and Eavis together on the Pyramid Stage at the
2017 Glastonbury Festival Eavis has credited a number of influences for his political views, including traditions of
nonconformity in his family, as well as his time as a miner, during which he was a member of the
National Union of Mineworkers. After recovering from stomach cancer, Eavis stood as a candidate for the
Labour Party in the
1997 general election in
Wells, polling 10,204 votes. In 2004, however, he suggested that disillusioned Labour voters should switch their vote to the
Green Party in protest at the
Iraq War, though he returned to supporting the Labour Party in
2010. In 2005, Eavis was quoted in
The Guardian as being a supporter of hunting. "I don't hunt myself, but I support the people who want to hunt. With all that's going on in the world, it was outrageous to ban it." In 2006, he was appointed as President of the
Somerset Chamber of commerce and Industry. In 2011, Eavis was quoted as lamenting the decline in political activity associated with the Glastonbury Festival. He was guest editor of the
Western Daily Press newspaper on Glastonbury's 'fallow' weekend, 23 June 2012. Eavis invited Labour leader
Jeremy Corbyn to appear at the 2017 festival, introducing the
Run the Jewels' set. Eavis supported Corbyn's
anti-nuclear and
anti-austerity policies, saying "he's got something new and precious, and people are excited about it. He really is the hero of the hour." == Charitable work ==