Looking at it objectively (putting aside personal views/allegiances concerning the case itself), how would people here assess the effectiveness of the Walker/Hartley-led campaign? What are the good points and bad points? I offer some thoughts below. I am mindful that it is easy to be an armchair critic of people who put their heads above the parapet, so nothing I say here should be taken as any sort of harsh criticism.
For me, the good points are:
1. A legal team has been found and a new CCRC application has been submitted.
2. They claim that the new legal team has built a viable case for appeal. We will have to see what the CCRC make of it, but on the face of it they have some interesting points.
3. They have established an effective social media presence and a following.
4. They are building a team of activists, and also Adam is on board offering moral support to sceptics like me (just joking).
5. As far as I can tell, they are reasonably sensitive and dignified in the way they present the case. To my knowledge, there have been no complaints from the family or tabloid newspapers.
6. They do have good judgement about the media. They avoided involvement in the Sky Crime documentary.
7. They are in constant touch with Jeremy. I understand they speak to him daily.
8. A lot of work is being put into the podcasts and the 'string and tin can' approach does have its appeal. When a podcast is good, it is really good.
Some bad points:
9. They appear not to have Mark Williams-Thomas on board.
10. They have not been able to break into the mainstream, despite a prominent and popular TV dramatisation of the case on ITV and the recent Sky Crime documentary. The best in-road they have been able to make is a weekly slot on a local radio station, plus support from alt-media types including Matthew Steeples and Shaun Attwood on YouTube. The pro-guilt side still dominate the 'air war'.
11. They have nobody high-profile and well-connected in support of them, such as a major celebrity or sporting figure or Member of Parliament. Peter Tatchell is not well-connected in that sense and he does not even state Jeremy is innocent.
12. They come across as guileless when it comes to campaigning. In the video of the demonstration at Essex Police HQ, they appear to just stand there like statues. I still think the day was a success and the speeches were good, but at the same time just standing there doesn't really amount to much and I couldn't understand what Peter Tatchell was doing when he insisted that a fairly junior officer act as his postman. They could have added a bit of drama to it, maybe produced a video of one of them 'pursuing' a senior officer, maybe the Chief Constable, outside the HQ or at another public meeting, asking him to accept the letter and offer a comment for the camera.
13. They have not taken the case forward forensically, which I think is really what is needed. Instead, they are relying mostly on appeal points from the Lomax era. I don't believe the appeal points put across by the campaign in social media reflect any deep or original research of the case.
14. The podcasts are of mixed quality. The use of an automated computer voice is baffling to me.
15. The second season of podcasts seems to include other alleged miscarriages of justice, which is strange, but to be fair, it may be down to a wish to develop links and good will with other campaigners.