 188 (0.51%), beating the English Democrats but coming behind theChristian Party of the ReverendGeorge Hargreaves and David Braid.[16][17]

In recognition that reforms were needed,Peter 'T.C.' Owen was moved from the honorary position of party chairman to that of deputy leader (and thus effective day-to-day leader) of the OMRLP, while Anthony "The Jersey Flyer" Blyth (owner of the Ommaroo Hotel and a member of theJersey Heritage Trust) took over Owen's role. Owen is one of four Raving Loonies to have scored more than 1,000 votes in an election (he polled 2,859 votes in the1994 European elections).

On 31 May 2017, Hope was interviewed byAndrew Neil on the BBC'sDaily Politics programme.[18]

Electoral performance

[edit]

In 1987, the OMRLP won its first seat onAshburton Town Council in Devon, asAlan "Howling Laud" Hope was elected unopposed. He subsequently became deputy mayor and later mayor of Ashburton in 1998 (mainly opposed by the local Conservatives; they allegedly never forgave him for becoming a member of the OMRLP)[citation needed] until he moved to Hampshire after Sutch's death. For over a decade, his hotel The Golden Lion in Ashburton (referred to by some in the party as "The Mucky Mog") was the party's headquarters and conference centre.

Two councillors subsequently became mayors: Alan Hope inAshburton in Devon and Chris "Screwy" Driver on theIsle of Sheppey in Kent.[19]

At theBootle by-election in May 1990, the Loony candidate (Sutch) received more votes than the candidate for thecontinuing Social Democrats. The story was a major headline in many UK newspapers; ironically, the by-election itself had attracted little coverage. Bootle is still regarded by the party as their most significant result in politics,[20] albeit one largely lampooning the political world.

In the1995 Perth and Kinross by-election The OMRLP did better than UKIP and Scottish greens. And In the2019 Brecon and Radnorshire by-election, the OMRLP candidate Lady Lily the Pink polled more votes than theUnited Kingdom Independence Party.[21] The party fielded 24 candidates and won a record number of votes in the2019 general election, when it polled 9,739 votes, the party's highest vote at a general election.

The party has yet to save itsdeposit at a by-election by winning at least 5% of the vote,[22] although Screaming Lord Sutch came close at the1994 Rotherham by-election as the party's leader, winning 4.2% of the vote.[23]

General elections

[edit]
ElectionCandidatesVotes% of votes
1983113,1050.0
198751,9510.0
1992257,9290.1
1997247,9060.0
2001156,6550.0
2005196,3110.0
2010277,5100.0
2015273,8980.0
2017123,8900.0
2019249,7390.0
2024225,8140.0

By-elections

[edit]

48th Parliament

ElectionCandidateVotes% of votes
1983 Bermondsey by-electionDavid Sutch970.3
1983 Darlington by-election3740.7

49th Parliament

ElectionCandidateVotes% of votes
1983 Penrith and The Border by-electionScreaming Lord Sutch4121.1
1984 Chesterfield by-electionDavid Sutch1780.3
1985 Brecon and Radnor by-election2020.5
1986 Fulham by-election1340.4
1986 Newcastle-under-Lyme by-election2770.7

50th Parliament

ElectionCandidateVotes% of votes
1988 Kensington by-electionScreaming Lord Sutch610.3
1988 Glasgow Govan by-electionLord Sutch1740.6
1988 Epping Forest by-electionDavid Sutch2080.6
1989 Richmond (Yorks) by-electionDavid "Lord" Sutch1670.3
1989 Vale of Glamorgan by-election"Lord" David Sutch2660.5
1989 Vauxhall by-election"Lord" David Sutch1060.4
1990 Mid Staffordshire by-electionLord David Sutch3360.6
May 1990 Bootle by-election4181.2
1990 Knowsley South by-electionDavid Sutch1970.9
November 1990 Bootle by-electionLord David Sutch3101.1
1990 Bradford North by-electionWild Willi Beckett2100.6
1991 Ribble Valley by-electionScreaming Lord Sutch2780.6
1991 Neath by-electionDavid Sutch2630.8
1991 Monmouth by-electionScreaming Lord Sutch3140.7
1991 Liverpool Walton by-election5461.4

51st Parliament

ElectionCandidateVotes% of votes
1993 Newbury by-electionLord David Sutch4320.7
1993 Christchurch by-electionDavid Sutch4040.8
1994 Rotherham by-electionScreaming Lord Sutch1,1144.2
1994 Bradford South by-electionDavid Sutch7272.4
1994 Eastleigh by-election7831.4
1995 Islwyn by-electionScreaming Lord Sutch5062.2
1995 Perth and Kinross by-election5861.4
1995 Littleborough and Saddleworth by-election7821.9
1996 Hemsworth by-electionDavid Sutch6523.0
1996 South East Staffordshire by-election5061.2

