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Rising Labour star threatens to unseat Tory grandee Iain Duncan Smith

“But it’s my name on the ballot,” implores Faiza Shaheen to a constituent on Cherrydown Avenue in north London as the Labour candidate aims to score one of the biggest upsets of the UK general election.

The left-wing economist is out on one of her final canvasses of the campaign as she tries to win over undecided voters.

She is hoping to unseat Conservative grandee Iain Duncan Smith, the party’s former leader and an MP since 1992, in the Tory bulwark of Chingford and Woodford Green on the edge of London.

It is a tough sell to the Royal Mail postman on his doorstep who has, like many voters, misgivings about Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn.

It does not stop 36-year-old Shaheen, an Oxford graduate with a PhD, spending more than 15 minutes at his door on a cold, damp December evening trying to turn him away from the Tories.

Shaheen, a director of a centre-left think tank, is stunned the “postie” is leaning that way.

“I know exactly what they think of us because I have seen them, the Etonians of the world, the Jacob Rees Moggs and the Boris Johnsons,” Shaheen says she told the man. “If you think that they have got your interests at heart, then I am sorry you are completely wrong.”

Akin Gazi, Shaheen’s husband, tells The Irish Times the postman was being won over by Shaheen’s local, working-class roots in this outer-London suburb.

The daughter of a mechanic father from Fiji and lab technician mother from Pakistan, Shaheen comes from Muslim home. She has been compared to Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the young Democrat turning heads in the US.

Cafe worker

She points out to the postman that she worked in a cafe up the road from his house as a teenager.

“That was the chink in his armour. We started to break him down a little bit,” says Gazi, referring to Shaheen’s “star power” that is getting her noticed with her impressive personal backstory, slick campaign video and a smart social media blitz.

“We have worked really hard, going back to undecideds and to squeeze them as much as possible and, if nothing else, getting them to not vote Tory or even hover over my name and think about it,” says Shaheen.

Those of us that understand how government policy can damage people’s lives are the people that need to be running in politics, not the people that live in mansions, went to Eton and have no idea of hardship

Chingford and Woodfood Green, once the political home of Norman Tebbit and Winston Churchill, is a key target for Labour this time around as changing demographics have chipped away at Duncan Smith’s majority over the past two decades. Young professionals and working families have moved out from central London to a constituency straddling London and Essex in search of more affordable and bigger homes.

Duncan Smith saw his majority slashed from 8,400 to 2,400 in 2017. Labour hopes Johnson’s “get Brexit done” campaign slogan and the arch Brexiteer’s reputation as the mastermind of Conservative austerity as work and pensions minister (2010-2016) will help Shaheen among remain-supporting Tory voters in a wafer-thin anti-Brexit seat (50.15 per cent remain) and people angry at Conservative cuts to public services.


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