Category Archive: Uncategorised

  1. Michelle Soan

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    Michelle Soan

    Whilst Head of Mobilisation at MacMillan Cancer Support

    Apart from your current organisation which other organisations that campaign do you admire?
    Alzheimer’s charities – they have executed impressive campaigns for access to treatments targeted at NICE, at the same time as raising the profile of a devastating condition.

    Who is the campaigner you most admire?
    It’s hard to pick one person, but Marjorie Wallace, SANE’s chief executive has done a huge amount for mental health, which is sadly still seen as a taboo, despite how common it is. Going back in history I have huge admiration and respect for the Suffragettes, namely Emily Davidson who threw herself under the Kings horse in the name of votes for women.

    Is there a campaigning organisation that you would like to see the back of?
    Not that I’d admit to in public. However, even organisations for issues I disagree with add something to the debate, so I wouldn’t like to see the back of any of them as I believe in freedom of speech.

    What advice would you give someone starting their career in campaigning today?
    Try new things and don’t be afraid to take risks. Also, look at what other organisations are doing and learn what works and what doesn’t. I have always found it very useful to join the campaign networks of other organisations as a great way to benchmark our activity.

    What three things make a good campaigner?
    Good communication skills, desire to try new ideas, and flexibility – willing to change strategy and tactics to react to the changing environment

    Which of these three do you have most of?
    I would say communication skills. In order to run successful campaigns it’s essential to engage and motivate a team that you don’t line manage. I believe the key to that is building good relationships and communicating effectively with the team and all stakeholders (internally and externally).

    Which of these three do you think is missing most out of people who campaign or want to?
    I think generally there can be a reluctance to trying new ideas and taking risks, but this may not be about the individual and more about organisations not being open to new ideas in case they don’t succeed. New ways to campaign are constantly evolving, particularly with the rapid growth of online social media opportunities. I think you need to be bold and take risks to keep campaigns fresh. I’ve been fortunate that I have been able to, but it requires you to be very persuasive.

    Generally are organisations getting better at campaigning since you began your career?If so, what’s changed?
    I’d like to think so. There are still some out there who think it’s just down to PR stunts, but there is so much expertise out there and new technology that it’s exciting to see what organisations are doing.

    If you weren’t a campaigner, what would you be?
    Working in the media – I love the buzz and unpredictable nature of it.

  2. Claire Bass

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    Claire Bass

    Whilst Head of Wildlife Campaigns at the World Society for the Protection of Animals

     

    Apart from your current organisation which other organisations that campaign do you admire and why?

    I admire the Environmental Investigation Agency a great deal, they punch way above their weight as a small organisation. They strike a good balance between work on long-term strategies and objectives while retaining the flexibility to act quickly in response to reactive opportunities.

    Generally are organisations getting better at campaigning since you began your career? If so, what’s changed?

    In the animal protection NGO movement I think yes, we are getting a lot more professional. Ten or more years ago the animal protection movement’s activities were often driven by righteous indignation, and an expectation that simply exposing problems in a report or a video on a website would stop cruelty. I think there’s a greater focus by many groups now on strategy, identifying and communicating effectively with key audiences, and on measuring impacts for animals, rather than volume of protest.

    Which campaigner inspires you most?

    Margaret Aspinall of the Hillsborough Family Support Group made a huge impression on me when I saw her speak at the Sheila McKechnie Foundation’s People Power event earlier this year. Her tenacity and unerring conviction that they would achieve justice, even in the face of such formidable and unyielding opposition and countless roadblocks, was truly inspiring.

    What three attributes make a good campaigner?

    Focus, empathy, tenacity.

    What’s the most rewarding or exciting campaign you’ve worked on and why?

    A few years ago we co-ordinated a very complex global public action to get people to ask their governments to vote against a proposal to partially lift the international ban on commercial whaling. Enabling multi-lingual protest, and working with more than forty other NGOs to ensure maximum public and media outreach in their respective countries, was challenging but ultimately extremely rewarding. Countries who had been considering the proposal ultimately rejected it in response to the public opposition; one Commissioner publicly cited our action as a clear indication from home that his ‘room to negotiate was not large’.

