President Obama has “compromised” on everything from financial regulation and healthcare to taxes.Obama claims that all of his “compromising” shows that he’s getting things done. After all, politics was long ago defined as “the art of compromise”.On it…
Posts Tagged ‘Conservatives’
We Can Fix America If We Focus on What ALL Americans – Liberals AND Conservatives – Want
While there are some things that liberals and conservatives will never agree about, there are many things that we already all agree on. Knowing the many things we agree to empowers us, because it helps get us away from the distractions so that we can …
Liberals and Conservatives Question Constitutionality of Healthcare Legislation
Both progressives and conservatives question the constitutionality of the healthcare bill. Specifically, people from across the aisle say that the government cannot force people to buy private health insurance.On the left, progressives such as law sch…
Conservatives and Liberals Agree: Proposed Bank Oversight Bill Will Make Things Worse
When a liberal labor leader and a conservative financial policy analyst unite against something, you know that something is really bad (actually, I don’t believe in the whole false left-right dichotomy; I think its Americans versus those trying to ste…
“There’s a Growing Sense Among Progressives [and Conservatives] That They Have Been Punkedâ€
Paul Krugman wrote in the New York Times yesterday:I don’t know if administration officials realize just how much damage they’ve done themselves with their kid-gloves treatment of the financial industry, just how badly the spectacle of government s…
MI5 ‘recruited al-Qaida sympathisers’
Senior Tory says six men were thrown out of security service amid ‘serious concerns’ and demands investigation
A senior Tory MP today called for an investigation into whether MI5 mistakenly recruited al-Qaida sympathisers.
Patrick Mercer, the chairman of the counter-terrorism subcommittee, said six Muslim recruits had been thrown out of the service because of serious concerns over their pasts.
The MP said he was writing to the home secretary, Alan Johnson, to call for an investigation into the matter.
Two of the six men allegedly attended al-Qaida training camps in Pakistan while the others had unexplained gaps of up to three months in their CVs.
Mercer told the Telegraph that the September 11 2001 terror attacks on the US should have prompted the British government to expand the security services, but this did not happen until the bombings on London’s transport network on 7 July 2005.
“It took an attack on this country for such measures to be started,” he said.
“But at this point it was an unseemly rush of which our enemies, not unsurprisingly, took advantage.”
Mercer added that he was concerned al-Qaida sympathisers who may have infiltrated the security services had not all yet been rooted out.
He said the two recruits who had allegedly been to training camps were not dismissed until after they had been given several weeks of training at MI5, but the others were identified before they started training.
A Home Office spokesman later said: “MI5 takes vetting very seriously indeed. All candidates are required to undergo the most comprehensive process of security vetting in the UK.
“Applicants go through extensive vetting and it is not unusual for a number to drop out or fail at the earliest stages for a variety of reasons.”
Tories can’t wait to make cuts, says Darling
Alistair Darling accused the Conservatives today of “almost wallowing” in the prospect of making deep cuts in public expenditure if they win the next general election and promised he would set out Labour’s own spending priorities before polling day, so that voters would have a clear choice.
The chancellor spoke as David Cameron, the Conservative leader, confirmed the Guardian’s weekend report that the Tories are preparing for a decade of retrenchment. He admitted his party could no longer afford to reverse either Labour’s 50p income tax rate on top earners immediately or to fulfil its pledge to abolish family inheritance tax.
“It’s incredibly daunting, the scale of the challenge and the mess that is being left in terms of the economy and, particularly, the budget balance. I mean it really is a daunting prospect,” Cameron said on BBC1′s Andrew Marr Show. “And that’s why I’ve said, you know, I can’t remember an opposition leader who in opposition has looked the British public in the eye and said ‘you know we are going to cut public spending, we have to do that’.”
In line with his strategy of highlighting his party’s openness – evident in shadow Treasury chief secretary Philip Hammond’s “pain and brickbats” admission in Saturday’s Guardian, Cameron said voters were “crying out actually for someone who’s going to lead them and who’s going to say ‘right, we’re all in this together’.”
