Friday 1 May 2015

Pick of the Week: Boris's darker side

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Our top five most-read articles this week, for your reading pleasure.

5. Clegg is the surprise winner of the Question Time debate

"I just wondered if you have got plans for a new job after next week when you become unemployed and your party becomes an irrelevance?" As opening questions to politicians go, this one from a member of the Question Time audience last night to Nick Clegg was particularly brutal. Yet the Lib Dem leader handled the scathing attacks on him last night with relatively good humour and political skill. As a result he emerged from the wreckage looking rather more human than either Cameron or Miliband. Opinion polls suggest that next week's elections are set to be at the very least a near-death experience for the Lib Dems and their leader. Last night's performance suggests that he's still got some fight left in him yet.

4. Two clues to the Tories' post-election plans

What will the Tories do if they fail to win a majority in the general election? Current forecasts suggest they're unlikely to be able to hold on either as a minority government or in coalition. But even if they lose the numbers battle, might they win the wider war? Over the past few weeks they have been preparing for a new battle of legitimacy in the public mind in order to lock Ed Miliband and Labour out of Downing Street. Might they just be able to pull it off?

3. Miliband rules out confidence and supply deal with SNP

Miliband's decision to rule out any deal with the SNP will make it significantly harder for him to form any kind of stable government. The Labour leader was forced into doing so because of persistent questions from the Conservatives. Yet these questions will not go away no matter how many assurances Miliband makes. After ruling out a formal coalition and a supply and confidence arrangement, the Tories are now asking him to rule out any vote-by-vote deals with the SNP. This is highly disingenuous. The reality is that it would be impossible for Miliband to prevent the SNP from voting alongside Labour, even if he wanted to. What they are really asking him to do is rule out forming any kind of minority government at all. This is a ludicrous proposition.

2. Has any Labour leader ever run a worse campaign than Jim Murphy?

Of course the only reason this has become an issue is because of Labour's almost unbelievable collapse in Scotland. If it had not been for this collapse, this election would be all but over and Ed Miliband would have been pretty much certain of becoming PM. Instead he's clinging on to the hope that he'll somehow be able to govern as the leader of a minority party backed by an anti-Tory majority. The causes of the collapse in Scotland are deep-rooted and not merely restricted to Labour's ill-fated role alongside the Conservatives in the independence referendum campaign. But if Scottish Labour had hoped that their new leader Jim Murphy could hold back the tide, they will have been heavily disappointed. Far from stopping, let alone reversing, the SNP surge, Murphy has overseen a further collapse of the Labour party north of the border, with one poll this week suggesting they could even lose every single one of their MPs in Scotland. If that does happen, then Murphy will have to take his own share of the blame.

1. Boris Johnson's row with Ed Miliband reveals his darker side

As one star fades, another rises. The emergence of Boris Johnson as the most likely next leader of the Conservative party has been long-coming, but what do we really know about the man behind the amiable facade? His appearance on the Andrew Marr show last weekend revealed a darker and weaker side to his character that not many people outside of his opponents at City Hall have seen before. It also revealed the limitations of his political skills. In a straight up battle between the London mayor and Ed Miliband on the Marr sofa, Boris came off significantly worse. This matters because within a matter of days we could see a new leadership contest begin in the Conservative party. This was not a fatal blow to Boris's ambitions but at the very least it will have raised some serious questions among his supporters about whether he is really up to the job of leading his party and, more importantly, the country.

Best of the rest...

David Cameron: 'This is a career-defining (err) country-defining election'

David Cameron: "This is a career-defining (err) country defining election"

Prime minister lets loose a revealing Freudian slip during a question and answer session

How should I vote in the general election?

Election day: Which party is closest to my political beliefs?

Our simple guide to the main five political parties

Climate change: The election's most ignored issue

Renewable energy issues have barely been mentioned in the 2015 election campaign

What do the 2015 manifestos reveal of parties' plans to tackle emissions, restore nature or use precious natural resources more wisely? Here's a run-down of their highs and lows.

Comment: A deal with the DUP could threaten the Northern Ireland peace process

Loyalist mural in South Belfast

What impact would a deal between the UK government and unionist parties have?

The fight in Wales: Plaid can't match the SNP's strength – but it can help lock out Cameron

Will the dragon roar? There are few signs of a surge in Welsh nationalism

Welsh nationalists have none of the strength of the SNP - but they could still prove decisive in the post-election chaos to come

UK government ordered to clean up Britain's toxic air

London smog: Air quality in London is 'perfectly fine' claims Boris Johnson

Clean air campaigners win five year legal battle against the government

Scottish hatred of English is 'biggest' racism says Nigel Farage

Farage: The SNP are "openly racist" towards the English

Ukip leader claims SNP are "openly racist"

Natalie Bennett interview: 'I'm not going to let a couple of males drown me out'

Natalie Bennett: "The surge of adrenalin hit my brain and it emptied."

Green party leader talks to Politics.co.uk about riding the surge and crashing on the rocks

An expanded Heathrow would take Wales further

Every 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 launched

Charity 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 policy

On 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 treatment

Diana 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 solar

Barrier for solar rooftops up to 1MW first raised by the STA over a year ago falls away.

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