Posts archive for: 2009
  • 13 July 2009 - Card of the Day



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    Today's card is

    Daggerclaw Imp - Black - Imp

    The Simic use the claws as scalpels, while the Rakdos use them for tattooing and torture. The Gruul use them to pick their teeth after lunching on the rest of the carcass.

    A kamikaze effort is made today by someone unable to keep their opinions to themselves. Given the stream of Labour women - not all of them tainted by the expenses scandal - lining up to accuse Gordon Brown of sexism or being a "Gordfather" or whatever, I'd hazard a guess that more is to come.

  • 10 July 2009 - Card of the Day



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    Today's card of the day does not bode well for someone trying to keep a lid on something private, discreet or secret.

    Monstrous Growth - Green - Sorcery

    The nightstalkers' little game of tease-the-squirrel suddenly took an unexpected turn.

    Enough said.

    -----

    Just a bit of an update - sorry for not linking to the cards yesterday, the links are up now.

    Also, the BBC have reported nothing unusual happening at Jonathan Djanogly's meeting with his Huntingdon constituency. Quelle surprise. We do all know what happened with Andrew Mackay in Bracknell, but this time it seems like Djanogly has got away with it for now; he did repay things before the scandal broke and he did 'fess up. But one hopes he got enough of a grilling to leave him in no doubt what people actually think.

  • 9 July 2009 - Come join with Captain Coulson



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    The title refers to an old folk song about ploughing the high seas in search of a better life - and then being attacked and sunk by pirates.

    Interesting that the Tories have found themselves in trouble over what Andy Coulson did as editor of the News of the Screws, but although people try to excuse Cameron from the issue because he would have known about Coulson before he hired him in 2006, perhaps he didn't know everything. To be fair, I hardly think Coulson would have admitted he did anything wrong before coming to work for Vulpes Vulpes, but the problem is that the Tories have been damaged here by association. I haven't been following the story - having a bit more Me time and looking for another job - but I think it is probably linked to the idea that Pluto in Capricorn is calling Pluto in Sagitarrius to account: the tactics used with impunity in the past are now being laid bare for the public to judge what is going on. Damian McBride was the first casualty of all this. But will Coulson redress the balance and make the Tories look equally foolish?

    A reading will provide a few answers.

    Situation: Ascending Aven - Blue - Bird Soldier

    An interesting card. The bird is well armoured and although belligerent, not overtly evil or malevolent in intent. It may be that Coulson is defending himself well or it may also be that he has nothing to be ashamed of, legally at least. But it is still an aggressive looking card - a challenge to the PinS status quo, and a situation where there is still potential for fireworks.

    Public appearance of Coulson's doings: Clockspinning - Blue - Instant

    Time has moved on and the public are no longer tolerant of politicians' dirty tricks, as Smeargate proved. It's a kind of acceleration of the slippery slope towards the next election, and it could be what the Tories "need" in the way of scrutiny of their own affairs. It's essentially pushing a fast-forward button towards what I feel has been looming over the Tories' head for some time; depending on how Cameron handles being tainted by association with Coulson if he has done something wrong, the buck may even stop with him.

    Internal reality of Coulson's doings: Brassclaw Orcs - Red - Orc

    "Brassclaws were typical Orcs - quick to laud their own prowess in battle, quick to jeer at their opponents, and quicker still to run away when things started to look slightly dangerous."

    A perfect summary for me of what the Tories have been doing for some time. They were taking the moral high ground so much over Smeargate you had to wonder what was in their own graveyards. If Coulson used unethical tactics in his editorship of NotW, has he used unethical, immoral or even illegal tactics while working for the Tories? Perhaps, perhaps not, but this is probably karma rebounding on those that were so quick to jeer during the early spring. For every Damian McBride, there is an Andy Coulson - and neither party now has the moral high ground. Interesting stuff ahead.

    Roots of the Situation: Thermal Glider - White - Rebel

    "The Mercadians are too busy looking down on us to see us coming." - Cho-Arrim rebel

    In other words, the Tories were too busy trying to find dirt on Labour to believe that they were also acting unethically or had people who worked for them who had done so. The "protection from red" mechanic shows clearly that while Labour were unpopular, the Tories believed they were untouchable. As I said, what goes around, comes around.

    Seeds sown by the situation: Crossbow Infantry - White - Soldier

    The crossbow is the ideal weapon for the lazy Mercadians: just point and shoot.

    It may not damage the Tories in the short term but the "lazy" word here confirms my idea that the Tories' own laziness is what will hurt them eventually - Coulson has been found out and may or may not go - I don't see Cameron sacking him at least, Cameron very rarely has the balls to sack anyone, as his behaviour during the expenses scandal has proven - but all this begins to take its toll on both parties, particularly as I have a hunch Norwich North might be an Independent gain if the expenses scandal is what drives the campaign forward. This won't help the Tories at all and the timing is utterly perfect - so perfect that one could think Dolly Draper or Mandy Mandelson must be behind it as revenge for Smeargate. Sad, but probably true, ventures Owlperson.

    Advice to Coulson: Monstrous Growth - Green - Sorcery

    The nightstalkers' little game of tease-the-squirrel suddenly took on an unexpected turn.

    Coincidentally, Mr Coulson is a squirrel totem - and this shows him growing to enormous proportions. If he does keep his job, he has to grow up - he has to play nice, or the public won't like the people he advises.

    Advice to the Tories/Cameron: Vintara Snapper - Green - Turtle

    "The snapper is still when all else moves/And strikes when all are dozing." - Tales of the Vintara Forest.

    The Tories need to lie still and stop bleating - and let Coulson be judged himself, or risk being dragged into this row. It's Coulson's doing as a newspaper journalist, not as a political spin doctor, but if he goes down, he should go down alone - not pulling Vulpes Vulpes with him. Thus the Tories could still jettison him while they have a chance. Unfortunately, of course, Cambo needs him as part of his "team" and thus is standing by him. Most of the time, people who become an embarrassment go very quickly when the person who is being tainted by association begins to suffer too, so I don't read too much into Cameron's initial endorsement of him. But a swift decapitation is needed to get them out of this mess too - they need to snap him off and leave him to face the music alone.

    Warning to Coulson: Tidal Flats - Blue - Enchantment

    The desolation and isolation of this card's art suggests Coulson really is alone, and that if things progress much further he will be abandoned by the Tories. Hopefully for the Tories' sake, the sooner the better; but a lot of people around Cameron are far too sticky for the Tories' own good, and Cameron shows a reluctance to get rid of people who are behaving badly which is a bad omen for government. But Coulson would certainly go if he became too toxic.

    Warning to the Tories/Cameron: Icatian Moneychanger - White - Townsfolk

    The concerns here are depicted by a figure who gives me the feel of the old slogan beginning "you have been weighed in the balance..." (or mene mene tekel upharsin). Perhaps Cameron should not stick to Coulson too long or he could be found rather wanting.

    Direction: Merseine - Blue - Enchantment/Aura

    This echoes the idea of the VIII of Swords in the traditional tarot, though without the connotation of the trap being a deadly one. Rather limitations restrict the situation to an outcome which may see the departure of another errant spin doctor. Removing the trap here requires strength, patience and resources, which are there but may or may not be used to greatest effect here. Regardless, the situation is one which is inescapable without a struggle.

    Solution: Combat Medic - White - Soldier

    "Although Icatia's Combat Medics borrowed much of their knowledge from other societies, their skills were their own." - Sarpadian Empires, vol. VI

    Again the situation is soluble; with patience, thought and backbone things will definitely be better if the struggle is joined to get out of the net above with dignity. It's not an issue that is beyond hope for anyone concerned - but the right decisions have to be made without prejudice or arrogance.  Sadly, those two are qualities shared by our politicians of all stripes, so we should not really be holding our breath. 

    Outcome: Icatian Scout - White - Soldier

    "Scouting is the art of balancing the need to go undiscovered with the need to get all the information you can. It's only by Leitbur's good grace that I'm still alive today." - Ailis Connaut, Diary.

    This is not do or die for the Tories, but they need to be aware of the pitfalls of association with Coulson and get better at recruiting spin doctors who can do what the scout does - gather information - without it being done in a dishonest or illegal way. The number of white cards in the latter part of the spread suggests it's not Gotterdammerung quite yet. It might also presage a return to honest spin as opposed to dirty tricks - which would be a relief after this spring and summer. But I still don't believe the party will emerged unscathed - it doesn't have a pedigree of doing the right thing over doing the expedient thing, nor does Cameron believe in reining in troublesome members who make him look bad. He may find himself no longer untouchable, but to be fair to him, I think he may raise his game a little bit more in response to this scandal than he would have done otherwise.

    Game on.

  • 9 July 2009 - Card of the Day --- the Coulson affair.



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    I will dissect the issue with Andy Coulson a bit later but the CotD reading will read for both him and Vulpes Vulpes as they attempt to wriggle out of the universal law of fate that "what goes around, comes around".

    COULSON:

    Goblin Berserker - Red - Goblin

    Goblins don't know the meaning of the word "tactics"—or the word "meaning," for that matter.

    And Coulson doesn't know the meaning of the words "ethical journalism", either. Shafted. He's obviously the one in the wrong here, but if it goes to a Met investigation - will Cambo be so eager to endorse him?

    CAMERON:

    Counterspell - Blue - Instant

    This card is the iconic "counter" to most spells in Magic - it, or its reworked variant Cancel (Cancel costs more to use and therefore is slower to come out in a game, making you save it for the really big things your opponent has to throw at you, like a Wrath of God, for instance) has won me a few games recently. To me this says that Cameron is the target of the countermagic - that his drive towards power trying to use Labour's dirty tricks against them (viz Smeargate) has fallen victim to the idea that journalists are never slow to challenge someone who sets themselves up as whiter than white. Cameron can't rely on Labour being hoisted on their own petard - he has to find something else, something genuinely positive to say about politics and policies before Coulson brings him down too.

    Like I've been saying for three years now.

  • 9 July 2009 - A late story from the Expenses Scandal



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    Jonathan Djanogly will today be quizzed by constituents on his claims for a cleaner and/or a nanny - it seems he employed her as a cleaner but she then advertised herself as a nanny/au pair on a certain website, raising questions similar to what Caroline Spelman was pilloried for last year over her payments from her Parliamentary allowance to her nanny.

    The issue isn't really the bit about the nanny/au pair business - it's mainly that he only spent three days a month (on average) at the property. (His constituents might also like to question that bit too, whether in fact he is paying attention to Huntingdon properly, a seat inherited from John Major who, according to Owlperson, was much more solicitous of his constituents' goodwill.) £400 a month is quite a lot just for that. As usual it is the amount of money these people can claim from taxpayers in general

    He is denying any impropriety and claiming that:

    "I reconfirm my position that my claims were made within the law and the rules of the second-home allowance scheme," he said.

    and yet:

    "I will not make any further claims in respect of my second home until the system has been reformed."

    Yet he was prepared to claim on an unreformed system for all this time. Like so much of the current crop of MPs, the people who are now falling over themselves to suggest reforms are the people for whom it became second nature to claim these sums, for properties which have in some cases (also see Alan and Ann Keen - Labour are far from whiter than white on this score either) remained empty for long periods of time. Djanogly is a millionaire, and, like the Keens with their double salary, it might also be fair to say that he could pay for it out of his own pocket rather than having to claim from the taxpayer. But that's too simple for some people.

    A card, perhaps, for how Mr Djanogly will fare when he meets his constituents today:

    Balefire Liege - White/Red - Spirit Horror

    The card depicts an incorporeal but nonetheless potent and dangerous spirit who gives fillips to both red and white creatures - a nod to the sophistication involved with Djanogly's demeanour and the rage bubbling beneath his constituents' skin. The scandal is by no means over (and Benedict Brogan in the Telegraph last night asked why Djanogly's claim had been missed by Cameron's "strict" audit) - and although the reception will be civil, it will also be mutedly hostile. The spirit of the scandal burns away - but the rage is focussed and curt rather than diffuse and ineffective. Djanogly will run a gauntlet, and will probably survive, but be damaged with the rest of the Parliament of Manure until someone can come in and sort it all out properly.

  • 8 July 2009 - Card of the Day



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    Today's card is again interesting - they always are.

    Spike Hatcher - Green - Spike

    Something begins strong, but is cannibalising itself either to strengthen others or to keep itself in contention. With the Government putting down a rebellion on the 10p tax rate, Spike Hatcher shows the propensity for regeneration in this context is quite phenomenal, but this warns Gordon and co that such Houdini episodes are ultimately just postponing the agony. Gordon is in command but he is using his finite resources to keep himself going and as such I'm not sure how long he will last once we get some proper discussion and debate going. I have no desire personally to see him go - except down to a proper Tory administration - but it's not up to me, it's up to him to use his strength, resources and +1/+1 counters effectively before they run out altogether. There is a lack on this card of getting any more: when they're gone, they're gone.

    How much longer Spike Hatcher will keep going, I'm not sure. But the resources are only finite, so Gordon must use them sparingly and, in a political context, try to mollify his jittery party and point them towards the real solution - that the Tories will currently fall at the first hurdle they come to without serious effort on their part to start leading the debate.

  • 8 July 2009 - LEGO gets political



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    Not sure whether this is funny, sad or something else but Amnesty's Control Arms group on Facebook has thrown up this fascinating blogger who uses Lego to portray human rights abuses and images of genocide.

    A novel concept. The impact is probably starker considering that the medium used is so novel. I'm actually slightly worried - you don't really know whether to laugh or cry at it, and end up doing the former. The blog is not as vividly written as the Darfur tableaux shown by Amnesty, a pity because it would otherwise be a very novel way of building a unique political outlook on the world. There could also be a slight conflict of opinion in here - she seems very left-wing and try as I might, I can't get worked up about international politics or the Middle East any more. Coming from a Northern Irish Protestant background I find it hard to see the world totally black and white - I would be for Irish unity but the practical obstacles are much bigger; and Owlie, while sympathising with the Palestinian issue and hating Ariel Sharon with a vengeance, points out repeatedly that Israel has acted mainly in self-defence - up to and including Gaza. The more the Arab states around it target it, the more it is going to go overboard in defending itself; and it is, after all, one of the few democracies that exist in that region.

    Legofesto doesn't touch on either situation but I find her expression lacking in subtlety, as if one side is always right and one side always wrong. I may utterly despise David Cameron and all he stands for, but I am prepared to admit he has said one thing of more than passing interest and worth in the past three and a half years - "sunlight is the best disinfectant". (It certainly has been over this spring and summer!) Not even Owlie, on the opposite bench, would say that the Cabinet lacks humanity or loves war - neither does the Shadow Cabinet. Although he did at the time vote for the Iraq War, he did come to believe we'd been duped - or that the top brass were duped. Inside Westminster, the debate was much fuller and more complete, and to give Blair some credit over this, up until Hutton and Butler (where he started to become deluded into thinking his judgment was infallible, leading to the cringeworthy interview early in 2006 when he told Michael Parkinson God told him to do it), at the time of the original debate, he came over as insecure and only believing what someone told him to believe.

    This makes him foolish, in hock to his own puppetmasters and naive, but I don't think anyone did this out of a love of war, except perhaps "What a Dick!" Cheney and Rumsfeld, who can both go to hell.

    Still, to do the Darfur tableaux, I think subtlety is the last thing anyone needs to have.

  • 7 July 2009 - The Quango-Wango Quee

    Excuse me for the nonsense title but Edward Lear might have been on to something about 21st century government.

    Andrew Neil steps in with a lucid and - for once! - highly critical (and not just subtly biased) discussion of the Tories' quango bonfire proposals.

    It's not so much about which quangos protect which vulnerable element of society but about what really is a quango. Good read and quite informative, and restores part of my faith in the media's ability to scrutinise Parliament effectively after the unctuous Kitty Ussher was allowed to sneak past under the BS radar last week.

    Doubtless quangos need reform and their directors possibly need a pay cut but if we are going to reduce spending in the long run we have to provide a robust programme of tricky reform not just axe bodies which are better off being divorced from government to ensure that political manipulation can't be used to distort their remit.

  • 7 July 2009 - Card of the Day



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    Today's card of the day may refer to the barrage of spending cuts that seem unwise, naive or criminally insane, depending on whether you have ever been bombarded by arrogant telemarketers that . Getting rid of quangos I think we'd all agree with, but the Tories really need to be questioned as to whether they believe that getting rid of regulators like Ofcom would not cause more problems in the long run. They have lost all sense of good governance in this - not that they had much perspective in the first place anyway - and may cause more trouble in the long run if this is their plan to reduce the national debt.

    Grapeshot Catapult - Artifact

    Recent research suggests these creatures were invented by Urza's and Mishra's original master, Tocasia, and that both brothers used them.

    The bland flavour text here gives us insight into the nonchalance with which the Tories present their programme for spending cuts - but the name of the card suggests it's just not enough to really make a dent in the debt, and the artwork - depicting goblins, not known for their intelligence - suggest it's another crude "vote-grabber" to go after the Daily Mail vote as usual. The absence of any thought into what happens when we vapourise much of the system that keeps the consumer protected against unscrupulous realities of corporate practice which makes it too easy for a company to keep someone on a mobile phone contract when they need to cancel it, for example.

    Why do the Tories do this? We could say any agency or quango is necessary and protects people from something. But - like the people who make fun of the Health and Safety Executive who don't really realise that the HSE would have a field day with my employer and effectively shut him down if they saw some of the things that he does at his shop - the Tories don't understand that these bodies protect people on the ground from the worst abuses of corporate capitalism. They are taking pot-shots - as in the card - at the framework which makes sure people like me - who certainly won't vote Tory if these policies are taken seriously by the cognoscenti a million miles away from abusive telemarketers and absent health and safety regulations (out of date food is stored in our shop's fridges, rather than removed to the back room, meaning that customers' health is put in danger from possible cross-contamination).

    A sad day for Britain if spending cuts are more important than protecting the vulnerable from corporate sharks. And a sad day for the Tories as they have definitely now lost my vote at the next election. 

  • 6 July 2009 - Card of the Day



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    Today's card of the day is...interesting, to say the least. Sorry for not writing over the weekend, but I felt it less easy to write two weekend cards because not much usually happens. This weekend did involve Facebook, MI6 and some rather less-covert-than-expected revelations, but they're gone now, so nothing really did happen. Trust me. It didn't...

    Rain of Filth - Black - Instant

    "When I say it rained, it was not small drops, but a thick, greasy drool pouring from the heavens." — Urza, journal
    Intriguing. Just what this means is fascinating, as I can't see many potentially volatile things happening today, but then, I'm not the one who's got a pile of juicy sleaze scandals on her desk ready to go to press this evening. The mechanics of the card require the sacrifice of resource-producing land to facilitate the production of extra resources (or "mana"), so it could refer to the Rover revelations that are trickling out. We shall see - as you know I'm not good at pinpointing what exactly is going to happen before it does - but don't be surprised if an ooze of leaks occurs at some point today.
  • 3 July 2009 - Card of the day



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    Today's card of the day is...

    Goatnapper - Red - Goblin Rogue

    Kith goats are just for practice. The real prize, of course, is a giant's cloudgoat.

    Whatever happens now is a way in, a way of weakening someone in order to get to the real paydirt. It could refer to George Osborne - this could refer to a repeat of Yachtgate; Owlperson is shaking his head but Deep Throat is giving me this so it could be that Owlie is concerned that I am getting too excited while DT knows more about how this develops over a longer period of time. Basically, GO is not in any particular political danger. But the story is largely target practice for bigger game. The expenses scandal, and even Yachtgate, is not over quite yet.

  • 2 July 2009 - Osborne to be investigated by sleaze watchdog



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    Shame it comes from his local Tatton Labour Party rather than anyone else, as that kind of thing is easily brushed aside as party political motivation. Osborne's CGT issue will not be investigated as this is a matter - apparently - for HMRC.

    Quite interesting that the Shadow Chancellor will be investigated by the department he may be responsible for after the Tories return to government, but stranger things have happened, such as Alistair Darling claiming tax advice on expenses and essentially getting away with it.

    I look forward to HMRC being called in but I think the end of the world will happen before that. However, with Pluto in our collective national birth sign, Capricorn, stranger things have happened.

    A card each for Osborne's past, present and future. An extra card fell out of the pack while I was shuffling, and for tarot readers this card is often important to the situation as a whole, so let's have it as a Situation card and then draw three more cards.

    Situation - Smokebraider (Red, Elemental Shaman)

    "Be silent and listen to your inner fire. Only then can you walk the path of flame."

    In all this, the Tories are being scrutinised before they get a chance to enter government. They have had a fairly smooth ride so far, and since Yachtgate didn't remove him, he has to stand up to the "sunlight" he and Cambo have been assuring us is the "best disinfectant". How he behaves in this will provide a judgement on his suitability to be Chancellor. He should accept this challenge, but too often the Tories are arrogant enough to assume that the characteristics of Pluto in Sagittarius (PinS - henceforth Pluto in Cap is "PinC") - a ruling orthodoxy in the media and a free ride while their opponents are trampled underfoot - still apply. With Pluto entering Capricorn during Yachtgate, the Tories were surprised when their attempts to smear Mandelson rebounded on them. Essentially, this was a sign that the motto for this cuspal era, while PinS is blowing itself out and PinC is beginning to establish itself, that "what goes around comes around" and "he who fights by the sword dies by the sword" means greater balance in the press and greater opportunity to hold people of both sides to account for their actions. Osborne should look on this as a test. If he passes it, great, he is made of good stern stuff and can take on the role of Chancellor easily. If he fails...no dice. The Past/Present/Future spread will give me more of an idea whether he will pass or not.

    Past - Elvish Promenade (Green, Enchantment)

    "The faultless and immaculate castes form the lower tiers of elvish society, with the exquisite caste above them. At the pinnacle is the perfect, a consummate blend of aristocrat and predator."

    Osborne indeed has lived by the sword. He was responsible for spinning against Mandelson, and it backfired because he expected to escape scrutiny due to the assumed media swing to the Tories. He hoped also to assume the mantle of a faultless or even become a perfect - and again the role of a politician in PinS was to be predator or prey. His old boss Howard became prey to Blair, but he and Cambo assumed they would be the predators to Brown. When the scandal hit, they hoped to use it to their advantage - and failed because they were also prey to a media who declared any politician fair game. So Osborne not only was a Perfect - by elvish standards - but assumed the mantle of a predator. Auden quoted the maxim "He to whom is evil done, does evil in return" in a poem about the Spanish Civil War. Sadly, the prey in 2005 is the predator in 2009 - but that maxim is becoming too apparent in the modern Conservative Party, at the expense of any idea of dignity, gravitas and coherent plans for long-term government. I prefer Brown's method of government, and in PinC that style of government becomes more and more necessary to cope with the potential collapses PinC augurs in the world financial system. So we must never assume the mantle of a perfect. But Osborne and Cameron know no better, and have.