The chancellor adopted a different approach to the “hard choices” ahead on tax-and-spending. With the Hammond interview in mind, he said that over the past few days some senior Tories had been “almost wallowing in the prospect of making cuts here, there and everywhere”.
All the parties should now set out their spending priorities “underpinned by values and principles” so that voters could decide whose mandate they should endorse to govern them until 2015, Darling said. “I think there is a distinction between people, if you like the slash and burn mentality, and those who believe that public spending actually can make a difference to the fabric of this country.”
Gordon Brown was still the man with “the values (and) commitment” to win the election despite Thursday’s drubbing at the Norwich North byelection, he said.
A handful of Labour MPs have called for a change of leader since the Conservative Chloe Smith, 27, took the Labour seat on a 16% swing. Brown told the Sunday Mirror: “We’ve got to show that we are a disciplined party getting on with the work of government. I think people are very clear that we’ve got a task ahead. We’ve got work to do to prepare for the autumn.”
Darling claimed international support for Labour’s response to the recession and said the VAT cut from 17.5% to 15% had been right, despite costing the Treasury £1bn a month. It would also be right to restore it next year as conditions eased, he said, a crucial distinction for Labour which claims the backing of leading economists in saying that cuts designed to balance the budget would repeat the mistakes of the 1930s if imposed before the economy was growing steadily again.
For his part Cameron stressed the need to cut deeply and soon, not least to persuade the City that it is safe to finance huge government borrowing, a Tory priority.
Row over Tory link to Polish right grows
The credibility of David Cameron’s new alliance in the European parliament is cast into fresh doubt today as the Observer reveals damning new evidence about its Polish leader’s past.
The allegations, which threaten to do serious damage to the Tory leader, centre on Michal Kaminski, a rightwinger chosen this month to chair the new and supposedly mainstream European Conservatives and Reformists group, of which the 25 Tory MEPs are members.
Opponents of Kaminski, 37, claim he has shown homophobic and antisemitic tendencies at odds with Cameron’s vision of a new tolerant Tory party. In particular, they say Kaminski was active in efforts to block an apology by his countrymen in 2001 for the massacre of hundreds of Jews in Jedwabne in July 1941. He denies this.
Speaking to this paper Kaminski also insisted he had never given an interview to a far-right Polish journal, Nasza Polska, during which he allegedly said Poles should not apologise for the Jedwabne pogrom until the Jews said sorry for collaborating with the Soviets.
“I never did an interview,” Kaminski insisted, adding that he “never tried to stop” an apology. But investigations by the Observer call those denials into doubt. Residents of Jedwabne at the time – backed by Polish journalists who covered the story – say Kaminski is misrepresenting his past role.
Footage of a television news bulletin from 5 March 2001 shows Kaminski reacting to news that the then President Aleksander Kwasniewski was to issue an apology and saying: “I think that Mr President can apologise but for other things. He should withhold apologies for Jedwabne.” The editor in chief of Nasza Polska, Piotr Jakucki, confirmed that Kaminski gave the 2001 interview.
At that time Jedwabne was the focus of international press attention after an American professor, Jan T Gross, published a book, based on the accounts of local people, which concluded that Poles, with the help of some occupying Nazi troops, locked hundreds of Jews into a barn, and set it on fire. But many people in Jedwabne and other parts of Poland, including Kaminski, believed the whole of Poland was being unfairly blamed for an unproven crime.
Maria Kaczynska, then a journalist with Gazeta Wspolczesna, recalls Kaminski’s role. “I remember all of this very vividly. I had to be in Jedwabne to write about him. I saw him in Jedwabne. He had a big folder and he pulled out a file, a petition calling on locals not to participate in apologies to the Jews.”
Kaminski also flatly denies having been involved in attempts to set up a committee aimed at defending the people of Jedwabne. “I had no involvement with them,” he said. However, Stanislaw Michalowski, the town council head at the time, said: “He was trying to set up a committee of Jedwabne defence but he failed.” Rafal Pankowski, who edits Never Again, an anti-racist magazine, said it was “incredible and appalling that Kaminski can lead a group in the European parliament that pretends to be mainstream and tolerant”.
In a letter in today’s Observer Kaminski calls claims that he is antisemitic “distressing” and insists he has spent “a lifetime of work supporting Israel and the Jewish community in Poland”.
“I have made it clear that the actions of some Poles in the Jedwabne massacre were horrific and criminal. The Polish people were also shattered by the Nazis. While we should share in commemoration I do not believe we should make the whole Polish nation culpable for the criminal acts of a small minority.”
Glenys Kinnock, the Europe minister, said: “This is another example of David Cameron’s inexperience and his willingness to leave Britain isolated. In the global downturn, it is more vital than ever that Britain remains at the heart of Europe. He needs to learn that he will not serve Britain’s national interests by resorting to isolation and extremism.”
Tories in Europe
Why has Cameron formed a new EU group?
In 2005, when campaigning to become leader, he promised Eurosceptic MPs he would quit the federalist European People’s party (EPP).
What is the problem?
He struggled to make a new group and ended up with allies on Europe’s hard right.
Does it matter?
Yes. Angela Merkel and Nicolas Sarkozy are angry that Cameron has left the EPP. It strikes important deals before EU summits.
UK Conservatives may need emergency budget after poll
Cameron condemns Labour tactics
• Conservative victor has 7,000-plus majority
• Tory leader says Brown ‘should learn lesson’
David Cameron accused Gordon Brown of running an “utterly despicable” campaign in Norwich North today as he celebrated a byelection victory that saw the Conservatives winning what was a safe Labour seat with a majority of more than 7,000. The Tory leader claimed that Labour had told “untruth after untruth” about opposition spending plans in the contest, which was triggered by the resignation of Ian Gibson after he was banned by his party from standing at the general election because of the way he used parliamentary expenses.
Chloe Smith, who at 27 becomes the youngest MP in Britain, took the seat with a swing from Labour to the Tories of 16.5%. Gibson had a majority of more than 5,000 at the last election and Norwich North has been Labour for 45 of the last 60 years.
Smith took nearly 40% of the vote, although when the result was declared at lunchtime on Friday it was clear that she had picked up fewer votes than the Conservative candidate did in 2005. Labour’s Chris Ostrowski, who was struck down with swine flu in the final 72 hours of the campaign – his wife Katie delivered his speech at the count – got just 18% of the vote, although he managed to see off a challenge from the Liberal Democrats. They had hoped for second place but got 14% of the vote and third place.
The campaign started after the Conservatives declared that they might have to cut public spending in most government departments by 10% after the general election, and Labour attacked Smith aggressively on this issue. One Labour leaflet suggested that the Tories could close up to 10% of schools in the country, and another said the Tories were “threatening to do away with free TV licences and bus passes for the elderly”.
This Cameron, on a celebration visit to Norwich, condemned Labour’s tactics in the strongest terms.
“I have seen a Labour campaign in this byelection that I would describe – and I choose my words carefully – as utterly despicable. If you look at what they said about us it was untruth after untruth,” he said. “Labour should learn a lesson … in this campaign where less than one in five people in a Labour-held constituency came out to vote for the Labour party, that this country has had enough of Gordon Brown’s dividing lines, has had enough of Gordon Brown’s misleading claims about his opponents, has had enough of Gordon Brown’s claims about Tory cuts and Labour investment and all the rest of that rubbish.”
Tory strategists believe that Brown was using the byelection to road-test a “Tory cuts” campaign and that the result shows that this approach does not work.
The byelection was also the first to be held since the controversy about MPs’ expenses erupted. The Tories believe their victory proves that main-party candidates such as Smith, who made transparency a key feature of her campaign, can still see off the threat from independents and minor parties in an era of public scepticism about politicians.
Brown said the result was “disappointing” for Labour but that local factors were to blame. “The voters were clearly torn between their anger and dismay at what has been happening over MPs’ expenses, something that we are trying to clean up, and at the same time the support for the former MP, the Labour MP Ian Gibson who was very popular,” he said. Brown also pointed out that all the main parties attracted fewer votes than they did in the seat in 2005.
