Posts archive for: 2 November, 2008
  • 2 November 2008 - Have the Conservatives jumped the license fee shark?

    Another day, another Conservative gimmick. This spread attempts to analyse not only Charles Moore and Bruce Anderson's intervention in the continuing debate, but also Conservative motivation for offering what may be the most gimmicky policy yet, with the consumer only seeing a £6 saving in order to smash the BBC's face in because they upset the Tories over Yachtgate. With policy being made in response to silly pranks pulled by two overpaid "comedians" (neither of which I find as funny as, say, Drop The Dead Donkey or Blackadder or previous generations' attempts at alternative comedy), have we seen the latest episode perhaps in the "DJ CAM - Pumping up the poll ratings!" policy auction? Or is it actually going to manifest itself in a serious, well-thought-through set of ideas for dealing with the issue of the license fee.

    For what it's worth, I'm not a big fan of the license fee either; it's an anachronism and most other countries have learned to provide a good television and radio service without public subsidy. Since I watch little television as it is (mostly "Seconds from Air Megadisaster Investigation" on the National Geographic Channel and "Everyone Loves People Behaving Badly" on the Paramount Hypocrisy Channel) I don't believe that the BBC provides value for the license fee money any more, particularly since the stuff I grew up on as a child mostly came from commercial television anyway - Blind Date and The Bill were family occasions and when I was twelve I had a crush on Jon Snow from C4 News. While I did an internship at the BBC World Service just before I started my A-levels, I believe that major international channels stand or fall largely on the quality of their output rather than their institutionalised status. Moreover, abolishing the license fee is important to get away from the question of potential bias - my opinion, and that of several unnamed colleagues within the local and national party hierarchy, is that the BBC displays bias towards the government, except when it is at rock-bottom in the polls, when it tends to favour the opposition. The Conservatives in my opinion have been enjoying the benefit of the doubt for too long - and in my notes from earlier in the year I find that I wrote "...and other pro-Tory commentators like Nick Robinson".

    The current issue therefore is not so much high principles as low partisanship. The Tories are annoyed not at Sachsgate but at Yachtgate, where Osborne had much more to fear and much more to lose than Peter Mandelson, given stricter standards applied to parliamentarians than to European Commissioners. With that hunch in mind, I felt the debate deserved a look-in here, as I am not sure that my own internal bias stands up to scrutiny without the cards to help me with this.

    S. Situation. STRENGTH - "Opportunity to put plans into action if one has the courage to take a risk. Morally, the defeat of base impulses. Reconciliation with an enemy - this can be outside oneself, or else refer to unruly forces within."

    This is the Conservative Party exerting control over its own public profile - trying to restrain destructive forces after an accusation on various websites - including the standard responses to Nick Robinson's blog posts - that the BBC deliberately focuses on the Tories' weaknesses to the detriment of attempts to promote their own agenda. This is a largely positive card for the querent, in that it shows restraint, discipline and control, but the aspects here suggest a political bias of their own and an attempt to manipulate output in their own favour to offset a perceived Labour bias.

    1. External reasons. ACE OF CUPS - "The feminine, passive power of gestation. The primal quiescence of the Element of Water. Nourishment, protection, the processes of creation, faithfulness, the faculty of feeling. Great fruitfulness is indicated, also fertility and the workings of love in the world. Can predict marriage, future motherhood, joy and plenty."

    The Tories are trying to offer an altruistic reason for doing this by offering leadership on the moral issues surrounding recent remarks by Brand and Ross, and it follows on from debates over the issue spearheaded by Charles Moore yesterday in the Telegraph and added to by Bruce Anderson, who is more revealing about underlying attitudes than Moore. It is presented as a response to concerns from the public that taxpayers should not be paying for smutty or obscene comments, and offers a direct and immediate response to this question.

    2. Internal reasons. VI PENTACLES - "Balance and solvency in material affairs. Income equals expenditure and the wheels of commerce turn smoothly. This is the card of the philanthropist, who uses his wealth not to build himself up, but to help others rise up in the world also. It indicates charity, sympathy, kindness of heart, and the gratitude of one who has been well-favoured by fortune. Gifts, awards, help from above, patronage."

