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Countryside Alliance accused over Radio 4 hunting vote
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01 January 2007
But questions were raised over the 52.8% vote for the repeal of the Hunting Act after the Countryside Alliance confirmed that it had conducted a drive to encourage pro-hunting activists to vote.
And it was revealed that the panel which selected five Acts to be included in Today's end-of-year poll considered excluding the hunting ban even though it received more nominations than any other law, because of evidence of a concerted campaign to skew the result.
The Hunting Act took more than half of the votes in the Christmas Repeal poll, well ahead of the European Communities Act of 1972 which took Britain into the Common Market, with 29.7%.
However, presenter Ed Stourton said there were "suspicions that there was an organised campaign at work".
And Conservative MP Ann Widdecombe, an opponent of hunting and member of the panel which assessed nominations for the poll, told Today: "Undeniably, the Countryside Alliance pulled out every last stop to get this result.
"We did hesitate on the panel to put this one forward because there was already evidence of links from the Countryside Alliance - encouragement etc - and of course we had the Boxing Day meets, when just about everybody who actively supports hunting would have been out and could have been reminded."
Countryside Alliance president Baroness Mallalieu told the programme: "What we did was to notify people on the website that this vote was taking place and suggest that they vote.
"The truth of the matter is that, of all the Acts on the list, this is the one that no case can possibly be made for retaining, because it has been a total failure all round.
"Whatever your views on hunting one way or the other, this Act is a fiasco and it is not surprising that it received a mass vote."
Since December 22, visitors to the Countryside Alliance website have seen an appeal to vote in the poll, along with a link to the Today site to make it easier for them to take part.
A message from chief executive Simon Hart read: "Of course this Government is not going to admit the gross error of allowing the Hunting Act on to the statute book by legislating for its removal, but winning this vote will add to the growing momentum for a future Parliament to scrap it."
Other votes in the poll went to provisions of the Serious Organised Crime and Police Act which require police permission for protests in Parliament Square (6.2%) and the Human Rights Act (6.1%).
Just 3.6% voted to overturn the 1701 Act of Settlement which bars Catholics from taking the throne and 1.6% to repeal the Dangerous Dogs Act 1991.
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