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. | |
The top five most-read articles on Politics.co.uk this week. 5. Whisper it: Nick Clegg is actually having a pretty good election
Most polls suggest he's on the edge of losing his seat along with many of his fellow Lib Dem MPs. So why's Nick Clegg looking so chipper? Could it be that he's just demob happy, or could it be that he expects the Lib Dems to pull off a last-minute recovery? One poll out today finds the party edging back into the teens for the first time in a long time, while constituency polls have shown they remain surprisingly resilient in many of the seats the Conservatives previously assumed would be easy pickings. Clegg has had a horrible few years as party leader but he's looking more confident than he has for some time. Could things finally be looking up? 4. This isn't an election, it's an extended photo-op
The first week of the election campaign has been great for fans of the political photo-op. So far we've had George Osborne fixing a car, Nick Clegg painting a wall and David Cameron feeding a lamb. But while voters have had plenty of opportunities to see the party leaders posing for the cameras, opportunities to see them under serious scrutiny have been few and far between. Instead we've witnessed a series of carefully controlled media opportunities, vetted questions and a procession of journalists with little else to report on but what the prime minister last ate for lunch. 3. Non-doms: Miliband has found his voice
Yet amid the stream of photo-ops, there has been at least one substantive policy announcement this week. Labour's proposal to abolish the non-dom tax break caused a panicked reaction both among the Tories and their supporters in the press. While many newspapers attacked the proposals as "anti-business" and "cataclysmic", a series of polls found they had massive public support, even among Conservative voters. The announcement has been followed by some of the best polls for Labour in months, with Milband's own approval ratings also surging. Is this a sign that Miliband has finally found his voice? 2. Leaders' debate verdict: A win for Nicola Sturgeon
Polls at the end of last week's UK leaders' debate failed to give either Miliband or Cameron a clear win. However, while the two men struggled to stand out, the leader of the SNP had no such difficulties. Sturgeon's articulate, confident and persuasive performance won over voters both north and south of the border. When former SNP leader Alex Salmond stood aside last year, many commentators predicted that the SNP would fall back. Instead, a new poll out today suggests their support has actually risen to new highs. So will this popularity last all the way until polling day, or will Sturgeon and her party go the same way as Cleggmania in the final stages of the 2010 general election? 1. Scottish leaders' debate: Jim Murphy has damaged Labour's chances
When Jim Murphy took over as Scottish Labour leader at the end of last year, the party hoped he could at the very least stop any further collapse of the party's fortunes, if not actually reverse them. Recent polls suggest he has failed on both counts. Yet it is his comments about what happens the day after the election that could cause the most damage to Labour's chances. His repeated insistence that the largest party should form the government, risks coming back to haunt Labour if they fail to win the most seats. Contrary to what Murphy believes, in a parliamentary system the right to form a government always goes to the party best able to win the backing of the majority of MPs. As things stand, that party is Labour, even if they win narrowly fewer seats than the Tories. This is a massive inbuilt advantage, but it is an advantage Murphy is apparently determined to give up. Best of the rest...Comment: Intermarriage is the acid test for migrant integrationIf Britain is to integrate migrants, an element of cultural exchange - including intermarriage - is a virtual necessity. Are the wheels coming off the Tory campaign?There's a sense of panic from Tory HQ since Labour's non-dom announcement The most embarrassing election leaflets of 2015As campaigning steps up another gear voters are starting to come across election leaflets – and using social media to mock them. The app that will sway thousands in the 2015 general electionThe data suggests it has singlehandedly persuaded over 100,000 voters to change their minds and back another party. Should we be paying a little more attention to Vote Match? Trident intervention shows the Tories are in real troubleFallon intervention shows party is stuck in the past There is more chance of Michael Bloomberg flying to the moon than becoming London mayorFormer New York mayor is not eligible under UK law | An expanded Heathrow would take Wales furtherEvery part of Britain is set to gain from an increased aviation hub capacity if the right decision is made – especially Wales. RSPCA - urgent #homesforhorses appeal launchedCharity received more than 22,000 calls in 2014 as horse crisis continues. London Oratory School in High Court challenge to School Adjudicator’s ruling on discriminatory admissions policyOn Tuesday and Wednesday this week, the High Court will hear whether one of the country's leading state secondary schools has been selecting its pupils on ethnic and socio-economic grounds in its admissions policy, the BHA can reveal. Older women with breast cancer not receiving best care and treatmentDiana Jupp: "It is unacceptable that, in 2015, a breast cancer patient does not get the best care and treatment simply because of how old they are". Government waives planning permission for commercial rooftop solarBarrier for solar rooftops up to 1MW first raised by the STA over a year ago falls away. |
Friday, 10 April 2015
Pick of the Week: Sturgeon surging - Politics.co.uk
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment