Archive for August, 2008

Friday 1st August 2008

1.30pm ToryDiary: Boris and Dave both seek to gain from the 'Obama effect'

Noon ToryDiary: Jonathan Isaby to join ConservativeHome from The Telegraph

10.30am ToryDiary: Prime Minister Cameron's early decisions

ToryDiary: And the only man who would improve Labour's fortunes is …

Andrew Lilico on CentreRight asks if growth in the money supply may force interest rate rises and tax cuts, potentially splitting Conservatives

Matthew Sinclair on CentreRight expresses his scepticism of the quango energywatch

Miliband_david_red_2 Brown reins in Miliband critics

Brown has ordered his closest allies to stop briefing against the foreign secretary, following his call for a bolder policy agenda - The Guardian

Miliband cancels official trip to India under pressure from Brown - The Times

Brown to resist backbench calls to sack Miliband - The Independent

Alice Miles profiles both David and Ed Miliband for The Times

Tories have nothing to fear from David Miliband, writes Daniel Hannan for the Telegraph

Cameron's first hundred days

The final part of Andrew Grice's series on Tory policies for the Independent looks at the first acts of a Cameron government, and whether divisions over Europe could return

Part 1 on the broken society | Part 2 on the economy | Part 3 on the NHS and education | Part 4 on the environment

Recession likely, but Thatcherite reforms mean long-term economic prospects remain positive

Edmund Conway in the Telegraph: "A recent report from Goldman Sachs showed that although Britain's economy may be overtaken by China and India in the coming years, the amount of wealth shared by each citizen on our small island will climb even higher than in the United States. It calculates that Britain could become the richest nation on earth, in terms of economic wealth per capita. The benefits of Thatcher's economic reforms - tearing down barriers to commerce and liberalising labour markets - made Britain one of the most dynamic, flexible, attractive places to do business in the world. Even a decade of Labour's regulatory and tax creep has not entirely eroded this."

Setback to Labour plan to cap spending in marginals between elections

Leaked Electoral Commission document expresses "strong reservations" over Jack Straw's proposals - The Guardian

David Cameron is one of the best-read people in British politics

Iain Dale in the Telegraph: "He speed-reads his way through several tomes a week. Some years ago I owned Politico's, a political bookshop in Westminster, and I remember well the huge orders Cameron used to place before each holiday - and this was before he was an MP."

Lindsayduncanasthatcher_4Pictured: Lindsay Duncan as Margaret Thatcher in new TV series - The Evening Standard

Lib Dems' top donor changes name and appearance in advance of major fraud trial - The Times

EDF Energy withdraws £12 billion offer to buy British Energy

The surprise announcement leaves the Government facing the prospect of its nuclear plans being delayed by years - The Times

Government considers windfall tax on fuel firm profits

The Chancellor is considering imposing a windfall tax on energy companies amid the public outcry over record increases in fuel bills. - The Times

A windfall tax would drive away investment without cutting fuel bills, argues Martin Waller in The Times

Ministers plan curb on pro-suicide web sites

"Websites which encourage vulnerable teenagers to kill themselves are to be blocked under plans by the Government to tackle the dozens of suicides that have been linked to internet chatrooms" - The Independent

Foreign prisoners now account for more than an eighth of Britain's prison population - The Times

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Thursday 31st July 2008

6.15pm ToryDiary: Parallels with 1995-97 (and differences)

4.30pm Seats and candidates: Labour’s John Austin MP will quit at next election

Whatnext

Racheljoyce
Top-up payments for healthcare and a stronger role for matron are two of the ideas in our special Platform on the future of Tory healthcare policy. Simon Chapman, Nadine Dorries MP, Andrew Haldenby and Dr Rachel Joyce all contribute.

Greg Hands MP on CentreRight wants his DNA back:  "A new report shows that I am one of more than a million entirely innocent people on the DNA database, which also includes 100,000 children."

