Friday, 13 September 2013

The Week in Review: Three stories we absolutely did not see coming (and three we did) - politics.co.uk

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By Alex Stevenson 

Politics, like most things in life, is a mixture of the predictable and the unpredictable. Every week we get big stories which reinforce slowly shifting narratives - interesting and enlightening, perhaps, but about as surprising as an accountant's underwear. And then every week, too, some shockers appear from nowhere, bubbling up from the Westminster news swamp. And often emitting a thoroughly unpleasant smell. Here's three examples of each.

WE SAW THESE COMING...

- Ed Miliband: Not liked much

They elected him. He pretended to like them. He was embarrassed into trying to dump them. They now despise him. There you have it, the basic structure for a four-party melodrama which nobody watches. This week was the opening of the season finale, a simmering cauldron of resentment in which neither the husband nor the wife are quite prepared to admit a divorce is just around the corner. Miliband was neither booed nor heckled in his speech to the TUC conference in Bournemouth - he didn't even get the respect of a decent standup argument. Union members just listened, full of sullen hostility, while he explained exactly why he doesn't want to need them anymore. Someone should write a country and western song about this.

- The economy: To gloat or not to gloat?

George Osborne prefers the former, Vince Cable the latter. That is because the former Saint of Twickenham would rather take a long view than engage in the dirty scrabble for economic supremacy. It's only the issue which will, after all, decide the next general election. Cable would also rather get in another low dig at the chancellor in the process. Osborne should feel infuriated by the business secretary's comments, after the chancellor opened the week with a speech in which the facade of cautious optimism barely concealed the glee of victory. Cable is right on this, by the way - it's far too early to write off Ed Balls' economic critique.

- Nick Clegg: Told to quit by someone everyone will ignore

The week ended with a call by Matthew Oakeshott, that most troublesome of Lib Dem peers, for Nick Clegg to resign as party leader. The man has no shame - and, unfortunately for his credibility, everyone knows it. Clegg is actually going through a rather quiet period (which for him counts as a good one). No apologies to be doled out this year. No real rumblings about his leadership, even if Sarah Teather ended her political career with a strop earlier in the week. No, of the three party leaders it's the deputy PM who's looking strongest right now. Maybe this one should have been in the 'unpredictable' section, after all.

WE ABSOLUTELY DID NOT SEE THESE COMING

- Syria: Sometimes gaffes save lives

He didn't mean to do it. Probably. Regardless, the journalists attending a Foreign Office press conference with William Hague and John Kerry will have been surprised to have been present at the moment a possible way out of the Syrian chemical weapons impasse arrived out of the blue.

You know the score by now, of course. Kerry's rhetoric, praised immediately afterwards as slow, deliberate and considered, appears to have inadvertently paved the way for a climbdown which suits all sides. By the week's end it looks like there are some problems with the Russian proposal, as one of our writers has suggested. But at least this is an avenue worth exploring. It is most definitely better than nothing.

- An awkward resignation speech

After prime minister's questions this week something odd happened. Nigel Evans, the deputy Speaker, stood up to deliver a 'personal statement'. However popular he may be in the Commons, this is a man who is facing criminal charges, with rape among them. Proceedings are now active but he used parliament, which as a rule tends to steer clear of meddling with the courts, to outline in a thoroughly moving address, how difficult his current ordeal was. MPs listened in dead silence, sitting rigid with awkwardness. Many will have been relieved when Evans sat down and they could totter off for some lunch.

- Gove: Less intelligent than we thought

If you hadn't noticed, the education secretary is a Conservative member of the Cabinet. He is, therefore, well aware of the peril of making any kind of remark which will be seized on by lefties as evidence of the unfeeling, monstrous Tory tendency.

Which is why it is so surprising he let slip the suggestion, in education questions on Monday, that people living in poverty have only themselves to blame. Labour instantly seized on the comments and had a field day. So did large chunks of Twitter. Michael Gove's effort simply has to be our quote of the week:

I appreciate that there are families who face considerable pressures. Those pressures are often the result of decisions that they have taken which mean they are not best able to manage their finances.

Oops.

 

 

Monday

Davey drops Cameron's fracking prices pledge

Gas prices won't drop overnight because of shale gas, Ed Davey concedes

Ed Davey has dismissed the prime minister's claim that fracking has potential to "drive energy bills down" in a speech on shale gas development.