52nd Parliament

ElectionCandidateVotes% of votes
1997 Uxbridge by-electionScreaming Lord Sutch3961.3
1997 Winchester by-electionLord David Sutch3160.6
1999 Eddisbury by-electionAlan Hope2380.7
1999 Kensington and Chelsea by-electionHowling Laud Hope200.1

53rd Parliament

ElectionCandidateVotes% of votes
2002 Ogmore by-electionLeslie Edwards1871.0
2003 Brent East by-electionAlan Hope590.3
2004 Leicester South by-electionR. U. Seerius2250.8
2004 Hartlepool by-electionAlan Hope800.3

54th Parliament

ElectionCandidateVotes% of votes
2006 Blaenau Gwent by-electionsAlan "Howling Laud" Hope3181.2
2006 Bromley and Chislehurst by-electionJohn Cartwright1320.5
2007 Ealing Southall by-election1880.5
2007 Sedgefield by-electionAlan Hope1290.5
2008 Crewe and Nantwich by-electionThe Flying Brick2360.6
2008 Henley by-electionBananaman Owen2420.7
2008 Haltemprice and Howden by-electionMad Cow-Girl4121.7
2009 Norwich North by-electionAlan Hope1440.4

55th Parliament

ElectionCandidateVotes% of votes
2011 Oldham East and Saddleworth by-electionNick "The Flying Brick" Delves1450.4
2011 Barnsley Central by-electionHowling Laud Hope1980.8
2011 Leicester South by-election5531.6
2012 Bradford West by-election1110.3
2012 Croydon North by-electionJohn Cartwright1100.4
2012 Manchester Central by-electionHowling Laud Hope780.5
2013 Eastleigh by-election1360.3
2013 South Shields by-electionAlan "Howling Laud" Hope1970.8
2014 Wythenshawe and Sale East by-electionCaptain Chaplington-Smythe2881.2
2014 Newark by-electionNick The Flying Brick1680.4
2014 Clacton by-electionAlan "Howling Laud" Hope1270.4
2014 Rochester and Strood by-electionHairy Knorm Davidson1510.4

56th Parliament

ElectionCandidateVotes% of votes
2015 Oldham West and Royton by-electionSir Oink A-Lot1410.5
2016 Tooting by-electionAlan "Howling Laud" Hope540.2
2016 Witney by-electionMad Hatter1290.3
2016 Richmond Park by-electionAlan "Howling Laud" Hope1840.5
2017 Stoke-on-Trent Central by-electionThe Incredible Flying Brick1270.6

57th Parliament

ElectionCandidateVotes% of votes
2018 Lewisham East by-electionHowling Laud Hope930.4
2019 Peterborough by-electionAlan "Howling Laud" Hope1120.3
2019 Brecon and Radnorshire by-electionLady Lily Pink3341.0

58th Parliament

ElectionCandidateVotes% of votes
2021 Hartlepool by-electionThe Incredible Flying Brick1040.3
2021 Batley and Spen by-electionHowling Laud Hope1070.3
2021 Old Bexley and Sidcup by-electionMad Mike Young940.4
2021 North Shropshire by-electionAlan "Howling Laud" Hope1180.3
2022 Birmingham Erdington by-electionThe Good Knight Sir NosDa49[24]0.3
2022 Wakefield by-electionSir Archibald Stanton Earl 'Eaton1710.6
2022 City of Chester by-electionHowling Laud Hope1560.6
2023 West Lancashire by-electionHowling Laud Hope2100.9
2023 Selby and Ainsty by-electionSir Archibald Stanton1720.5
2023 Uxbridge and South Ruislip by-electionHowling Laud Hope320.1
2023 Tamworth by-electionHowling Laud Hope1550.6
2023 Mid Bedfordshire by-electionAnn Kelly2490.6
2024 Wellingborough by-electionNick the Flying Brick2170.7
2024 Rochdale by-electionRavin Rodent Subortna2090.7
2024 Blackpool South by-electionHowling Laud Hope1210.7

Parish and town councillors

[edit]

As of 2021, the party has seven parish and town councillors, one via the Molesey Residents Association.