    The Tories' main reason for doing this is probably still fairly decent, in that it helps propose a saving or tax cut equal to a £6 cut in the TV license fee and could be seen as giving them a unique and interesting policy to try and restart their bid for office. However there is some sort of patronage extant here, in that it looks as if they are listening to internal discussions without doing anything exceptionally radical. It is a piece of funded, thought-through policy, which they need; however it may also be seen as rather a gimmick and also not offer significant benefit to the consumer nor change much BBC policy. It is a way of making small changes to the status quo rather than giving a large windfall to viewers.

    3. Roots of the policy. IV WANDS - "Achievement in the realm of ideas. The card of the successful and renowned designer, innovator or professional man. The establishment of beauty and elegance. Wit, mental alacrity, the most subtle arts of civilisation, refinement, and culture."

    An idealistic and ideologically driven policy based on internal debates and the need to give voice to internal concerns. The Four is usually a card of internal stability and structure, and thus the implication here is that this policy was formed from the debate about bias common on a lot of Tory websites. It cannot as such be voiced in that way, but the Brand/Ross fiasco has legitimised and given shape to these discussions, such that the debate has crystallised into policy. Full marks for trying...

    4. Consequences of the policy. V PENTACLES -"Poverty, destitution, material worries, unemployment, loss of security. This card warns of severe material adversities ahead, but suggests that enforced restriction in one area of life may open up possibilities in others. Important bonds may be formed with those in similar circumstances, and avenues still remain to be explored. The message here is 'do not despair'."

    ...but half marks for outcome. As a policy it does not satisfy those who want a full review of the license fee, nor does it look good to those who have read the internal debates and see the Sachsgate affair as an excuse to punish the BBC for Yachtgate. Most papers covered the story in some detail, including the Daily Telegraph - should those have a windfall tax levied on them because of anti-Tory bias? It makes the Tories seem petty and vindictive while the savings to the consumer are paltry. This is knee-jerk policy-making at its worst as the party seeks to find a way to revive its flagging poll ratings without daring to be radical or to articulate coherent manifesto plans a single second before Brown calls an election.

    5. Necessary reasons for this policy. VI WANDS - "Victory, triumph, the arrival of great news. The complete fulfilment of major hopes and wishes. Success earned by hard work and originality, satisfaction in what has been achieved. The skilful overcoming of all opposition through the use of diplomacy instead of force."

    In this context, the necessary reason for this was to score points over an adversary and impose a moral standard on wayward comics. It also wanted to display radical thinking, shocking the public into paying attention to Tory proposals. The Conservatives needed to score some points and demonstrate their radical credentials; just as Tony Blair once described himself as belonging to the "radical centre", so the Tories need to show that their thinking goes beyond the rather complex and ponderous economic debate being conducted at levels well above the political stratosphere. It is an impressive radical idea - but if it is to be anything more than that it needs to form part of a solid platform, and the victory implied in the Six of Wands is temporary and needs consolidation to be made permanent.

    6. Unnecessary reasons for this policy. JUSTICE - "Injustice, lack of fair dealing, bias, prejudice. Legal tangles that delay the administration of the law. Complex and expensive law-suits."

    There is a bias here and the Tories have naturally decided that there own interest is best served by attacking an institution perceived by a minute section of society as biased or objectionable, while ignoring the fact that most people are not bothered by the contents of the Tories' own blogosphere. This policy is naive, only gives a £6 pa saving for the average licenseholder, and does not address more radical opinion that suggests that the state-owned TV stations in other countries do not suffer from commercialisation and that the license fee is rapidly becoming an anachronism, particularly in a hi-tech, globalised society. It is a proposition made at the wrong time, for the wrong reasons, and does not go far enough for most of those against the license fee in principle.

    7. Pro-Labour BBC bias. THE WORLD - "The final and successful completion of any matter in hand. The summing up of a question or series of circumstances. A culmination of events. The ending of a cycle of destiny."