Tim Montgomerie on CentreRight: Sky’s new opinion poll tracker

Three PlayPolitical videos:

Steve Richards: The Labour leadership battle has begun

"Brown is trapped in a narrative from which there is no escape. The polls will not improve greatly in the autumn and yet this period is now being seen as his defining test. Meanwhile the leadership question drowns out all other ministerial messages. Suddenly one question overwhelms all others: How to end the noise? There is a single answer. Fairly or not, and whatever the risks, only cathartic change brings the chance of calm. Miliband’s intervention makes it more likely than not that Labour will have a new leader by the end of the year." - Steve Richards in The Independent

Brown’s allies brief against Miliband

Miliband_david_red_tie
"Gordon Brown’s allies yesterday accused David Miliband of self-serving disloyalty and weakening the prime minister’s authority after the foreign secretary provoked a firestorm of speculation over his leadership ambitions with an article in the Guardian calling on Labour to find a new forward vision to defeat the Tories." - Guardian

Writing in The Sun George Osborne accuses Labour of putting political ambition before the urgent interests of the nation.

The Telegraph profiles the team behind Miliband.

A Times leader worries about his commitment to the state: "His years at Mr Blair’s side have made him a reformer, but one who believes firmly in government action. His article yesterday asserts the need for “government to act as a catalyst”, describes “the political creed of the Labour Party” as “combining government action and personal freedom” and suggests that social justice and better public services are inconsistent with deregulation and lower spending. His confidence in the State is striking."

A Government minister questions the timidity of Brown’s first year

"The only way forward now is bold Labour. What we want to see is the Gordon Brown of Bank of England independence, SureStart and Make Poverty History. I think that his responsibility is to provide the bold and decisive leadership that we now need." - Ivan Lewis MP talking to The Independent

Ian Blair hits back at attempts to oust him

"Sir Ian Blair yesterday warned that his post as commissioner of the Metropolitan police was becoming increasingly politicised and that plans by the London mayor, Boris Johnson, to take more control of the force could ultimately be damaging.  The commissioner was speaking as it emerged that an aide to the mayor had to be reined in by a lawyer from seeking Blair’s suspension over allegations of cronyism." - Guardian

Tory press officer attempts to fix newspaper poll - Independent

Is the Conservative Party cooling on the green agenda?

"Green campaigners smelt a rat in May after Mr Cameron failed to mention the words "environment" or "climate change" in a 1,200-word statement about his priorities for government." - Andrew Grice in The Independent

Whittingdale_john
John Whittingdale leads MPs’ call for internet firms to police ‘dark side’ of web

"The internet industry must take more responsibility for protecting young people from the "dark side" of digital content relating to abuse, violence and suicide, according to a committee of MPs… The committee chairman, John Whittingdale, criticised YouTube for not going far enough with proactive measures, beyond a pledge to take down material when it is "flagged" up by users." - Guardian

"Both Labour and the Conservatives have abandoned the less privileged and created an ‘underclass’" - John Rutherford in The Guardian

Vince Cable urges the end of higher charging for pre-payment energy users - Independent

We’ll pay a high price for free-trade failure - Peter Mandelson in The Telegraph

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Wednesday 30th July 2008

3.15pm PlayPolitical: David Miliband tells Sky News that his controversial Guardian article was an attack on David Cameron, not Gordon Brown. Anyone believe him?

Andrewmitchell

3pm Andrew Mitchell MP updates ConHome readers with a progress report from the Conservative social action project in Rwanda

2.45pm Peter Cuthbertson on CentreRight: In Hobbesian Britain, carrying a knife is often rational

2pm Martin Parsons on CentreRight: Labour are undermining at least 50% of Britain’s historic core values

11am Dan Lewis on CentreRight: In economic policy, is Obama to the left of Gordon Brown?

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10am PlayPolitical video: Watch Ed Balls skipping

ToryDiary: Labour’s leadership crisis

Farmer David Eyles, writing for The Platform, worries about charging people for merely possessing a knife.

Two PlayPolitical videos:

David Miliband: Labour needs to change and change now

"David Miliband, seen as a frontrunner to succeed Gordon Brown if he resigns, today intervenes in the debate about Labour’s future saying "the times demand a radical new phase" from the government if it is beat the electoral odds and win a fourth term." - The Foreign Secretary doesn’t mention Gordon Brown once in an article for The Guardian

Cameron focuses on local media while holidaying in South West

"David Cameron relaxed into his British beach holiday yesterday with a televised shopping trip, a national radio phone-in and an interview with 70 readers of a local newspaper." - Times

Picture_38_2
"Conservative party leader David Cameron today set out his pitch for Westcountry votes in a unique event with Western Morning News readers. In a wide-ranging hour-long session he fielded questions on the European Union and water bills, rural housing and post office closures tearing the heart out of rural areas.  He backed the use of wind farms to help the environment, criticised the cost of the new logo for the Cornwall super-council and said a cull of diseased badgers could help to tackle TB in cattle herds in the Westcountry." - Western Morning News

