Eagle Eye

Today's prize for environmentally friendly journalism goes to The Guardian, which managed to lead its front page with the recycled story that Jack Straw would like us to think that he tried at the last moment to dissuade Tony Blair from joining the Iraq invasion.
Of course, it is of interest that Straw has been listed to give evidence to the Iraq Inquiry, at which he will presumably be asked about his note of16 March 2003. But a front-page lead? That might imply that the story of the note itself is new, an inference some people inevitably draw.
It is not. It was reported by John Kampfner in his book Blair's Wars, serialised in the Mail on Sunday on 14 September 2003.
It would be an absolute effing disaster if Gordon Brown was PM, and I'll do anything in my power to effing stop him.
(It turned out that everything in his power was not enough.)
Thanks to Nick Robinson, here is the transcript of Hutton on the Eddie Mair programme on BBC Radio 5 Live:
Mair: You said it. Didn't you?
Hutton: I did say it. Yes, I did. Yeah. Let's just get that over with.
Mair: And what do you think of him now?
Hutton: My opinion has changed of Gordon. I think he has - and certainly, in all of his dealings with me, showed nothing but, sort of, a great deal of support and help during my time as a minister. So I personally have no criticisms of Gordon's performance as prime minister at all. I think he has been a tremendously hard-working man, who has really put, as I said, his heart and soul into it.
A proper, thinking Oakeshottian who has been an intellectual and moral pioneer in an environment at times brutally hostile to him. That's Andrew Sullivan. I'm a big fan. He makes it his business to speak truth to power. Precisely because he doesn't allow tribal immaturity to obscure his thinking, and precisely because he is, as The Daily Dish boasts, "of no party or clique", Sullivan is the most important and most effective critic of the Republican Party alive today. I challenge any conservative who thinks themselves reasonable to find dispute with his excoriation of the increasingly disappointing Bill Kristol. His post is brave, and so correct that I'm going to copy and paste the whole fabulous thing.
Neoconservatism In A Word: "Fight"
Bill Kristol, whose view of politics is pretty much as Trotskyite as the far left used to be, does not see healthcare reform as a means of addressing a serious political, economic and moral challenge. It is, of course, just one more battle in the eternal ideological and partisan warfare he believes in. His current advice to the GOP is the same as the advice he has given for a couple of decades now:
*** Keep fighting on health care. Fight for the next few days in the Senate. Fight the conference report in January in the Senate and the House. Start trying to repeal the worst parts of the bill the moment it passes, if it does... The criticism of the Obama administration needs to be broad-based, because you never know just what issue is going to take off, and because the opposition needs to knit together all those who object to the Europeanization of America... So: Fight on with respect to health care. Fight on other fronts. And recruit new fighters. In a word: Fight. ***
Note that the issues as such are largely opportunistic - "you never know just what issue is going to take off".
Just keep punching out the outrages, constantly wage scorched earth resistance to any reform of any major problem, find any issue, any appointee, any opening to wage a campaign of brutal oppositionism ... and for what? To win against liberals. That's the goal. Yes, that's all they have. And that will make them happy enough. It's a game after all, isn't it? Healthcare reform? The GOP has no way to insure the uninsured and is now pledging to keep Medicare untouched to foil any cost controls. Climate change? Again, there's no valid alternative, no brave championing of a carbon tax as a better alternative to cap and trade, just an incessant attempt to throw mud and scandal at any of those concerned with global warming. The deficit? If it grows, attack Obama. If it shrinks a little and joblessness rises, attack Obama. There's no real coherence here, just bellicosity, limitless partisanship, profound cynicism and fanaticism.I saw Iain Dale had a taxi-driver moment when Ipsos-MORI reported a 17-point Conservative lead rather than the three-point gap that was rumoured:
How can you take seriously a polling organisation which shows such huge monthly fluctuations? The last three months have shown the Tory lead go from 17% down to 6% and back up to 17%. Ridiculous.
Now some of the comrades are excited about today's ComRes poll in The Independent, which shows a nine-point lead, as opposed to the 17 points in its previous poll for The Independent on Sunday.