    The answer here is two-fold. One, if any debate has crystallised or culminated, it is the one on Conservative Home or Nick Robinson's blog during Yachtgate as to why the BBC supposedly opened the book on Osborne rather than sticking to GO's revelations about Mandelson, nor the spurious one about whether taxpayers should fund obscene phone-calls regarding a member of the "Satanic Sluts". Two, if the BBC was not pro-Labour beforehand, it may be forgiven for becoming so now, if only because the Tories have been so rash as to have this debate in Opposition and not safely in power.

    8. Pro-Tory BBC bias. II PENTACLES - "The cycles of change at work in the world, the natural fluctuations of fortune which must be allowed for when planning ahead. Indicates movement and changes that are imminent - news, communications, journeys, all connected with business, money, material pre-occupations. Stimulating developments which give birth to an atmosphere of light-heartedness, laughter, joy in the pleasures of society. Skilful navigation of the waters of existence, knowledgeable manipulation of the rules of life to attain continuing success."

    The fluctuations in fortune are significant enough recently to show that it is possible to suggest that when the Conservatives were quite significantly ahead in the polls the BBC was pro-Tory. The target of current blogosphere attention, Nick Robinson, is listed somewhere in my notes as "pro-Conservative" - I remember a party colleague after the 2005 election suggesting the BBC would be more friendly to us after he took up his position as chief political editor there - proof "our people" were now taking over despite the general election defeat. So the perception of bias tends to shift and if it is now pro-Labour, it was evidently pro-Tory not so long ago.

    9. Continuing approach from the Tories. KING OF CUPS - "He is skilled in the way of the world. He is a born manipulator, gifted at conducting negotiations and arriving at a position of power and authority by means of the agility of his mind rather than the strength of his body. He is a man of ideas, a patron of the arts and sciences, an expert in law, and a leader in business. He seeks power and the fulfilment of his own high ambition, and is adept at diverting the tides of fortune into channels that suit his own ends. He instinctively works in secret, behind the scenes, and avoids taking others into his confidence whenever possible. His motives remain hidden and he is often distrusted or feared by those around him. He commands respect, but not love."

    The Tories are not commanding much love here because they are working from narrow sectional interests rather than with the benefit of the BBC as an institution or the press and media in general. This approach looks agile, radical and what Adrian Edmondson might call "edgy", but it is really in the same league as leaving obscene messages on Mark Thompson's answer-phone about what the Tories would like to do to Auntie. It is calculated to appeal to the people - all 37,000 of them who complained about Sachsgate, but in reality does little to address serious issues about the license fee. Cameron may think this is a harmless prank but the last people to do that have had both their BBC careers truncated or suspended. Not a good precedent to follow.

    10. Long-term consequences. VIII WANDS - "Hopeful change, movement, activity. The ending of delays and the speeding up of all matters. Suggests a suitable time for taking the initiative, acting with courage and self-confidence, and grasping opportunities as they occur. A favourable omen for news and communication of all kinds, the promotion of understanding and co-operation. Important journeys are shown - particularly travel overseas or to a new country. This is not a card that indicates success in itself, but it suggests conditions which can lead to success."

    In the context of the immediate consequences which do not look too good for this idea, this card accelerates change or momentum, which could either ameliorate or exacerbate the Five of Pentacles. The unbalanced and chaotic nature of this card tends to rush towards something, but since the Five moderates and tempers this with an unintended or mediocre outcome, the speed that is suggested here could get out of control and derail rather than enhance the Tory strategy for the next election. They may be going too fast in the direction of the Five to slow down and restrain their approach to their detractors and people who do not agree with them.

    11. Direction of trend. THE WHEEL OF FORTUNE - "The commencement of a new cycle in one's affairs. The processes of destiny, working through time. Events of great moment, over which one can have no personal influence. The operation of the laws of fortune. The solving of a problem through the progression of circumstances. The reaping of what has been sown."

