Did your email system distort this newsletter? Click here to see it online. To make sure emails from Politics.co.uk don’t go into your junk folder, please add us to your email contacts. To stop receiving emails such as this, please update your preferences or unsubscribe here. | |
![]() | ![]() ![]() ![]() |
George Osborne's decision to cut the top rate of tax two years ago was a goof of almost Godfrey Bloom proportions. It wiped out public trust in the government and made it impossible for Osborne to ever again claim that the country was "all in it together." That is until now. Osborne's announcement this week that he wants to see the minimum wage rise to £7 is the first real sign that the Conservative party is beginning to understand the difficulties they face at the next election and the steps they need to take to counter them. It is a smart move both economically and politically. It will cost the government next to nothing and may even save them money in the long term. More importantly it makes it far more difficult for Labour to portray the Conservatives as a party only interested in helping the rich. But those hoping it marks a turning point for the party are likely to be disappointed. This was not any great moment of principle from Osborne who has long been opposed to raising the minimum wage. Nor was it part of a wider agenda, as the shocked reaction from both trade unions and big business has attested. Instead the timing of the announcement suggests that it was a purely cynical political decision, shamelessly positioned to overshadow Ed Miliband's first big speech of the year. So far so what. Osborne is entitled to announce his policies when and how he likes. But the point is that while Osborne has done one thing this week to change people's negative perceptions of the party, everything else the government is doing has simply reinforced them. The party's obsession with immigration shows no sign of ending, despite the government's own advisors telling them it has hugely benefited the UK economy and wiped billions off of the deficit. It also continues despite one estimate that just two dozen Romanians have so far entered the UK, since work restrictions were lifted. There is a human cost to this obsession. For every government announcement designed to stoke fears about immigration, there are many more immigrants and asylum seekers suffering abuse and ill-treatment in the UK. But there is also a political cost. All the polls show the public share the government's concerns about immigration, but they also show that this is not translating to an overall increase in vote share for the Conservatives. This is a paradox that some people in the party have long realised. The party's most popular figure Boris Johnson was one of the first to diagnose the problem. The piece "Why we lost" appeared in the Spectator after the party's heavy defeat to Tony Blair in 2005. It is worth quoting at length:
It is this paradox that is preventing the Conservative party from winning the next election. The public may agree with the Conservatives on immigration, they may even agree with them on Europe. But what the public do not want, is to vote for a party which does nothing else but bang on about immigration and Europe. The decision to raise the minimum wage is a wise attempt to move the party upmarket, but when everything else the party is doing is keeping them downmarket then it will count for little. So when Tories call for bans on foreign languages, label feminism "ludicrous," or call for single parents to be judged, it's a problem. And when the work and pensions secretary calls a gay man a "pantomime dame" it's a bigger problem still. Ed Miliband's performance this week suggests that Labour still have a long way to go to win an overall majority. But if Labour's task is large, then the Conservative task remains far larger still. Best of NewsFracking blight as households warned of mining rights![]() Thousands of households receive letters warning that the land beneath their homes could be used for mining, prompting fears that landowners will seek to cash in on the government's plans for widespread fracking across the UK. Mea culpa: Clegg prays forgiveness for Rennard sex harassment![]() Nick Clegg ratchets up the pressure on Chris Rennard to apologise for alleged instances of sexual harassment, even as he speaks openly about his own failure to protect the women affected 'Don't quit like we did': Norwegian PM gives Britain an EU warning![]() The prime minister of Norway has warned Britain not to go down the road followed by her country and quit the EU, in a remarkable statement ahead of a meeting with David Cameron. Historic moment as UK grants first atheist asylum decision![]() An Afghan man is granted asylum in Britain on the basis of his atheism, in what is thought to be the first decision of its kind. Just two dozen Romanians estimated to have arrived in UK![]() Predictions that millions of Romanian immigrants would flood into the UK when work restrictions were lifted have proved unfounded, with one estimate claiming that as few as two dozen have arrived. Westminster's nadir: Belief in party leaders falls to historic low![]() The combined satisfaction ratings of the three party leaders are lower than at any equivalent point before a general election, a devastating new poll finds Khat ban: Ministers did not assess impact on rising crime![]() Home Office minister Norman Baker insisted it was "too early" to judge the extent to which the khat ban will lead to rising crime. Public to be 'bribed' into backing fracking![]() Local authorities will be allowed to keep 100% of business rates from fracking sites, while local people could be handed up to one per cent of revenues in an attempt to head off opposition. Best of Comment and AnalysisImmigrant stories: The psychotherapist and the letter of proof![]() She had the proof of her right to stay, but she was already lost in a system which made no sense. The truth behind the Amritsar massacre![]() As reports emerge that the UK may have colluded in a merciless 1984 raid on the Golden Temple in Amritsar, we look back at one of the most painful and important moments in Sikh history. WATCH: Nick Robinson's 'fat bottomed girls' blunder![]() The BBC's political editor apologises after his Ipad starts playing Queen song live on air. PMQs Review: Miliband should use it or lose it![]() Ed Miliband has another terrible week at PMQs. Political Week OnlineThe Political Week Online: Miliband in the middle![]() Ed Miliband, a letter from Owen Jones, Lord Rennard, Francis Hollande, and Russell Brand's divine conversion to feminism. The Week According to Sean DilleyThe week according to Sean Dilley![]() Broadcaster and general nuisance Sean Dilley gives us his take on the week in politics. | The coalition has trivialised the importance of health and safetyNASUWT comments on Triennial Review of the Health and Safety Executive. Flooding presents critical long-term issues for our national infrastructureProf Will Stewart from the IET comments on what floods tell us about the national infrastructure. BSIA members to fly the flag for the Best of British security solutions at Intersec 2014BSIA members to demonstrate their latest state-of-the-art security innovations to visitors at the forthcoming Intersec 2014 show in Dubai. Voice Scotland welcomes £3.5 million for childcare training after meeting ministerVoice welcomes £3.5milion funding package for childcare workforce development announced by the Scottish Government, after meeting Michael Russell. Country Land Association backs Owen Paterson's pledges on red tape, biotech and BTBThe CLA today backed Environment Secretary Owen Paterson’s pledges to slash £1billion of the red tape suffered by farmers, eradicate bTB and support biotech crops. |

No comments:
Post a Comment