Friday, 31 January 2014

Week in Review: The Tories threaten to fall apart all over again - politics.co.uk

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To lose a Commons vote as prime minister is humiliating. But to be humiliated without even losing a Commons vote is something altogether worse.

Cameron ended the week engaged in a grubby, underhand war with his backbenchers. Rebel Tory MPs had put down amendments to his immigration bill – one of them demanding extended controls on Bulgarians and Romanian migrants while another pressed for judicial discretion over right-to-family-life deportation claims.

Cameron won both votes, but the manner in which he did so was highly revealing. In a sign of quite how little authority the prime minister has over his own party, he was forced to tell ministers to abstain on the latter amendment. It was defeated – by Labour and Liberal Democrat MPs – but the image of a party leader without the strength to actually oppose amendments which he considers illegal will not have been forgotten by his party. Or the opposition.

How did it come to this? The signs were there throughout the week. The numbers didn't stack up, but Downing tried to call a bluff and force a vote. They took a gamble and, in a sense, won. After all, they won the vote. But it was a pyrrhic victory, revealing his hand and showing quite how poor his cards are.

It was an unfortunate week for the prime minister throughout. Public support for Ed Ball's commitment to a 50p tax rate refused to die down, despite a savage mauling from the right-wing press and business leaders.

Cameron's Achilles Heel was the result of reports that he wanted to cut the top rate of income tax further - to 40p. It was remarkable: a politically barmy move 18 months ahead of the general election. It was as if George Osborne was going out of his way to validate precisely those concerns the public have about the Tories. Miliband was able to use the reports to make Cameron squirm during PMQs. It was the Labour leader's first convincing win since 2014.

Then the immigration bill returned. Downing Street tried a last minute gambit , including a Theresa May amendment which would allow her to strip British subjects of their citizenship. It was a move specifically designed to fly against the face of decades of human rights consensus on not making people stateless. Apparently, this is the sort of thing which attracts the Tory rank-and-file. But even that didn't work. The Tory backbenchers rebelled anyway.

The next morning, as he picked up the pieces, another disaster struck. The EU referendum bill had been killed off by the Lords. Backbenchers will want a government bill now, but Cameron knows that if he starts one the Lib Dems will kill it off. His only other option is to try another private members bill, but that is likely to meet the same fate in the Lords.

This is where his concessions to his eurosceptic backbenchers have got him. It doesn't pacify them, it just encourages them. And now he's trapped, with no good options, and a parliamentary party seemingly intent on his blood.

The best of the week in news...

The 'pale-blue party': Godfrey Bloom hits back at Farage's 'drivel' attack

Godfrey Bloom warns Ukip could be turning into an imitation of the Tory party

Godfrey Bloom hits out at Nigel Farage for scrapping Ukip's 2010 manifesto, saying the party has adopted a "no-policy policy"

Boris Johnson tells police to 'get medieval' on rioters

Police need to be "much harder" on protesters who break the law says Boris Johnson

Boris Johnson calls on the police to "get medieval" on rioters as he backs proposals for the Metropolitan police to be allowed to use water cannon on future protests.

The myth of welfare tourism: European body find UK benefits 'manifestly inadequate'

The White Cliffs of Dover: Claims that people try to reach the UK for its generous welfare system may be misplaced, according to the report

Britain's welfare payments are "manifestly inadequate" and fail to live up to the requirements of the European social charter, an influential body has found.

Christians only: Tory MP backs Farage on Syrian refugees

A Syrian man carries a body out of the rubble following air raids by government forces

Britain should only open its doors to Christian refugees from Syria, according to a leading Conservative backbencher.

Revealed: Rape victims abused in British detention centres

The controversial Yarl's Wood detention centre, burnt down by detainees in 2002

Female victims of rape and torture are subjected to abuse and intimidation in British detention centres, according to a damning new report into the plight of women asylum seekers in the UK.

Ukip donor takes out bizarre anti-gay advert

Farage plans to rid Ukip of 'Walter Mitty' figures

Nigel Farage's attempts to distance Ukip from the extreme views of its members fall apart as a major party donor takes out an extraordinary newspaper advert describing homosexuality as an "abomination".

Central African Republic calls for UK to send troops as it falls into civil war

A French soldier stands by the body of a Muslim man who was reportedly beaten to death by a crowd in the north of Bangui last Friday.

Britain asked to send soldiers to the Central African Republican, as the country slips into civil war

The best of the week in Comment and Analysis...

This is your brain online: What can you and can't you say on Twitter?

Carl Miller: 'The problem is that it is now not a question of trolls breaking the law, but a question of whether it is in the public interest to prosecute them'

The laws on illegal tweets are much wider than you think

Comment: The conspiracy of silence around Croydon's knife attacks

Georgie Keate: 'The borough commander saw me and snarled: "What a headline last week''

Six young people stabbed in eight days. But the police say crime in Croydon is dropping.

Comment: Ukip is turning into a pale blue Tory party

Godfrey Bloom: The current leadership want to... professionalise, homogenise, sterilise, pasteurise or any other 'ise' you fancy

Nigel Farage wants to get rid of the 'wrong people' in Ukip - but most of them are in central office.

Comment: When was the last time feminists did anything for real women?

Janice Atkinson: 'I took my husband's name because I love him and wanted to marry him'

While professors of 'womens studies' pontificate about whether we should use maiden names, real women count their pennies and get to work.

PMQs verdict: Miliband's first big win of 2014 leaves Cameron tongue-tied

Poised and confident: MIliband scores his first major win of 2014

Miliband picks apart the PM's evasions to score his first major win of 2014.

Comment: How Bafta strike action made the Royal Opera House pay a decent wage

Joseph Blake: 'A mini-revolution is happening on the streets of London'

They charge hundreds for tickets, but pay pittance to their cleaners: how a new trade union took on one of the most famous institutions in Britain.

Comment: Banning smoking in cars with kids is an abuse of state power

Ian Dunt: ' If we're prepared to pass laws to protect children from the health risks of their parents' choices, then we'd better be prepared for the repercussions'

Once you invite the state into your private property it will make itself comfortable and demand ever more powers.

Comment: We need a law to protect us against privatisation

Caroline Lucas: I've had many heartbreaking letters and emails from constituents who've been made more ill by distressing experiences of Atos fit-for-work assessments

It's time for a radical change - one that recognises that the services that we pay for and rely on should be accountable and transparent

Blog: The press's hysterical reaction to 50p tax shows how out of touch they have become

Ed Balls under fire for saying wealthiest should pay more

The press's reaction to Ed Balls' proposal shows they have lost touch with their readers.

"New EU targets are useful as they put a peg in the ground" says IET

The European Commission has outlined its plans for climate and energy policy until 2030. Read IET comment here.

Selective Catholic school admissions policy decision quashed over "arguable error"

‘Inconsequential technicality’ leads to quashing of schools adjudicator decision on London Oratory School.

Tree of Hope: "Piece of the Puzzle, Autism Awareness Shoe"

The "Piece of the Puzzle, Autism Awareness Shoe" has been created especially for Blossom For Children and Tree of Hope.

More long term support needed for families displaced by flooding say researchers

Planning for the emotional aftermath of devastating floods is as important as the immediate impact of such emergencies.

"Warm words" on mental health from Nick Clegg welcome - but the reality is budget cuts

Comment on Nick Clegg Mental health speech from charity Rethink Mental Illness.

IET responds to OECD findings that girls still trail boys in maths

The maths ability of teenage girls in the UK trails behind that of boys, according to figures from the OECD.

Voice: Research like Sutton Trust report should highlight importance of low wages

Voice comments on Sutton Trust childcare report.

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