Those of you who do not know about sampling variation, look it up on Google. Those of you who do, look at Anthony Wells's UK Polling Report Polling Average. The Conservative lead is at 12 points, as opposed to, er, 12 points a week ago, and 14 points two months ago.
Update: Anthony Wells emails to say that he had not updated his average at the time I wrote this, so the Tory lead is not 13 points as I wrote a few hours ago but an earth-shattering 12 points. The trouble is that even if the Daily Mail put "No Change in Underlying Poll Trend!" in two-inch-high type on the front page, no one would think it much of a story.
If you are even remotely interested in pop music today you will know that Rage Against The Machine, an American rock band, have stormed the charts this week after a viral campaign on Facebook pitched them against Joe Mcelderry, the X Factor winner.
Following people’s comments online it would appear that there is much cynicism from camp Mcelderry who feel that RATM’s success is undermined because they are on the same record label as Mcelderry. They have, I feel, rather drastically missed the point. The big, giant, screaming point being that music is categorically not about money. Yes, the music industry is about money, but music itself is not. I wonder if these sore losers know how the industry works. Maybe they think that Simon Cowell’s are behind every band/musician on the planet. Maybe they think that all it takes is a few weeks training and performing on telly before you’re made. Maybe they don’t know that most jobbing bands, the ones lucky enough to be signed to and supported by a label, are in hundreds of thousands of pounds worth of debt to their label for years before they make any money, if they ever do. Maybe they think song writing takes place in a glamorous studio by a guy that lives on Butler’s Wharf. Maybe they don’t know that most of it takes place in someone’s bedroom that they can barely afford to light or heat. Maybe they don’t know that an artist has only him/herself and if they are lucky a supportive friend, partner or family member, to help the keep the dream alive. Why do they keep the dream alive? Because a true artist has no choice, it’s in them and they have to get it out. It’s certainly not for the money. But maybe hundreds of thousands of people across the country don’t know that.
One Facebook comment said: “There’s no such thing as a free lunch, they’re (RATM) doing it for the money.” Well, actually it doesn’t work like that. Most bands are working for minus nothing for the larger part of their career. Rage Against The Machine were certainly not picked out of oblivion and thrust into fame and fortune, they worked as hard as most lawyers, doctors, teachers etc to get there but the difference is, they had no guarantee of a job at the end of it. They gambled with their livelihood and that’s brave. Now, in the case of RATM it paid off, but for thousands of musicians, the gamble doesn’t pay off. Ever. They get dropped, they get shelved, they get messed around by their label, they get the soul pummelled out of them by men in suits, most never get signed at all. And it’s the fault of the British public for not exploring the wonderful range of music that’s out there and instead filling their Christmas stockings with whatever has the budget behind it to be advertised the most. It’s laziness in part, but mostly it’s just ignorance, we just don’t know what a wonderful world is out there, musically speaking or politically speaking. It’s a shame because we’re the ones missing out on some truly spectacular music and the music industry suffers, jobs are lost, creativity is crushed and Simon Cowell and his cabinet of X Factor winners will rule the world unless we get out there and have a look around at what else is available.
I’m not a hater, all congratulations to Cowell, Burke, Boyle, Lewis and Mcelderry, they play the game well, but it’s up to us to give them someone to play against. Joe Mcelderry has been gifted with a beautiful voice, but he’s not put in the hard graft that RATM have and he never will. He’s not even put in the hard graft that Simon Cowell himself has, who started from very meagre beginnings in the post room at EMI. This is why it’s so vital to support the music industry, like the British public did last week. Yes, RATM got some money, but they worked jolly hard for it and therefore deserve it more than Joe. And while I’m sure Joe worked hard too, it just doesn’t compare.
Simon Cowell spoon-feeds us music in the same way that our government spoon-feeds us our lives. It’s shiny, bland and PR’d. We are told what to like, so we like it. We get fleeting glimpses of a world beyond, where exciting bands like Mumford and Sons are operating on a different plane, where we are not followed, watched and tagged by government officials, where we feel like our vote counts, but there is so much Joe Mcelderry and Alexandra Burke in the way that we can’t see for trying. I’ve come to the conclusion that those in camp X Factor can’t be blamed for their lack of knowledge about real music, because they just don’t hear it. (Radio 1, I’m onto you too, you have a lot to answer for, but that’s another article.) Yes, X Factor is good entertainment for the dark winter months, but it can’t be allowed to drown our once great and groundbreaking music industry..
Music has always mirrored politics, but over the last ten years it’s seemed that people just can’t be bothered. With this years number one I predict a change in the mood of the generation that politics forgot, the millions who marched against an illegal war, remember them? The ones that have been ignored and who don’t even bother to vote any more because they feel like their voice is not heard. The ones that are so desperate that they have voted BNP because they just don’t know where else to turn. ‘Horrific’ is the only appropriate word for that particular state of affairs. The reason this Christmas’s number one is so exciting is that it shows a depressed, suppressed and repressed nation flexing their combined muscle in a small but significant act of independence which we have been stripped of by New Labour. Yes, it’s a drop in the ocean against it all; the recession, global warming, the war, the unbearable and suffocating bureaucracy, the bland, PR’dness of it all, but you’ve got to start somewhere.
The televised election debates, that is. Number 199 of my Questions to Which the Answer is No is asked by Peter Hoskin at Coffee House.
Lord Lawson of Blaby: Access denied
I'm a little confused. Those who don't believe that climate change is being forced by human action object to being called "climate change deniers". It's a nasty attempt to associate them with "holocaust deniers" apparently.
But then the grand panjandrum of the global warming naysayers, Nigel Lawson, comes out with this in an article for The Wall Street Journal today:
"The world's political leaders, not least President Barack Obama and Prime Miniser Gordon Brown, are in a state of severe, almost clinical, denial. While acknowledging that the outcome of the United Nations climate-change conference in Copenhagen fell somewhat short of their demand for a legally binding, enforceable and verifiable global agreement on emissions reductions by developed and developing countries alike, they insist that what has been achieved is a breakthrough and a decisive step forward."
So it's rude to call someone a denier over climate change science, but not over climate change politics? Or are we talking semantics? Is it acceptable to accuse someone of being "in a state of denial", but not a "denier"? Well, that would be a view. But those who subscribe to it had better not complain in future about the tyranny of political correctness.
photo: Conservative Home
“MBA students come out with, ‘The customer’s always right,’” he says, adopting a whiny voice. “Horseshit! The customer’s usually wrong! And, ‘My staff is my most important asset.’ Bullshit! Staff is usually your biggest cost!”
Via Marbury.
Illustration: James Ferguson
How come the finest diplomatic and political minds in the West didn't see the Chinese veto coming? Copenhagen has been planned for two years and yet no one seems to have thought to find out if the leaders of the country producing the most greenhouse gas would sign up for what most other countries would accept. Or, if the Chinese said they would, whether they meant it.
I recommend Michael McCarthy's report and question-and-answer guide in The Independent on Sunday today. Also worth reading: the magnificent pessimistic rage of Polly Toynbee (in the course of which she proclaims social democracy as an optimistic creed), and Tim Collard at the Telegraph, stating what should have been obvious: don't blame the Chinese; they are part of the solution.
The relative failure of the Copenhagen summit has a more parochial implication: Gordon Brown won't get the credit he so richly deserves for a feat of negotiating energy and skill that helped to solve all the main issues apart from the big one, the great stonewall of China.
The lazy assumptions that I shared - that Brown hates international meetings, that he is shy, awkward and rude, and therefore a poor negotiator - turn out to be wrong. I am told by his spin doctors that he used his relationship with Barack Obama to help save the summit as it approached meltdown on Wednesday and Thursday. They tell me that he chaired difficult meetings brilliantly, and that he chaired so many of them, with such energy and stamina, that he seemed to be directing the whole show.