The defeat seems unlikely to reopen the debate about Labour’s leadership, at least in public and in the short-term. David Miliband, the foreign secretary, said today: “Everybody understands that the byelection reflects some unique circumstances. It is not evidence for the need of a change in the Labour leadership.”
The Liberal Democrat leader, Nick Clegg, said Brown’s “ham-fisted treatment of a popular MP” had resulted in “disaster for Labour”.
According to a Press Association analysis, Cameron would be swept into 10 Downing Street with a Commons majority of 218 if the result was repeated across the country at the next general election.
Cameron hails ‘historic’ win for Tories in Norwich North
Public has had enough of Gordon Brown, says Tory leader as he congratulates his newest MP, 27-year-old Chloe Smith
David Cameron today hailed the Tories’ byelection victory in Norwich North as a “historic” result for his party and insisted it showed that the public had “had enough” of Gordon Brown.
On his seventh visit to the constituency since the contest began, the Tory leader heaped praise on his newest MP, 27-year-old Chloe Smith, for turning a Labour majority of 5,000 into a majority of more than 7,000 for the Conservatives.
“This in a seat that has been controlled by Labour for 45 of the last 60 years,” he said.
Cameron added: “We have seen an absolutely historic victory in Norwich North. It shows this country has had enough of Gordon Brown’s dividing lies. This country has had enough of misleading claims about opponents. This country has had enough about misleading claims about Tory cuts.”
Cameron spoke after his party inflicted a humiliating byelection defeat on the prime minister.
In the first electoral test in a Westminster seat since the MPs’ expenses scandal rocked the House of Commons, Smith won the Norfolk seat with a majority of 7,348 and became the youngest MP in the Commons.
Labour’s defeat, in a seat held comfortably by the party since 1997, is the fifth byelection blow Brown has suffered since he took over at No 10.
If the result was repeated across the country in a general election, the Tories would be swept to power with a Commons majority of 218.
The Tories would have 434 MPs, with Labour on 107, the Liberal Democrats 79, and others 30.
Responding to the news, the prime minister admitted it was a disappointing result but said no party could take a “great deal of cheer” from it because all three of the main parties had lost votes.
“The Conservative vote went down, the Liberal vote went down; only the fringe parties saw their votes going up,” he said.
“I think it’s a lesson that we have all got to observe. We have got to clean up Westminster politics and we are doing that. But we have got to keep our eye on what is important to people and that is the economic recovery.
“We’ve got to deal with all problems that arise. That includes swine flu, where we’re acting in a calm, organised and ordered way to deal with the problem and help people in every part of the country.”
Cameron visited the constituency six times during the campaign, which was triggered by the resignation of Labour’s Ian Gibson following the MPs’ expenses scandal. The popular MP had a 5,459 majority at the last election in 2005.
Following today’s count, Smith won with a total 13,591 votes. Labour’s Chris Ostrowski, who missed the final days of campaigning due to swine flu, received 6,243 votes and the Liberal Democrat candidate April Pond came third with 4,803 votes.
The UK Independence party pipped the Greens to fourth place by 4,068 votes to 3,350.
The 16.49% swing from Labour to the Conservatives at Norwich North was just short of the 17.61% at last year’s Crewe and Nantwich byelection.
Turnout was 45.88% – down almost a third on the 2005 general election figure of 61.09%.
Labour supporters are thought to have stayed at home in protest against the party’s treatment of Gibson, who stood down as an MP after Labour ruled that he would not be allowed to stand for the party at the next election because he had used parliamentary expenses to fund a flat that he subsequently sold to his daughter at a discount.
In her acceptance speech, Smith paid tribute to her predecessor, saying he was a “strong, independent” voice. She pledged to represent the people of Norwich North with the same honesty and conviction as he had.
“I will be a tireless champion for local people,” she said. “You have invested great responsibility in me. It will be an honour to serve you and I will not let you down.”
Ben Bradshaw, the culture secretary, insisted that the party had been right to take tough action against MPs over their expenses despite today’s result.
Jo Swinson, the 29-year-old Liberal Democrat MP had held the unofficial title of “baby of the house” until today.