    The Tories are at the mercy of events here - no man is an island. The events of 9/11 opened up a flaw in Tony Blair's personality wide enough for the Tories to (belatedly) catch on to the prospect of government, only to have the pendulum stopped half-way. Had 9/11 not happened, Iraq and the concomitant diminution of Blair's former popularity may not have happened and he would have won another landslide in 2005, leaving the Tories in a comparatively difficult position now. The recent events in Brown's favour have increased the difficulty level of winning the next election, and more unseen and unpredictable events are likely on the horizon. Whether these will be in the Tories' favour or to their misfortune is still to be understood, but on recent form, it may get worse before it gets better.

    12. Outcome. IV CUPS - "Emotional happiness and fulfilment which has reached its peak and can proceed no further. The establishment of a family. The passive enjoyment of that which has already been attained. But this card also indicates a new dissatisfaction which the things of this world cannot assuage. Fulfilment having been attained, what can follow? Love is perhaps turning into familiarity."

    Two things have already shown that the Tories have some internal problems. One is that Shadow Cabinet members have been asked to give up their second jobs to concentrate on the run-up to the next election - and have complained about taking a pay-cut as a result*. A memo has also been leaked suggesting the Tories are desperate to find something to reverse the current downward trend, and Cameron's team has suggested that old policies should be recycled to try and find something to say. The Party needs to find something to stimulate flagging enthusiasm for it, but does not know how to produce genuine, timely manifesto promises which can re-engage voters that have returned to Labour during the credit crunch. There is a feeling here of ennui, which Cameron cannot shift despite this seemingly radical "brainwaves" such as this. This is designed to stroke the egos of a few activists, disguised as a tax cut which delivers minimal benefit for the viewer and invites reaction from a BBC which only followed Fleet Street's lead in pouring the same sauce over the Tory gander as well as the Labour goose. The party is running out of steam and should seek ways to genuinely excite voters and activists alike rather than paranoid gimmicks designed to punish perceived enemies.

    *(perhaps they should be reminded that Cabinet ministers only earn a set amount and probably should not be having other directorships that pay £200,000+; they should also take heed that Ann Widdecombe's comment as Shadow Home Secretary that she would not want to be the actual Home Secretary because she could not sanction abortions possibly did not do us any good as regards Shadow Cabinet ministers at a previous election who refused to face up to the realities of serving in Her Majesty's Government.)

  • 2 November 2008 - Glenrothes Revisited - Labour leak suggests SNP will win a 3,000 majority

    I've never heard of turkeys voting for Christmas, but this may be a case of Guy Fawkes voting for Bonfire Night. A Labour leak has suggested that the SNP might win a 3,000 majority. Discounting the point that this might be misinformation (the Hubdub ticker for this has narrowed appreciably since I posted the widget a few days ago) in order to get Labour voters to turn out on the day, we have to assess the impact that this particular by-election will have, not only on the SNP and Labour but on the Tories. Although they are not going to win - not even David Cameron thinks so - the by-election will have an impact on them as the main opposition party. The intuitive answer goes something like this:

    If Labour win, then they will be seen to be clawing back more of their poll ratings and this might give them more of a bounce, reducing the Tories' lead into territory that will produce a hung parliament or even regain the lead by a few points.

    If the SNP win, then Labour will break and run; the bounce will evaporate; and the Tories will reclaim a lot of the lead they have lost over the past month. A BPIX poll in the Mail on Sunday has given them a 14% lead, but as Tory Home states, this survey does not get factored into their poll-of-polls because of the unreliability and irregularity of its appearances. It claims to take raw data from YouGov, but YouGov usually weight their findings based on demographic data and the likelihood that people will vote, and the fall into single figures remains. However with Labour on the run in Scotland, the Tories will smell blood and go back on the attack and into a genuine double figure lead.

    So it was worth doing a line for the Tories as well, and my findings were rather counter-intuitive based on the above assumptions but par for the course with other readings. Meanwhile Portillo has broken ranks this morning with an article in the Sunday Times all but suggesting Brown should cut and run with an early poll, given Tory disarray. The first cuckoo of spring? I'll look at this later, along with the license fee debate and the Tories' response to that issue.