What is really extraordinary is that they are right. Just because they are the Prime Minister's spin doctors does not mean that they should always be disbelieved. Because I have also spoken to other people who have no interest in talking Brown up but who have seen him in action. They say that he is really good at the multi-dimensional chess of international summitry; that, as chairman of many of the key meetings, he has proved himself an effective judge of summit psychology, allowing people to feel that they have had their say but keeping the business moving along. Obviously, the UK, as a part of the European Union delegation, had limited leverage on the geopolitical power play between the US and China, but that limited hand was played, I am told, as well as it could have been.
What a productive error that was. I expressed myself clumsily in The Independent on Sunday last weekend. Don Paskini responded on his blog and at Liberal Conspiracy. I tried to express myself more clearly here:
The bonus tax is popular in the short term (on the "tax anybody but me" principle), but I think it will have a negative effect on perceptions of Labour over the long term because it makes the party look as if it doesn’t like success.
Then everyone else joined in. Anthony Wells chipped in at UK Polling Report. Sunder Katwala had a go at Next Left. Tom Harris was typically forceful in his "Class war is for losers". I also had an intelligent commenter called mjtmjt (his real name), who came in on Paskini's side of the argument.
Daniel Finkelstein had the last word yesterday, giving me the sort of name-check that I would put up in lights at the top of this blog if I knew how, and endorsing Wells. As he says, Wells summed up the whole spat brilliantly thus:
Polls on whether the public agree with a policy or not do not always tell the whole story. When looking at a policy there is the direct effect of whether people agree with it or not, and the indirect effect of what associating themselves with that policy will do to a party’s image.
The example I normally use is not taxing the wealthy, but immigration. Polls consistently show that immigration is an issue people care about, and that they want harsher restrictions upon it.
Surely immigration would be a winning issue for the Conservatives? Not necessarily, since they have also spent the last four years trying to change their image to look less reactionary and “nasty”. If they made anti-immigration a key message, it might itself be popular, but would risk making them look bigoted and unpleasant.
It’s the same with taxing the rich. If tax hikes are necessary, polls always show that people much prefer them to hit the rich. Equally, penalising bankers is a route to easy popularity.
The downside is that it risks making Labour look like a party that doesn’t like success or aspiration, an image that Tony Blair managed to shed.
The modern media now has a collective oppositional self-interest not just to particular parties or class interests, as in the past, but to the very idea of government and politics itself.
A super pedant takes issue with my earlier post attempting to out-pedant Paul Waugh on the spelling of Solicitor General. He said hyphen; I said not. It turns out that Hansard says Solicitor-General. But then it not only also hyphenates Advocate-General but Attorney-General too.
Has she got one? Patricia Scotland (left) and Vera Baird.
I think we put that down to one of the charming eccentricities of ancient British tradition.
Ed Balls, the Schools Secretary, gives us dividing-line politics at its most crude in his column for Tribune today. It is not the Tribune site yet, but is here. This is the key passage:
The Tories ... want to cut the deficit faster. That leaves them with a revenue gap of billions of pounds each year, which can only be filled by across the board cuts to public services, a massive rise in VAT or most likely a combination of the two.
Of course, raising VAT is an option Ministers have been advised to consider in the past. In 2001 when we needed to raise billions of pounds to transform the National Health Service, there were some who favoured putting up VAT rather than national insurance.
But in 2001, Gordon and I rejected that advice. We said if you put up VAT, it's going to hit people's bills for clothes, petrol, household goods, and other essentials. It's going to affect millions of pensioners and people who are out of work, and because VAT is the only tax which everyone pays the poorest people in society will end up paying the most as a proportion of their income. We said the fair thing to do is to increase National Insurance, so that only people who are in work will pay, and the people who can afford the most will pay the most. That’s the same choice the government made last week.
The truth is it's the Tories who are the party of VAT. They doubled it to 15 per cent in 1979, raised it again when they abolished the Poll Tax in 1991, then tried to charge the full rate of VAT on domestic fuel and power in 1993.
I like the "Gordon and I" - in 2001 Balls was only Brown's chief economic adviser. But the attempt to paint the Conservatives as "the party of VAT" is (a) unsubtle and (b) an implied confirmation of reports that "Gordon and I" forced the Chancellor to reject a VAT rise in favour of another hike in National Insurance in last week's pre-Budget report.
