Official Monster Raving Loony Party
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| Official Monster Raving Loony Party | |
|---|---|
| | |
| Leader | Alan "Howling Laud" Hope |
| Founded | 1983 |
| Headquarters | 9 Newtown, Honley, Nr Holmfirth, W. Yorks, HD9 6PQ. |
| Political Ideology | Insanity, Satire, Pragmatism, Existentialism |
| Political Position | Left-right |
| International Affiliation | |
| European Affiliation | |
| European Parliament Group | |
| Colours | Yellow & Black primary. Green and Purple additional. |
| Website | www.omrlp.com |
| See also | Politics of the UK |
The Official Monster Raving Loony Party (OMRLP) is a registered political party established in the United Kingdom in 1983 by musician and anti-politician David Sutch, also known as Screaming Lord Sutch (1940-1999).
[edit] Sutch's early political activity
Beginning in 1964, Sutch—of Screaming Lord Sutch & The Savages—stood under a whole raft of party names, mainly as the National Teenage Party candidate. At that time the voting age was set at 21. The name "National Teenage Party" was intended to highlight what Sutch and others saw as hypocrisy on a national scale: while teenagers were denied the right to vote on the basis of their supposed immaturity, the "adults" running the country were involved in such shenanigans as the Profumo Affair.
Sutch himself was in his mid-twenties in 1964.
[edit] Formation of the Official Monster Raving Loony Party
Sutch, who had been shot during a mugging attempt in the 1980s while he lived in the United States, left the USA thoroughly disillusioned with what he saw as an increasingly violent country.
He then returned to the UK and to politics, and it was at this time that the "Raving Loony" tag first appeared.
A similar concept appeared in the "Election Night Special" sketch by Monty Python's Flying Circus in 1970 in which the "Silly Party" and the "Sensible Party" competed against each other, and The Goodies did a similar skit with Graeme Garden as a "Science Loony". Monty Python and The Goodies also popularised the word "loony" in the sense that Sutch was using in the name of the OMRLP, but it is equally possible that Sutch inspired the two comedy shows by managing to stand against Harold Wilson in 1966 and in the City of London election in 1970. There had also been a "Science Fiction and Loony" candidate in the 1976 Cambridge by-election.
There were two other individuals important in the formation of the future OMRLP. The first was John Dougrez-Lewis, who stood at the Crosby by-election of 1981 (which was won by the Social Democratic Party's co-founder Shirley Williams). Dougrez-Lewis stood at the by-election as Tarquin Fin-tim-lin-bin-whin-bim-lim-bus-stop-F'tang-F'tang-Olé-Biscuitbarrel (a name taken from the aforementioned Monty Python sketch), having changed his name by Deed Poll from the somewhat plainer John Desmond Lewis, on the behalf of the Cambridge University Raving Loony Society (CURLS) despite a legal challenge to stop him from standing by a far-right candidate wishing to highlight his suspension from Middlesex Polytechnic for his views. CURLS were an “anti-political party” and charity fundraising group formed largely to be a fun counter response to increasingly polarised student politics on campus & responsible for a number of fun-stunts (their Oxford University equivalents were the “Oxford Raving Lunatics”) Dougrez-Lewis was to become Sutch's agent at the notorious Bermondsey by-election of 1983 where the OMRLP banner was first officially unfurled.
The second person who helped found the party was Commander Bill Boaks, a retired World War II hero involved in the sinking of the Bismarck, who had campaigned and stood for election for over 30 years on limited funds, always on the issue of road safety (he had been prosecuted several times as a result of his campaigns against several prominent figures who had mysteriously managed to escape prosecution for drunk-driving offences). Boaks foresaw the problems that increased traffic and more roads would cause the country, but by the time his predictions of unnecessary child deaths, pollution and congestion were proved correct, he had died as a result of head injuries received three years earlier from a motorcycle collision. Boaks acted as one of Sutch's counting agents at Bermondsey and also proved influential on Sutch's direction as the leading anti-politician: "it's the ones who don't vote you really want, because they're the ones who think". Boaks subsequently retired from standing at elections due to his injuries, content that someone else was now taking up the anti-Establishment baton he had held for three decades.
[edit] Candidates and party manifesto
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 and Paddy Ashdown) in the 1992 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 his deposit but this does not stop people standing. Sutch came closest with 4.1% and over a thousand votes at the Rotherham by-election, whilst Stuart Hughes still holds the record for the largest number of votes for a Loony candidate at a Parliamentary election, with 1,442 at the 1992 General Election in the Honiton seat in east Devon. The all time highest vote achieved was by comedian Danny Bamford aka Danny 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 rival Corrective Party, and was a former close associate of Stuart Hughes.