CouncillorCouncil
Howling Laud Hope (Cllr Alan Hope)[25]Fleet Town Council, Hampshire
Baron Von Thunderclap[26]Bolney Parish, Sussex
Monkey the Drummer[27]Molesey Parish, Surrey
Norm the Storm[27]West Grinstead and Partridge Green Parish, West Sussex
Sarah Mad Cow[27]Lower Carlton Parish, Lincolnshire
Sir Giles Greenwood[27]Kemberton Parish, Shropshire
The Iconic Arty Pole[27]Great Carlton Parish, Lincolnshire

2010 William Hill branding

[edit]

For the 2010 general election, the OMRLP used the description "Monster Raving LoonyWilliam Hill Party",[28] which was met with criticism by some members,[citation needed] with John Cartwright, Loony candidate in Croydon, publicly stating: "I am not and will not be a mercenary, or an advert, for a commercial company during the course of the election campaign."[29]

Membership

[edit]

The statement of accounts for the period 1 January to 31 December 2008[30] outlines membership at 1,354, made up of 173 paying members and 1,181 "lifetime but non-paying". It currently costs £15 per year for membership, which includes a party rosette, a certificate of insanity, a Loony badge, a party membership card and a letter from the party's leader.[31] A £20.00 membership is available for those overseas.

Sir Patrick Moore (1923–2012), the British TV amateur astronomer, was the finance minister of the party for a short time. He once said that the Monster Raving Loony Party "had an advantage over all the other parties, in that they knew they were loonies".[32]

In 1992, the Glasgow bandHugh Reed and the Velvet Underpants released the song "Vote Monster Raving Looney", despite not having any actual ties to the party.

Policies and electoral strategy

[edit]

The OMRLP are distinguished by having a deliberately bizarre manifesto, which contains things that seem to be impossible or too absurd to implement – usually to highlight what they see as real-life absurdities. Despite its satirical nature, some of the things that have featured in Loony manifestos have actually become law, such as "passports for pets", abolition of dog licences and all-day pub openings.[33]

Other suggestions so far unadopted included minting a 99p coin and forbidding greyhound racing in order to "stop the country going to the dogs".[20]

The Loonies generally field as many candidates as possible in United Kingdom general elections, some (but by no means all) standing under ridiculous names they have adopted via deed poll. Sutch himself stood against all three main party leaders (John Major,Neil Kinnock andPaddy Ashdown) in the1992 general election. Parliamentary candidates have to pay their own deposit (which currently stands at £500) and cover all of their expenses. No OMRLP candidate has managed to get the required 5% of the popular vote needed to retain their deposit, but this does not stop people standing. Sutch came closest with 4.2% and over 1,100 votes at the1994 Rotherham by-election, whileStuart Hughes still holds the record for the largest number of votes for a Loony candidate at a Parliamentary election, with 1,442 at the1992 general election in theHoniton seat in east Devon. The all-time highest vote achieved was by comedianDanny Blue, who secured 3,339 votes in the 1994 European elections under the pseudonym of "John Major". Bamford had also acted as an election agent for Lindi St Clair's rivalCorrective Party, and was a former close associate of Stuart Hughes.

In the run-up to the2011 Alternative Vote referendum, the party adopted an equivocal stance, advising its supporters, on 8 April, to "vote as you see fit".[34] In response to mainstream parties debatingBrexit, the OMRLP suggested sendingNoel Edmonds to the European Parliament "because he understandsDeal or No Deal".[21] It has advocated an "al dente Brexit" rather than a hard or soft Brexit.[21]

In popular culture

[edit]

Screaming Lord Sutch appeared as himself in the opening episode of television sitcomThe New Statesman, standing for election in the seat of Haltemprice, which was won by Alan B'Stard for the Conservative Party. Sutch and his party polled second, ahead of Labour and the SDP.

The party's regular appearances at by-elections were satirised in theBlackadder the Third episode "Dish and Dishonesty", with a candidate from theStanding at the Back Dressed Stupidly and Looking Stupid Party standing as one of Baldrick's rivals in a by-election held in arotten borough.