Balls has a fair point that NI is more progressive - better related to ability to pay - than VAT, but against that it is also true that it is a "tax on jobs". (Nor is it wise to remind us of Labour's defeat of VAT on domestic fuel in 1993, one of the most ungreen and retrograde policiesof the past two decades.) Whoever forms the next government, all taxes will have to rise, including VAT.
All taxes have drawbacks. This is one dividing line that politics does not need.
Seriously, though, does anyone (apart from Blairsupporter) even read this constant rubbish any longer?
Top pedantry from Paul Waugh. Reporting on the Solicitor-General's dog, he asks of Vera Baird's title: "Anyone know why it's hyphenated, but Attorney General isn't?"
I can answer that one. It is not hyphenated. Neither the Solicitor General nor the Attorney General take a hyphen, according to the Law Officers' website, and the house style of most newspapers, including The Independent titles. Nor does the Advocate General of Scotland, or that of Northern Ireland, when it is created.
Who said the internet dumbs us down?
Three years ago, then prime minister Tony Blair promised his Israeli counterparts that the legislation allowing private citizens in Britain to obtain arrest warrants for foreigners suspected of carrying out war crimes would be amended. And he meant it. No one had to point out to Mr. Blair that with the wars taking place in Iraq and Afghanistan, he, his colleagues and the officers of the British Army and their American allies could also find themselves in the dock. Blair's successor Gordon Brown has also made similar promises.
So why was this amendment never put into effect? Not because the Labour government could not find the necessary majority in parliament. And the leaders of the Conservative Party have also privately assured the Israeli embassy in London that it would support such a motion. No, the British government hesitated and prevaricated because they knew full well just how downright unpopular such a move would be. They would have been eviscerated by the local press, by every single human-rights movement, by the Archbishops, the professors and by the great majority of their own grassroots memberships. For a weak and deeply unpopular government, this was too much to contemplate. In other words, while Israel may be able to comfort itself with a degree of sympathy from Britain's political leadership, it has lost the understanding of the rest of the country's opinion makers.
Some of you may be asking, So what? Britian's days as a superpower are long over. True, but in the arena of international media and public opinion, Britain still punches way above its natural weight. The maiden speech given by Catherine Ashton - who is from Britain and the European Union's new high representative for foreign affairs and security policy - in which she roundly criticized Israeli policies is just the latest striking example. The response from Israeli politicians, a proposal to boycott British products, already signed by a third of the Knesset, is risible.
Just as the connection Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman made between global anti-Semitism and the arrest warrants in his speech on Wednesday is pointless, neither is another round of moaning about Israel's "hasbara failure" going to get us anywhere. The point at which a change in PR tactics might have remedied Israel's international situation has long passed.
Another Questions to Which the Answer is No special: this is number 197, the title of a discussion forum hosted by the BBC. It appears that a law is being debated in the Ugandan parliament on Friday that proposes:
The death sentence where the offender has HIV, is a "serial offender" or the other person is under 18;
Imprisonment for seven years for "attempted homosexuality".
I wouldn't want to spend too much time in the Comments, but note that 182 of 395 comments have been rejected by the BBC moderator so far.
Captain Scarlett has been drawn into the Chilcot inquiry now (he looks more and more like that California governor); can the Thunderbirds be far behind?
I think we all know how to do this now, but just to recap in respect of this morning's front-page report in The Independent:
(a) It's not new;
(b) It fits at least one of several interlocking anti-war narratives;
(c) Nobody lied.
Tom Harris is cross. He waited eight and a half years for House Magazine to write a profile of him (pdf), and in its first paragraph it accuses him of having voted for the Social Nemocratic Party.
That'll teach you, you traitorous right-wing splitter. If you vote for a party that is one letter different from the Satanic Nasty Party, you have only yourself to blame if 26 years later some teenager who's never heard of Bill Rodgers makes a typing error.
Photograph: Yes, that was considered media friendly in 1983


