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Last 3 Posts @ October 10, 2008 3:02:59 PM EDT

"Best brains" problem (14 mins ago)

I am sure I heard Digby Jones on Radio Four say the government should be careful in their regulation of the financial sector as the "best brains" will flee the country...

Martin Eaglestone

Norwegian MP Didn't See That Coming! (23 mins ago)

So a Norwegian MP is standing down after spending thousands of pounds worth of tax payers cash on phoning fortune tellers for advice. I bet she didn't see that comin...

KERRON CROSS - The Voice of the Delectable Left

On the attack… (32 mins ago)

Tygerland

Friday, July 11, 2008

Hypocrisy over Haltemprice - 5 comments

I think this is a fairly typical response from Labour bloggers to David Davis's by-election victory:
The man, David Davis, is a complete nutter, having put his constituents of Haltemprice and Howden through a phoney by-election for the sake of his own super ego. The man who thought 42 days to question terrorist suspects was too much and violated the principles of Magna Carta was nevetheless happy to support 28 days. This nutter wasted money on a phoney election merely to satisfy his personal ego. This by-election proved nothing except confirm its status as a safe Tory seat.
As such it's a thoroughly unreasonable collection of speculative personal attacks and irrelevant or unsubstantiated claims, that dodges the issues in order to gain some measly political advantage.

You'd almost think Labour bloggers supported the 42-day detention proposal. If I had to sum up the reaction from last month, I can't remember more than one or two favourable responses from bloggers who weren't Councillors or MPs.

The point I tried to make last month was that (aside from Davis's character being irrelevant to the issue at hand) that this was an opportunity for us all to combat the illiberal attitudes of the general public, that some of us believe were the real driver of the 42-day proposal, and others in a similar vein. If Davis did succeed in changing attitudes, at least in Haltemprice and Howden, then good - liberal attitudes are in all of our best interests, whatever party we associate with.The idea that you can temporarily breach your own deeply-held values for political advantage is not one I want to be associated with.

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Friday, June 13, 2008

David Davis' resignation - 11 comments

Call me wet behind the ears, but I've been surprised by the amount of hostility directed at David Davis, who (for the benefit of future readers) resigned today as Shadow Home Secretary - even from those who ought to agree with him in their opposition to the 42-day detention plan.

He's an MP, elected to support his party, and to express his own views, and the concerns of his constituents. Clearly he's already addressing points (1) and (2), and it's apparent that he's prompting a by-election to address point (3). Seems perfectly reasonable to me. Besides, elections are a Good Thing, and democracy has no price, so to talk of 'frivolity' and 'wastes of taxpayer's money' shows a grotesque attitude to democracy. It isn't a risk-free strategy either: seats only appear to be 'safe' until a remarkable independent candidate comes along and turns the election on its head; and as I keep saying, vote tallies start at zero and increment, they don't decrement - party majorities are no more that statistics.

If these initial reactions are anything to go by, Labour's big guns are going to take a depressingly contemptuous line. Take this, from David Blunkett:
David Davis's behaviour is a pure piece of political theatre [...] This is childish and immature and it is not worthy of a major political party to engage in such theatre.
As good an advertisement as I've heard not to enter party politics (if one were needed). Thanks, DB.

Equally tawdry, I feel, would be the decision not to field a Labour candidate at the forthcoming Haltemprice and Howden by-election. That would be a decision bound to salt the earth for the local CLP and the PPC, who might well pay the price at a local level for years to come. Whatever our individual views, Labour, nationally, has made its decision, and so it must stick up for its policy, whether that allows it to hold its vote, or costs it a deposit. The Lib Dems are entitled not to stand if they fully support the Conservatives, but Labour can't withdraw too, leaving one side of the argument/electorate with no (mainstream) representative.

Returning to the democratic point: needless to say, the 42-day plan doesn't cease to be illiberal or (probably) unnecessary even in the event that the electorate does back it (the interventions of the loathsome Kelvin McKenzie and Rupert Murdoch are surely proof enough - via Phil), but if some good is to come out of this affair, it would come from Davis and the Lib Dems eroding that apparent public support, and changing public attitudes for the better.

Don't, by any means, take that as an endorsement, but the task for Labour activists during this by-election is the same as it ever was: to battle illiberal and conservative ideas and values, with liberal, cooperative, and socialist ones. It would be a shame if, in doing so, we couldn't hope for a Labour MP to be elected.

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Sunday, March 18, 2007

Speke by-election - 1 comment

This hasn't attracted much attention until today (considering Labour won...), but it was a very impressive one, back on March 8th, the result being:

Colin Strickland (Lab) 1,984 (gain)
Lynnie Williams (Lib Dem) 1,218
Steven Greenhalgh (BNP) 281
Cherry Fitzsimmons (Green) 68
Brenda Coppell (Cons) 54
Mark Bill (UKIP) 49
Turnout: 28.76%

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