The 'sometimes' special relationship: Kerry and Hague gloss over Commons defeat

William Hague and John Kerry: The special relationship downgraded?

Britain remains a valuable partner to the United States because it "sometimes" stands up to dictators, secretary of state John Kerry has declared from the Foreign Office.

A premature victory lap? Osborne triumphant as economy recovers

George Osborne: Just can't keep away from construction sites

George Osborne will claim victory over Ed Balls in the battle for Britain's economic future later.

Tuesday

It's parties, not politics, that voters don't care about

The public wants to engage, but doesn't trust the parties

Ed Miliband's vision of a new mass membership organisation is nothing more than a dream. The reality, as the hard data from today's British Social Attitudes survey shows, is that the party system in Britain is dying a long, drawn-out, painful death.

Comment: Miliband's union battle will be about spending, not funding

Adam Bienkov: Union members don't care about funding rules

Ed Miliband's big union battle will be over what the next Labour government would spend, not party funding arrangements.

50 years on: This year's party conferences won't match the drama of 1963

Harold Macmillan: Taken ill on the eve of the 1963 Tory party conference

The media coverage might have been very different, but that didn't stop the conference season of 50 years ago being packed with drama.

Wednesday

Sketch: Downfall of a deputy

Nigel Evans' exit from the deputy Speaker job left MPs uncertain how to react

The discomfort in the Commons chamber was palpable. MPs just didn't know how to respond to the dramatic, emotionally-laden resignation speech from deputy Speaker Nigel Evans.

PMQs as-it-happened

PMQs as-it-happened

Follow all the twists and turns of Ed Miliband and David Cameron's clash at prime minister's questions (PMQs) with our dedicated live blog.

Comment: Syrians won't benefit from this unworkable chemical weapons fudge

Hannah Stuart: The initiative risks distracting people from the ongoing civil war in Syria

Even if Syria complied with the Russian initiative, the regime has enough conventional and biological weapons to continue their assault on the Syrian people.

Thursday

Royal Mail to be sold off within weeks

Public remains opposed to Royal Mail privatisation

Royal Mail is to be privatised within weeks, the government has announced, as postal workers prepare for widespread strike action.

Interview: Liam Fox

Liam Fox: On the up once more

Liam Fox thinks Britain needs power and influence. Which, coincidentally, is what he could with a bit more of himself.

Comment: Promoting arms exports is sheer madness

Ann Feltham: Instead of fuelling insecurity and abuse around the globe, this money would be better spent on tackling real threats to security

Both Iraq and Libya are in chaos, yet the UK government's response is to plug more weapons sales. It's madness.

Friday

Sympathy for the scrounger? How austerity is shaping the welfare reform debate

Will coalition welfare reforms hurt or help the disabled?

The public's suspicion of benefit 'scroungers' seems to be fading - potentially giving critics of the coalition's welfare reforms a louder voice in the debate.

Comment: If Britain wants global influence it must look to Europe

Nathan Dabrowski:Britain should only intervene on the global stage insofar as the actions promote our interests

The gateway to global influence is right on our doorstep.

Interview: Natalie Bennett

Natalie Bennett: Captain of "a very cooperative football team"

Is the characterisation of the Greens as a "watermelon" party - green on the outside, but red in the middle - preventing them from forming a broader coalition of support?

CIOB video: It's all about people

NASUWT comments on GCSE results

Commenting on the GCSE results, Chris Keates, General Secretary of the NASUWT, the largest teachers’ union, said:

NUT Wales comment on GCSE Results

Commenting on this year’s GCSE results, NUT Secretary, David Evans, said:

NUT comment on GCSE results

Commenting on today’s GCSE results for England, Wales and Northern Ireland, Christine Blower, General Secretary of the National Union of Teachers, the largest teachers’ union, said:

NASUWT comments ahead of publication of GCSE results

The fact that GCSEs are challenging and demanding qualifications is buried in an avalanche of politically motivated, false claims of grade inflation, dumbing-down and easy options, say the NASUWT.

CIOT: Institute warns of ‘dangerous precedent’ over tax code for banks

Government proposals for a strengthened Code of Practice on Taxation for Banks1 will set a “dangerous precedent” by giving HMRC power to determine and publicly announce non-compliance with the Code without any right of appeal, the Chartered Institute of Taxation has warned.

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