In 1987, the OMRLP won its first seat on Ashburton Town Council in Devon, as Alan Hope was elected unopposed. He subsequently became Deputy Mayor and later Mayor of Ashburton in 1998 (amid disproportionate opposition from local Conservatives - they had never forgiven him for "defecting", although as Hope pointed out they had expelled him for his OMRLP membership in the first place) until he moved to Hampshire after Sutch's death. His hotel in Ashburton "The Golden Lion" (referred to by some in the party as "The Mucky Mog" for reasons apparent to anyone visiting it for the first time) was the party's Headquarters & conference centre for over a decade.
The OMRLP are distinguished by having a deliberately bizarre manifesto, which contains things that seem to be too impossible or too absurd to implement. Despite its satirical nature, some of the things that have featured in Loony manifestos have become law, such as being able to vote at 18, "passports for pets", and all-day pub openings. Similarly, the outcry following Alan Hope's appearance on the BBC's Nationwide current affairs programme after he was elected - during which he mentioned that butter and milk surpluses were being dumped down abandoned mineshafts under European Community rules to maintain prices (something the media of the day had failed to expose) - resulted in the distribution of such surpluses to the needy or charities instead.
[edit] Divisions within the Loony Party
Just like any other party, the OMRLP has long suffered from splits over policy regarding just how silly it should be. Many believed that the splits were flimsy attempts at poking fun at the series of splits going on in British politics during the late 1980s - at the Vauxhall by-election there were two Green Party candidates (due to an error on their part) and two National Front candidates from their warring "Third Way" and "Flag" factions, as well as the feuding Liberal Democrats and Social Democratic Party candidates - but the splits were serious, despite Peter "Top Cat" Owen's blithe dismissal to journalists that "the only splits I'm interested in are the ones with bananas in them" (which led to his adoption of an inflatable banana when on the campaign trail. Owen's election leaflets are also noted for stressing his political philosophy as a "pragmatist").
Some members believe that OMRLP activities are purely for fun (and an ego trip or publicity for their entertainment business), while others see the party in the same vein as Private Eye magazine or programmes such as That Was The Week That Was or Spitting Image, using satire to make serious points on issues of the day. Tensions have often resulted because the more serious types in the OMRLP have managed to do what most observers considered impossible - actually achieve a creditable number of votes - tending to put the noses of the "Fun-Da-Mental-ists" out of joint.
There were also objections in some quarters to the continued presence of convicted brothel keeper and minor celebrity Cynthia Payne—a friend of Sutch—who was at the front of many party photo opportunities but continued to stand instead as a member of the rival Rainbow Alliance party (aka Captain Rainbow's Universal Abolish Parliament Party) of George Weiss (a friend of Ian Dury and Peter Cook). The controversy heightened after Weiss was convicted of heroin possession (the News Of The World settled a damages claim by the OMRLP, for saying Weiss was a member, out of court).
Due to ill health, Lord Sutch became less involved with the party and his last campaign was in Winchester after a by-election was called when the main election was undecided due to a count difference of just two votes between the Conservative and Liberal Democrat candidates. Assisted by his Campaign Manager and Election Agent, Peter 'Uncle Belly' Byford, the party gained 316 votes.
[edit] Split leads to Raving Loony Green Giant Party
In 1989, Stuart Hughes, along with Danny Bamford (later Danny Blue), Roly Gillard, Melvyn Hartshorne, inventor Mike Madden and tree surgeon Stuart Greenwood formed the breakaway Raving Loony Green Giant Party (RLGGP), mainly due to personality clashes with OMRLP Chairman Alan Hope and other "Fun-da-Mental-ists" - the final straw being the latter (and Sutch's) behaviour during a sponsored walk to the Scilly Isles for the children's cancer charity, CLIC, where they only turned up at the start and finish for the media call whilst Hughes and others did the whole event.
