Today marks a bit of an end of an era for me as I have filed my last Saturday politics column for The Journal
after 18 and a half years.
The column was launched by my former editor
Mark Dickinson shortly after I joined the paper as political editor in
1997, and his successor-but-one Brian Aitken agreed to keep it going
after I left the staff in 2004.
I will miss the opportunity to
hold forth on the week's political events, but all good things come to
an end and I will always be grateful to The Journal for having given me
an outlet for my writing for so many years.
Anyway here's the final
column, which focuses on the fallout for Labour from Jeremy Corbyn's
leadership election victory. The pay-off line is a Journal in-joke, but I
am happy to explain it anyone who wants to know.
http://www.chroniclelive.co.uk/news/news-opinion/maybe-labours-ids-moment-maybe-10085396
Saturday, September 19, 2015
Saturday, May 09, 2015
Opposition parties pay bitter price for 2010 mistakes
Labour hobbled itself in Thursday's election by choosing the wrong brother as leader in 2010, while the Liberal Democrats lost their political identity by joining the coalition. Here's my election round-up which will appear in today's edition of The Journal.
SO we all got it wrong. All the speculation about hung Parliaments, deals with the Scottish National Party, questions of what would constitute a ‘legitimate’ minority government – in the end, it all proved to be so much hot air.
SO we all got it wrong. All the speculation about hung Parliaments, deals with the Scottish National Party, questions of what would constitute a ‘legitimate’ minority government – in the end, it all proved to be so much hot air.
Labour and the Liberal Democrats are not the only political
institutions that will need to take a long, hard look at themselves after the
biggest general election upset since 1992.
So will the opinion polling industry.
Its continued insistence that the two main parties were
running neck and neck, and that we were duly headed for a hung Parliament,
ended up framing the main debate around which the campaign revolved in its
latter stages.
Had the polls showed the Tories with a six-point lead, the
debate would not have been about whether Ed Miliband would do a deal with
Nicola Sturgeon, but about whether the NHS would survive another five years of
David Cameron.
There were many reasons why, to my mind, the Conservatives
did not deserve to be re-elected, not least the divisive way in which they
fought the campaign.
By relying on fear of the Scottish Nationalists to deliver
victory in England and thereby setting the two nations against eachother, Mr Cameron
has brought the union he professes to love to near-breaking point.
Preventing this now deeply divided country from flying apart
is going to require a markedly different and more inclusive style of politics
in Mr Cameron’s second term, in which devolution and possibly also electoral
reform will be key.
Thankfully the Prime Minister appears to recognise this,
although one is perhaps entitled to a certain degree of scepticism over his
sudden rediscovery of “One Nation Conservatism” yesterday morning.
But what of the opposition parties? Well, it is fair to say that both suffered more
from mistakes made not during this election campaign but in the aftermath of
the last one.
Make no mistake, this was an eminently winnable election for
Labour, but it would have been a great deal more winnable had the party chosen
the former South Shields MP David Miliband as its leader in 2010 ahead of his
younger brother.
That said, Ed fought a much better campaign than many
anticipated and stood up well in the face of some disgraceful and frankly
juvenile attacks by certain sections of the national media.
What may have swung the undecideds against him in the end
was his apparent state of denial about the last Labour government’s spending
record, while I shouldn’t think the tombstone helped much either.
Of course - Stockton South aside - Labour continued to perform well in the North
East on Thursday, and the party also had a reasonably good night in London.
It was the East and West Midlands that proved particularly
allergic to Mr Miliband’s party, and it is here that whoever emerges from the
forthcoming leadership contest will need to concentrate their energies with
2020 in mind.
Mr Miliband has facilitated that contest by swiftly falling
on his sword, and with deputy leader Harriet Harman also set to stand down, the
party will now be able to choose a new team to take it forward.
After such a shattering defeat there will doubtless be calls
for a completely fresh start, and new names such as Liz Kendall, Dan Jarvis and
Stella Creasy will come into the frame alongside some of the more usual
suspects.
As for the Liberal Democrats, well, the Tories’ cannibalisation
of their erstwhile coalition partners seems to prove once and for all that Nick
Clegg made a catastrophic misjudgement in taking them into government in 2010 –
as some of us warned him at the time.
He has also been rightly punished by the electorate for what
many saw as an appalling breach of trust over university tuition fees.
The upshot is that a party which achieved a fifth of the
national vote under Paddy Ashdown and Charles Kennedy has not just lost nearly
all its MPs, more seriously it has lost its identity.
The laws of political dynamics will ensure Labour eventually
bounces back from this defeat, just as it did in 1964 and 1997. For the Lib Dems, though, the future is much
more uncertain.
Wednesday, May 06, 2015
Five reasons why I'm backing a Lab/Lib coalition
Yesterday I outlined why I don't think the current Tory-Lib Dem coalition deserves to be re-elected. Here's why I hope a Lab-Lib coalition will emerge in its place.
