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Autumn is my favourite season. The reds, golds and browns herald the end of summer and the beginning of a new, more serious time of year. And, of course, it brings the party conferences. I
used to spend the first weeks of autumn travelling to all the conferences, most often in one of our seaside towns or cities – Blackpool, Bournemouth, Brighton. Cold winds and restless seas
greeted us band of conference dwellers, as we began our journey at the Trades Union Congress. This year the Labour and Conservative conferences, taking place in reverse order to the norm,
are being held equidistant from my birthplace in Lancashire, battling for some northern soul between Liverpool and Manchester. On my visits, the dress code alone told me which conference I
was at. The Liberals, the most relaxed, the Conservatives, the most formal, with Labour sandwiched in between: no ties for men, but jeans frowned upon. Over time the uniforms merged towards
business attire, no doubt now replaced with the smart-casual of a post-Covid world. At the end of Labour conference, we would muse philosophically on the debates, clashes and applause of the
week. Our conclusion: “We go to Labour conference and wonder why we vote Labour.” Then we went to Tory conference, and we remembered why. THE PROCESS OF PEACE Albin Kurti, the prime
minister of Kosovo, will be at this year’s Labour Party conference. He is an important leader. Recently at a dinner in Pristina, we talked about his admiration for the Beatles and interest
in visiting Liverpool. While I hope he sees something of the great city, I am shocked by the reports of violence in the north of Kosovo. I was in Pristina to discuss the Brussels dialogue I
led a decade ago between Serbia and Kosovo. It took real leadership from both nations to talk to each other after a history of conflict and horror – and even more to find some level of
agreement. Small steps. Ten years later the process is stuck. Once again, we need courage to respect the past, mourn those lost and focus on the future. The prize of finding solutions is
peace and prosperity in Europe. I hope Kurti and Aleksandar Vučić, the president of Serbia, will not let this opportunity pass. We should give them every support. _[SEE ALSO: THE BOY WHO
WOULD BE BOND]_ A BEVY OF BOOKS Later in the season I will have the joy of visiting some of the extraordinary book festivals that take place all over the UK. Until I wrote a book, I had no
idea most of them existed. Yet I find a thriving industry of events, from Derby to Buxton, Appledore to Queen’s Park. My book, _And Then What?_, which came out earlier this year, tells seven
stories of my time in office as the EU’s foreign policy chief. In each I describe what it was like to be there, whether in Libya after the bombing of Benghazi, negotiating with the Iranians
on their nuclear programme, or standing in Maidan, Kyiv, with demonstrators at the beginning of the Ukraine crisis. AT VLADIMIR’S TABLE The question I get asked the most is: “What is
Vladimir Putin like?” I always start my answer by saying he looks much as he does on TV. But Putin leaves those who spend time with him in no doubt of what matters to him. Spoiler alert:
it’s not international norms. At one of our regular dinners, sitting across the table from the presidents of the EU, he appeared uninterested in what was being said. He chatted a little to
his foreign minister, and then looked around the room. His disdain seemed plain to see. Only at the end when he started to ask questions was it clear that he had been putting on an act. His
apparent lack of interest hid a fierce determination to challenge every point. For him, relations with other nations are purely transactional. THINGS FALL APART Getting to book festivals by
train has been a challenge. Trains were so often “not as advertised”. Carriages disappeared, leaving those who had booked seats scrabbling for space. Today, the backdrop of “things falling
apart” seems ever more real. Autumn will lead to winter, and pressures will grow on an NHS in desperate straits. Food banks are besieged by hungry people, and homelessness is visible on
every street I walk down. In Kosovo, the third poorest country in Europe, I was asked one question I was not expecting: why are so many people sleeping on Britain’s streets? How sad, they
said. _Catherine Ashton will appear at Cambridge Literary Festival on 18 November: cambridgeliteraryfestival.com_ _[SEE ALSO: WHY ARE SO MANY LITERARY PRIZES CLOSING?]_ Topics in this
article : Magazine This article appears in the 04 Oct 2023 issue of the New Statesman, Labour in Power