    First, though, the SNP and Labour. I am using Terry Donaldson again.

    SNP

    a. Impact of result. QUEEN OF CUPS - "In a woman's cards, it would generally show either her, or a woman significant in her life in an emotional sense. In a man's cards it would show either a significant woman or the 'female' receptive side of his personality."

    I get the words "relief" and "acceptance" here in this card, the ability to relax and enjoy the result after a hard-fought battle. The SNP pride themselves on a good victory and learn from the process of campaigning and any mistakes they made and the way of solving the problems arising from them, or they manage to hold Labour to a small win rather than allowing themselves to crumple and fade, and let Labour away with the seat.

    b. Direction afterwards. VII SWORDS - "The need for vigilance. Also, an important but worthwhile sacrifice being made. A rather shadowy figure creeps into our encampment and makes off with five swords, leaving behind the two that presumably he cannot carry."

    The SNP do damage, but not lasting or significant, to Labour's prospects in Scotland. A short term gain, but since they cannot carry everything away they are unable to KO Labour completely and should remain aware that there are still more battles ahead.

    c. Positive developments. VI CUPS - "Learning to give and receive on an emotional level. Two people face each other, each offering a cup of friendship, from which flowers are growing. This card is similar to the Two of Cups but here there is a sense of something - shown by the flowers - having already grown, rather than starting completely afresh."

    A partial reconciliation springs to mind, though I am not sure who or what the SNP will be reconciled with. A peaceful, calm time for the party and a flourishing of ideas, strategies and techniques for office in Holyrood and participation in Westminster. A lasting result for the SNP.

    d. Negative developments. PAGE OF PENTACLES - "A young sergeant-at-arms stands looking out at the horizon. Represents looking around at one's own economic horizon for something new to get into. An alternative meaning is the preparedness to take on new responsibilities as the young sergeant gets ready to be an officer."

    This might indicate complacency and a feeling of entitlement, and the SNP may read more into the result than necessary - there might be people on the radical edge of the party believing this gives them a mandate for independence - the candidate has already stated that he would get "homesick" at Westminster and supposing he would be there only five years or so before independence. The SNP need to avoid getting too hopeful that this marks the beginning of the end for the Union - it may be just a protest vote that will return to Labour at the next general election.

    e. Eventual Outcome. PAGE OF WANDS - "Learning and/or travel is shown here, as the Page prepares himself for a journey which will take him through foreign lands, suggested by the mountains/pyramids shown behind him in the distance."

    A dynamic situation with as-yet unrealised potential - potency and possibilities only beginning to be realised. If the SNP can remember that independence from England would not bring huge dividends and would mean the end of free healthcare given the size of the taxbase of comparable countries like Ireland, and thus would impose financial hardship on constituents, then they can use this potential within the Westminster system and help Scotland to flourish without being too dependent on English money or being a participatory force within the Union. The SNP have the possibility to speak up for Scotland but are foolish to claim that any victory here enhances the possibility of actual independence.

    LABOUR

    a. Impact of Result. THE WORLD - "A very successful period is opening up for you. The achievement of an important objective in your life. Aim still higher, because the higher you aim the better. Dealing with the building blocks of reality. Entering a period of completing a karmic debt."

    The impact of the result is one of transcending possible defeats and turning it into a victory over other forces elsewhere. Although the polls and cards still point to an SNP win, the force is still with Labour enough to get a positive outcome from this result. It really depends on how Brown reacts and how the English polls react, because the opposition is still fragmented over the UK as a whole. If the Tories are not winning in Scotland other diversions may be in place to minimise the damaging aspects of defeat.

    b. Direction afterwards. KNIGHT OF SWORDS - "If this represents a person, it shows the querent or a man that they are closely associated with in a conflict situation. The Knight may be on their side or an adversary. This card can sometimes suggest the use of conciliation and negotiation rather than the continuation of hostilities. If it represents a process, it points to the need to prepare for battle, the kind of battle being suggested by the surrounding cards."