    How do you feel campaigns will change over the next five years?

    I would hope to see more campaigns creating market incentives for positive action – campaigns which equip consumers and investors to make ethical choices with their money. If campaigners can continue to extract greater transparency in supply chains, exposing the impacts of certain products and practices on people, animals and the environment, I think there exists an opportunity to make that information easily available to consumers.
    If the way that people’s buying or investing choices are affected – either negatively or positively – is then clearly and quantitatively fed back to companies, this could help create more market imperatives for positive policy changes. It would be great to see more alliances developing between different NGO sectors to pool this sort of information, so that a consumer could have easy access to a company or product’s overall ‘ethical footprint’.

    What advice would you give someone starting their career in campaigning today?

    There’s a lot of good literature on theories of campaigning, behaviour change etc now, many advocating very different approaches based on whether your end goal is to change hearts, minds, or actions, or a combination of the three. I’d say read up and talk to your new colleagues about which philosophies and tactics they favour and why.

    If you weren’t a campaigner, what would you be?

    Maybe an investigative journalist.

  3. Should all charities merge their communication and fundraising teams?

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    There has long been an issue, and even on occasions minor conflict, between Communications/Campaigning departments and Fundraising departments. Over the 22 years that I’ve worked inside organisations like Shelter, Save the Children and Amnesty, I’ve seen this happen.

    However, the teams or departments shouldn’t be merged. The motivations and the skillsets of the leaders of the two teams are often different. The skills crossover, but fundamentally a fundraiser needs to push the boundaries in order to maximise income and will feel the pressure to do so. A communications/campaigns leader may be able to focus more on long term objectives about change.
    Also, what we see at our recruitment consultancy, The Right Ethos, is that when it comes down to employing staff, people like to specialise still. As a CEO, people are happy to oversee specialist people leading Fundraising or Communications. But, if they are a Communications practioner for example, then they would prefer not to be responsible for the fundraising side.

    Hence The Right Ethos specialises on recruiting for roles in Communications & Campaigning.
    What is important is that the two Directors or Heads of the respective departments work well together and share objectives – and are supported and lead properly by their line manager/CEO.
    This blog was in response to an article in the Guardian ‘Should all charities merge their communication and fundraising teams?’ Wednesday 24 June 2015. Click Here for full article

  4. Sarah Williams

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    sarah_williams

    Campaigns Manager, Living Streets

    Apart from your current organisation which other organisations that campaign do you admire?

    There are many but Shelter often stand out for me. Their approach is extremely focused and strategic. They’ve done a fantastic job at getting housing the political prominence it needs.

    Who is the campaigner you most admire?

    Mark Thomas. He has a great mix of humour, tenacity, fantastic ideas and a novel way of sharing news of his campaigns beyond a traditional audience.

    Generally are organisations getting better at campaigning since you began your career? If so, what’s changed?

    I don’t know if they’re better, but I think they’re adapting well to a changing landscape. If I think about the history of campaigning organisations I’ve been involved with, they have always successfully fought for things that matter.
    What is exciting is the speed at which some campaigns can take off, and the ease that digital platforms can offer for engagement. I think organisations are getting better at using these. Rethink’s Find Mike campaign was a great example of a compelling story, a simple message and an easy action.

    What three attributes make a good campaigner?

    Probably similar to those that Mark Thomas has; Tenacity, a sense of humour and an ability to target and focus well.

    What’s the most rewarding or exciting campaign you’ve worked on and why?

    There are so many! Just before I left Parkinson’s UK I worked with local campaigners to successfully campaign for a Parkinson’s nurse. They had been trying for over two years and there was no specialist care in place when they asked me to help.
    I came in to help them think a bit differently, but made sure that the local campaigners were still at the forefront. Within three months they had an agreement to get a new Parkinson’s nurse in place. I love knowing that the people I worked with will see things improve for them and the ones they love.

    How do you feel campaigns will change over the next five years?

    I think we’ll see a lot more high profile individual campaigns because of social media and platforms like Change.org. The personal stories will be the ones that get attention and are widely shared.

    What advice would you give someone starting their career in campaigning today?