Nicholas Stephanopoulos: Do Conservatives Follow the Framers — or the French?
Who declared that the country’s legal system is “poorly organized if a judge enjoys the dangerous privilege of interpreting the law or adding to its…
Labour fears third place in Norwich North byelection
Tories look on course to overturn 5,459 majority, with Labour locked in battle with Lib Dems for second place
Gordon Brown was today bracing himself for the possibility that Labour could be pushed into a humiliating third place in the Norwich North byelection.
As counting began in the first election since the MPs’ expenses scandal rocked Westminster, the Conservatives look on course to overturn the 5,459 majority won in 2005 by Ian Gibson, with Labour locked in a battle with the Liberal Democrats for second place.
David Cameron has visited the constituency six times during the campaign, underlining the opposition’s determination to snatch the seat for its candidate, Chloe Smith.
The election in the Norfolk seat, comfortably held by Labour since 1997, was caused by the resignation of Ian Gibson. But with turnout at 45% – down almost a third on the 2005 general election figure of 61.09% – Labour supporters are thought to have stayed at home in protest against the party’s treatment of Gibson, a popular local figure.
Gibson quit after Labour ruled that he would not be allowed to stand at the next election because he had used parliamentary expenses to fund a flat that he subsequently sold to his daughter at a discount.
Some voters told the party they would not vote for his would-be replacement, 28-year-old Chris Ostrowski, who is recovering from swine flu, because of the way Gibson was treated.
One Labour insider said: “The Conservatives are trying to play down what is happening but I think the reality is that Labour is in a fight with the Lib Dems for second place.
“The turnout has been poor in traditional Labour areas and I think the reality is that the Tories have taken the seat.”
Green sources also said the Conservatives were set for victory.
But a Green party spokesman said: “We are still confident of claiming our best result in a byelection.”
The Tories were confident that Smith, 27, would win, but were downplaying comparisons with the Crewe and Nantwich byelection last year, when the party overturned a Labour majority of more than 7,000, winning by 7,860 with a swing of 17.6%.
“Norwich North is different because, as a result of expenses, the voters are angry with all parties,” one senior Tory said.
Brown acknowledged Labour could suffer at the ballot box and attempted to focus the blame for any poor performance on the “unique” circumstances of the election.
“We are the only political party that has taken as dramatic action as suspending people from the membership of the parliamentary Labour party, and we have done that in a number of cases where we thought that what has happened has been unacceptable,” he said at his Downing Street press conference on Wednesday.
“I hope people who are Labour voters will come out and vote Labour, but I think people do understand the uniqueness of this byelection resulting from the parliamentary events that came before.”
But senior Labour MP Tony Wright accused Brown of making an error by punishing Gibson in an effort to appear “tough” on MPs caught up in the expenses scandal.
Wright, the chairman of the Commons public administration committee and a friend of Gibson’s, told BBC2′s Newsnight: “I do think he was badly treated. I think there were people in the House of Commons who did far worse things than he did.
“I think he was a victim of a moment when all the parties, and all the party leaders, were falling over each other to show how tough they were being.
“One of the fascinating paradoxes of this election is that, if Ian had been standing, a victim of the expenses scandal in this first election since we had the expenses row, he would have walked it by a mile.
“This is another election where people want to kick the politicians and they will kick, particularly, the politicians in power.
“This is different from when you come to a general election, which we will have in about 10 months’ time, where people have to choose a government.”
To compound Labour’s difficulties, its candidate, Chris Ostrowski, was forced to abandon the campaign trail in the run-up to polling day after collapsing with a bout of swine flu and being taken to hospital. He is staying away from the count but his wife is expected to be there in his place. The Liberal Democrats, who were well behind the Tories in 2005, claimed the byelection would be a Tory-Lib Dem contest and that Labour could come third behind their candidate, April Pond.
If either Ostrowski or Smith wins the seat, they will become the youngest MP at Westminster.
The unofficial title of “baby of the house” is currently held by the 29-year-old Liberal Democrat Jo Swinson.
