INSIDE: Fabian Hustings: laughometer

15/06/2010, 08:23:14 AM

This is the laughometer from last night’s Fabian society leadership hustings.

Tiny chuckles weren’t recorded.

We maintained our rule that to score you had to get a proper laugh from a significant portion of the room.

David Miliband 5
Ed Miliband 7
Ed Balls 9
Diane Abbott 7
Andy Burnham 6

These numbers are significantly higher across the board than for previous hustings. Last night was a first outing for the Uncut reporter operating the laughometer on this occasion.  We have not yet been able to establish whether the leap in laughs was due to operator error, or to the candidates loosening up and getting funny.

Views from those present at last night’s Fabian as well as more than one other hustings would be welcome.

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UNBOUND: Tuesday News Review

15/06/2010, 07:36:15 AM

#Hustings

“Mr Burnham stressed his ordinary working class background. Both the Milibands pointed out that they were the sons of immigrants who went to a comprehensive school and even knew people who didn’t sit exams. They didn’t mention their well connected Marxist intellectual father or the influential opinion formers who attended dinner parties at their North London home. Mr Balls revealed he once trotted along to a party conference to look after the kids while his wife did the important business of speaking.” – The Times

“There were some real stand out moments this evening. Perhaps most notable was Andy Burnham’s somewhat surprising decision to come out in support of the Iraq war. Burnham feels that we need “a framework for intervention”, but on Iraq itself he said, “I stand by the original decision.” Whilst at times Burnham appeared to inspire the crowd with his aspirational narrative about his own background, and “ordinary kids without connections”, it is hard to believe that his comments on Iraq won’t draw the most attention.” – Labour List

“According to the poll, Ed Miliband, the shadow energy secretary, is emerging as a compromise candidate, with the second highest number of first preferences, and the most second and third preferences. In contrast, David Miliband is a “Marmite candidate” – either liked strongly or disliked – and is struggling to pick up second and third preferences.” – The Telegraph

“Emma Burnell asked the candidates for the Labour party leadership “are you a Socialist – and what does the word mean to you?” at the hustings event co-hosted by the Fabian Society, Compass, LabourList, Left Foot Forward, Progress and the Young Fabians at the Institute of Education in London. Gaby Hinsliff challenged the candidates to give a “one line” ideology for this final question of the hustings event.” – Next Left

Read the rest of this entry »

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UNCUT: Eugene Grant says the disabled should still have grounds for optimism.

14/06/2010, 11:51:24 AM

Helen Keller, the deafblind American radical, once said: “Optimism is the faith that leads to achievement. Nothing can be done without hope or confidence”. The first deafblind person to earn a bachelor of arts degree, Keller went on to become an accomplished author, well-travelled lecturer and prolific political activist.

The election feast is now behind us.  The first frenzies of the coalition’s honeymoon are done.  And yet, thus far, the Lib-Con coalition has offered little in the way of optimism for some of the most disadvantaged in our society: people with disabilities. On the contrary, the approach adopted by the new government appears tainted by cynicism.

First, the pledge from work and pensions secretary Iain Duncan Smith to reassess all 2.6 million incapacity benefit (IB) claimants and move them onto other benefits like jobseeker’s allowance and employment and support allowance (ESA).  This is a thorny political issue, which isn’t necessarily regressive.

Read the rest of this entry »

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UNBOUND: Monday News Review

14/06/2010, 08:12:48 AM

Glasgow Hustings 

Miliband: talking on cuts

 “Labour leadership contenders have mounted a concerted attack on the Westminster Government’s plans to revive the UK economy with heavy cuts targeted at the public sector. The five candidates were speaking at a hustings in Glasgow’s Royal Concert Hall yesterday attended by more than 600 activists from across Scotland. Leadership favourite David Miliband said it was important “the innocent who benefit from public services or work for public services, don’t pay for the sins of the people who were running the financial services at the time of the economic crisis in 2008”.” –The Herald

 “A pledge had been taken by Ed Miliband saying that for the next year, he will consent to the Scottish Labour Party that it can run its own election campaign and autonomously build up its own policies. A need to “lighten up” Labour in London has been viewed by the leadership contender.” – Top News Blog