    Get involved and make mistakes. Don’t worry about trying things out, sometimes the things you’re sure are going to work well don’t – and vice versa. Find other people and organisations that you admire and talk to them to find out what they do and how they do it.
    I think that’s the same advice for people at any stage of their campaigning career.

    If you weren’t a campaigner, what would you be?

    Probably working in Corporate Social Responsibility for businesses helping them to change from the inside.

  5. Barbara Crowther

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    Director of Policy and Public Affairs at Fairtrade Foundation

    Apart from your current organisation which other organisations that campaign do you admire and why?

    So many! Greenpeace continues to be both brave and innovative – not least the Russian illegal detention of the Arctic Sunrise 30, but also their ability to drive serious issues with a sense of fun – I loved their Star Wars campaign to turn Volkswagen from the ‘dark side’ and the Chainsaw Barbie campaign to Mattel. I’m impressed how38 Degrees has woken everyone up to the power of online in driving nimbleness and democratisation of mass-scale campaigning that every organisation can learn from, and springboarding from online to focussed local organisation and direct action. Traidcraft did an awesome job as part of the successful campaign to win the establishment of a Grocery Code Adjudicator – a supermarket watchdog with teeth – and continues to plug away solidly on trade justice issues where many other NGOs have flagged!

    Generally are organisations getting better at campaigning since you began your career? If so, what’s changed?

    I think campaigns have got smarter in terms of pushing for specific policy or public goals, and in being creative in how they seek to reach the public and their targets. I do think we’ve lost ground a little on local and grassroots organisation – traditional NGO campaigning has become much more individual action oriented, but at Fairtrade, we have great experience of the power of local mobilisation. Fairtrade towns campaigns have been the backbone of building public awareness and applying change and pressure on companies and public authorities, and we’re proud of that!

    Which campaigner inspires you most?

    It’s probably clichéd right now to say it, but Malala is pretty awesome – such bravery and such maturity at such a young age. She never asked to be in a global spotlight, and I have occasionally worried about Western media or political manipulation. But you only have to listen to one interview with her to know that she has all the great qualities of a legendary social justice campaigner. Loved her response to the Nobel Peace Prize outcome – that winning peace is more important than winning prizes!

    What three attributes make a good campaigner?

    Firstly vision – a clear sense of the change you seek – vision requires you also to understand the world and power dynamics you’re dealing with. Second, dogged perseverance – very few campaigns are won overnight and most get knockbacks, so refusing to give up, and looking for new ways around obstacles is critical. Thirdly, creative flexibility – being able to react and adjust plans if they’re not working, or find a new creative way of bringing the campaign alive again if it’s flagging, or seizing quickly on a new opportunity you hadn’t seen at the outset.

    What’s the most rewarding or exciting campaign you’ve worked on and why?

    The massive mobilisation for Jubilee 2000/Drop the Debt Campaign from 1997-2002 was a pretty exciting time for international development and economic justice campaigning. With hindsight, we didn’t always get it right, and of course it’s still not been won, but it was an amazing global effort, especially in the global South, and delivered some good progress in writing down some of the excessive debt burdens and challenging the nature of conditions being imposed. Our campaign for Fairtrade bananas since 2000 has been pretty successful – around 1 in 3 bananas sold today are Fairtrade – and we’ve had great fun with it, but more to the point, I’ve had the privilege of seeing its positive impact for banana farmers and workers. Again we’ve not yet reached our goal and need to turn the tables now – campaign for there to be no unfair bananas left in the UK, until the industry as a whole is delivering living wages and sustainable livelihoods for banana workers and farmers. If we can do that on bananas, it could be an iconic victory that could spill over to other global supply chains and business practices.

    How do you feel campaigns will change over the next five years?

    There’s going to be a push for even greater transparency of information and decision making, at local, national and international level – whether it’s campaigning health or child welfare, or private sector responsibility and corporate accountability or local and national government policy. People will take more matters into their own hands as we go further into an open access era of campaigning – technology is putting more power to campaign in the hands of many more people, by making information more accessible, creating new networks that transcend local or national boundaries, but also potentially to find their own solutions through peer-to-peer or shared economy, as we’re seeing in lending, community energy generation, car sharing etc. In Fairtrade we’re calling it ‘Unlocking the Power of the Many’!

