Labour's Great Online Hope
BY Nancy Scola | Friday, May 14 2010

Following the proceedings from afar of last night's PdF "Action Replay" event in London, it quickly became clear that brand-new Labour MP Stella Creasy was one of the night's big hits. The Twitter stream was glowing, from "Everyone I spoke to post-#pdfge2010 seemed mightily impressed with @stellacreasy. Give her a few years and the Milibands better watch out!" to, simply, "you were magic." Even Conservative web guy Samuel Coates had some measured praise for the new Labour MP: " @stellacreasy used Twitter well to focus on voters on Twitter, but its not representative of Labour's echochamber approach."
Creasy replied, naturally, on Twitter, showing some of the humanity that has made the 33 year old former mayor of Waltham Forest an appealing online presence. "Goodness- Twitter feedback from #pdfge2010 v kind & ego stroking!," she tweeted. "[L]ast time I spoke @ conf someone just kept tweeting about hating my hair."
The 2010 election, of course, didn't have the outcome that Labour had wanted, but Creasy's election in the Walthamstow constituency in East London (52% of 41,000 votes) was a bright spot -- less for the relatively predictable result than for the fact that she did it by pioneering a sort of engaged, accessible Labour politics.
A small snippet of Creasy's remarks (all, alas, that seems to be available from the evening) is above, and you might want to give it a listen. You can also follow along with Creasy's journey via @stellacreasy.