    Present - Duskwalker (Black, Minion)

    Osborne (and, in my opinion Cameron too; since he is wedded to Osborne and didn't ditch him in late 2008 like someone more astute might have done in the wake of Yachtgate) is now corrupted by being part of the winning side, and is hoping to walk forward untested and unjudged into government. Not possible. If the heat of a general election wouldn't get him, the light of the expenses scandal might. The card is still powerful, but this power has been bought in exchange for his purity and incorruptibility. And guess what? He too has CGT bills he avoided. He can no longer stand up to the scrutiny PinC will bring. Even if he wins, he will be tainted, as his leader is, and unlike some of the older generation brought up in power under the forces of Pluto in Scorpio, where real deaths and real rebirths were constantly testing the mettle of Michael Howard and Ken Clarke, among others - the Hillsborough and Zeebrugge disasters, the Lockerbie bombings and Kegworth air crashes, the poll tax riots and other chaos, ending with the cuspal Dunblane massacre, exposed the government to scrutiny, forced their hands and ultimately led to the Tories' downfall. The intervening years have been all the worse for lack of scrutiny of government, and then opposition. But what that leads to is corruption that is now subject to scrutiny. Power for the Tories has come at a price. And the image of choking dust suggests more metaphorical clouds gathering to act as the abrasive scrutiny we all need and deserve.

    Future - Lammastide Weave (Green, Instant)

    "A ribbon torn will ward away dark dreams."

    I'm going to give this a conservative reading and say we will find out Osborne's fate at Lammastide - early August. I can foresee a good ending - for all concerned - but the card points to what it has come to represent for me, and Osborne will have to wait for the judgement on his expenses, as will we, since July is going to be more evasion than actual enlightenment. It is a generous card, so I am allowing Deep Throat to come in and say that Osborne like others will be judged by the general election, but that things will be settled largely before then, so Lammastide is a fair reading for this card and attempts to guess what will happen will have to wait for that time for now.

  • 2 July 2009 - Yet another reason why Kitty Ussher is standing down from Parliament at the next election...



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    And they think we're going to believe this. She should be made to stand up before the people who watch Daily Politics and say why she is really leaving, just how much she owes in CGT, and be made to write a cheque live on air.

    Up until a few weeks ago, Kitty Ussher was the high-flying Exchequer Secretary to the Treasury, a job description which needs at least an A-level in Mastery of Tongue-Twisters to write, not to mention say. She resigned from the government because, as Wikipedia states:

    On the 17th June 2009, after controversial details of MP's expenses had been released in the press Ussher resigned, citing a desire to "prevent embarrassment to the government" .Ussher is said to have flipped the designation of her second home from Burnley to South London, in order to avoid Capital Gains Tax estimated at between £9,750 and £16,800 on her Burnley property.

    Essentially, another one caught with her hand in the CGT till. If she really felt this way, why was she a high-flying junior minister?

    She claims to be leaving Parliament, essentially, to spend more time with her family, and not that her short and relatively inglorious career led her to commit tax evasion with public money. Although not yet a criminal offence, under GB's new ideas she'd face a year in jail. Hopefully if these laws come into effect they will make it retrospective.

    Bye-bye Kitty. We all know the reasons you're standing down, and you're using the oldest excuse in the book. No need to pretend why you're doing it - people appreciate honesty in their MPs, and unfortunately, you being MP for Burnley might just have given the BNP more votes. Please don't let us face the prospect of a BNP MP...oops, you might already have.

    The future is dim - the future is Nick Griffin. Hopefully, Labour can turn this one around, but I don't put it past the public mood, and this video does you no favours. In a time when we need truth - however ugly it is - we get another corrupt little porker who thinks she can slide into genteel obscurity. Wasn't that hard to get elected - but how hard will this make Labour's re-election in Burnley next time? One can only guess and hope and pray you don't send us into a re-run of 1933.

    Let's have a look at this through the lens of the oracle cards.

    Kitty Ussher - person/MP

    Fertile Ground - Green - Enchantment/Aura

    Pretty, valuable, and delicious - a boggart thief's trifecta.

    Kitty tried to have her cake and eat it, and was a very promising young MP and minister. She appeared quite a tasty scalp for the Telegraph, and the elements of thievery here relate to the CGT issues. Without a moral compass, the 2005 intake - who could use Blair and Howard for their own gains and dump them when the coast was clear - have been seduced by the cornucopia of what was offered. Most candidates now will learn the pitfalls of such an approach, and one can only hope that the 2009-2010 intake will have learned from their predecessors wrongs. Tasty, fertile - and tempting. One could be referring to Ms Ussher and to Parliament here...but the party's over, kiddo.

    Ostensible Reasons for Leaving

    Elvish Branchbender - Green - Elf Druid

    "How do the vinebred feel? Fah! We do not ask the puppet how it feels when the puppeteer bids it dance."

    In the video, Kitty claims to feel that her children only see her on the Parliament channel given the workload. Owlperson advises here: it's possible to balance family life, even as a man, with parliamentary demands, particularly given the family-friendly hours. He confesses to feeling some sympathy for her - and it is no coincidence that "spending more time with the family" was once a genuine excuse to leave front-line politics, even if it became a euphemism for other less savoury events leading to resignation - but this sympathy is outweighed by the sheer incendiary nature of the video given that she was an ambitious minister who suddenly had to find a reason to leave with dignity. If she was operating under the new rules she would have got a prison sentence. So what the Daily Politics is thinking about the intelligence of the people seeing the video, he doesn't know, and why they - who were propelling the expenses scandal forward - are now trying to downgrade it is also anyone's guess. Again, bias gets in the way of revealing unpalatable truths. Perhaps Ms Ussher should be forced to make a second video - this time giving her real reasons for standing down.

    Real Reasons for Leaving

    Thick-Skinned Goblin - Red - Goblin Shaman

    The shaman of the tribe is responsible for keeping track of all its treasures, including angry pets, cursed lamps of fiery doom, and CGT bills from HMRC.

    Owlperson's addition. Ussher is just another person caught with her knickers down, a goblin with a knowing smile on her face thinking to Andrew Neil - will this do, Brillo-Pad? The great thing about TV is that the public have very limited right of reply.The even better - and scarier in the context of Burnley - thing is that the public have an extensive right of reply at the next election. Which is coming. Soon. Labour better put pressure on Ussher to do another slot, distance themselves from her, and select a decent successor for Burnley. Otherwise the nauseating spectacle of European election night and Nick Griffin could be repeated. For Westminster. If we don't stop these people hiding behind a benign spending-more-time-with-the-family smokescreen - or if we keep giving them peerages ;) - we will lose a lot more than just a couple of scamming bastards.

    Outcome for Burnley

    Wing Storm - Green - Sorcery

    A thousand wings beating as one can choke the sky itself.

    Burnley is going to be in ferment, not necessarily solely because of the video (though the BNP could plausibly do a version like the Downfall parodies, inserting subtitles to show Ussher's real reason - their marketing has got a lot better in recent years and I don't put it past them to do this) but because of the scandal in general. The elder in the picture is confronted by the horde of birds and flying animals beseiging him, which shows to me a public revolt. The green card suggests it may not be the BNP Labour are under threat from here, and it is more likely to show public dissatisfaction with the political system itself than just with the Burnley Labour Party. But the force here is a force for good, not evil, so something must happen to put the BNP on the back foot, if not Labour back on the right one.

  • 2 July 2009 - Card of the Day



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    Happy Birthday to my mother. Mustn't forget her present that I bought her in Hereford Cathedral the other week.

    Today's card of the day is...

    Tidal Flats - Blue - Enchantment

    Interesting card, not so much because the wasteland depicted in the card suggests the calm after a storm but also that the intricate rules text suggests to me that a lot more is going on behind a flat and bare surface. While the parched atmosphere is inducing lethargy in our politicians, there are still machinations there - you just have to look beyond the surface to see them.

     

  • 1 July 2009 - Of all the worst moves that could possibly be made...



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    ...Michael "Owlbastard" Martin is to get a peerage.

    Just speechless about this so let's see what my cards say. It's the Leaf Dancer again. I promise I shuffled the pack but that kind of convinces me that this situation comes into conjunction with the Card of the Day. I can just see the Torygraph front page tomorrow...

    Martin has slipped passed us under the radar and speared himself a nice, plump "retirement" present that goes beyond any possible semblance of a joke. It's a great Tom Lehrer moment - you know, the guy who said satire was dead when Henry Kissinger received the Nobel Peace Prize - isn't it?

     

  • 1 July 2009 - Card of the Day - PMQs projection



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    Today's Card of the Day is rather agile and evasive, and since I pulled a similar card for PMQs, I suspect it may have a bearing on what Brown avoids saying rather than what he actually does say.

    Leaf Dancer - Green - Centaur

    "A leaf dancer sweeps through the forest like a spring breeze, evading even the sharpest eyes and ears."

    Brown may find himself out on a limb again but his agility here means he escapes from PMQs with his honour, if not dignity, intact. "Forestwalk" is the keyword on this card, which allows the creature to attack unblocked if the defending player controls a forest card (used to provide green "mana") so the centaur pictured, representing Brown according to Deep Throat, can even land a blow or two on Mr Foxy. But Foxy, being a woodland animal himself, may have other things up his sleeve.

    As to who wins, I get the green card

    Lammastide Weave - Green - Instant

    "A ribbon torn will ward away dark dreams"

    As such the winner is not obvious but Deep Throat is saying that the PM will at least acquit himself well, if not turn the tables back on Vulpes Vulpes. The dark dreams - for now - are kept at bay, but they are still there.

  • 30 June 2009 - Wacko Jacko's kids aren't his --- well I never...



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    Michael Jackson's kids aren't his - allegedly. Twitter said so but I seem to have lost the tweet from TelegraphNews and I can't find it on Google. But it was there. Really.

    Given that this photo shows that his older son is not exactly material for the Black Panthers, I'm not sure I ever believed that they were. Going by Barack Obama, one would expect them to ... well ... how do I put this delicately? ... look a bit more like him as he was at the age of 5.

    Nevertheless, the tarot never lies. What does the oracle say?

    Deep Spawn - Blue - Homarid

    Actually, they may be. The "spawn" idea suggests that Jackson's progeny are deeply bonded to their father and were indeed the fruit of his loins. Debbie Rowe might have given them their looks, but looking at the older boy's nose...yup, that's Jacko in there. Owlperson notes that dual-heritage children are more often than not darker-toned than children of white parents. But there is no guarantee that this will be the case and counsels even that two such children in a row are not unusual.

    All the same, because they don't look of dual heritage - I'm not convinced that this episode in the long-running saga won't stop here. Pulling a card for the issues around Jackson's children, Grinning Ignus (Red - Elemental: "Take care what you offer the ignus. Food, perhaps. Coins. But nothing flammable!" - Stovic, village eccentric) again warns of a potential firestorm over this - but only if the plaintiffs in this case are reckless and try to assert their case by ordering a DNA test. For the resolution of the issue here, Rebellion of the Flamekin (Red- Tribal Enchantment/Elemental) again emphasises that the situation can be won by the party who controls and directs the potential firestorm and can provide absolute proof of their assertions; the rebel issues here mean to me that the insurgents in the situation - presumably the mother - might have an advantage.