    Brown will be anxious to try to quell any potential fall-out from this and although at one point it threatened to destroy his premiership it no longer has the power to do that. However, he is going to need to be able to turn the agenda away from this quickly and use some of his new potency to stop trouble spreading. There is an ounce of profligacy in this - spending his way out of his own recession - but he is not paralysed by this result, rather energised.

    c. Positive developments. VIII SWORDS - "Frustration. The need for patience. If the woman struggles against the limiting power of the swords (i.e. her situation at this time), then she will only succeed in hurting herself. Here she must exercise self-control and wait until a change takes place in her situation before she dissipates any further energy in trying to set herself free."

    This is the party exercising restraint (since this is a positive development, the card is said to be "exalted" or, in political parlance, have the best spin put on its appearance) and understanding their strengths as well as worrying about their weaknesses. However there is little to be absolutely positive about and this is also a warning to the party that it is dangerous to struggle or behave in a pessimistic, or paranoid manner. This is not ultimately a defeat - the Tories are still not gainng in a place where they ought to be bouncing back to form any kind of a government. Labour cannot afford to panic here, and because this card is exalted, they understand this and learn from this defeat. Brown did not panic during the spring and summer, and Labour will not sack him when he is at his most effective.

    d. Negative developments. WHEEL OF FORTUNE - "Excessive use of intoxicants. Overfunding. Overexpenditure. Huge debts. Expense account. Massive mortgage."

    This is all metaphorical, but Labour need to avoid "overspending" their political capital here and carry on with what they are doing elsewhere. They no longer have a make-or-break situation on their hands, but it could still upset their recovery in the polls across the whole of the UK if the Tories remain sanguine or do not also lose from this or other issues that crop up between now and November 6. Labour need to move on from this as there may be little they can actively do to propel themselves back into a positive lead altogether.

    e. Eventual Outcome. IV SWORDS - "The lifting of tensions. A young knight rests on the ground while above him we see three swords being lifted away. Beside him lays another swords, which is his."

    Brown is not so much bouncing back here but doing what he does best in a crisis - remaining calm, using the qualities of steadiness and patience that he possesses in spades, and allowing even defeat to wash over him. The air is cleared - no panic will result, no leadership issue will be brought forward, and he is able to get on with his job in relative peace.

    THE CONSERVATIVE PARTY

    a. Impact of Result. DEATH - "The Death card shows that one complete period of your life is coming to a close, to make way for a new one which is beginning. We see here the cosmic street sweeper, clearing away all the debris to make way for new life forms to come along. Without that process of purification that new life would just get choked out and be denied its chance of existence."

    Death is often downplayed in the modern tarot because in many private readings the emphasis is on advice rather than prediction and transformation is often regarded as positive rather than negative. However, endings are endings. You could think that what was bad for Labour would be good for the Tories, but this here is counter-intuitive, indicating that it may come too late to stop internal discomfort within the Tory party, or that failure in Glenrothes actually begins to call Cameron's approach to voters north of the border into question. To win a general election the Conservatives have to making waves in Scotland; the party has downplayed its prospects in Glenrothes but this card's processes could even call Cameron's leadership into question.

    b. Direction afterwards. KING OF SWORDS - "If this card represents a person, it shows the querent or a man whom they are associated with in a situation of having won a great victory. By looking at the surrounding cards, we would be able to tell the nature of the victory and whether it has worked to the querent's advantage. If it represents a process or an event it suggests that you do not have to continue struggling. Rather, it might show that the right time has come to reassess whether the time is right for consolidation. In other words, for taking benefit of the gains already achieved."