Let children drink at home, says David Cameron

"Some of the friends I had, the ones who had the biggest problems, were the ones who actually were never allowed to drink anything at home - whereas the ones who drink responsibly were the ones who were given a glass of wine or a small glass of beer or a shandy or something. That’s the right way to do it in the home." - Speaking to Radio 1 yesterday, quoted in The Telegraph

Johnson_boris_pointing
Boris Johnson’s aides plot to suspend Met Chief Blair
- Times

Andrew Grice’s five part review of Tory policies turns to schools and hospitals today - Independent

Part 1 on the broken society | Part 2 on the economy

Reuben brothers give Tories nearly £200,000 - FT

Grant Shapps accuses Labour of using HIPS to deliver backdoor council tax revaluation

"Shadow Housing Minister Grant Shapps, said: "Behind the smokescreen of HIPs, Labour’s real agenda is to build up a property database of every home. Property Information Questionnaires are most likely just another way of conducting Labour’s controversial council tax revaluation and re-banding by the backdoor.
"The public will be clobbered twice – once for a costly Home Information Pack and then again in the form of higher council tax bills for home improvements and their parking spaces."" - Telegraph

"How tax credits hit the rocks" - Sue Cameron in the FT examines the failure of one of Brown’s flagship policies

Labour’s English problem

Images
"With all the political attention paid to the Celtic fringe of Scotland, Northern Ireland and Wales, Labour sometimes lost sight of the simple fact that four-fifths of the British population live in England. And the English are once more ceasing to vote Labour.  This may be the single most important fact about the last general election. Labour won another national majority of seats, and indeed they won a large majority of English seats - but the Tories gained marginally more popular votes than Labour in England. The full result was startling. In May 2005, Labour won 286 out of 529 English seats with 8.05m votes, or 35.5% of the popular vote; Tories 194 seats with 8.10m votes or 35.7%, Liberal Democrats 47 seats, with 5.201m or 22.9%." - Geoffrey Wheatcroft in The Guardian

Failure of Doha

"The failure of the talks is economically disastrous and could be politically destabilising. A deal could have been worth several hundred billion dollars in increased global activity, a fillip that national economies could use now." - Telegraph leader

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Tuesday 29th July 2008

Andrew Lilico on CentreRight: How and why the Church of England will split

5pm ToryDiary: Conservatives to the right, LibDems to the left, SNP to the north

5pm PlayPolitical videos: McCain ads attack Barack Obama for (1) inexperience, (2) hypocrisy

4.30pm CentreRight updates:

1pm PlayPolitical videos: Harriet Harman explains why she wants to toughen the law for men who kill unfaithful wives and soften the law for wives who kill violent husbands and Should Brown step down?

Lunchtime updates on CentreRight: Tim Montgomerie isn’t worried about overpopulation and Peter Whittle is looking for cultural distractions from economic difficulties

James_morris_2
11.15am Seats and candidates: James Morris adopted for Halesowen and Rowley Regis

10.45am Suleiman R Shah writes his first entry for CentreRight: Wake up and smell the Lassi: "The Australian Foreign Minister, Stephen Smith, described the Afghan-Pak border region as the "the current international hotbed of terrorism" in a press conference with Condi Rice last week. This was an understatement. It’s not just the border region, but increasingly Pakistan proper."

10am Graeme Archer on CentreRight: A disabled health service

ToryDiary: Could a Miliband-Johnson ‘dream ticket’ revive Labour?

Greg Hands MP on CentreRight: Why are guidebooks so left-wing?

Chrisgraylingmp

Chris Grayling MP on Platform: We must end the extreme deprivation of Britain’s cities

Local government: Pickles attacks plans to re-unionise local government

PlayPolitical video: Pro-Obama advert from MoveOn.org is aimed at youth market and is set to air on Comedy Central, ‘Hope could happen to you’

SNP and Tories deny reports of secret talks

Salmond_alex
"A senior Salmond aide said: "It is a ludicrous report and the exact opposite of the truth. The SNP is currently the only party the Tories are not having discussions with, given that they are in the Calman Commission with Labour and the Liberal Democrats." - Herald

> Yesterday’s ToryDiary: Annabel Goldie denies secret talks with the SNP

"The Labour Party in Scotland will be more independent of party bosses in Westminster in the future if the three main contenders for the leadership get their way" - Scotsman