Brown braced for defeat in Norwich
Tory candidate expected to win in poll triggered by resignation of MP caught up in expenses scandal
Gordon Brown is bracing himself for electoral defeat as polls opened today in the Norwich North byelection.
Labour has held the seat comfortably since 1997 but the party is expected to pay a heavy price for the MPs’ expenses controversy in the first Westminster byelection since the Commons was rocked by the scandal.
David Cameron is due to visit the constituency for the sixth time this morning, giving a final boost to a campaign seen by Conservative headquarters as an important test of the party’s ability to withstand a Labour attack based on a “Tory cuts” message.
Unusually, the votes will be counted tomorrow rather than at the close of the polls this evening, partly because staffing a daytime count is easier. This has not happened at a byelection in recent years.
The byelection was caused by the resignation of Ian Gibson, a leftwinger who quit parliament after Labour ruled that he would not be allowed to stand at the next election because he used parliamentary expenses to fund a flat which he subsequently sold at a discount to his daughter.
Gibson, who was popular in the constituency, had a majority of 5,459 in 2005, and Labour’s decision to ban him as a candidate appears to have backfired, with some voters telling the party that they will not vote for his replacement, 28-year-old Chris Ostrowski, because they think Gibson was treated unfairly.
The Conservatives seem confident of victory. But they are nervous of comparisons with the Crewe and Nantwich byelection last year, when the Tories overturned a Labour majority of more than 7,000, winning by 7,860 with a swing of 17.6%.
“Crewe and Nantwich took place against the backdrop of the abolition of the 10p rate of tax and voters were so angry that they came straight over to us. Norwich North is different because, as a result of expenses, the voters are angry with all parties,” said one senior Tory.
Chloe Smith, the 27-year-old Conservative candidate, has responded to the challenge of campaigning in a climate of scepticism about politicians by issuing her own “contract with the people of Norwich North” containing various promises on policy and expenses.
The Liberal Democrats, who were well behind the Tories in 2005, claimed yesterday that it was now a Tory-Lib Dem contest, and that Labour could come third behind their candidate, April Pond.
At the start of the byelection, Labour campaigned aggressively on the theme of “Tory cuts”, in what was seen as a dry run for the general election strategy being planned by Brown. But the Tories believe that this tactic has been unsuccessful in Norwich North because they are winning the argument on public spending nationally.
Labour’s campaign suffered a blow when Ostrowski was taken to hospital with swine flu yesterday. He was recuperating today, but cabinet ministers Andy Burnham and Alan Johnson were in Norwich North campaigning on his behalf.
“I am very confident that we can win this byelection,” said Burnham. Privately, Labour was trying to make life difficult for Cameron by suggesting that anything less than a 10,000 majority would be a disappointment for the Tory leader.
The other candidates are: Peter Baggs (Independent), Thomas Burridge (Libertarian party), Anne Fryatt (None of the Above party), Bill Holden (Independent), Laud Howling (The Official Monster Raving Loony party), Craig Murray (Put An Honest Man into Parliament), Rupert Read (Green), Glenn Tingle (UK Independence party) and Robert West (British National party).




At last, Brown is getting it right
Democracy works, however imperfectly. It is a commonplace that democracies make governments responsive to the peoples’ wishes and demands. They allow for the argument, dissent and deliberation that produces better decision-making. But they do more. They have a capacity for self-correction, renewal and national reinvention. They express the deep wisdom of crowds. They force governments to confront today’s economic and social realities with today’s ideas and nostrums.
British politics – and the country – faces a democratic conundrum. The universal consensus beyond Number 10 is that an exhausted Labour government is facing electoral disaster led by a man unsuited to the task of prime ministership. The Norwich byelection result is but a harbinger of the annihilation that is to come. Gordon Brown has a habitual capacity to overclaim and dissimulate. He believed his own propaganda about escaping boom and bust and bought the neoconservative ideology that financial markets were innovatively efficient, so helping stoke a wild credit boom, a failure he still does not publicly recognise.
