Title: Pressure Groups Project
1 Pressure Groups Project
2Type of Group
- The Countryside Alliance was formed when 3
organisations merged in 1997 the British Field
Sports Society, the Countryside Business Group
and the Countryside Movement. - Initially more of a sectional group, the
Countryside Alliance is now viewed as a cause
group, predominately for those who live and/or
work in the countryside, but also for those who
do not wish to see civil liberties threatened.
3Membership
- 105,000 members but over 400,000 members of the
General Public showed their support at the
Liberty and Livelihood March on September 22,
2002 This is a march for the people, and by the
peopleand not simply rural people.
4Aims
- The Countryside Alliance works for everyone
who loves the countryside and the rural way of
life. Through campaigning, lobbying, publicity
and education, the Alliance influences
legislation and public policy that impacts on the
countryside, rural people and their activities.
5Issues of Concern
- Food, farming and conservation
- Rural Services
- Rural Economy
- Angling
- Hunting
- Shooting
- Avian Influenza
- Moorlands
6Finance Details
- Membership fees
- Prices range from Single membership (45) to
Gold membership (179) although younger members
(19 years and under) do not have to pay a
membership fee. - Donations
- Legacies
- Sponsored Events
- Sponsored Trek of Mt. Kilimanjaro in Tanzania to
raise funds for the Countryside Alliance is
scheduled for the 15th- 25th of this month -
each participant is expected to raise around
2000 sponsorship after covering their own costs.
Many members of the CA represent their cause at
other charity events, such as charity runs etc.
7Campaign Targets
- The CAs targets are outlined in their Policy
Jigsaw, which can be downloaded from their
website. Many different aspects of country life
are covered, and these are just a few of their
policy ideas - Education Only 1 in 3 young inner city school
children know that their eggs come from chickens - Beauty and Wildlife fly tipping costs the
taxpayer 150million each year, and has
devastating effects on the countryside, and the
CA wants the govt. to take action. - Environment the CA wants Gordon Brown to
seriously review his long-term plans for
affordable housing the CA believes that green
and brown belt land should not be built on, and
renovation of existing properties could provide
an excellent alternative to mass developments.
8Campaign Targets
- Rural Services- public transport is
increasingly expensive due to privatisation in
rural areasin addition, local branches of the
Post Office are under threat. - Rural Economy the CA has calculated that the
average wage for a country worker is 17,400pa
housing is therefore not affordable. The CA
proposes that council tax from those who own
second homes in the country should be used to
help those on lower incomes.
9Campaign Targets
- Country Pursuits the CAs hooked on fishing
campaign hopes to encourage more schoolchildren
to take up angling. - Kate Hoey, the CAs chairwoman, has written an
open letter to the Home Secretary (Time to Bite
the Bullet on Gun Ban) presently, there is
legislation that could prevent two young British
women reaching their 2012 Olympic target shooting
potential (they shoot with handguns.) - There are MANY more campaign targets, and as you
can see, they are a lot less controversial than
banning the Ban! ..
10This week is National Post Office Week.
National Post Office Week starts this Monday,
(the 19th) . Post
Offices are a vital amenity to rural people, and
the Countryside Alliance is worried that the
uncertain future of Post Office and the imminent
closure of certain branches will disadvantage
those who live in the countryside. The
Countryside Alliance website can direct those who
wish to support the cause to a local venue, and
the most avid supporters can go to the Methodist
Hall, Westminster on Tuesday (20th). The
Yorkshire meeting is on Friday!
11Campaign Methods
- Marches and Demonstrations. Most famously in
September 2002, when 407,791 marched through
London. Other tactics include parking tractors,
horseboxes etc outside govt. buildings, breaking
into the House of Commons - Poster Campaigns. over 30,000 Fight Prejudice,
Fight the Ban correx boards were set up
nationwide during the campaign - Open Letters.- Kate Hoey is a fan of these,
regularly using National Broadsheets to express
her views. - Publicity- So far, the CAs fight against the
Hunt Ban has led to over 1,100 pages of newspaper
coverage, and has spawned a spate of both
positive and negative television reports.
12Recent Successes and/or Failures
The CAs flagship battle is the only aspect of
its policy that has reached any sort of
conclusion Despite the CAs campaigning, the
Hunting Act of 2004, banning hunting with hounds
in England and Wales ,came into force on the 18th
of February 2005 - an obvious failure? The CA
are planning to repeal the unworkable Act, so
only time will tell whether or not the CA will
emerge victorious. In addition, Hunting,
albeit in a different form, has survived the
ban, and on Boxing Day 2006, turnout was at a
record high, with 320,000 riders taking part
across the UK. Ongoing policies will also need
time to develop, but the government may begin to
take more notice of rural residents in the
future, as they are more politically active than
their more apathetic urban counterparts the
voting turnout in rural areas was calculated at
63 at the last General Election.
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