NOTE: the previous thread has been deleted
I’ve just got back in from London and have been able to read through the previous thread for the first time. This has now been taken down, Mike Smithson
I’ve just got back in from London and have been able to read through the previous thread for the first time. This has now been taken down, Mike Smithson
How will Cameron react to Alan Duncan? The first of tonight’s revelations from the Daily Telegraph are just starting to come out and the big name to be highlighted is Alan Duncan. See the story here The big question is what David Cameron is going to do? Will the Tory leader get tough? Could Duncan find himself out of his front bench role? More follows:- Mike Smithson
Why no bail-out for the newspaper industry? I always enjoy the various addresses given at the annual White House Correspondents’ Dinner – Stephen Colbert’s legendary 2006 performance deserves your time – and this year President Obama acquitted himself with another witty performance (though not as good as his 2005 roasting of Rahm Emanuel) but it was the postscript that was most interesting. Addressing the celebrity journalists (who have, by his own admission, given him a very easy ride), Obama chose…
Is now the perfect time to be an anti-establishment politician? As the expenses row moves into Day 3, Saturday’s polls provided some answers to the question as to its impact on the political parties, as opposed to the individuals who’ve been in the spotlight. They also raised others. The media narratives easiest to follow are those which focus on a single person or event: a parliamentary vote, an election, an individual’s misconduct or the like. One of the problems of…
The Gord story just keeps on going From the Sunday papers this from the Sunday Times seems to be the most difficult one for Gordon. It’s an interview with Peter Watt, Labour’s former general secretary, who had to leave during a donations row eighteen months ago. His description of how his former boss, the Prime Minister, operates could not be more timely. One little snippet is about the election that never was in October 2007. “No matter what anyone says,…
CON 43(-2) LAB 27(nc) LD 18 (+1) BPIX for the Mail on Sunday has:- CON 45 (nc) LAB 23(-3) LD 17 (nc) It is highly likely that the bulk of the fieldwork for both surveys took place BEFORE the expenses revelations. The changed shares on YouGov are based on the last survey from the pollster – not the last survey in the Sunday Times. The BPIX poll is in the Mail on Sunday. We have no Lib Dem shares at…
Wales (4 seats) If Scotland in 1979 was a two party, Wales in 1979 was a one party state, and that party was Labour. Callaghan may have lost the general election (but Wales served Labour well, as they polled 48% of the Welsh vote) and winning 23 seats of the 40 that were created in 1983. However just as at the moment the Conservatives started their march and by 1983 (despite losing Montgomery to the Alliance) the Conservatives gained 3…
Click to watch When can they get the focus put on Cameron? The political news this afternoon has been dominated, again, by the Gurkhas issue following the rejection by the UK Border Agency of four out of five residency test cases. This follows yesterday’s meeting between the Gurkhas’ campaigner, Joanna Lumley, and Gordon Brown. Today’s decision led to interesting scenes and a hastily organised meeting at the BBC’s Westminster offices between Ms Lumley and the minister responsible, Phil Woolas. Quite…