[edit] Stuart Hughes's electoral successes
The first Raving Loony to win as a result of a straight vote (as opposed to being elected unopposed) was Stuart Hughes, taking the "safe" Conservative seat of Sidmouth Woolbrook on East Devon District Council in May 1991. He then took a seat on Sidmouth Town Council from the Conservatives the following day. His success was met with fury and quite disproportionate hostility from the local Tories. Hughes' reaction was to attempt to make their lives a misery for the next three years: eg. refusing to pay his Community Charge (also known as the Poll Tax), then dumping scrap metal in the middle of the council chambers to the value of his unpaid tax when threatened with legal action. He also formed an alliance known as "The Coastals" (because of the seats they held) of Independents and the sole Green Party councillor, giving East Devon's ruling Conservatives the first true opposition they had faced for decades (the local Liberal Democrat and Labour Parties being negligible).
Hughes retained his seats with increased majorities in subsequent elections, and the final humiliation for the Conservatives came when he took the Devon County Council seat from the local party's Chief Whip in the council. Hughes remains a member of all three councils to this day although he now does his politicking - ironically - as a Conservative.
The RLGGP's better organisation and success at the polls proved a wake up call to the OMRLP, and at one stage in England during the early 1990s there were 16 councillors elected despite having the phrase "Raving Loony" accredited to them, and one in Scotland - Mark Boyle on Johnstone Community Council - who stood as a joint Official Monster Raving Loony Party and Raving Loony Green Giant Party candidate because he disagreed with the split (Hughes and Sutch thought having a joint councillor for two warring factions hilarious, Hope less so). To date, two have risen to become mayors - Alan Hope in Ashburton in Devon and Chris "Screwy" Driver on the Isle of Sheppey in Kent.
[edit] Loonies embarrass Social Democrats : the First Bootle By-Election
At the Bootle by-election in May 1990, the Loony candidate (Sutch) received more votes than the candidate for the Social Democrats. The OMRLP newsletter for June 1990 released by Alan Hope said "WHAT IS GOING ON?" and Sutch himself appeared utterly shocked when interviewed by the BBC after the result was announced.
The story was a major headline in many UK newspapers, ironically the by-election itself had attracted little coverage: the little media attention there was focused on a bizarre row between Labour and the Raving Loonies. Relations between Labour members and Raving Loonies had never been good, but they reached a new low when the Labour agent tried to have the Loony candidate, Screaming Lord Sutch, arrested for breaking the old electoral law forbidding using a public house as an election campaign headquarters which had been repealed in 1987. The tabloid newspapers referred to "Kinnock’s Killjoys" (Neil Kinnock being the Labour leader at this time) for the campaign's duration, & the OMRLP never looked back.
The result was the last straw for the rump Social Democrats - centred around former Labour Foreign Secretary Dr. David Owen - who had refused to join in the merger of the SDP with the Liberals to form the Liberal Democrats. Rubbing salt in their wounds, Sutch offered in jest to form a coalition with them, but they instead disbanded, or at least most of them did: a core around the defeated SDP candidate, Jack Holmes, vowed to carry on - ironically reforming an alliance with the continuing Liberal Party (run by Michael Meadowcroft and David Moorish, who had also opposed the merger). Almost a year after Bootle, the supposedly disbanded SDP finished fourth at Neath, and continue to this day winning council seats after their supposed "death".
Although there has been far more prestigious Loony results before & after, Bootle is still regarded by Raving Loonies as their finest hour, or at least a watershed moment when they had to be treated as a serious political party, albeit one largely lampooning the political world.
[edit] Serious attempts to gather votes
Sutch also defeated a joint Plaid Cymru/Green Party candidate at the bitter Monmouth by-election and almost beat the ruling Conservative Party's candidate at the Islwyn by-election later on - but by this time the OMRLP were organised enough to make coming in fourth the norm in by-elections in England and Wales.
The credit for this must lie with John Tempest, a former Liberal/Liberal Democrat press officer and election agent (and co-founder of the award winning Bradford Soup Run charity for the homeless). Together with friend and OMRLP activist Willi Beckett (one of the founders of the anarchist One-In-Twelve Club in Bradford), they transformed the way the party fought elections. From the outset they were determined to make the OMRLP reap the rewards of being the unofficial "protest vote party" of the UK: now posters, car stickers, and a never-ending series of headline-grabbing stunts not only made it easier for the party to gain publicity, but also ensured they were treated fairly by the media (three by-election TV shows were cancelled when the OMRLP used the law to stop them having candidate debates that barred the Loony candidate).