Worse, for a democratic politician, he is a lecturer and a bludgeoner rather than an arguer and a persuader. To argue, persuade and lead, you have to respect those with different views whether inside or outside your party. This is not his instinct; instead, he relies on a toxic inner circle to help him dispatch opponents by fair means or foul, as a lengthening list of able former colleagues is testimony. It is a tribute to the Labour party’s death wish that it has not the courage to unseat such a leader.
Other truths will surface over the next 10 months. The essence of democracy is alternative governments. After 13 years of New Labour, the country is ready for change. But the question it will and must ask is whether David Cameron’s Conservatives are the answer to Britain’s problems. To jump from the frying pan into the fire would be stupid. Brown, like the tortured heroes of Shakespearean tragedies, is complex: he has strengths that partly compensate for his all too obvious flaws. One strength is that he is assembling an array of policies that are right. This, along with his astonishing tenacity, makes it so hard for his party to junk him. And here’s the rub. The country may find it has the same difficulty.
One of the Conservative party’s problems is that it does not have the intellectual, political and philosophical wind at its back and it has no surefooted sense of what it should do as the economic and social crisis unfolds. Thus Boris Johnson’s London mayoralty in which little positive has been done. As somebody close to him acknowledged admiringly to me, Boris is the classic Tory. It is as important to occupy power, so denying its use to others, as to do anything constructive with it. That may excite Tory camp followers; others may feel that the point of power is to use it.
The size of the prospective budget deficit has given the Tory leadership a new confidence. The Conservatives’ task is to do what comes naturally: to take an axe to public spending and the regulatory arms of government like OfCom or the Financial Services Authority that displease the Tories’ natural constituencies, whether Rupert Murdoch or a stage army of City traders. Yet under Adair Turner, the FSA has begun to get serious about insider trading, investment banker bonuses and the structure of banks’ business models. Just as it gets its act together, it is to be disbanded and its powers handed to what City minister Paul Myners calls the “bookish” Bank of England, whose record of both spotting asset price bubbles and handling bank crises is dire. Thinking City people concerned about the dominance of speculative finance are shaking their heads in disbelief. Equally, Sky’s competitors and many consumers are no less dismayed that a champion of competition is to be abolished.
Giles Wilkes, chief economist of the Liberal Democrat-leaning thinktank CentreForum, writes in an excellent overview of the current crisis (“A Balancing Act: Fair Solutions to a Modern Debt crisis”) that, while it was right to be tough on public spending and public deficits in 1979, it would be disastrous today. He argues that an economy beset by large private debt, low inflation, negligible private sector demand, collapsing asset prices and a broken banking system faces very different problems to the British economy of 1979. The growth in public debt that the Tories decry has been essential to heading off a full-blown depression.
It is tragic that Cameron and George Osborne have been seduced into primitive Samuel Smiles Thatcherism. They, like Brown, are more complicated than their cartoon depictions. Both have been brave enough to ask tough questions about the priorities of British capitalism and to have tried to open up a debate about how civil society as much as the state should address Britain’s social problems. Now they have regressed to simple anti-state, budgetary conservatism at just the wrong moment.
For over the last few weeks, the subterranean balance of the deep argument has begun to swing back to Brown. As Wilkes says, he got it wrong during the boom, but his fiscal strategy is now right. Brown’s document, “Building Britain’s Future”, is only halfway there, but it is the right trajectory. It was an achievement to persuade both Nissan and Toyota to step up their investment in electric car batteries and hybrids in Britain. It is right to begin the electrification of the railways. He is right to defend the FSA. Although much criticised, Britain must afford the big deficits until the economy plainly bottoms, when it will be right both to raise taxes and then slow spending growth. But not until then. Brown is right to insist there is a fundamental difference of strategy and Osborne and Cameron would have been cleverer not to have allowed this gap to open.
Will they really risk intensifying recession? Will they risk a second financial crisis that would bankrupt the country by mismanaging financial regulation? Do they have a strategy for building the economy? Will Britain leave the EU? These are big questions and in democracies cannot be avoided. If Labour was led by a charismatic leader sure of his or her ground, it would beat this Conservative party. Even with Brown, the Tory margin of victory cannot be taken for granted. There is a deep wisdom in democracies. They tend not to elect governments who will do the wrong things.