  • 30 June 2009 - Card of the Day - and Norwich North by-election to be held on July 23



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    Brown is risking the Norwich North by-election on July 23. He must know something we don't. Having already done a reading for that poll, drawing a card for the reasons for not pushing it back, Fertile Ground (Green - Enchantment/Aura) - "Pretty, valuable, and delicious - a boggart thief's trifecta") suggests he believes there is scope to win there and that circumstances are more favourable on the ground. Let's hope so.

    Anyway, today's card.

    Elephant Ambush - Green - Instant

    This image, combined with the idea of "Flashback" - playing a card from your discard pile rather than you hand - suggests to me there is someone who we think is politically "dead" lurking in the wings. How you can hide when you are the size and stature of an elephant is largely beyond me but the idea of an ambush from beyond the metaphorical grave intrigues me enough to leave it to our collective imaginations as to who and what will happen.

    As for something I noted on my Facebook page last night about the Tories' need to tell us what they are doing, there is a problem when people see them as a possible government but too dependent on not being Labour to govern. My feeling is that - privately - the party has always promised me as an activist that they will be putting forward a proper platform for government "in a couple of months". That "couple of months" has lasted a couple of years at worst.

    Some people cite fear of the media and Gordon Brown making a mockery of them and using them to deny the Tories a return to government. But the media are much more favourable to the Tories now than they were in 2003-05, and no government has ever been elected without a thorough exposition of their policies or by becoming the focal point for concrete opposition - such as Tony Blair became in 1995-97, particularly with issues such as handguns. By contrast, I don't see the Tories concentrating on anything other than raw statistics - activists on the ground, poll ratings, poll leads - which will evaporate or become disillusioned if they make no more than a cursory nod towards policies in the months ahead and continue to bash Labour's record repeatedly without offering a positive alternative or one constructed with government - rather than just an election win - in mind. Labour had that platform and design for government in 1997, otherwise they wouldn't have lasted so long now. Whether or not you agree with them - and I've said several times the state needs to refocus and allow non-state organisations to develop and grow rather than making people dependent on government bureaucracy - it seems to work.

    Perhaps the Tories know this - that they don't have a credible alternative to Labour's bureaucracy yet. They have a scheme for short-term cuts, yes, and a reduction in spending, yes - but not how to spend the reduced budget in such a way that existing statist necessities like a . In many places they are indistinguishable from Labour or propose fairy flim-flam like a Minister for Quality of Life. They don't understand the modern age and, as I've said several times, don't understand that the world has moved on since they were last in government. Blair adapted to the conventions set up by Thatcher and Major, but established conventions of his own. The Tories understand this, but they do lack awareness of the extent to which the public sector has evolved under Blair.

    It's no longer a case of "I want my country back". It's a case of "We want to move our country forward in a different way".

    So what are those different ways? The Tories still don't apparently know except "let's cut off resources we can't afford". They need to get more in-depth and more mature before they will convince the public that not only are Labour dead, they are also obsolete. I don't think that will happen if they hide their manifesto until polling day in a general election, or want an election before one is fully ready.

    (Owlperson says it isn't because they have had to change direction so many times in the last few years - due to the recession - that what worked in 2006 doesn't work in 2009 and thus the bulk of the policy is still subject to the changing economic times. As a loyal Tory but a former government minister, most of the above is what he thinks the Tories still need to understand, let alone distill into practical policy, and he thinks that the support for the Tories in his constituency is still not deep enough among the marginal parts to be assured at an election, though the main opposition for him is Liberal Democrat. Extrapolating his ideas on to the national picture, the Tories will certainly pick up seats but not reassure people that they are competent enough to govern instead of Labour to get into overall government. He predicts a small Labour majority with questions as to whether the LDs will lose seats to the official opposition - but not enough and in not significant enough places to wreck Labour's fourth election victory.)

  • 29 June 2009 - Card of the Day



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    Today's card of the day is

    Grinning Ignus - Red - Elemental

    "Take care what you offer the ignus. Food, perhaps. Coins. But nothing flammable!" - Stovic, village eccentric.

    Today's card of the day suggests something flammable may be offered to the Ignus - but will he take it?

    KA-BOOOOOOOOOOOOOM!

  • 28 June 2009 - Ian Gibson's Labour successor chosen for by-election



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    LabourList reports that Chris Ostrowski has been selected as their candidate in the marginal seat of Norwich North, vacant after Ian Gibson pulled the plug on himself over the expenses scandal and then resigned to cause problems for Gordon Brown - largely of his, and his fellow pilferers', making of course.

    I can't find a date for the by-election yet, presumably the writ has not yet been moved. Owlperson says that he would make by-election writs be moved on the vacancy of the seat automatically for six weeks later - to avoid the parties punting difficult by-elections into the long term future, like Glenrothes last year.

    So let's look at a tentative spread for what might happen here then. Wary of my inability to predict Glenrothes' result itself, I'm not going to say who might win, though no doubt the astrologers will be posting about it as it is a Labour-Tory English marginal, just as Nantwich and Crewe was but much more likely to go Tory as it was Conservative-held between 1983 and 1997.

    LABOUR - incumbency

    Goatnapper - Red - Goblin Rogue

    Kith goats are just for practice. The real prize, of course, is a giant's cloudgoat.

    This could refer to Gibson's stewardship of the seat, but it also suggests some irregularities, as if the seat was "stolen" last time; my articles on electoral reform give neither me nor Owlperson real hope that Norwich was immune to such tactics. So Gibson's tenure might have ended just at a time when the Tories were kosher enough not to be manipulated out - not to, to put it bluntly, have their votes chucked in the bin. The balance of the goblin shown clutching the goat in question is also balanced on a precipice already, showing that even if Gibson won legitimately, he still had a tenuous hold on the seat anyway. Therefore I would expect it to go Conservative at the by-election without too much trouble. Whether it will or not I'm not necessarily going to call.

    LABOUR - candidate

    Seedguide Ash - Green - Treefolk Druid

    "May you shade three generations of seedlings."

    I think Labour have chosen a good candidate here; someone with potential and someone with genuine ability to win the seat under good national circumstances. The gentle nature of the card's blessing suggests Ostrowski, even if he doesn't make it into Parliament, would be a good candidate for Labour to foster elsewhere at a general election.

    LABOUR - prospects

    Aquitect's Will - Blue - Tribal Sorcery - Merfolk

    There is nowhere on Lorwyn that the Merrow Lanes cannot go.

    I'm not going to come out for either party, but this is a positive, fluid card, which gives Ostrowski a decent chance at the seat, and a smooth and penetrating campaign which reaches far into the corners of the electorate. While the card is indeed blue, it looks a calm, peaceful campaign for Labour and is perhaps a better omen than I necessarily expected to draw.

    CONSERVATIVES - history of the seat

    Elven Fortress - Green - Enchantment

    "The size of the obvious Fortress walls often misled foes. Actually, the Elves enchanted the forest itself to provide the first line of defense with tangling vines and stinging thorns." - Sarpadian Empires, vol III

    The Tories regard the seat as an established base in Norfolk and would like to think that winning it would make victory more certain in 2009-2010, because it has in the past swung to their side during a governing period. The Tories believe, moreover, that it should be theirs by right, as Norfolk, along with a lot of southern, eastern England is quite naturally Conservative in outlook and thus Labour here are an aberration. A short-sighted image - the seat only went Tory in 1983 after a long Labour history - but an image that is arguably needed to muster the confidence required to win here.

    CONSERVATIVES - candidate

    Night Soil - Green - Enchantment

    Some said killing the Thallids only encouraged them.

    The general aura around this card for me is that the Tory candidate will be a lot less edifying a character than Ostrowski, and a lot more willing to fight dirty than Labour. Still a green card, so still room for potential, creeping like a fungus over the constituency. But a base card filled with the idea of human waste products and perhaps not the best image for a wannabe MP.

    CONSERVATIVES - prospects

    Scarred Vinebreeder - Black - Elf Shaman

    For disfigured elves, there are few choices between death or nettlevine.

    No comment. A black card, so at best a kind of pyrrhic victory. Some sort of companion to the idea of Night Soil, and with Labour's prospects side by side, I'm not sure the Tories will necessarily pull it off. I'm still reluctant to back Labour outright here, but for the moment it doesn't seem that the Tories really go about this campaign the right way and suffer as a result. That said, the creature here gains strength at the expense of someone else; but this strength is short-lived and expensive. So there is no virtue in the party's gain, if indeed it is a gain at all.

  • 28 June 2009 - Card of the Day



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    Fistful of Force - Green - Instant

    This card of the day can be reasonably taken to refer to the Alan and Ann Keen chapter in the expenses scandal, which with the green border and "natural" motif suggests to me that the power in the people is stronger here than their rulers can imagine. The squatters have not won conclusively - I would imagine the Keens will launch a suit in defence of their property - but again here we see the people these MPs have abused striking back at their misappropriated property. Although the squatters may not have known what they were actually doing - their cause is not to highlight the expenses abuse, but campaign for a larger goal of no border-crossing restrictions (still relevant to us because we have not yet joined Schengen) - the "clash" mechanic on this card demonstrates that they have scored a larger victory than they thought they might because of the hot issue of expenses and their abuse.

    Way to go, fellas.

  • 28 June 2009 - Keen as a whistle - or maybe not...



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    The twists and turns of the expenses scandal continue. Alan and Ann Keen have now found out that squatters have moved in to their derelict "first house", which was allegedly being refurbished - while the Keens claim on their "second" home in Westminster.

    I did begin a reading for the Keens during the week but I lost it when my computer decided to refresh the screen without warning. I will just pull a single card for this, as Owlie and Deep Throat suggest it is a mere sideshow rather than a rolling news topic. The Keens are apparently the Labour equivalent of Nicholas and Ann Winterton, but the article concentrates on the No Borders movement, and Owlperson remarks that although he is as a Conservative pro-immigration controls, he nevertheless is not sorry that the people involved have invoked their legal right to move in to the empty property and shafted two of the most audacious expenses claimaints at Westminster. Poetic justice.

    Pulling a card for The Keens, we get Farrel's Zealot (White - Human Townsfolk): "Farrel, a former priest, believed Icatia was far too complacent towards the Order of the Ebon Hand". But our Farrel in this case has seen what goes around, comes around - the zealous claims on expenses have come back to haunt the couple and symbolise not only the largesse expended on frivolities but the power of the people to reclaim their property from greedy MPs.

    For the squatters, I get Thallid (Green - Fungus), the iconic card which symbolises the encroachment of natural forces on those trying to hold them back; the active and wholly appropriate reclamation of follies by the people ruled from their discredited rulers.

    For the future of the situation, I get Icatian Phalanx (White - Human Solider): "Even after the wall was breached in half a dozen places, the Phalanxes fought on, standing solidly against the onrushing raiders. Disciplined and dedicated, they held their ranks to the end, even in the face of tremendous losses." The Keens will assert their property rights on the squatters, though the card here suggests defence rather than offence. Looking at the image on the card, the youth and femininity of the soldiers does suggest to me, however, that the initiative lies with the young people involved in this situation - the squatters who are taking direct action - though apparently unaware of the wider British political issues involved; they sound like the descendants of the old Euro-communist movement, and have an international flavour - and their understanding of the law will prevail over those who are manipulating it for their own greed.