 “David Miliband, his brother Ed, Andy Burnham and Ed Balls all said Scots Labour leader Iain Gray should have a seat on Labour’s ruling body, the NEC. And speaking at a special party hustings in Glasgow, Diane Abbott gave her support to devolution.” – BBC News

The Candidates  

“I was teased and bullied right through my school years about my name and stammer and it was merciless. I wouldn’t say it reduced me to floods of tears but it was really tough. I wouldn’t wish what happened to me on anyone. That’s why my kids (Ellie, 11, Joe, eight, and Maddy, six) took my wife’s surname Cooper. I’d never dream of calling them Balls.” – Ed Balls, The Mirror

“Why, after threatening legal action to prevent the publication of details of him and his wife adopting two children in America, does David Miliband go public, describing this ‘incredibly exciting, but nerve-racking’ process? Because he is striving to become leader of the Labour Party and, ultimately, Prime Minister. Telling how he and wife Louise struggled to have a family might endear him to ordinary voters. Which, in turn, might confirm his front-runner status among Labour MPs and party bosses. There is no point in being sniffy about his apparent hypocrisy.” – Daily Mail 

Balls: Teased at school

 “Earlier this month Ed Balls, the former Schools secretary and a contender to be the next Labour leader, admitted it had been a mistake for Labour not to have restricted immigration from eastern Europe. In 1997, annual net immigration into the UK stood at 48,000, rising to 237,000 a year in 2007 and falling back to 163,000 in 2008.” – The Telegraph

“The Labour leadership candidate Ed Balls has claimed that the party’s refusal to rule out increasing VAT was central to its general election defeat. An increase of the rate to 20 per cent is expected in George Osborne’s first Budget next week. Such a move would be “economic madness”, Mr Balls claims, as well as being “the least fair option for raising tax”.” – The Times

The Party

“Labour said more than 2,000 people joined the party in Scotland in the weeks after the election, bringing the total to 20,133. The figure is about 25 times the usual number of new recruits each month.” – The Independent

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UNCUT: Clever politicians are using the social web to make humanity scaleable, says Jon Bounds

13/06/2010, 01:24:52 PM

Despite its sneering disregard for politicians, the biggest hit at the Personal Democracy Forum in New York earlier in the month was Cory Booker.  The two main threads of the conference were platforms and tools (some promising, some not) and a desire to discover whether the internet could “fix” politics. The general assumption was that trust in politicians is irretrievably lost and that political mechanisms are broken and need reforming in new ways.

Cory Booker is the mayor of Newark, New Jersey.  The mayor of a city in the shadow of a big neighbour, a city of around a million people with a high non-white population, a city often unfairly characterised in the media as dangerous or dull.  Philip Roth, who grew up there, has not been kind about contemporary Newark. Read the rest of this entry »

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GRASSROOTS: Caroline Alabi on yesterday’s Compass conference and leadership husting

13/06/2010, 10:41:13 AM

Conference

The first issue that needs to be addressed is how on earth did the Compass conference manage to sell out even though it was on the same day as England’s first World Cup game?

Fair enough, the actual match didn’t kick off till two and a half hours after the conference ended, but many who have endured the World Cup in the past will know how important it is to have a ‘good spot in the pub’ to ‘warm up to before the kick off.’

The morning speakers were the first Green MP, Caroline Lucas, Nick Dearden of the Jubilee Debt Campaign, Christine Blower from the National Union of Teachers and Neal Lawson of Compass. They all spoke well on where Labour went wrong at the last election and what is required for us to move forward. Read the rest of this entry »

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UNBOUND: Sunday’s News Review

13/06/2010, 08:52:27 AM

Abbott on This Week

Abbott

“Since she began chumming around with the sons of Satan that are Michael Portillo and the more repugnant Andrew Neil on their amateurish late night TV show, the whiff of sulphur has stuck fast. Is it really OK for an apparently avowed fighter for equality, justice and decency to throw her head back and laugh merrily along with an ex-Murdoch lackey who used to carve up people’s reputations for profit? Where does that cosy friendship sit with high principles? And further accusations of hypocrisy follow her when famously, after having publicly attacked others for opting out of state education and sending their children to private schools, Diane Abbott did precisely the same with her own son.” – The Herald