    What advice would you give someone starting their career in campaigning today?

    Get stuck in with both your heart and your head – focus on something you really believe in and care about, but also make sure you do the hard graft study of the politics and the gritty details, so you know your stuff and can apply political intelligence alongside your passion for change. If you’re just setting out and seeking a first step on the ladder, consider volunteering or an internship with a campaigning organisation or team – I know many people who gave their time in the first instance, built up their skills, knowledge and experience, started at the bottom but went on to paid campaigning roles in organisations they have really wanted to work for.

    If you weren’t a campaigner, what would you be?

    Dead?

  6. Patrick Olszowski

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    Patrick Olszowski

    Whilst Head of Campaigns and Policy, Stroke Association

     

    Apart from your current organisation which other organisations that campaign do you admire?

    Global Witness have brought significant change to the international trade in diamonds and are currently involved in an important case around NGO investigations and data protection.
    While they appear fearless in the face of challenge, I am sure there must be moments of abject fear when they are engaging with powerful interests. This is common for all of us who campaign and the key is to use anxiety as a way of learning.

    Who is the campaigner you most admire?

    The campaigners I most admire are the Greenpeace team who scaled the Shard in London. This bold action helped draw attention to drilling in the Arctic and was a brilliant example of individual bravery sparking storytelling, leading to public mobilisation, brand building and donation.

    Is there a campaigning organisation that you would like to see the back of?

    Speaking personally, I am not a fan of the record industry lobby. They helped bring in the Digital Economy Act and as someone who firmly believes in the right to a fair trial (this law was proposing to disconnect people from the internet), they would have to be my choice.

    What advice would you give someone starting their career in campaigning today?

    Before you take action, think about how you want the world to be different and then work backwards from there.
    Most campaigning is about relationships, understanding who people are, what motivates them, the constraints they operate under and then (and only then) working out how to shift them from one place to another.

    What three things make a good campaigner?

    1) Being able to craft compelling stories.
    2) Being able to separate people from the power. This is about a cold headed and rational power analysis. Where is the decision made, who makes it, who influences these people, who do I know, who am I going to speak to first?
    3) Recognising that changing the world is just as much about fundraising, service delivery and service improvement as it is about public affairs and mobilisation.

    Which of these three do you have most of?

    My mission in life is to tell compelling stories that create real change. At the Stroke Association my colleagues in the Media and Campaigns teams have been working hard to tell a different story about stroke, to bust the myths:
    1) That stroke only happens to older people. Nope, it can happen at any age.
    2) That stroke leads to the end of life. Again wrong. With the right support, people can and do go on to recover and make very significant contributions.
    3) That stroke is inevitable. Again, if you do just one thing post reading this article, get your blood pressure checked. It might just save your life!
    I developed and launched the Life after Stroke campaign, (an integrated public affairs and media campaign) which has led to real world policy wins, changes in the law, a continued priority for stroke, huge media coverage, new supporters and funds.
    The really exciting thing is that now this story is starting to gain real momentum, other opportunities are appearing. Stroke has just been featured on Eastenders (one of the characters has had a stroke), we’ve been picked to be the Royal Mail’s charity for the next two years and are finding new supporters all the time.

    Which of these three do you think is missing most out of people who campaign or want to?

    As campaigners our instinct is for action. We all need to remember to stop, think and analyse where power lies before leaping to action, hopefully, though, without losing our zeal!

    Generally are organisations getting better at campaigning since you began your career? If so, what’s changed?

    I think that charity campaigning is going to change significantly. Some charities will be put off by the Lobbying Act, others will see diminishing returns from tired “contact your MP” actions and others will not do enough to tie their work in closely with the wider work of their charity and so lose impact.
    I believe the most successful campaigning organisations are already highlighting problems and coming up with answers that are both desirable and financially sustainable. This is often not easy but is essential as campaigning is about DELIVERING improvements in people’s lives.

    If you weren’t a campaigner, what would you be?

    Even if I wasn’t lucky enough to be paid to campaign, I’d still be a campaigner.