Tempest and Beckett suffered the same problems from the "Fun-da-Mental-ist" faction, but by then new people had entered the party such as future Chairman Peter 'T.C.' Owen, to whom beating the other parties was what it was all about and who saw nothing funny about coming last with a handful of votes. Also Tempest was known - ironically - as one not to suffer fools gladly (there were a number of clashes between him & Hope). It was no coincidence that during the era of Tempest and Beckett, other well known "alternative" parties such as the Greens, National Front, British National Party, and the UK Independence Party often withdrew their candidates from seats after an OMRLP member had announced their candidature because of the damage to party morale from finishing with fewer votes than a "Raving Loony".
Beckett was forced to drop out of Loony activities due to ill health, prompting Tempest to end his association with the OMRLP, thanks to work & Soup Run commitments - along with being fed up with the lack of gratitude and backbiting from the "Fun-da-Mental-ist" that were happy enough to ask for his help to get them out of a number of scrapes - including a nasty election feud in Holmfirth between Melodie Staniforth and Mike Madden of the rival RLGGP faction during the mid 1990s (Madden eventually quit standing in elections).
[edit] Sutch's death, and its aftermath
Screaming Lord Sutch, a manic depressive after the death of his mother Annie in 1998, committed suicide on June 16, 1999.
Sutch's death drew tributes from right across the political spectrum. There were also however some not-so-complimentary comments - the worst coming from Roseanna Cunningham, at the time MP for Perth and a columnist for the Scottish Sunday Mail. Cunningham claimed newspapers were more interested in the death of someone she felt had contributed nothing to politics nor society whilst 'ignoring' the death that same week of Cardinal Basil Hume (in fact most had given long obituaries) who she felt had done more (she did not name any specific achievements). Cunningham had previously been upstaged by the OMRLP on the night of her victory at the ill-tempered Perth & Kinross by-election due to the death of Sir Nicholas Fairbairn. A foul-up between SNP spindoctors inside and outside Perth Town Hall and the BBC led to expectant nationalist supporters gathered outside cheering Sutch, Boyle and Beckett for five minutes instead when they stumbled out of Perth Town Hall first; leaving Cunningham trapped inside whilst the OMRLP (and one defecting Scottish Liberal Democrat) conducted the crowd in choral renditions of both "Spot the Loony" and "Let's All Laugh At Labour". (Labour had spent a fortune in vain on trying to win the seat for Peter Mandelson's then aide Douglas Alexander.)
This in many ways sums up the OMRLP's role in politics. Politicians and the media loved them, so long as they themselves did not fall foul of their antics.
Sutch's funeral - organised by Tempest - was attended by members of the OMRLP and RLGGP (including Hughes - who with Freddie Zapp brought along a huge floral tribute shaped as an OMRLP rosette), who provided a more dignified entourage than Sutch's own relatives and romantic partners, who fought with one another at the graveside. The running of the OMRLP fell to Alan "Howling Laud" Hope and his late cat, Cat Mandu (killed 2002). Cat Mandu was reputedly the real winner of the 1999 membership ballot for the replacement for Sutch.
The OMRLP fielded 15 candidates in the 2001 General Election, where they actually ran up their best General Election results to date.
[edit] Second split: the Rock 'n' Roll Loony Party
This, however, has been followed by a series of disastrous by-election results and a further split. Town Councillor Chris Driver formed the Rock 'n' Roll Loony Party with Mike Young & others - dissatisfied with Alan Hope's leadership (or perceived lack of it) - in a sad replay of the events surrounding the OMRLP/RLGGP split a decade earlier (interestingly Roly Gillard, who had rejoined the OMRLP upon the RLGGP's demise, also took part in this split).
This splinter however did not last anywhere near as long as the RLGGP, although in a replay of what happened to Stuart Hughes and the RLGGP, success at the ballot box ensured the failure of the new party. Chris Driver's election as Mayor of Queensborough Town Council for the municipal year 2002/2003 curtailed on its leader's time enough to ensure party activities effectively ground to a halt. By 2004, the RRLP was effectively dead, with most of its members having rejoined the OMRLP. (Gillard however dropped out of politics altogether after his wife's suicide in 2002.)
[edit] Non-Loonies who nevertheless claimed to be
The party suffered from a number of individuals that claimed to be members—usually for their nefarious reasons—down the years (leading in several instances to recourse to the Law), eg. one Peter “The Mad Monk” Dixon in Cheshire stood as an "Official Monster Raving Loony Christian Party" candidate to promote his own religious views - he was promptly disowned by John Tempest in the press). Two cases in particular deserve mention.
Sir Patrick Moore, the famous British TV astronomer, claimed several times to be the party's Minister for Flying Saucers. In fact, Moore was not welcome at all within the party.