“Ben Bradshaw, the former cabinet minister, was strikingly open on BBC 1’s Question Time last week about the fact that he did not agree with Diane Abbott. The way he spoke of her, she might as well have been a member of a separate party. The Labour Party has always been like that, of course, but usually the niceties of party unity are observed in public. Now, transparency and openness are the motifs of the times.” – Independent on Sunday

“Her maverick stance is her trump card. She said she knew what the Compass members were thinking: “Subliminally, I don’t look like a credible Labour leader”. But she proclaimed a new era for her party and “so I might be just what the next leader looks like”. After lukewarm introductions to David and Ed Miliband, Ed Balls and Andy Burnham, the hall at the Institute of Education in Bloomsbury roared its approval for Abbott.” – The Herald

Ed Balls on the deficit

The Leadership Race

“It is important to get the deficit down but… arguably the path we set in government was too fast,” he told the audience of around 1,000 activists. “If you try to do it too fast, you actually end up stifling the economy, leading to more unemployment, slower growth and in the end a bigger deficit.” – Ed Balls, The Press Association

“So the Milibands are not, as Ed has claimed, “too weedy to fight”. The latest Labour leadership debate produced the first needling dissent as he challenged his older sibling David on the Iraq war. “The first two hustings were polite and, frankly, a bit tepid,” he says. “We need to disagree, whether we’re brothers or not.” ” – The Telegraph

Labour's Ministerial Fruit Bowls

Scotland

“Ed Miliband yesterday pledged that he would allow the Scottish Labour Party to run its own election campaign next year and develop policies independently. The leadership contender said Labour in London needed to “lighten up” after years of the party at Holyrood having to look over its shoulder towards Gordon Brown and Tony Blair before making policy decisions.”  – The Scotsman

Getting Fruity

“It wasn’t just David Miliband and that banana. Labour’s health ministers practised what they preached when they encouraged people to eat healthier food. They filled up their office fruit bowls at a cost to the taxpayer of more than £100,000. For 13 years all five ministers at the Department of Health were given £8 of fruit a day.” – The Times

Alan Johnson’s electoral reform

“Mr Johnson, who was the favoured candidate of many Labour MPs to replace Gordon Brown as prime minister, has always been a passionate advocate of electoral reform. If he fought, and won, a by-election on the issue in his seat of Hull West and Hessle – next door to Mr Davis’s seat – it would put him in prime position to play a leading role in a referendum campaign to change the way all MPs are elected.” – The Telegraph

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INSIDE: The Miliband brothers go to the fair

12/06/2010, 07:26:25 PM

While the prime minister was on the phone to President Obama this afternoon, the Miliband brothers were both at the Primrose Hill summer fair.

This genteel summer jamboree centres on Chalcot Square, the gracious georgian heart of what some locals call ‘the island’ (there is no through traffic).  It is a super-chichi enclave of ultra-pricey knick-knack shops and multi-million pound houses two miles north of central London.

In the charming, pastel-coloured high street, you can buy sixteen different kinds of cappuccino, but there is no laundrette, no corner shop, no ATM.

Not only does Jude Law live in Primrose Hill, it is where you would expect Jude Law to live.  In fact, it is where his sybaritic character in The Talented Mr Ripley would have had his London flat. Read the rest of this entry »

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GRASSROOTS: Mike Forster looks at the leadership contenders: David Miliband is Brazil.

12/06/2010, 04:59:11 PM

Much has been said on this site and others about communicating with our core constituency in a language they can understand. So thought I’d have a crack at explaining the second-most interesting contest going on at the moment in terms of the first.

True, there aren’t 32 contenders in the Labour leadership contest, but there are parallels with the world cup.

Whichever team wins the football, though, it is unlikely to have much of an impact on your life or anybody you know. Even England winning will only have a fleeting impact, mainly a stinking hangover on July 12th.