  • 27 June 2009 - Alan Milburn to stand down at the next election



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    Sadly not missed. Perhaps Labour's demigod - or demagogue - of nasty spin and possibly holds the world record for spending the least possible time with his family - resigning after the foundation hospitals near-defeat and coming back just over a year later to help Tony Blair fight off Michael Howard. Gasp! He will be in his early 50s after the next election. So not old enough and experienced enough to be considered for leadership then. Poor Alan, perhaps he will spend more time with those 5 other jobs he has.

    A card? All right then. If we must.

    Summon the School - White - Merfolk

    "When merrows talk, listeners grow fins."

    Milburn did have the gift of the gab and the clause "Return Summon the School from the graveyard [or discard pile]" suggests that just maybe we may not have seen the last of him, even if he does put himself beyond reach after the election. Just like Tony Blair has dabbled in extra-parliamentary politics (in the hope of returning some day? Chance'd be a fine thing, Deep Throat is adamant he has no chance of getting the job of President of Europe), Milburn is not finished yet and like some people I could mention - but won't - is now putting himself out of the running of normal business so that he is untainted and can return later.

    Deep Throat doesn't fancy his chances, but still, Milburn doesn't know that, does he?

  • 26 June 2009 - Card of the Day and the Lammastide Weave



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    Today's card is interesting in terms of the overall arc of events.

    Elvish Harbinger - Green - Elf Druid

    Again, an interesting "portentous" card which suggests a more feminine outlook than her Giant companion, which has come up a couple of times in the past. She is also quite seductive looking, which may suggest more sleaze (which is what I'm getting from Deep Throat).

    Speaking of Deep Throat: A card pulled yesterday in a general off-line spread sets an important date as being Lammastide - August 1; there is an eclipse on August 5 which ties in to this too. While this is during the recess, Deep Throat suggests that Nick Clegg is not the only one - see posts passim - who wants Parliament to continue over the summer this year to sort this constitutional-ish crisis out. Although the initial chaos has abated, we are in to the period in which the party leaders seek to manipulate the mood for their own interests.

    Given the card for the Situation is so interesting, let's have a look at the events surrounding August 1-5.

    Situation

    Lammastide Weave - Green - Instant

    Lammastide is at the time of a neo-pagan festival, and both derive partly from Lughnasadh, one of the four mediaeval Irish festivals which come from the original Celtic pagan practice. It is traditionally connected with the harvest and its name refers to the Christian tradition of the "loaf-mass" or bringing for blessing the first crop of wheat and the bread made from it. Thus the metaphorical connection with harvest here holds the connotation of those under scrutiny beginning to reap what they have sown during the spring - and beforehand.

    Occurrences

    Elvish Branchbender - Green - Elf Druid

    "How do the vinebred feel? Fah! We do not ask the puppet how it feels when the puppeteer bids it dance."

    The public witness - and understand - what is really going on here. After a couple of months where both parties have striven to lessen the impact and redirect the agenda away from the recent scandals, another event or series of events occurs to shake down those trying to manipulate the common good for their own ends. Either the public feel they are the puppets manhandled by their rulers, or our rulers themselves begin to feel like mere pawns in a much bigger gain. Although columnists on astrology seem to be left-wing and swayed by the apparent innocence of anti-capitalism and anti-financialism, and towards charismatic figures like Barack Obama, here I feel the pendulum will go in the opposite way to reveal charlatans and reveal which ideologies or issues have been manipulating us for the ends of people more powerful - or just with that appearance - than ourselves.

    By the way, to those who say Obama can solve the world's problems - not many now, I suspect - the eclipse at his inauguration and the stumble he made part way through may hold longer-lasting clues to his fate than we may assume here.

    Underlying currents

    Thorn Thallid - Green - Fungus

    "The cooling climate forced the Elves to experiment with new food sources." - Sarpadian Empires, vol. 1

    Now I get why in the last explanation I felt climate change had something to do with this, though at an oblique and possibly metaphorical level. With this week forecast to be one of the hottest this year, that seems nonsense. However the cooling climate and the fungus here relate to a slow and steady decay in the processes that govern us. The underlying element is that the attempts to bull-sh*t their way out of trouble are beginning to turn sour and manifest themselves in ways which would have been unthinkable under normal Pluto in Sagittarius rules. It no longer holds together because of the power of the last few months to jolt a society out of complacent inertia and into a situation which is different and uncomfortable. Pluto in Capricorn last time destroyed Britain's empire in North America, at least in the southern half. Now it's our turn to feel political revolution because of a changing - political - climate.

    Obstacles to this change

    Scuttling Death - Black - Spirit

    This card involves the "sacrifice" of a creature - the death of a creature you control in the game to pay for some other effect which would bring you good fortune. In a way, politics tries to surrender something up so that the continued gravy train can roll on. (I'm not necessarily talking about expenses, I'm more talking about the status quo which is comfortable both for New Labour as a whole and their Tory clones.) It is as if here one era - both astrologically and politically speaking - is struggling to hold back another. Neil Giles notes that the last 14 years have been largely about discussion and debate, with words speaking louder than actions and communications being used to control. Now, finally we get to have those words manifest in concrete possibilities - but the old era, knowing that these manifestations will undoubtedly lead to much less power for their chosen communication barrage, is fighting to hold it back. Why else would David Cameron - arch Pluto-in-Sagittarian - want a general election so quickly on his terms if he did not want the summer to subject him to the rigorous scrutiny he demands of Labour? And yet he has the bigger bill than the Prime Minister to pay back.

    Manipulation and communication is given one last throw of the dice here to try and hold things back from physical and administrative destruction.

    Overcoming this obstacle

    Oakgnarl Warrior - Green - Treefolk Warrior

    "Roam as you will, your roots remain in the strong earth of your Rising."

    Again, the momentum here is far too strong for the efforts above to hold it back. History never stays still. Governments can never wholly manipulate themselves, nor can Oppositions, even ones ahead in the polls on paper. (Janet Daly cautioned a while ago that this support was as soft as, oh, Lancashire cheese.) The direction now is too pressing to hold anything back, even with another scapegoat to throw on the altar.

    Directions afterward

    Nightshade Assassin - Black - Human Assassin

    A swift and brutal end to the situation with what is achieved at Lughnasa (funny, I'd always thought Dancing At Lughnasa referred to a place until I read the article on it today) being a finality for someone or something (hedging my bets here but Deep Throat believes it's the former). The idea of madness - a mechanic on the card allowing you to play the card if you would otherwise have to discard it - is something else to take into account - what happens will obviously happen for a reason, but the finality of it all will seem as if the party which effects this change will have gone loopy.

    Deep Throat is telling me which one, but I would prefer to meditate on that a bit later and close off this reading now.

  • 26 June 2009 - Card of the, um, evening


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    Oops. After promising a card a day again, I failed to upload one today so we will just have to see what this evening holds. Just listened to the end of Any Questions (Radio 4), as asinine as ever with all the parties in point-scoring mood. Shock, horror...Hilary Benn just promised spending cuts. Hold the front page. Tessa May showed the Tories in excellent form as she pledged to singlehandedly balance the budget by cutting...erm...the ContactPoint database (now that will really make a difference) and got into an argument with David Dimbleby which still shows that the BBC is biased against the Tories but doesn't seem to want to make the first move against Cambo the Magnificent.

    All quiet on the Pluto in Capricorn front then.

    But does the Magic card tarot have Any Answers for us?! ;)

    Goldmeadow Harrier - White - Kithkin Soldier

    "It's a proven fact that sling-stones from the dawn side of the riverbank sail the farthest and truest." - Deagan, cenn of Burrenton

    A little may go a long way with the above discussion (since this is the only political news I've heard all day - been working on my CV in between consulting my own personal owl-astrologer-person Jerrold Donington - I'll take this card as a reading for Any Questions). A single stone can fell a giant - just ask Goliath - but although we can see both the shooter and the victim, we can't quite see how strong the momentum is behind any particular issue right now. Nevertheless, as Deagan says, what starts out as innocent questioning now may become hotter and hotter an issue as the summer progresses. Just like individual MPs - Derek Conway, the perennial Nick-and-Ann Winterton show, Jacqui Smith - gave us a little bit of gossip over their expenses but nothing too dramatic or too dangerous until the whole hive was kicked over, so questions of public spending - and public spending cuts - may not seem too drastic or even too controversial an issue right now, but with a whole lot of planets lining up in increasingly dangerous positions in the near future, who knows what will spark off another feeding frenzy? Deagan might just live to regret throwing that one small pebble.

    Regarding my own opinion over ContactPoint - I do believe there is a big issue over the surveillance society, and it needs to be explored properly (I might get round to writing on it here as well, by which time I hope I shall have an ID card). Nevertheless, I feel the reasons for setting up a database such as this are genuine and necessary, and that the Tories need to properly explore the need for some sort of networking between authorities to protect children and not just say they would abolish it outright. I know it is slightly unfashionable to be pro-"surveillance" (and I know at work I am the subject of a camera so good my employer largely uses it for telling him what sweets we need to replenish the chocolate counter), but although I don't approve of the idea "...if you don't have anything to hide..." I don't personally feel threatened by it. Maybe it is my subconscious taking care of nagging doubts, but Owlperson says it is largely him and largely because I don't have anything to hide. Like all subconscious reactions, I don't approve or disapprove. It just is.

    Oh and one other thing. Owlperson asks, "What kind of  a word is 'surveilled' anyway?!"

    My answer: the sort of word the people who are opposed to it have to come up with to justify an LSE seminar on the subject.

  • 25 June 2009 - Michael Jackson is DEAD?!

    Can't really believe it but...just for the records.

    Not a fan - in fact I was really cut up when Jarvis Cocker got arrested for mooning him onstage at the Brit Awards in 1996, about Jarvis that is not about the so-called King of Pop - but it's trickling out although as of now the BBC still has him "gravely ill in hospital", on its static html site at least rather than on the live stream, which is reporting his actual death.

    No cards, no nothing, not a real issue but...just unbelieveable.

  • 25 June 2009 - Now, I'm not one to complain, but...



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    (as Sally Smedley of Drop the Dead Donkey notoriety said to Sir Peter over duck a l'orange...)

    But did you see the Ten O'Clock News?! The only thing less palatable about the way they suggested the Conservative Party's modernisation project had stalled...talk about understated bias and contempt.

    Personally I'd rather they stuck to criticising Foxy directly and stopped messing with the necessary modernisation (however superficial it appears to have been) but at least they made the point that the expenses scandal is not over yet. And that's official.

    A card perhaps. Again, a single card from Gatherer.

    Ambiguity - Blue - Enchantment

    Couldn't have put it better myself. The twisted rule text on this card is because it was from the Unhinged spoof set published in mid-2004, but it is referring to the subtle and rather difficult way of checking the political barometer here - it is all in the nuances of the report rather than the direct, hard-hitting, "David Cameron today resigned in favour of the Vodalian Mage because he just couldn't hack it any more". Oh well. On we go.

  • 25 June 2009 - John Rentoul on the Iraqi death toll since 2003



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    Leaving nasty party politics for a moment, John Rentoul claims the government is overestimating the death toll in Iraq.