1. Labour has fought the most positive campaign. Call me old-fashioned if you like, but I still believe that politics should be about sharing a vision of a better world rather than promising to protect us from nightmares - the politics of hope versus the politics of fear. While the Tories have relied on negative campaigning and the tired old tactic of better-the-devil-you-know, Labour has set out a positive case for change, outlining how they would change this country for the better. Even if you don't agree with all the details, this is the right way to do politics and it deserves to succeed.
2. Ed Miliband has exceeded expectations and has demonstrated that he is ready to be Prime Minister. Despite being subjected to the most disgraceful and frankly juvenile abuse from certain elements of the national press, the Labour leader has held up well under pressure. As someone said on Twitter today: "I’m sure Cameron eats a bacon sandwich really well. But he’s overseen a million people visiting food banks. I know which matters more." Ed M may never have that easy rapport with the public that Tony Blair had in his pomp, but in a contest with Cameron he wins hands down, simply because he is more in touch with the lives of ordinary voters.
3. Labour is the only major party committed to repealing the 2012 Health and Social Care Act. I've heard it argued by health service professionals that the horse has already bolted on this, and that the unleashing of private sector forces into the NHS cannot now be undone. Well, maybe, but it can be contained. The Health and Social Care Act - that massive, top-down reorganisation the Tories promised us would never happpen - was a deceitful piece of legislation that set out a route-map towards a system of privatised health care that few people actually want. It needs to go so we can rebuild our NHS according to the principles on which it was founded.
4. Contrary to the received wisdom, Labour's policies are actually more business-friendly than those of the Tories. People who do not realise this are faling to see the elephant in the room, namely David Cameron's commitment to an in-out referendum on European Union membership in 2017. The uncertainty created by this will wreck the so-called 'recovery' and prolong the economic pain for those households, businesses and regions who have yet to see its benefits. On the question of the deficit, there is very little to choose between the two big parties and, since 2010, Labour has moved significantly in the direction of greater fiscal responsibility.
5. In coalition with the Liberal Democrats, Ed Miliband would lead a social democratic rather than a socialist government. Nick Clegg has been absolutely right in this campaign to position the Lib Dems as a moderating influence on left and right, maintaining his equidistance between the two big parties and appealing to the centre ground which is where British politics should continue to be anchored. Many see Clegg as a Tory collaborator but to be fair, he has made it clear he will talk first to whichever party has the most seats. For the other reasons set out above, I hope - and pray - that this will be Labour.
1. Labour has fought the most positive campaign. Call me old-fashioned if you like, but I still believe that politics should be about sharing a vision of a better world rather than promising to protect us from nightmares - the politics of hope versus the politics of fear. While the Tories have relied on negative campaigning and the tired old tactic of better-the-devil-you-know, Labour has set out a positive case for change, outlining how they would change this country for the better. Even if you don't agree with all the details, this is the right way to do politics and it deserves to succeed.
2. Ed Miliband has exceeded expectations and has demonstrated that he is ready to be Prime Minister. Despite being subjected to the most disgraceful and frankly juvenile abuse from certain elements of the national press, the Labour leader has held up well under pressure. As someone said on Twitter today: "I’m sure Cameron eats a bacon sandwich really well. But he’s overseen a million people visiting food banks. I know which matters more." Ed M may never have that easy rapport with the public that Tony Blair had in his pomp, but in a contest with Cameron he wins hands down, simply because he is more in touch with the lives of ordinary voters.
3. Labour is the only major party committed to repealing the 2012 Health and Social Care Act. I've heard it argued by health service professionals that the horse has already bolted on this, and that the unleashing of private sector forces into the NHS cannot now be undone. Well, maybe, but it can be contained. The Health and Social Care Act - that massive, top-down reorganisation the Tories promised us would never happpen - was a deceitful piece of legislation that set out a route-map towards a system of privatised health care that few people actually want. It needs to go so we can rebuild our NHS according to the principles on which it was founded.
4. Contrary to the received wisdom, Labour's policies are actually more business-friendly than those of the Tories. People who do not realise this are faling to see the elephant in the room, namely David Cameron's commitment to an in-out referendum on European Union membership in 2017. The uncertainty created by this will wreck the so-called 'recovery' and prolong the economic pain for those households, businesses and regions who have yet to see its benefits. On the question of the deficit, there is very little to choose between the two big parties and, since 2010, Labour has moved significantly in the direction of greater fiscal responsibility.
5. In coalition with the Liberal Democrats, Ed Miliband would lead a social democratic rather than a socialist government. Nick Clegg has been absolutely right in this campaign to position the Lib Dems as a moderating influence on left and right, maintaining his equidistance between the two big parties and appealing to the centre ground which is where British politics should continue to be anchored. Many see Clegg as a Tory collaborator but to be fair, he has made it clear he will talk first to whichever party has the most seats. For the other reasons set out above, I hope - and pray - that this will be Labour.
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