He had formerly run his own United Country Party in 1979, which merged in 1981 into Dennis Delderfield's New Britain Party (with characteristic poor timing, they did so a day before the launch of the Social Democratic Party. Both the UCP and the NBP were far-right parties, one of many failed attempts between 1976 to 1982 to create "respectable" versions of the British National Front. Moore's claims had more to do with erasing his past political associations from public consciousness - fearing his TV career could be terminated if he was seen as racially prejudiced at a time when the BBC (for whom he did "The Sky at Night") were becoming increasingly sensitive to race issues. He later changed his story, claiming the party had asked him, but he refused.
Second comes Hugh Reed & The Velvet Underpants, a band barely known outside of the Scottish University circuit. They released the song "Vote Monster Raving Looney" in 1992. They were however nothing to do with the Official Monster Raving Loony Party (hence the different spelling of "Loony") & similarly disowned by a press statement from John Tempest.
The band subsequently became involved in fund-raising activities for the "ultra-nationalist" (i.e., ethnic/cultural nationalist) Siol nan Gaidheal group (who were expelled from the Scottish National Party in 1982).
[edit] Councillor defects to BNP
One of the few bright moments for the party after the death of Sutch came in 2000 when Angela Ashcroft won a seat on the multi-member Cuckoo Oak ward on Madeley Parish Council in Shropshire. This soon turned to embarrassment (and horror) when she defected not long after to become the local organiser for the far-right British National Party.
[edit] 2005 general election
A biography of Sutch - "The Man Who Was Screaming Lord Sutch" (by Graham Sharpe, the Media Relations Manager for bookmakers William Hill) was released in April 2005 (ISBN 1-85410-983-9), but its description of what remains of the party as "wannabes, never-would-bes and some bloody-well-shouldn't bes" was hardly what the party needed in the middle of a General Election campaign, though it is debatable just how much an effect this had on the party’s fortunes at the General Election. (They did gain an impressive article in the financial section of The Times days before the vote itself.)
The manifesto, entitled "The Manicfesto", for the 2005 General Election the OMRLP's major manifesto commitment was once more 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. This has been a Loony staple policy since the original manifesto was written by Sutch's agent Pauline Read in 1983. 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.
The rest of the party's manifesto included:
- Refusing to sign up to the euro, but inviting the rest of Europe to join the pound.
- Drivers can go straight over a roundabout when there's no traffic coming "to make driving through Milton Keynes more fun".
- Traffic cops "too stupid" for normal police work to be retrained as vicars.
- Withdrawal of MPs' £118,000 expenses allowance, and the money "in future be distributed to the poor and needy so that they can waste it instead."
- Any MP whose constituency sells off a school playing field for development will be required to relinquish their own back garden as a replacement sports facility for the school.
- All motorways to become massive cycle tracks instead
- All speed cameras will be abolished and replaced by a new device fitted to cars which will automatically slow down to the speed limit when driven though an infra-red beam.
- The introduction of a 99p coin to "save on change".
Overall the results proved a huge disappointment for the OMRLP after their success in the previous general election, the only bright spot being Alan Hope’s increase of the vote to over 500, but all other candidates saw marked reductions - including Owen haemorrhaging over 300 votes straight over to the BNP, contesting the Wokingham seat for the first time. "Top Cat" Owen is the only member of the current OMRLP line up ever to poll over 1000 votes (he polled 2,859 votes in the 1994 European elections), & his dip in fortunes despite a previously strong local following appears to have killed the last realistic chance the party ever had of seeing a saved deposit.
[edit] York Branch terminal split
The party also suffered from an ill-needed row over its York branch, which led to there being no "official" City of York candidate. Eddie Vee, the previous candidate, wished to stand again, but the branch honorary secretary John E Morris and the branch treasurer, Gareth Spydaz elected to have the famous alternative artist Andy "Milladdio" Hinkles as the candidate and asked Vee to stand elsewhere.
Morris and Spydaz were well known enough in York, Morris as a former National Front and then Green Party activist, whilst Spydaz is known as York's "super-squatter", an activist of the York Peace Collective that led a series of highly publicised squats during 2003 and 2004 to highlight neglected "listed" buildings (their antics included the holding of Art exhibitions within such abandoned properties).
The response, however, from OMRLP headquarters was for Boney Maroney to expel Morris and Spydaz from the party and declare Vee the candidate the branch "wanted".