    Yes, you heard it right. A major liberal newspaper's main political correspondent and blogger is actually saying that fewer people than the government thinks have died since the Coalition forces went in to Iraq in 2003. Which is counter-intuitive and thus perhaps an example of rather selfless regard for the truth. It would be further in Rentoul's own interests to claim that there was a massive bloodbath in Iraq and up to a million people have been killed - but no, apparently Miliband is wrong to claim that "many hundreds of thousands" have died, and the true figure is more like 100-200,000 dead since hostilities began in February 2003. (Let's say ~150,000.)

    I've left a comment as "Owlqueen" on the post suggesting that a fuller truth may come out when the Iraq War finally gets its own enquiry this coming year. Hopefully there is going to be not only an inquiry but the usual mountain of press reports on how Iraq has fared and is faring since the invasion. Magic had a word for it - Coalition Victory. This is not a random pull - but a card which came out before 9/11 (I believe) - from a set called Invasion - which suggests to me that life does often imitate art with . If it had come out after the 2003 invasion, I would have said there was some kind of conscious or unconscious satire element. But before? Interesting. There is, according to Owlie, a whole other dimension to the human collective subconscious which anticipates major global events in pop culture before they happen, leading to life appearing to imitate art. According to Owlie, it is more a case of our minds foreshadowing great events ahead and planning for them subconsciously, so the shock is lessened when they arrive. Divination is a way of exploring this consciously and deliberately; however we seem to do a lot of it in literature, particularly in literature such as mass-market swords-and-sorcery where the mind deliberately imagines alien situations and alien landscapes. We end up with previously unimaginable events - such as 9/11 and the fallout from that - being predicted and then sadly coming true.

    Back to Rentoul: Owlperson and Deep Throat both concur that this may be our Sigiled Paladin standing up for the truth, so there is no need to pull a card for it. I hoped I might pick a diamond out of the rough to find our Pal for today. Of course David Miliband still comes in for a bit of flak, but at least someone seems to be acting contrary to expected interests and expected intentions. Maybe there really is hope.

    More later on.

  • 25 June 2009 - Payback time - and the Card of the Day returns



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    David Cameron is making himself and others pay back £250,000 in excessive expense claims. He claims not to be interested in a witch-hunt - which is a shame because I think the public want one from his Shadow Cabinet, just as Brown has had his miscreants summarily removed. Divisions have erupted because the central party has been looking privately for more scapegoats to be sacrificed from among the backbenches, evidently seen as an excuse to impose "foxy" candidates on seats. Whether this is right - as sitting MPs are the ones causing the problems - or wrong - because of the obvious lack of resignations from within the party putting off normally loyal commentators such as Peter Oborne - is still to be seen, but it might not be seen to be enough, particularly when the leader himself is implicated with his own mortgage claims and has only so far paid back a tiny fraction of what he reasonably owes the taxpayer.

    A card, you say? How about... (from the Random Card on the Gatherer database)

    Spitfire Handler - Red - Goblin

    "Wait till Toggo sees this!"

    Goblins are not renowned for their sensitive handling of things, and tend to spit fire - and have it back-fire. While this is not perhaps the biggest danger in the situation the volatility of the situation's handling suggests to me a lot more will have to be done later to shore up the party if the leadership continues to mess with the constituency chairmen and long-serving MPs; though I hold no sympathy for MPs that would be facing deselection under these moves, anything that begins to rock the boat for the Tories as much as they assume this will damage Labour is - personally speaking - to be welcomed. Owlie can't take a view on it himself, but he notes that part of the problem Michael Howard faced at the end of his leadership term was that he tried to fiddle with party procedures and unnecessarily centralise decision-making within the party for short-term political ends.

    And Cameron is still not really to be punished properly over his own misclaims. Payback is the very least of what he should do, but even Hazel Blears wrote that cheque and was not spared the axe, at least from the Cabinet. With an ornery group on Facebook dedicated to getting rid of John Redwood from his Wokingham seat, I'm not sure whether the public will relax just because £250,000 has been repaid. It should never have been claimed in the first place, and the only reason why Cameron and his cronies are saying that the rules were flawed are because they got caught. Sorry is no longer good enough.

    ----

    I will be doing a card a day for another while, just to see whether things are hotting up or cooling down. This will still be a random Magic card, again from the Gatherer Database. I'm enjoying using them as an oracle for something that is clearly visible to me, and they seem to work reasonably well and reasonably consistently. Onward.

    For today, 25 June 2009, we have:

    Sigiled Paladin - White - Human Knight

    Each sigil marks the recognition of a great deed and signifies a duty owed to the one who granted it.

    There is an honour about today that hasn't been seen in a while - someone, somewhere, steps forward and does the right thing without asking. The nobility of the card goes beyond petty party politics, and involves some sort of gesture that is recognised as more than just that. It is a bit like Justice in the tarot - that karma begins to work for the good of the situation and the good of all rather than in narrow partisan interests. It's not going to be spectacular, nor is it going to be something negative like a resignation or someone being found out and sacked, nor does it relate to the above story about the Tories' payback day. But it stands outside the fray and makes the whole situation inside the Parliament of Manure seem even worse.

    By the way, we are now into Sun in Cancer, which means things should get a lot more fluid and we will begin to make a bit more headway before Leo appears to start the wildfires later on. Don't expect much from this sign - it normally governs the winding down towards the long summer recess - but the intensity of this spring's events suggests to me that after airy and the less coherent aspects of Gemini things begin to coalesce again into something more viscous and definable. The trend is still downward, but after the elections things begin to settle into recognisable patterns.

  • 24 June 2009 – Making a bit more Magic: part 4 – David Cameron



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    Nothing really to say on this – so on immediately with our latest reading for Vulpes Vulpes’ prospects over the summer. As I said, I don’t think Cameron has so far shown he has much strategic resources to be the Vodalian Mage – the surprise twist in the tail of this long hot Parliament. He may surprise me, but given that the VM needs the element of substance and surprise – and Foxy’s interventions have been at best wholly predictable and wholly superficial – I’m not 100% sure that he can be at all.

    READING: DAVID CAMERON – PROGNOSIS OVER THE SUMMER

    Situation

    Moonglove Winnower – Black – Elf Rogue

    Winnowers live to eliminate eyeblights, creatures the elves deem too ugly to exist.

    This to me encapsulates Cameron’s whole period of leadership – the elimination of anything he personally deems doesn’t fit. While this can sometimes be a tactic and strategy that is necessary to bring together a disparate and divided coalition into an efficient machine capable of government, the element of black in Cameron’s first card suggests this is not actually what is right for this situation, nor does it bode well for the situation Cameron is in. If this card was white, I would say he was going the right way to unite the party, but his conception of unity is trying to destroy or persecute those that don’t fit and warping the concept of party discipline into something that drives his personal beliefs – ugly as they are – into a position for personal gain. The “Deathtouch” is still deadly, but for how much longer Cameron can act this way after the events of the spring depends largely on how long he can go without revealing any depth or substance of what he wants to do. His own business affairs were shaky in the run-up to the European elections, and his tactics now have not changed – he will say anything, do anything, pledge anything purely to gain a short-term advantage. I don’t believe this can sustain him in government and after the surprises of this spring I think Cameron is on the rampage – but losing the control needed to govern properly. Time will tell what happens but Black does often speak for itself.

    Public Appearance

    Fertile Ground – Green – Enchantment/Aura

    Pretty, vulnerable, and delicious – a boggart [or goblin] thief’s trifecta.

    The bloom and cornucopia on the card is belied by the flavour text – Cameron is still marginally on top but he is also vulnerable – as vulnerable as Brown – to events and predators. My overall belief is that this situation has no real victor currently in place; the events of the spring confirmed to me that both parties would suffer from what was to come if what Owlperson has been trying to tell me for two years or so would be able to come about. So here the public still seem fairly well-disposed to Foxy, with the caveat that he is also vulnerable from the threats lurking ahead during the summer and his success or failure is still dependent on the whims of a thirsty press and public.

    Media appearance

    Nameless Inversion – Black – Tribal Instant/Shapeshifter

    Just as a changeling’s influence can have dramatic effects, so too can its sudden withdrawal.

    This points to a waning in Foxy’s influence over the press as the judgements are made on expenses – Vulpes Vulpes initially profited from the scandal by being seen to do something about it, proposing some vapidly promising ways of diverting the public’s attention from his own affairs and those of his comrades, and trying to persuade people he was better equipped to deal with things after an immediate election. Then he crashed in the polls and failed to radically better Michael Howard’s results at the European elections. I haven’t seen many polls since then – trying to de-tox enough to get on with my own life – but I would imagine the media no longer sees him as their great white – or even reddish-brown – hope. The situation is in flux, and can change rapidly. And it’s another black card. All is not well in Foxy-land either, we just may not yet see it. What a surprise.

    Inner reality – personal

    Stonybrook Angler – Blue – Merfolk Wizard

    “Water is in the air, the trees, and the earth. Understand its motion, speak its language, and the subtle currents that flow through all living things will fall under your command.”

    Foxy is not stupid. He does know how to act, in the same way Tony Blair did. He does understand the currents and tries to swim with them, and knows – like a good magician – how to fool the public, and how at times to genuinely impress without giving them too many ideas as to how he does it. But this changeability might be useful in opposition; he may need to solidify and build on this to make sure he is ready for his desired election. Again, a Merfolk Wizard, but not our Vodalian Mage, who frightens and impresses – and kills – with surprise and direct action. If Foxy can come up with something from this introspection (I feel this card means he is always looking for ways to present himself as bigger and better than Brown without having to come up with the goods; and this is a particular issue at the moment), then he can actually be the VM. If not, then not.

    Inner reality – party

    Gilt-Leaf Seer – Green – Elf Shaman

    Desmera blinded her seers so that her beauty would be the last image burned in their memories. The act only deepened their insight.

    The damage done to the Conservatives only makes them stronger and wiser. If this power can be controlled by Foxy, so much the better (for him at least). But if he has blinded them in some way, then the party knows who did it, and what they need to restore their sight. By manipulating and breaking his party in to their communal harness, Foxy may think he has made sure of their loyalty; but I’m not sure that the party does not at the same time resent this imposition. Peter Oborne took a stand against the sleazebags in Cameron’s Shadow Cabinet – but no-one save Andrew Mackay has been sacked, unlike the mass destruction of Brown’s own Cabinet. This may be an issue Foxy has to face at some point. The party is still blind – but this produces a way of viewing the world which relies on feelings rather than conscious vision. The dangers here are latent, but could surprise if things get too bad later on.

    Roots of his situation

    Scarred Vinebreeder – Black – Elf Shaman

    For disfigured elves, there are few choices beyond death or nettlevine.

    Another Black card. Cameron has to work harder now, is what I’m getting from “Deep Throat”, because he has produced a legion of disaffected Tories beneath the parapet of public view. If the Nameless Inversion becomes too great, they could cause problems; they already in effect have, but I’m getting from Deep Throat as well that there is still too much holding the party together which needs to be loosened before things can really get going. Nevertheless, he adds that this blackness in Foxy’s cards – where Gordon had mostly red (chaos) and green (deeper power and solidity), Vulpes Vulpes has too much black, even so far, to be really confident of anything greater than current output. While the disaffected have not made their move, Foxy is safe. But when they do, he’s toast.