Andrew Grice continues his week-long examination of Tory policies with a focus on the economy - The Independent

Labour has stolen the Tory policy of crime mapping, they should also steal the elected police chiefs policy - Telegraph leader

The Guardian says Labour MPs are not ready to go public against Brown

"The Labour party appeared to rally round its troubled leader yesterday, as MPs sought to deny the existence of a list of names being sent to the cabinet calling on them to urge Gordon Brown to quit." - Guardian

But Rachel Sylvester, in The Times, finds little loyalty for Brown: "There is little residual loyalty towards the Prime Minister among his Cabinet. “I don’t think Gordon would die in a ditch for me so why should I die in a ditch for him?” one minister said."

Boris Johnson sees two years of leadership speculation ahead

"For most of the next two years, it can be confidently predicted, the story of the Labour Government will be about coups and plots and Cabinet rivals warring for succession. One day we will be told that the armies of Hattie Harperson are mustering in the wings; the next day the media will be talking up the claims of Geoff Hoon - "Who Hoon?", as Lenin so pungently put it.  One day a female columnist will announce that Miliband has the magnetic good looks to see off Cameron; and the next day a rival female columnist will proclaim that, on the contrary, James Purnell is the man, what with his sideburns and his interesting views on welfare reform." - Boris Johnson in The Telegraph

Is it Brown? Darling? Harman? Who’s in charge?

The Telegraph reports on confusion as to who is running the country during the PM’s summer break.

Gg385_375144a
Cheeky youths collar Gordon Brown for photo-op - Times

"Business cheers Brown’s policy on unions"

"Gordon Brown was on Monday praised by business for resisting “the worst” union demands on policy, but urged to stand his ground in the run-up to this autumn’s politically charged party conference season… The relaxed business reaction was in stark contrast to a Tory briefing document that on Monday proclaimed the resurrection of a Labour party in hock to its historic paymasters." - FT

Harriet Harman wants softer sentences for domestic abuse victims who murder their partners - ePolitix

The Sun wants tax cuts

"UNIONS and Leftie MPs want Gordon Brown to hammer the rich and impose a windfall tax on banks and energy moguls… The Treasury already grabs a huge slice of the cash pouring into Britain from these giants. And if we hit high earners, we will lose some of our biggest wealth creators.  As a nation, we already pay too much tax. Too much is squandered by incompetent ministers.  What we need is value for money, an attack on waste — plus the TAX CUTS such a policy could deliver." - The Sun Says

Welsh Assembly making too frequent requests for transfers of power from Westminster - Western Mail

PLEASE NOTE: Samuel Coates is no longer working for ConservativeHomeAll email to Tim Montgomerie please.

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Gordon Brown’s Future

It was late on Sunday night, and like everybody else I was wrestling with the issue of the moment.

Would Labour get rid of Gordon Brown? Or would they stagger on?
In just a few hours’ time I would have to hand in my copy, which is now due at breakfast time on Monday, and as the […]

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Holidays abroad

I consider it my patriotic duty to find a destination as sunny and foreign as possible.
Well, my friends, it’s been nice knowing you. I like to think this column has acquired a reputation for daring. I flatter myself that I have occasionally blurted truths that more tactful and successful politicians have avoided.
Today, however, I feel […]

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Housing in our age

“Hypocrisy is at the heart of our national character - without the oil of hypocrisy, the machinery of convention would simply explode.”
What? I said. You don’t mean to say that’s it? I rubbed my eyes and emitted a sigh as tragic as Prince Charles on beholding the blueprints for the gherkin. For a year they […]

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Centre Court, Wimbledon

It was round about halfway through the second set and things were hotting up on Centre Court when I noticed the mobile starting to flash silently in my breast pocket. Furtively I fished it out. There was no choice. You have to be on call. Even in the throes of the greatest tennis match ever […]

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England’s national underperformance

We have a seat on the UN Security Council and troops in conflicts around the world; and yet this year we didn’t even qualify for the European Championships

There is a famous story of how, in 1945, Gen de Gaulle was taken by the Soviet foreign minister Molotov to see the ruins of Stalingrad, where thousands […]

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Goring walkabout

“My word, there’s Boris!”  Back in the constituency in Goring-on-Thames today for a very rapid walkabout gathering the views and listening to the needs of residents ahead of this week’s election that will see a successor take over the Henley seat.  Thanks for sending the picture, Brian.

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