How true this claim was can be gauged from the fact that Vee then failed to raise the £500 deposit to stand, but Morris and Spydaz had the deposit for Hinkles - now standing as a York Integrity Party (although the ballot paper simply reads "Independent Hinkles") - submitted within days of the Notice of Election being posted.
Morris, Hinkles and Spydaz proffered an olive branch to party HQ, but with no response, and with the Socialist Alliance and the Green Party contesting the seat, any hopes the Hinkles candidature may have had of attracting the "alternative" vote from his association with Spydaz were dashed – he barely took 100 votes.
[edit] 2005 school mock elections shock
There were however two crumbs of comfort. For the third election in a row, the OMRLP found its candidates being debarred from the Hansard Society/BBC TV "Newsround" School Mock Elections running in tandem with the General Election (the same fate befell the BNP), and the party advised pupils to get voters to spoil their ballot papers in protest in schools that refused to back down. In the event, 102 Raving Loony school candidates stood, winning in 21 of these, and taking enough votes in two parliamentary constituencies to be declared to have 'won' the seat - the two being Bristol East and the hard-line Tory constituency of Chesham & Amersham, neither of which have any history of active Raving Loonyism before.
[edit] The current status of the OMRLP
The OMRLP's official headquarters was the Dog and Partridge pub at Yateley in Hampshire, but this was lost shortly after the 2005 General Election. The Party Leader remains Alan Hope, although the real day-to-day running of the party is done by Melodie "Boney Maroney" Staniforth, whose 2004 council election result of over 300 votes was greeted with a remarkable amount of ill-will from local major party members (the usual signs that a "Raving Loony" candidate has now moved into the "serious threat" category). The council election circuit seems to be the best chance the OMRLP has of regaining any of its past glories when its vote, funds - and public interest – appears to be in terminal decline, & is facing a tighter squeeze for the "protest vote" from other minor UK parties with more members & organisation.
This analysis seems to be borne out by the fate of veteran candidate Peter Berry, aka Baron Von Thunderclap: unable to afford to take part in the 2005 General Election, he concentrated on the local council elections - acquiring 192 votes in the Hurstpierpoint & Bolney ward of West Sussex County Council on 5 May 2005 (the OMRLP website lists this erroneously as 692 votes), an improvement on his 7 June 2001 result of 113 votes for the Haywards Heath ward.
Ironically, the party was to fall foul over its funding on 26 September 2005 when the Electoral Commission forced them to return a donation of £350 sent by a supporter from the independent British Dependency of the Isle of Man.
The party contested both the Bromley and Chislehurst and the Blaenau Gwent Parliamentary by-elections on 29th June 2006. The latter saw the return of Willi Beckett to OMRLP activities, tragically it was revealed in October 2006 that he is terminally ill with cancer.
According to its 2004 accounts the party had a membership of 247.<ref>[1]</ref>
[edit] Quotations
- "Vote for insanity. You know it makes sense." - Screaming Lord Sutch (a parody on Margaret Thatcher's oft-used "You know it makes sense" by-line circa 1979-1983
- "Why is there only one Monopolies Commission?" - Screaming Lord Sutch (on many occasions)
[edit] References
"The Man Who Was Screaming Lord Sutch" - Graham Sharpe, April 2005 (ISBN 1-85410-983-9)
"Life As Sutch" - Lord David Sutch (ghost written by Peter Chippendale), Angus & Robertson 1991 (Expanded Edition 1992)(ISBN 0-207-17240-4).
Sutch's "autobiography" needs to be treated with care, as amid the facts are fictions from Chippendale because he thought they made the book more entertaining. During this period, a number of UK publishers released many such spurrious "faction" autobiographies from minor celebrities only too happy to take the royalties (or having little choice but to do so owing to financial problems).
Another problem for researchers on the OMRLP is the tendency of newspapers to simply make up policies the party purported to have or even statements from members when they did not (a problem most minor UK parties face without adequate access to legal redress).
[edit] Further reading
- Louis Cooke. "Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh Way", Flak magazine.
- Jon Ronson. "Beyond a joke", The Guardian, 2000-01-15.
- "FAREWELL TO THE LOONY LORD", The Argus, Newsquest Media Group, 1999-10-15.
[edit] See also
- List of frivolous political parties
- Pet passport
- Rhinoceros Party of Canada
- McGillicuddy Serious Party of New Zealand.
[edit] External links
- Official web site of the Official Monster Raving Loony Party.
- The Hinkles/Vee Row (continued)
- Baron Von Thunderclap's 2005 election resultde:Official Monster Raving Loony Party