Our eventual choice of leader, though, could mean the difference between 5 years of a Tory government or 10, or even more. Read the rest of this entry »

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UNBOUND: Saturday News Review

12/06/2010, 07:30:04 AM
 
The Leadership Contenders

“It’s a delicious prospect. The man who once met a black man being pounded to oblivion at the despatch box by a black woman. The old Etonian son of a stockbroker being ejected from Downing Street by the daughter of a welder. The husband of the daughter of a baronet being given his marching orders by a single mum from Hackney. As spectator sports go, it would certainly beat the World Cup.”  – The Independent

“Until now Mr Miliband has been private about his family life, facing criticism from his opponents that he lacks warmth. But in an emotional interview, he described the personal experiences that have shaped his politics. He and Louise tried IVF. “Emotionally, it was incredibly exhausting. You don’t want to talk about it to people because you are going through this very intense personal thing and you don’t really want everyone saying, ‘Oh, how is it going?’ Or, ‘I am so sorry’. Or, ‘What is the latest news?’ he said.” – The Times

“Whether you like it or not – and why wouldn’t you? – Britain is a dizzyingly diverse place. You can find every colour of skin, style of dress, class, creed and cuisine on every high street. Which is why it’s depressing that a Martian visiting the House Of Commons would assume our ruling class was cloned in a test tube. Hundreds of bland, white public school boys rolling off a conveyor belt in the Home Counties.” – The Mirror

“The bookmakers’ favourite to win the Labour leadership, today urged Frank Field not to betray Britain’s poor after he called for the government to drop Labour’s main target for cutting child poverty. Miliband made his remarks at the first official Labour hustings in east London. Field, appointed by David Cameron to conduct a wide-ranging inquiry into the causes of poverty, said the Labour target was mathematically unobtainable, had not been achieved anywhere in the free world and revealed he would look to develop better targets. He is due to report at the end of the year.” – The Guardian

Europe

“Loosening the rigid labour market is seen as vital to ensure Spain’s long-term economic recovery and to ease market fears of a Greek-style debt crisis by proving Socialist Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriquez Zapatero’s unpopular government can act. But talks between the Socialists, business leaders and unions failed to come up with a consensus draft on Thursday after two years of on-off talks and the government has decided to present a draft labour reform unilaterally.” – Reuters

 
 
 
 
 
 

Darling: 'Safe pair of hands'

The Ex-Chancellor

“The obligatory description of the ex-chancellor is that he is a “safe pair of hands” (generally accompanied by reminders that a trucking magazine once awarded him the title of “most boring politician” two years in a row). It’s meant somewhat pejoratively, but “safe pair of hands” turns out to mean sleek, tanned, straight-talking – and yes, safe, in that one can easily imagine panicking bankers and prime ministers turning to him for answers and calm. Funny, too, though his jokes about previous Guardian interviews have a certain take-it-on-the-chin ruefulness: two years ago Darling said, bluntly, that Britain had to brace itself for the worst economic climate in 60 years.” – The Guardian

Being in Opposition

“Some Labour figures appear relieved to be in opposition. Quite a few to whom I have spoken since last month’s election seem to think their party did rather well. It didn’t: it won 29 per cent of the vote. So far, Labour’s leadership election seems to be taking place in a parallel universe. The candidates talk about reconnecting with the voters, but the crisis in the public finances (which Labour would have had to tackle if it had retained power) rarely gets a look-in. They are more interested in connecting with Labour members. Now that the general election is over, it is safe to talk about immigration, Iraq, bankers and high earners. But there’s no need to mention the c-word. The cuts can be left to the other parties and Labour can retreat to its comfort zone.” – The Independent

Scotland

“David Miliband yesterday declared Labour should learn from the party’s stunning general election result in Scotland.  The Labour leadership contender, who has pledged to rebuild the party, also welcomed further powers for the Scottish parliament.  He took his campaign north of the border, where he met MSPs and party activists.Miliband also watched Scottish Labour leader Iain Gray take on Alex Salmond at First Minister’s Questions.” – The Independent

The Trial

“‘In my judgment, the conduct alleged against these defendants is not covered by Parliamentary privilege and is triable in the Crown Court. ‘Unless this decision is reversed on appeal, it clears the way for what most people accused of criminal behaviour would wish for: a fair trial before an impartial jury.” Judge – The Daily Mail

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