  7. Penelope Gibbs

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    Penelope Gibbs

    Director of Transform Justice

     

    Apart from your current organisation which other organisations that campaign do you admire and why?

    Policy Exchange – because whatever one thinks of their views, they have succeeded in getting the ear of this government and have influenced policy profoundly. They have championed police and crime commissioners and the breaking of the public sector “monopoly” over probation services. Without them these things might not have happened. I admire them because they are effective, though they probably wouldn’t describe themselves as campaigners.
    Citizens UK for campaigning for the Living Wage. They have argued well, got good evidence and successfully used community organisers as advocates. A worthy cause slowly and steadily won, mainly through face to face contacts and meetings.

    Generally are organisations getting better at campaigning since you began your career? If so, what’s changed?

    Organisations are getting better but the political space is getting more difficult to influence. MPs and Peers are efficiently whipped and few will defy their party.
    E-campaigning has revolutionised campaigning through helping charities to harness the passion of thousands of supporters. It’s a double edged sword though, because the more mass e-mail campaigns there are, the more difficult it is to break through.

    Which campaigner inspires you most?

    Ray and Vi Donovan’s son Chris was killed by a group of boys in horrible circumstances. Ray and Vi met their son’s killers in a restorative justice conference and felt “free” for the first time in years. They have set up a trust in memory of Chris and tour the country talking about their experience and the power of restorative justice. Ray and Vi truly have created good out of bad.

    What three attributes make a good campaigner?

    Passion
    Guile
    The ability to understand other points of view

    What’s the most rewarding or exciting campaign you’ve worked on and why?

    The Out of Trouble campaign I led for the Prison Reform Trust was very rewarding. The aim was to reduce the number of children and young people imprisoned in the UK. During the course of the five year campaign, the number of under 18 year olds imprisoned in England and Wales reduced by a third. A sign of true success is that the campaign ended in September 2012 but the numbers have continued to fall ever since.

    How do you feel campaigns will change over the next five years?

    I hope campaigns will focus less on changing the law. Legislation is very powerful but changing legislation does not necessarily produce social change and vice versa.

    What advice would you give someone starting their career in campaigning today?

    Be incredibly focussed. Campaigns with vague, amorphous aims tend not to work. Remember achieving your aim is the most important thing. It doesn’t matter if no-one knows who or what organisation was behind a positive social change, as long as it happens.

    If you weren’t a campaigner, what would you be?

    A civil servant. Civil servants have more power to influence positive social change than anyone else in government. But I would need to be able to conform and I’m not convinced I could.

  8. Letter published in Third Sector 17th January 2012

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    To hear it click: http://bit.ly/AjF6uF

    To read it….. here it is:

    Cathy Pharoah is correct in noting in her article “Charities can make a difference…” when she says that “…there are signs that the sector is increasingly rediscovering the power of advocacy”

    Charities despite smaller budgets are realising they can get a better return on their investment to reach their aims and goals by turning to advocacy and campaigning tactics. The change has been happening for a few years – began slowly in the late 1990’s then really took off around 2005 – Make Poverty History played an important role in this.

    We see new campaigns and charities investing in policy analysis and development then using it to make change by using campaigning, public affairs and parliamentary tactics. As a result, we’ve increased our staffing to cope with this by over 70% and moved into larger premises.

    It is a real shame that at a time where this expansion in campaigning is occurring that the NCVO’s Campaigning Effectiveness team which supported the sectors work no longer exists. There is a gap that needs filling if anyone is up for taking on the challenge.

  9. It’s a 5 horse race – 4 months to go to the General Election

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    As a former local Councillor, I’m used to regularly delivering leaflets saying “It’s a Two Horse Race” with a cheesy pencil drawing of racehorses and claims that it’s between our party and the main other party. Making out it’s going to be close, even if the end result is a 20-30% difference in the votes. All with the aim of getting your vote out on the day and to stave off complacency.

    Well no-one is going to be complacent about the result of the polling on May 7th. It’s looking like a 5 horse race – the usual 3 equines, plus UKIP and the SNP. Only the Tories or Labour can win it. But the other 3 parties will play a major role in who will get past the finishing line and actually into government.

