I usually stay up to watch general elections, although I don't think I did the last one. I think we'll probably both be staying up this time even though - unlike my husband - I feel a bit gloomy about the whole thing.
We have put up a Labour poster - our next door neighbour has one and there are two more in our road - none for other parties. (One of our neighbours stood as a local UKIP candidate a few years ago - and got absolutely nowhere - he hasn't even put a poster up this time). Our Labour MP is very pro-active, responsive to local issues and has promptly responded to the couple of e-mails I have sent her. I think her commitment to the area will encourage people who are not very political to vote for her. My husband will definitely vote Labour. I'm still toying with the idea of voting Green. I wish we had PR (though not the system that we were given a vote on after the last election).
When I visited Colchester recently, I saw quite a few Lib Dem posters. I think Bob Russell has been the Lib Dem MP there for many years and is popular. In the Suffolk countryside, Tory posters span the fences which enclose large tracts of farmland. In the village where my mum lives, a few more Tory posters, but on 1960's private housing estate where she lives, there are one or two Labour posters - which is quite a surprise. It is a staunch Tory area but not that many Tory posters - only farmers and the conspicuously wealthy seem happy to advertise their Tory affiliations. I wrote to the local MP about a matter concerning a heavily "slanted" "consultation questionnaire" re the Meals on Wheels service. I received a reply which showed that he had not even bothered to read my (fairly succinct) letter properly. I did not even receive a reply from the local Tory councillors. Needless to say, mum recalled their complete lack of interest and voted (by post) accordingly.