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Month: July 2006

Labour holding firm in spite of Prescott

Labour holding firm in spite of Prescott

Populus shows Tory lead down to two points The seemingly never-ending saga of John Prescott seems to be having almost no impact on the party standings in the latest Populus poll in the Times this morning. These show with comparisons from last month CON 36% (-1): LAB 34 (nc): LD 19% (+1). So the only change being the Tories down a point and the Lib Dems up one. This is in sharp contrast to Sunday’s BPIX poll in the MoS…

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Would Gordon’s first act be to abolish PMQs?

Would Gordon’s first act be to abolish PMQs?

Has he a plan to avoid the weekly grillings? One of Tony Blair’s first moves when he came to power in 1997 was to change Prime Minister’s Questions. For decades the PM had had to face the House twice a week – Blair changed it to once but doubled the time available. He was new in the job, there’d been a landslide and change was in the air. The plan was met with little resistance. Is it fanciful to think…

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Sean Fear’s local by-election review

Sean Fear’s local by-election review

Will Enfield be the next Wyre Forest? Dr. Richard Taylor caused a shock when he won the Wyre Forest constituency from Labour in 2001. His success was based on a campaign to save Kidderminster Hospital. At the same time, a small political party, Kidderminster Hospital Health Concern, won a number of seats on the local council on a similar platform. Although Dr. Taylor’s majority was cut in 2005, he was the first Independent Parliamentary candidate since 1945, to win his…

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Cameron gets Prescott poll boost

Cameron gets Prescott poll boost

BPIX gives the Tories a 10% lead and puts the LDs on 15%? British Polling Index has carried out another of its intermittent surveys for the Mail on Sunday. The pollster has not been listed as a member of the British Polling Council and whenever I have requested further information my emails have been ignored. In its first published survey for the paper since April BPIX has the Tories on 41%, Labour 31%, with the Lib Dems at 15%. The…

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Guest article: do we have the wrong political parties?

Guest article: do we have the wrong political parties?

A guest contribution by Innocent Abroad A tired third-term government with a leader past his sell-by date is a recurrent theme in British politics. The Tories have been there often enough, and the Liberals too, just before World War I. This is Labour’s first experience of it – the party has never held office (discounting the wartime co-alition) for more than six years at a time before. What is new is the inability of the Tories to achieve the kind…

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Guest article: Is Labour’s century-long Party over?

Guest article: Is Labour’s century-long Party over?

A guest contribution from Tabman “The founding of the Labour Party owes more to Methodism than Marx. Discuss.” At the heart of this classic A-Level Politics question is an examination of the founding coalition of the Labour Party – the finding of common interest between the “Working Man”, in the form of the TUC, and the “Concerned Middle Class” represented by socialist intellectuals such as the Fabians. This founding coalition has changed shape and emphasis over the last 100 years,…

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The betting on Prescott’s successor

The betting on Prescott’s successor

Writers can be forgiven the occasional cliché when the situation they are trying to describe is an extreme one of its kind. So just as last Saturday Wayne Rooney was as sick as a parrot and Owen Hargreaves covered every blade of grass on the pitch, John Prescott is beleaguered. Having already got himself into a hole where Tony Blair seems to just about accept that his position within the Labour party entitles him to the pay and perks of…

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Latest polls: a mixed story

Latest polls: a mixed story

ICM gives Labour a boost; YouGov is steady In the wake of the Blaenau Gwent results, Labour supporters must have got some partial comfort from the ICM poll in the Sunday Telegraph this weekend: Labour’s share had recovered by 3% to 35%, just one point behind the Tories on 36% (a 1% drop). The Liberal Democrats were unchanged at 18%. (The changes are relative to ICM’s previous poll published just 12 days before.) The last survey from YouGov, however, as…

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