    Seeds sown by his situation

    Thieving Sprite – Black – Faerie Rogue

    Deep Throat, who has made himself audible because he says I am more relaxed, more switched off to external influences (the barrage of press information or other people’s opinions, mainly, but also non-political personal issues such as worrying about indigestion, gastric flu or my boss from hell) and more receptive to information from above, says that this represents that more difficulties for the Tories over their money matters are on the way; and he says the issue of second jobs that I saw plastered over Page 2 in the Sun on Monday was not a red herring by any means. Thievery was not just confined to Labour, and Cameron’s refusal to clear out the dead-wood in the Shadow Cabinet may still plague him. He is unable to resist more meddling and more intransigent reluctance to give up the perks of the job. DT also says that the sacrificial backbenchers were not enough for Cameron to really fill the electorate with confidence that he is the one to sort things out. Nevertheless, for the time being, DT says, I should not get excited about the ultimate defenestration yet.

    Advice

    Runed Stalactite – Artifact/Equipment

    When a changeling adopts a form no other changeling has taken, a rune appears in the caverns of Velis Vel to mark the events.

    The key to this card is innovation and ingenuity, particularly in the area of policy. It is something the Tories just lack, and what will win them the election and distance themselves from sleaze. We’ve been asking the same question for three and a half years, we get a different answer every time, and nothing seems to add up, but we might as well keep asking him while he is around to answer us. The advice, in other words, is the same as it always has been – stop relying on tactics and start thinking long-term, governmental strategy.

    Warning

    Wren’s Run Packmaster – Green – Elf Warrior

    This is the gathering of forces, and in an ill-dignified aspect, it is the gathering of momentum against rather than for the leader as he currently leads. The disaffection of the Vinebreeder above can and will gather momentum if the advice is not taken and innovation is not made in policy terms to match Labour’s ability to come up with a new initiative every day and add more elements to its overgrown state. Without a coherent answer, the pack will gain new members, and since the wolves’ bite will be deadly, I would advise Fox to start running, fast, in the opposite direction.

    Direction

    Skittering Monstrosity – Black – Horror

    Most living things were weakened and stunted in the ruinous aftermath of the Phyrexian invasion, but a few grew more horrid than ever.

    As with last night’s reading for the Conservatives as a whole, the only way for the moment is down – the intensification of the corruption, the short-term tactics that only lead to winning the election rather than governing decently, the arrogance and sleight of hand which I have come to expect from Foxy. If he is the Vodalian Mage, then he will know how to deal with this Monstrosity. But since it came up in the Party’s cards, and is now in his cards, I think he is connected with the degeneration rather than the regeneration.

    Solution

    Smokebraider – Red – Elemental Shaman

    “Be silent and listen to your inner fire. Only then can you walk the Path of Flame.”

    Cameron needs to be able to grasp the flaming nettle here – mixing my metaphors to keep in with the cards rather than the English language – and do what no Tory leader has yet done – prove himself to be skilled at governing rather than winning. He does have the capability – his inner fire – but he doesn’t have the skills to launch a better strategy than just keeping quiet and hoping he can manipulate press and public to get into the driving seat. The expenses scandal and his reaction suggests to me he needs to promise something solid and substantial – but his inner fire is currently spent trying to manipulate and plot against a new Speaker chosen by Parliament. What is alien to him seems to be acceptance of the neutral elements of government because they don’t work in his direct personal or political favour. It’s his loss if he doesn’t learn to harness the inner fire, and it eventually guts him as a result.

    Outcome

    Elvish Promenade – Green – Tribal Sorcery/Elf

    The faultless and immaculate castes form the lower tiers of elvish society, with the exquisite caste above them. At the pinnacle is the perfect, a consummate blend of aristocrat and predator.

    Deep Throat counsels that this card means something different to when it came up for Gordon in the context of preening but over-ambitious juniors lining up to replace him. Foxy has no such problem; there are no contenders seriously vying for his job. However it does represent leadership issues, with personalities not so much clashing as conspiring in the event of difficulties to come. The depth of the cold malice inherent in this card is chilling. When it comes, it will come swiftly and coherently; but the weight of personal issues here means that as with the Cabinet, the corruption will be cleansed away (perhaps unwittingly) and the best can come out of this seemingly evil situation.

    Significant events: June/July

    Boggart Sprite-Chaser – Red – Goblin Warrior

    “Auntie pointed out to the faerie how much mischief a flying boggart could wreak, and a beautiful new friendship was born.” – A Tale of Auntie Grub

    The card shows a union of disparate interests in such a way as to make the Tories the ones to watch over the summer. Again the colour is red and the element of chaos is inserted into the situation; wild abandon trumps cool, clearheaded thought. It is this loss of control that shows the Tories to be just as bad as the government when it comes to internal politics; it is born not perhaps of frustration (although there is enough of that about) but also of high spirits leading to too much frivolity rather than too little. Something that seems innocent can turn deadly, and because this is Cameron’s cards in particular we are looking at rather than his party’s, it erodes his authority.

    Significant events: August/September

    Mournwhelk – Black – Elemental

    It hoards Lorwyn’s rare sorrows.

    An ending on a black card again does not sit well with Tory plans. “Rare” sorrows suggests that what no longer seems to fit with Tory success develops into something rather unfortunate; and discarding in the mechanics suggests an ending rather than a beginning.

    Poor Vulpes Vulpes. Amen.

  • 24 June 2009 - Finning the pack


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    The Finnish Centre Party has pulled out of the new Conservative and Reformist grouping in the European Parliament; Twitter pal jamesgraham, not a big fan of Vulpes Vulpes by any means looking at his tweets, posted this link here for our delectation. There is a certain dryness to the report, and I don't follow European politics (I learned a long time ago there was only so much I could get upset about at any one time) that much but James seems to think it gives more than just a passing shove to the possibility of the BNP-ski group really taking off.

    I'll pull a random card from the Magic database instead of using my own, and up comes...

    False Memories - Blue - Instant

    "My enemies will forget everything other than their anguish." - Ambassador Laquatus [yes it's him, yes he's a Merfolk...].

    This card deals with changing events at random and refreshing available resources (although technically the "graveyard" is where spent spells and dead creatures go in the game - a discard pile, if you will - there are always spells to bring those creatures back to life, such as the Makeshift Mannequin spell we have seen in readings before). It creates nothing - it doesn't seriously alter the state of play that much - but it subtly alters the landscape, maybe removing resources from Vulpes Vulpes' control or warping what he thought was available both in Europe and beyond. It seems the Finns might have betrayed their British friends because the loss of influence by leaving their current grouping may actually have been too great for them to bear. As I said, it doesn't change anything directly, but it provides Foxy with a potential set of falser friends and shows the transience of loyalties originally pledged. Not an auspicious omen to say the least.

    Owlperson adds that the Tories have been losing support because they count on the friendliness of the centre-right currently in power in France and Germany, but he does wonder about the lack of support for a far-right grouping in general and is sceptical himself of this move. In the sense of "false memories" here, he also counsels that the card brings a random element into play - rather than relying on what you have directly available, you trust that the alternatives are better, but have to stick with what you have rather than being able to recall that which you have rejected. In a sense it is a metaphor for the whole concept of the "BNP-ski" group: the Tories are gambling on the unknown rather than sticking with the known. This could be good, it could be bad, but Owlie stresses the balance of power is no longer in their hands if they confine themselves to this strategy of non-cooperation to appease a few radicals. They have traded influence abroad for influence over a few rebels at home. It remains to be seen whether the gamble will pay off, particularly with Merkel and Sarkozy fairly stable at home and yet committed to the EPP. Foxy may have gained marginal allies at the expense of core support, always a foolish move. The falseness may not hit home domestically yet, but a diminishing influence even within the larger grouping in the European parliament was in his mind quite foolish.

    We'll see, he says ominously.

  • 24 June 2009 – Making a bit more Magic: part 3 – Gordon Brown



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    Continuing the introductory series using Magic The Gathering cards to tell sharper and more detailed political fortunes, I am struck by the need to explain the colours of the “suits” in the game, and what situations they refer to. Any card game or indeed tarot pack seems to do much better having suits to categorise the cards and what they refer to.

    The traditional tarot uses Wands (Fire, superficial actions and perhaps in political terms reactions and responses to events as opposed to deeper seated policy), Swords (Air, the ideas and intellectual arguments bandied back and forth as to how to run the country, in our political model at least; the upper numbers of the suit become more and more polarised to show the rise or fall – particularly fall – of the protagonists involved), Cups (Water, the emotional depths and personal interactions between people as well as the appearances and spin that  characterise modern politics) and lastly Pentacles or Coins (Earth, the actual political substance which governs policymaking and actual results but tends to get lost beneath the other suits in what actually rules the media’s interests). The Major Arcana stand alone as the issues of fate and uncontrollable direct events (such as the credit crunch or what led to the expenses scandal; minor disturbances like Smeargate or Yachtgate can be represented by trumps but are more likely from my point of view to be of Minor Arcana significance rather than epoch-defining or epoch-shattering cataclysms), while the Court cards are involved in the suits and represent whole personalities working within the system rather than single actions or the results of a bad hair day chez Brown or Cameron.

    In Magic, the suits are ordered slightly differently.

    White – usually governs knights, angels, chivalry, the backbone of what is considered “good” but can lead to the fossilising, ossifying tendencies we can see might have led to this current chaos breaking out. In terms of politics for me it also represents healing and the respite from trouble which helps a party rally or provides a breathing space for more mundane issues to hit the headlines. If a White card comes up it means that there is more likelihood of a positive outcome than a negative result; but remember too much “good” and the “good” itself becomes corrupted. White is the colour of the “War on Terror” – too much assuming you are the only one in the right and you become rather...left.

    Blue – the Conservative colour which for me will suggest – but not dictate – a Conservative solution as opposed to Labour being the party with the advantage. In the game it is the colour of magical manipulation and clever sleight of hand, mainly allowing the player to erode his opponent’s resources or call on more options of his own. It restrains, binds and constricts; in general political terms it means an intellectual solution may be found, arbitration between two competing sides both with their own views and opinions. It is the colour of most think-tanks and also of negotiations such as we saw after the European elections where Gordon Brown appeared to bargain his way out of trouble for now. In terms of the tarot – and not all colours have a tarot analogue – it is the suit of Swords. It also represents the suit of Cups quite often, as its focus is Water as well as Air; the Vodalian Mage is blue.

    Red – Labour colour and too many red cards in a reading for the Blues or vice versa mean Labour is more important in this situation (or indeed the other way round – too many blue cards in a reading for Brown or his party and I will take it that the Tories here have the upper hand). The colour of chaos, the colour of blood and fire and general mayhem; represented in Magic by the iconic Goblins, if these cards come up it doesn’t necessarily mean the protagonists are in reality nasty deformed little troglodytes (Owlperson sometimes may beg to differ, but he knows the people involved personally and they come in all shapes, sizes and party labels), though it might do if the subject is Hazel Blears, but it means that they are acting foolishly, irrationally and with more venom and hatred than is strictly necessary.

    Not that I believe Labour alone do that (for pure venom and stupid hatred watch the Tory reaction to the election of John Bercow) but the colour red may also sit well with the fiery suit of Wands in the conventional tarot. The preponderance of red cards in Boris Johnson’s reading last night made sense about how he governs London – on a wing, a prayer, and an aide’s assistance – and made me think he was rather too scatty to be Prime Minister, only maturing into Green as the years tick by.

