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Organising events in the constituency A
guide for those who work for an MP Added: 9 March 2004 If
handled badly, events in the constituency can go very wrong indeed – and
an event that goes wrong can be very newsworthy from the perspective of
your local media. This guide aims to help you plan such events and
hopefully avoid the major pitfalls. Planning
your event It’s always best to do your
planning in a team of two or three people. This way different
eventualities are bounced around and you are less likely to miss something
important. So sit down over a coffee with a colleague or a local activist
and have pens and paper to hand. What
you want to achieve is list of tasks to be done, a list of resources
needed and a schedule for executing each element of your plan. Brainstorm
every element you can think of…
Don’t
just stick to these items and these questions. The relevant factors will
change depending on the area, the type of event and even the climate. Keep
thinking of things until you can’t think of anything any longer. Dividing
responsibilities Once
you have identified the questions, you have to start answering them and,
in doing so, you will provide yourself with a great quantity of work to
do. So make a list and categorise it – maybe in the form above – and
then start to farm out these responsibilities. If a crisis emerges, you
will not be able to deal with it if you are swamped with basic tasks that
could have been delegated. When thinking who can take on responsibilities,
think of your intern, colleagues, local Party activists or local
Councillors. The
Planning Schedule When
you know who is doing what, you then need to work out when they should be
doing it. For this purpose you need to produce the event schedule.
Obviously,
the planning schedule has to be more comprehensive than this. You should
prepare a detailed schedule of tasks for the day of the event. You should
always provide to speakers and the media a programme for the event itself
– in effect a rundown of how the meeting will go, who is speaking when,
how questions will be taken etc. In
short, planning and delegation are the keys to success in such events.
When dividing responsibilities, don’t overload yourself – you need
time to develop an overview of the project. Above all, plan your work and
then work your plan and then everything will be fine. Learning
from experience After
the event get the team together briefly for a post-mortem.
Learn the lessons and the next event will go even better. One other thing: remember that the allowances your MP claims are for Parliamentary duties only and are not for party political or campaigning work. The incidental expenses provision should not be used to fund campaigning or party political events. Such events should not be held in offices funded from the incidental expenses provision, and neither should staff paid from the staffing allowance be working on these issues unless it is after working hours. AH/March 2004
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