    The way surrounding cards indicate the impact of the Glenrothes vote for the Tories, it suggests to me that the party is bullish for a bit longer, trying to make maximum gain out of the result. With Death nearby, although purification does not necessarily have to mean physical or political death, it does tend to be a negative card dressed up as a positive result. However, the Tory bullishness represented by this card could mask more difficulties than provide solutions; their difficulties might not come to the fore quite yet because of the masking effect but they may not wholly disappear.

    c. Positive developments. X SWORDS - "Major changes - not always ones that are desired - but the negative aspect of these can be minimised or completely reversed by going along with them and in that way turning them to your advantage."

    This is the positive aspect of one of the most negative cards in the pack - that destruction of something usually leads to change and rebirth. The prognosis is still not good, but at least this result will produce needed change and endings, and, since no-one has ever quite managed to destroy the Tories despite hundreds of attempts over the last twenty years* this is a positive development - though not necessarily for existing personnel. A reshuffle or even a leadership contest could now be seen to be, quite literally, on the cards.

    *(most notably by some on their own side - Michael Gove's article on the eve of the 2004 conference suggesting that the Tories would come third at the 2005 election and with the subtext that he was angling for leadership of this benighted incarnation is not forgotten by Parliament of Fowls, and has meant that every time he opens his mouth to speak on policy I am reminded of his irritatingly callous refusal to help the party who had just given him a safe seat after a month or two of membership and I de facto do not take him seriously. How he managed to square this one with his local party I don't know, because had I been the association chairman I would have demanded his resignation immediately.)

    d. Negative developments. VII PENTACLES. "Hard work, but approaching the harvest time. Notice how in this card we are only approaching our harvest time, i.e. a point where we can witness all of our efforts paying off and materialising. The figure in the card shows someone working a hoe, not a scythe or other cutting instrument. The hoe is used for making water channels through which the plants can receive water. As he stares at the ripening crop, we become aware that it is still not yet ready to be plucked. As you can see, some of the Pentacles are still very small on the plants."

    The Tories have not made the effort here to try and improve their results in Scotland. They have neglected their crops and let the SNP run away with the prize. The intuitive thing from Cameron's point of view is to let the SNP reap the harvest and in the glare of negative publicity, see Brown go down the pan alongside Labour's chances of winning the next election. However this crop is withering on the vines, for two reasons. One, it is naive to believe that events will not conspire, as they have in the last month, to cancel out the bad effects of Glenrothes with better news elsewhere. Two, the Tories have not realised that winning Scotland back is necessary to gain power in the rest of the UK. Becoming a narrow English interest group will neither win them a working majority, nor maintain them in government over the long term. A fragmentation of the opposition was what did for Michael Howard in 2005 because the Liberal Democrats split not only northern and Scottish/Welsh opposition to Labour, they even prevented them from winning southern marginals like Watford, Harlow, seats in the Home Counties and the south-west, not to mention more urban seats in Bristol and Southampton. The Tories need to speak for the whole of the United Kingdom and cannot assume that what is bad for Labour is automatically good for them. Complacency is the thief of electoral success.

    e. Eventual Outcome. KNIGHT OF CUPS - "This card shows an individual or a situation involving an individual in which strong emotions are involved. The person could be a lover, a friend, or a symbol of how the querent is interacting with others emotionally. In a man's cards, it would show either him or a friend; in a woman's cards it would generally show a man in her life, or the 'male' (active) side of her personality."

    This card for me has come to signify David Davis - during the spring it appeared constantly as an opposition or question for the Tories in otherwise fairly benign outcomes. Nevertheless here it may be a more general sign of trying to troubleshoot the party - warped by the intensity of Death and the Ten of Swords it may be that this is a rescue package of some sort to prevent the Tories going under at a time when we need coherent opposition to Labour rather than a collection of squabbling oppositional factions which have allowed Labour two successive general election wins after the "Ground Zero" approach of 1997. This is the possible alternative to what has evidently failed so catastrophically elsewhere.

  • The Honourable Member for Oak Tree North

    Lovely heartwarming story from the Mail - a cute little wol just right for our parliament...

    Wonder if he is imposing a license fee on the local voles and/or ringing their grandparents saying "I ATE UR LITTLE SNUFFLES YESTURDAYYYYYYY!"

    I think we should be told.

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