On Monday evening, Ken Clarke, described by Intelligence² as a Big Beast of British politics, was being interviewed by John Humphreys, though even Humphreys was scarcely able to get a word in, as Ken opined, entertainingly and at length, on Brexit, Boris, elections and a life in politics.
Comments
https://twitter.com/Peston/status/1201979739042398208?s=20
https://twitter.com/Peston/status/1201979739042398208?s=20
The six (SIX!) wealthiest people in this country own more than the 13.9m poorest.
But pressuring the IRS on a tax return. That's a much bigger story.
Pedantic maybe, but important to remember that the EU is not the same as the EEC, or the EC. The status quo is rarely on offer for long.
It probably took me four or five years to get my net assets above zero.
A pensioner on a state pension living in an owned one bedroom flat in Glasgow has greater net assets than the bottom find million put together, because there are always going to be lots of people with zero or negative net worth.
Maybe poor voters don't care about the mega-rich. Maybe they don't believe anything can be done about it. Maybe they just don't like what Labour are proposing. Maybe they have been scared off progressive taxes by the mega-rich controlled press. I don't know.
But it is a good question.
Baaaaaaaad business.
Where do you think it all went wrong?
The owner of the Gannex manufacturer was Joseph (to become Lord) Kagan while Jeremy's suit is made by a company owned by an Imran Khan (not the Imran Khan presumably). Perhaps ermine awaits Mr Khan likewise.
We must be clear about this; it does mean, if this is the idea, the end of Britain as an independent European state. I make no apology for repeating it. It means the end of a thousand years of history.
Once upon time there was a little crook. His name was Chris Davies. He was a Tory MP for Brecon & Radnorshire and he was caught forging some receipts.
It was a LibDem target seat, so all the LibDems on pb.com were in uproar. IanB2 reminisced about other crooks he had caught forging their expense claims. Cyclefree ascended her pulpit. Moral indignation raged through pb.com about the nasty little Tory chiseller.
(Nick Palmer was an honourable exception).
I said Chris Davies was a little crook, and the LibDems perhaps ought to be careful because, sooner or later, someone in the LibDems would be caught forging something.
Well, well, well.
That day has come -- sooner than I expected, I admit. Any comments from the morally outraged LibDems? It is all very quiet.
I am not sure that the retired CDE voters of Hartlepool and Stoke are really aspirational.
When baby boomers were young the average young person had more wealth than the average OAP.
As boomers aged so did move the wealth distribution.
If someone you've never heard of shoplifts a pair of earrings, it's not a story. If it's David Cameron, then it's a bit story.
Not sure she's exactly endeared herself to LBC listeners...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9GSeHUd1c5Y
Which is a pity, because for Ken his views on Europe are the ones which trump everything else. But not a huge pity because I have never had the chance of voting for him (or not) and now presumably never will.
Still, I can't help having slightly mixed feelings about the man: he could, if had had tempered his views on Europe just a tad - not renounced them, just toned them down a bit - he would have been a shoo-in for leading his party. The fact that he did not do so is both highly admirable and highly regrettable.
No-one had heard of Chris Davies before the LibDems began to tub-thump.
The comparison of Chris Davies to David Cameron is just laughable.
https://www.theguardian.com/music/2003/jul/25/popandrock.artsfeatures2
One forged a receipt (although he had actually spent the money).
The other forged some emails and got letters sent from solicitors to a completely blameless organisation threatening legal action.
I'd say Rosie's crime was more serious, actually.
The EEC planned a single currency from the early 1970s with the fall of Bretton Woods and the rise of the "snake".
Now, it's suited politicians to pretend it wasn't happening. But the direction of the EEC/EC/EU was set at creation.
It was an interesting summary of his thoughts though, and great photo of you both.
Con 43%
Lab 33%
LD 13%
Grn 3%
BRX 3%
SNP 3%
Others 2%
My point is that one was an elected official, one of just 650 MPs in the UK. And one is a functionary at a minor political party. It's a question of what is newsworthy.
Much better than some Labour ones like Alun Milburn.
But I think that while it's still connected to material interests, it's more visceral than that - "the politicians I believe will most advance my interests are the one with whom I can most easily identify and which seem to most like me" - and for the WWC in Scunthorpe and Stoke it's increasingly difficult to slot the modern Labour party into that category.
This is a website for political geeks. Newsworthiness has nothing to do with it,
I am waiting for the LibDems who hounded Chris Davies to hound Rosie Cobb.
Myself, I urged some understanding for Chris Davies, and I am happy to extend the same understanding to Rosie Cobb, She no doubt found one lie snowballing into more lies and forgery and legal action. I feel sorry for her, just as I did for Chris Davies.
He is also long overdue his retirement and its not a shame he is retiring now.
Have you heard the most recent Beach House album? It's darker and more satisfying than anything they've released before.
"Another candidate said the party had not bothered to include a promised rail fare reduction announced on Monday on their campaign Facebook page, because it was just likely to increase voter scepticism about whether the party’s programme is deliverable."
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/dec/03/labour-plan-to-tackle-rip-off-britain-would-save-families-6700
Journalism involves like speaking to people.
For a lot of folk I suspect Labour have drifted towards offering too much to those who don’t deserve it and too little to those who do.
There are retail offers on train fares. There is free super-fast broadband. There is more money saving on childcare and utility bills. WASPI women can grab their cash with a handy calculator on the Labour party website. Students can reclaim tuition fees -- and you can get a bit more cash back if you click through on the link on the Labour party website.
It seems Labour's vision for the future of Britain is Martin Lewis on steroids.
2019 - 871 > 1000
Hard to argue with anything he says now, on Brexit (where he has been scrupulous in trying to make the best of what he sees as a bad decision), or anything else. I hope we'll have the benefit of his wise words to years to come.
Assuming his health is good, I wouldn't completely rule out Ken doing an Alan Clark and coming back for a final fling. Particularly if things don't go as well as we'd like next Thursday and a micromajority or hung parliament means that we get another GE in 2-3 years time.
I don't think he's going to like not being in parliament. There's only so much Jazz one can listen to and only so many cigars to be smoked.
Huh.
https://www.nottinghampost.com/news/local-news/gallery/rushcliffe-mp-ken-clarke-career-3283074