A candidate was shown canvassing for a by-election on theOne Foot in the Grave episode "I'll Retire to Bedlam" where a regional news programme filmed him knocking on the Meldrews' door. He explained the nature of the party, that they had some clearly set out policies, and that people could choose to vote for them as a protest vote; all while dressed vaguely as a bee. Later in the episode, another candidate for one of the major parties was shaking hands with patients in hospital, then came up to Victor to shake his hand and asked if Victor would be voting for him. Victor replied that he would be voting for the Monster Raving Loony Party and that he found their political platform the most sensible of all the major parties.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Official Monster Raving Loony Party : Membership".Loonyparty.com. Retrieved12 September 2014.
  2. ^"View registration".The Electoral Commission.
  3. ^"Screaming Lord Sutch – History & Timeline". The Loony Archive. Archived fromthe original on 26 August 2009. Retrieved31 August 2014.
  4. ^"Sutch's life".Record Collector Magazine. 28 March 2009.
  5. ^"Statement of persons nominated and notice of poll". Cambridge University Raving Looney Society. Retrieved31 August 2014.
  6. ^Tidy, Joe (29 March 2015)."Is This The Worst Election Candidate Ever?".Sky News. Retrieved12 June 2017.
  7. ^Hemming, Henry (2 April 2009).In Search of the English Eccentric.Hodder & Stoughton.ISBN 9781848541542. Retrieved13 February 2019 – via Google Books.
  8. ^"Suicide verdict on Sutch".BBC News. 31 October 1999. Retrieved25 March 2018.
  9. ^Sharpe, Graham (2005).The Man Who Was Screaming Lord Sutch. Aurum Press.ISBN 1-85410-983-9.
  10. ^"Loony's Past R I P".Loonyparty.com. 14 October 2013. Retrieved12 June 2017.
  11. ^ab"2005 GENERAL ELECTION MANIFESTO".Loonyparty.com. 18 May 2011. Archived fromthe original on 6 June 2017. Retrieved12 June 2017.
  12. ^"Past Conferences".The Official Monster Raving Loony Party. 25 June 2011.
  13. ^Images, Christopher Furlong/Getty (29 September 2017)."At the Monster Raving Loony party conference in Blackpool – in pictures".The Guardian.
  14. ^"Latest news".Sawley Parish Council. Archived fromthe original on 14 July 2014. Retrieved31 August 2014.
  15. ^Shaw, Martin; Updated (24 August 2018)."Ex-Monster Raving Loony Party deputy leader Melodie Staniforth dies".Yorkshire Live. Retrieved12 April 2025.
  16. ^Wells, Anthony."Sedgefield".UK Polling Report. Archived fromthe original on 23 January 2013. Retrieved3 January 2013.
  17. ^Wells, Anthony."Ealing Southall".UK Polling Report. Archived fromthe original on 26 October 2017. Retrieved3 January 2013.
  18. ^"Monster Raving Loony Party is 'ahead of our time' says leader".BBC News. 31 May 2017. Retrieved12 June 2017.
  19. ^"Loony elected as town's new Mayor".Kent Online. 29 May 2002.
  20. ^abChakelian, Anoosh (15 December 2014)."What are the Monster Raving Loony Party's election plans?".New Statesman. Retrieved8 January 2018.
  21. ^abcForrest, Adam (2 August 2019)."Ukip beaten by Monster Raving Loony party at by-election".The Independent.
  22. ^"Election results 2019: Greens lose the most deposits".BBC News. 13 December 2019.
  23. ^"Results of Byelections in the 1992-97 Parliament".United Kingdom Election Results. Archived fromthe original on 20 July 2017.
  24. ^"Birmingham Erdington Parliamentary by-election".Birmingham City Council. 3 March 2022. Retrieved16 March 2022.
  25. ^"Fleet Town Council – Councillor Contact Details".Fleet-tc.gov.uk. Archived fromthe original on 2 August 2019. Retrieved7 June 2019.
  26. ^"Election of Parish Councillors for Bolney Parish Council"(PDF). 3 April 2019. Retrieved7 July 2021.
  27. ^abcde"Results of the May 6th Elections 2021".The Official Monster Raving Loony Party. 9 May 2021. Retrieved17 February 2022.
  28. ^"The Official Monster Raving Loony Party; Vote For Insanity".Loonyparty.com. 3 July 2014. Retrieved12 July 2014.
  29. ^Cardiff Central Retrospective, The Annual Report and Continuing Manifesto – MMX Edition p. 23, Pocket Propaganda Press, Cardiff. ISSN 2045-1660.
  30. ^"Official Monster Raving Loony Party Statement of Accounts 1 January – 31 December 2008"(PDF). Electoral Commission. Retrieved31 August 2014.[permanent dead link]
  31. ^"The Official Monster Raving Loony Party".Loonyparty.com. 3 June 2024. Retrieved3 June 2024.
  32. ^"Obituary: Patrick Moore". BBC News UK. 9 December 2012. Retrieved31 August 2014.
  33. ^Edwards, Brian (6 May 2015)."7 Monster Raving Loony Party policies which are now part of UK law".Mirror. Retrieved30 March 2019.
  34. ^"AV? | The Official Monster Raving Loony Party".Loonyparty.com. 8 April 2011. Retrieved12 July 2014.

32.Rik Mayal,The New Statesman- episode 1 season 1 (1984)

Bibliography

[edit]
  • Life As Sutch – Lord David Sutch (ghost written by Peter Chippendale), Angus & Robertson 1991 (Expanded Edition 1992)ISBN 0-207-17240-4

Further reading

[edit]

External links

[edit]
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