'Oh, so that's who Richard Morris is..." Lord Hattersley on The Daily Politics

'An influential activist' - The Guardian

'Iain Dale, without the self loathing' - Matthew Fox in The New Statesman

'
You are a tinker...' - Tim Farron

Saturday, 30 November 2013

The Lib Dems' shift left could be more dangerous for the Tories than Labour




Here's my latest suggestion in The New Statesman - in a nutshell, that the Great George Street strategy is to target soft Tories. Ryan Coetzee was kind enough to respond - so I've added his Twitter comments at the bottom of the piece. Also, curiously, while if I'm right this strategy could benefit Labour, readers of the NS have responded with a fair amount of vitriol...

Chris Huhne has ventured in Juncture magazine that any Labour/Lib Dem coalition after the next election is likely to be based upon common agreement in the policy areas of tax, the environment and housing. Which would be grand if he’s right, as Lib Dem members seem to think that these three areas (plus jobs) should form the four key pillars of the 2015 manifesto.
And indeed the received wisdom is that Nick has moved left (much to the chagrin of certain high profile MPs) - remember the long list of things we’ve stopped the Tories doing in government announced at conference, the free school meals announcement, the agreement to look again at secret courts post 2015, the apparent acceptance that the bedroom tax might not be the best idea since sliced bread...
The differentiation strategy is in full swing and it looks like Nick has heeded the advice of Tim Farron when he said of left-leaning Lib Dem voters from 2010: "The people who are most likely to vote for you next time are the people who voted for you last time...You don’t write people off, they’re there to be persuaded to come back, or rather stay with us". 
So, it’s all guns blazing on the swing to the left. Or is it? I wonder if there isn’t another thought in the minds of Great George Street folk.
We’ve already tacitly accepted that 2015 is going to be tough for the Lib Dems and we’re in defensive mode. The second place party in the majority of our seats is the Tories, not Labour (38 vs. 19). Of our top 50 target seats, the majority are Tory. Of the 13 seats we lost in 2010 – in theory, the easiest for us to win back – no less than 10 fell to Tories.
Which is why I suspect what’s going on is less a lurch to the left but a small veer, designed to appeal to One Nation Tories alienated by the UKIP tendency in the Conservatives that seems to be in the ascendency. The sort of person who cares about the environment, who bought into "vote blue, go green" and now feels a little let down. The sort of voter who benefits most from the rise in the income tax threshold. The sort of voter who cares quite a lot about house prices and home ownership. The sort of voter Nick Boles had in mind when he suggested it might be time for a revival of the National Liberal Party – before it was pointed out that there already is one…
The environment. Tax. Housing. It’s what we’ll be fighting the next election on. But I wonder if it’s an agenda that should give David Cameron more sleepless nights that Ed Miliband?


And Ryan 's view is...






Friday, 29 November 2013

Which countries in the world take in the most refugees? Clue: we're not one of them

With the immigration debate once again in full swing, it's worth noting that far from being over run by asylum seekers, the UK does not feature in the top 10 countries taking in refugees.

Indeed there is only one EU country that does feature in the top 10- Germany, which takes on nearly 4 times as many as us (589700 vs. 149765)

Source: UNHCR UK


Food for thought.

Hat Tip to both @ianbirrell and @davidmills73

Thursday, 28 November 2013

The Minister for Lap Dancing

I was doing a bit of digging around the other day on the general UK  Government Information site - and noticed a few slightly odd things; such as there is only one of the 24 Ministerial departments where there is a majority of Lib Dems holding office.

Anyway, some of our Westminster representatives do seem to have some slightly strange responsibilities. So would you like to hazard a guess who is

Minister for Lap Dancing
Captain of the Queen's Bodyguard of the Yeoman of the Guard
Minister for Bees
Minister for Taxis

The answers to all 5 are listed below - just scroll down....









The one of the 24 Ministerial departments where there is a majority of Lib Dems holding office?

Scottish Office

Minister for Lap Dancing

This falls under the responsibilities of Norman Baker

Captain of the Queen's Bodyguard of the Yeoman of the Guard

Lord Newby

Minister for Bees (actually, Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for Bees, but still...)

Dan Rogerson

Minister for Taxis

Baroness Kramer
 
  






Wednesday, 27 November 2013

Before they were famous...

Cambridge Footlights, 1994.


I know a couple of them did rather well - the Vice President and the Treasurer for example

But whatever happened to that Secretary? The name seems familiar - but I just can't place him....

Hat tip @chrisdeerin

Tuesday, 26 November 2013

Could someone show this to Michael Gove please, ASAP

Thanks


Hat tip @simoncooper

woo hoo, Staggers wins at EI Awards

Many congrats to @georgeeaton and everyone at The Staggers which has been named On line Comment Site of the Year at the #eiCA13 Awards.



Huzzah :-) 

UPDATE

Here's the official announcement.



And here's the piece in The Staggers announcing the news. I am incredibly flattered to get a mention. I don't know quite what to say. Thanks George!













Is Dr Who a Lefty?

..asks the New Statesman

Well from this photo I think its safe to say Socialist Daleks are in a minority. Though I guess we might have guessed that Daleks would in the main belong to the nasty party.

H/T @spharrison1