    Some relevant pieces to read on how to deal with this year from a campaigning perspective. Tom Baker, the self-styled “Thoughtful Campaigner” who The Right Ethos helped place last year at BOND as their Head of Campaigns and Engagement has written this piece: 7 things you need to know about election campaigning.
    Also, worth reading: Three Predictions for Charity Campaigns in 2014 by Claremont Communications: Predications for charity campaigns in 2015.

    And worth knowing about Oxfam wrap on the knuckles before Christmas for being – though I hope it won’t rein any campaigns in too much as a result Oxfam criticised by charity commission.

    Pollsters are being cagey about the outcome, they remember 1992 too well, when most predicted a Labour majority. Sometimes it’s worth looking at what the bookies think as they can’t afford to be wrong.

    The current odds of 25 to 1 on a Labour/SNP/Liberal Democrat coalition looks quite an attractive price to me.
    Looking beyond the election, what if the Liberal Democrats got back into government with 6 times the number of seats of UKIP but only around half the votes. A massive campaign for a fairer voting system from the right wing?
    2015 – It’s going to be very interesting.

  10. Mariam Kemple

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    Mariam Kemple

    Whilst Campaigns and Advocacy Manager at Crisis Action

     

    Apart from your current organisation which other organisations that campaign do you admire and why?

    I’ve recently been inspired by the entire campaigning sector following the collective work we’ve all been doing in response to the ‘Gagging Law’. As someone who has a lot of experience in coalition campaigning, it’s been wonderful to see so many different voices from the UK charity sector speaking as one in a targeted and effective way to push for change.

    Generally are organisations getting better at campaigning since you began your career? If so, what’s changed?

    Absolutely – it’s been very exciting to see this development over the years. Campaigning has become much more professionalised and, with that, we’re seeing a stronger focus on monitoring and evaluation. As a result, the sector is becoming much better at identifying and achieving impact. We’ve also become better at learning from our colleagues in fundraising – building campaigner journeys that ensure supporters around the country can be turned into activists. Finally, the eventual embrace of new technologies – particularly social media – is having a fascinating effect on the responsive capacity of organisations.

    Which campaigner inspires you most?

    I regularly work with Sudanese or Syrian activists who put themselves at serious risk by speaking out on abuses taking place in their country. I am awed by the dedication and bravery they show in doing so – it is a privilege to work with them.

    What three attributes make a good campaigner?

    First and foremost, any campaigner needs to be passionate about their work. This is what you need to influence others, to push on through the long hours and to keep going in the face of disappointment after disappointment. Second, you need to be strategic – able to work out the most effective, efficient route to influencing your target. And, finally, you need to be flexible in order to adapt your strategy to the myriad of unexpected changes that any campaign will encounter.

    What’s the most rewarding or exciting campaign you’ve worked on and why?

    In March 2012 I ran a social media campaign for the first anniversary of the Syrian conflict – Unite for Syria. We had no budget and no time but through sheer hard work were able to convince activists and celebrities the world over to support a multimedia campaign. On the day, we reached millions upon millions of people and the campaign itself became the story. It was wonderful to create something from literally nothing and to create a global community of activists all working together – from Brazil to Indonesia, India to South Africa, Egypt to the US.

    How do you feel campaigns will change over the next five years?

    I hope that campaigners will continue to be more and more driven by monitoring and evaluation. I also expect that the medium for our tactics will change as the sector catches up with all that the internet has to offer. That said, I still believe that the core components of campaigning will remain resolutely the same and that the strength of a constituent’s handwritten letter to an MP will always be one of the most powerful tactics we can deploy.

    What advice would you give someone starting their career in campaigning today?

    Immerse yourself in the campaigns of the whole sector – sign up to every newsletter and campaign bulletin! Get a feeling for how different organisations engage their supporters, the ambitions they set for themselves and the success they obtain. Make sure you have experience of local campaigning – volunteer in your community and experience the day to day of influencing local institutions and decision-makers. Finally, I would encourage anyone to work in Westminster for even just a short period of time in order to understand the ‘other side’ of campaigning, so that as a campaigner you appreciate the environment your targets will be working in.

    If you weren’t a campaigner, what would you be?

    A legal barrister – I’d still have to be arguing for a living!