Rather chuffed to be able to announce that my teaser piece on the forthcoming pamphlet by the Labour Uncut gang, of which I have written a chapter, yesterday was the subject of the lead front page story in the Independent by Andrew Grice. You can see the full analysis with data at Labour Uncut here and the pamphlet will… Continue reading Revamping Labour’s union ties could help Ed Miliband
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Syria: the hangover
If Westminster is often a bubble, at frenzied times like last Thursday’s Syria vote it becomes even more so. Everyone is waiting for the latest news. What can easily happen, and what seems to have, is for Parliament to forget about the world outside entirely until it is over. As the Telegraph reports, some Labour MPs, as… Continue reading Syria: the hangover
My God, what have I done?
It’s been a whirlwind forty-eight hours. First Cameron came up with a motion supporting military intervention in Syria. Then Miliband went in with a softening amendment and said he would not support the government unless the amendment was passed. Cameron softened his motion to accomodate Miliband. Then, to Cameron’s apparent fury, Miliband declined to support it anyway, thus… Continue reading My God, what have I done?
The next London mayorals are upon us already and strewn with elephant traps for Labour
My eighth piece for the Independent, on Miliband’s unappetising road to the next London mayoral elections, is here.
Oh Vladimir, so much to answer for
A couple of things about Russia, following my piece about Putin’s recent gay-bashing. Firstly the pole-vaulter Isinbayeva, who gave the following long and excruciating interview about how she really did not see why gay people should be allowed to go around proselytising their “sick” ways. The cynics among us might think it may not be long… Continue reading Oh Vladimir, so much to answer for
The farce of the “Bradford Spring” is over, but we should not forget its lesson for Labour
Ah, the excitement of the “the most sensational victory in British political history”, as its author so modestly put it, has all lasted a tragically short time, hasn’t it? The surprising thing is not that George Galloway seems to have tired of Bradford after less than a year and a half in the job as… Continue reading The farce of the “Bradford Spring” is over, but we should not forget its lesson for Labour
Gay rights are human rights and we have the right to defend them everywhere. No ifs, no buts
Well, it had to come. Over the last year or two, the far left has shown its tolerance of sexism of the most unpleasant variety, thanks to the treatment of rape allegations about “Comrade Delta” in the SWP, among other things. Similarly the tolerance to anti-Semitism shown by some of those who purport merely to campaign… Continue reading Gay rights are human rights and we have the right to defend them everywhere. No ifs, no buts
A Falkirk coda: who leaked?
One last matter on Falkirk, which did not get raised in yesterday’s piece yet intrigues me, is the following riddle it leaves behind. Who was close enough to Miliband to see the full Falkirk report; disloyal enough to leak something damaging to Labour; and who was far-left enough to have thought of Seumas Milne as the ideal… Continue reading A Falkirk coda: who leaked?
On Falkirk, and unfinished business
There is a distant rumbling going on within the labour movement, with parliament in recess and the media in silly season, which will surely last until conference. It may, in fact, last until next Spring’s special conference. Or it may even last until the next general election. Perhaps thanks to the timely intervention of the… Continue reading On Falkirk, and unfinished business
Turkey: just how compatible are democracy and Islamism?
My piece for Progress on developments in Turkey (and Egypt) is here.