Tag: “David Cameron”
Boris win a boost for Cameron – I don’t think so
Posted on 5 May 2012 | 11:05am
It is remarkable how slowly the media moves from a pre-ordained narrative that turns out to be wrong. Boris Johnson having failed to win anything like the support being predicted for him, the win over Ken Livingstone is being seen both as a big step towards Boris being the next Tory leader, and a rare [...]
Game on, and if Tories think this is about communications, the game is definitely winnable for Labour
Posted on 4 May 2012 | 9:05am
I hope someone at Tory Central Office is minting a medal for Michael Fallon, the MP who so gamely trots from studio to studio defending whatever Cameron-Osborne shambles happens to be trending at the time. But last night, as he sat with others waiting for election results to come in, there came a little sign [...]
Don’t fall for Boris Johnson’s ‘I’m not a Tory’ shtick
Posted on 2 May 2012 | 9:05am
So tomorrow London decides whether Boris Johnson gets another bash at being Mayor, or Ken Livingstone a return to City Hall. Whizzing through my morning media brief, I see Ed Miliband correctly exposing the strategy that Johnson is hoping will get him over the line. This from the Independent Page 17… Ed Miliband has accused [...]
Cameron and Osborne should heed Alistair Darling’s advice
Posted on 28 April 2012 | 5:04pm
I don’t suppose the two arrogant unapologetic posh boys who don’t know the price of milk (copyright Nadine Dorries) would ever listen to Alistair Darling. But they could do worse. Writing in the FT today, Labour’s last Chancellor sets out his ideas for how his successor George Osborne might get the economy going, including investment [...]
Leveson drama will run and run, but double dip recession is event of the week
Posted on 27 April 2012 | 9:04am
A Tory strategist (now there’s a rare bird) is quoted in the FT today as saying ‘I don’t think there will be a permanent impact [from recent troubles] if we can show we are a competent government.’ That may be true, though I doubt it; may be wishful thinking, indeed clearly it is; but the [...]
No Prime Minister … media blitz was wrong thing to do
Posted on 24 April 2012 | 7:04am
No, no, no Prime Minister … that media blitz yesterday was not the thing to do. I mean they were perfectly nice pictures, jacket off in the Today programme studio, striding red box in hand around Number 10, hitting said red box on train, factory visit, sit down with Nick Robinson in nice industrial setting, [...]
If Sarkozy loses, Cameron should reflect that omnipresent hyperactivity may have been a factor
Posted on 19 April 2012 | 10:04am
If, as is being widely suggested, Francois Hollande wins the French elections, and Nicolas Sarkozy becomes a rare, single-term President, there are one or two lessons David Cameron might try to draw on … once he has repaired the damage done to Anglo-French relations by effectively endorsing Sarko. The main lesson relates to hyperactivity. When [...]
Backlash on charitable giving latest sign Budget was not thought through
Posted on 11 April 2012 | 8:04am
It was on April 1 (apologies for inability to cut and paste links on the iPad but nobody has taught me yet!) that I suggested we should ‘watch out for a backlash on charitable and philanthropic giving.’ At the time, the debate was focusing on pasties and the so-called granny tax, but it was a [...]
NASA climate change scientist exposes world leaders’ abdication of resposibility
Posted on 6 April 2012 | 1:04pm
I like the sound of this NASA scientist Prof Jim Hansen, who intends to use his acceptance speech for a major award on Tuesday to issue a fresh warning about man-made climate change. It has been mind-boggling to witness the way that climate change denial has become a right-wing political virility symbol, like low taxes, [...]
Media finally catching up with public’s sense that Cameron unsure what he stands for
Posted on 4 April 2012 | 7:04am
Even accepting that the media’s shift to a more negative take on the government is in part dictated by David Cameron’s decision to set up the Leveson Inquiry, he would be wise not to dismiss the change as an act of revenge pure and simple. Because in many ways I believe the media, which has [...]

The Burden of Power