    Green – Owlperson likes to think of Parliament as still sovereign, even though it is corrupted by partisan loyalties. As the colour of the House of Commons (we can more or less ignore the Lords, though our dear friend Lord Mandelson of Foy and his Knights of the Rump Cabinet may intrude once or twice to put their views across through the Red suit) it means that this suit may be better suited to matters where a holistic solution – a neutral one, a non- or bi-partisan answer – may be the way forward. It is largely the colour in Magic of large lumbering creatures, with or without brains to match, and likes to Trample its opponents rather than think of ways to outwit them. The steamroller of history may be coming towards us, disguised as a Giant Spider or a Verdant Force. In the tarot it is also represented by Pentacles/Coins, being an earthy and back-to-basics suit.

    Black – the colour of corruption, filth, sleaze and murky dealings. Scandal, outright danger, decay and the creeping dread of something far worse than even the BNP is coming and this is not a suit I’d like to see in anyone’s cards as it really means that the situation may have gone beyond what is salvageable without major reforms or cutbacks. If a black card comes up I would be under no illusions that there is either something rotten in the state of Britain lurking or that necessary but painful measures will be taken to put it right.

    Gold – Some cards are multi-colour or “hybrid” – usable with two or more colours in the game. Hence they can be treated as partly one colour above and partly another, blending and mixing the two aspects for a more balanced prognosis.

    Artifacts – a non-coloured card – normally the tools and equipment used on the battlefield of Magic, and hence either neutral players, neutral forces or simple mechanics of the situation which are hard to classify as one or other of the above colours. In political terms it might be the simple ticking of time to evaporate the goo of another messy affair (such as Yacht- or Smeargate, both superseded by the ordure of the Black cards of the expenses scandal, which still doesn’t have a pithy name despite attempts to label it “Moatgate”) or the disinterested parties such as the Bank of England, the Daily Telegraph or other press outlets which assist the stories but do not – on the whole – make them.

    Land – locations and providers of coloured resources driving the game forward. None of the “basic land” cards made it into my reading pack because they do not say much about the places we find ourselves in. However I have just bought a couple of new packets of cards, and one card is labelled Crumbling Necropolis. As a metaphor for Parliament at the moment, Owlperson is insisting I put it into my pack to show up when it is most needed.

    On with Gordon’s reading before we drown in our own verbiage.

    READING: GORDON BROWN – PROGNOSIS OVER THE SUMMER

    Situation

    Oakgnarl Warrior – Green – Creature: Treefolk Warrior

    “Roam as you will, your roots remain in the strong earth of your Rising.”

    Again, I think Brown is stronger and more deeply rooted than he necessarily appears or how his enemies want him to appear. No doubt things will get worse for him, but he has the strength and resilience inside to be Prime Minister for as long as the electorate don’t throw him out. The crucial ability of the last four PMs has been their ability to stay strong, and this is why I disagree with Angel Neptune about Boris – PM isn’t about image, it’s about depth of character and not trying to twist with the wind. Wind may ruffle your leaves, and a storm might well fell you, but a mighty oak is stronger than a bouncy (but intelligent and ambitious, I’ll grant him that) frog when it comes to recognising Prime Ministerial talent. The job is not a figurehead for chaotic advisors – it’s for someone with the deep roots to outlast the storms above. Brown is not finished by a long chalk, but from the distance that I’m looking at the card’s detail, the warrior’s gauntlet looks very like the steeple of St Martin-in-the-Field church (the one off Trafalgar Square) toppling under the strain of an unseen wind. Things are very rough out there, and Brown needs to engage his inner warrior to make sure he isn’t blown over by this storm.

    Public appearance

    Hunt Down – Green – Sorcery

    “Springjacks and faeries can be difficult to hunt, but my favourite prey are the flamekin. They never fail to put up a worthy fight when cornered.”

    Brown is still the subject of the public’s hunt and still in danger from public opinion. Although as in his situation he has the personal strength to deal with it, he is being pursued keenly by a public newly enfranchised by recent months’ affairs. Owlperson notes that there is an owl in this card as well; he has a bit of insight into the Vodalian Mage that I don’t have and says this owl’s appearance holds a key to the identity of the Mage as a totem symbol. In the public’s domain here though he says the owl is still only an observer and will not be able to use the public to manipulate the situation here. What is more important is that the card shows the flamekin – red elementals – at swordpoint, suggesting public confidence in Brown is low and that the Prime Minister needs to do more than just root himself in his own soil and hope he is not blown over.

    Media appearance

    Icatian Moneychanger – White – Creature – Human

    The Moneychanger is an old card which is not now typical of cards generally published – the old Magic game was more of a standard swords-and-sorcery genre which created whole worlds rather than followed epic battlefield stories. Brown is of course a former Chancellor who sits better with money matters than “politics” at its most basic. I would think if he called an election now the media would still see Labour – and in them, Brown – as the most efficient and effective ruler, even if the Moneychanger does look more sinister than the White suit may allow for. In a sense Brown here for the media at least is still an effective if aloof government man, and no-one else has his capabilities quite yet for balanced government, and it is a testament to his own courage and bluster and his opponents’ foolishness that he has managed to stay ahead. Although opinion-formers might still feel that he has a long way to go to restore their absolute confidence, loyalty and support, the media doesn’t seem to be portraying him that badly – it means he needs to try and focus himself at least on the object of government and hope his opponents, whether inside Labour or outside his party, will do themselves enough damage before he is fatally wounded. As Heimdall to Cameron’s Loki, he is probably doomed to fall anyway, but at least he may take others worse than he down with him.

    Inner reality – personal

    Aether Burst – Blue – Instant

    As fleeting as a cephalid’s promise.

    Cephalids are squid-men which replaced Merfolk for a while, with Merfolk coming back in the game over the last few years (this is a card published in 2001, before the design and the direction of the game changed somewhat). Brown inside is reliant mainly at the moment on day-to-day issues, and is not, unfortunately perhaps for him, making enough hay while the sun does still shine to last him through the winter. He works on bursts of energy and understanding, but doesn’t have much substantial yet to sustain him unless he can find another issue – swine flu has been mentioned, though it seems unlikely in this day and age that with public hygiene being important that it will become a modern Black Death – to grasp as a leader as he did with the credit crunch last year. Inside he is floating – but hopefully this will be replaced with a bit more solidity in the long run.

    Inner reality – party

    Giant Harbinger – Red – Giant Shaman

    There is still rumblings within the party, they are trying to find another giant, and it is matter of time and events before they get to the prize here before Brown has enough grounds to stop them again. Although their resources are meagre at the moment – the expenses scandal has put too many people beyond the leadership pale, though equally it didn’t stop John Bercow being elected Speaker – they are trying to pave the way for another giant to give Brown the Ent a run for his money. Giants are by their nature clumsy and greedy, however, and another Miliband-style blunder could cost Brown’s opponents more than it costs their beleaguered leader.

    Roots of his situation

    Elvish Promenade – Green – Tribal Sorcery – Elf

    The faultless and immaculate castes form the lower tiers of elvish society, with the exquisite caste above them. At the pinnacle is the perfect, a consummate blend of aristocrat and predator.

    This spell generates more creatures – elves, in this case – to harry the opponent with. In Brown’s case, this is the parade of would-be leaders portraying themselves as whiter-than-white and possibly perfect even while their expenses scandals lay decomposing in the Telegraph column inches. Hazel Blears, Jacqui Smith, James Purnell, David Miliband (last summer), Alan Johnson (this summer) – all tried and failed. But they felt the need to try – and Brown at least needs to make sure he understands that and tries not only to cling on but redress the balance.

    Seeds sown by his situation

    Kithkin Greatheart – White – Kithkin Soldier

    Sometimes a curious giant singles out a “little one” to follow for a few days, never realising the effect it will have on the little one’s life.

    Kithkin are what pass for hobbits in the Magic world. In this card a lumbering, clumsy giant treads on his small assistant. Or not, as the case may be. Brown simply needs to look out for lumbering giants and make sure they don’t tread on him. Could be quite difficult, but remember – giants are clumsier than ents. They make good muscle, but not good brains, and you need both to lead the party and both to lead the country. But having created some rather ornery giants in his time, that Brown still needs to look out for them is no-one’s fault but his own.

    Advice

    Spore Flower – Green – Fungus

    The “fungus maiden” card again. Sleepy as she is, I am now drawn towards the ruins in the background, and might suggest that Brown wakes up to what those ruins represent (a green card – Parliament, perhaps?) and tries to repair them before they are consumed by the fungal growth which would put them beyond hope. It is possible to do so, but Brown’s still-solid position may still produce both complacency and inertia, and those ruins look like becoming a reality if this isn’t halted immediately. That it can is already in doubt, but Brown could do something to restore Parliament rather than just lowering his centre of gravity and waiting until it all goes better for him again in the autumn.

    Warning

    Goblin Chirurgeon – Red – Goblin

    “I asked one of my aides how they do it, but all he’d say was, ‘Trust me, Mayor, you don’t want to know’” – Lydia Wynforth, Mayor of Trokair

    This little mischief-maker is already machinating against Brown, and being smaller than the average giant he may well be possessed of a few more ounces of cunning, if not intelligence, than his bigger friends. What Brown fears, possibly, are giants. What he should be fearing are the goblins – those that look harmless now but may be concocting vile experiments, homunculi or zombies in their backbench laboratories. Being red, it’s primarily a threat from within his own party. The good thing about this is goblins are generally as stupid as giants, and like Miliband last summer may blow their hand too soon out of pride, hubris or excitement. But Brown should really know about this beforehand if he is going to sort things out properly in the longer term.

    Direction

    Tideshaper Mystic – Blue – Merfolk Wizard

    He paints with drop and shimmer a world that only exists in the wistful heart.

    An artist, then, a painter of fantasy and imagination that thinks outside the box. It’s a blue card, but we’ve had blue Merfolk Wizards before (coughcoughVodalianMagecoughcough) and the direction is still in their direction. Nevertheless, if Brown really can show a bit of vision here he may be able to pre-empt the Mage’s own ideas and protect his party from running out of ideas to create the baroque public sector that Brown set himself as a challenge when he came into government twelve years ago. He and Blair did show the Tories they were capable of using their policies, making them more Labour-orientated, and selling them to the public in ways limited only by the paucity of New Labour’s bureaucratic idea of the state. The Mage, when he comes, will have real vision and talent and real ideas how to square the circle of making the state do less and making it do what it does better. That is Brown’s task now, but it may end in being taken over by the Mage when he comes. For now it’s in Brown’s hands to do this, which is why I’m not saying this too is a harbinger of the Vodalian Mage. It’s not. But it shows the direction Labour has to go to recapture the public imagination and the electorate’s all-important vote.

    Solution

    Spellstutter Sprite – Blue – Faerie Wizard

    This is what the game terms a “counterspell”, a way of neutralising your opponents’ spells before they take effect. What is happening here is Brown merely holding things off, buying time, and not using his own imagination – and remaining government authority – pro-actively enough to allow a genuine return to prominence and real safety. Perhaps he is trying to punt things over the hill of the next election, hoping a recovery will ease the polls slightly and provide him with a 1992 last-chance-saloon victory in order to help him realise his dreams and ambition. But countering his opponents is not enough to win the game – he needs help from the giants and ents rather than hoping to keep the Tories at bay indefinitely. They might boob before long, but if Brown could leave them in the dust, he should do. But this solution is not at all satisfactory for those of us who dislike Cameron intensely and don’t want him anywhere near Downing Street before he has had a chance to understand that his party has no idea how to oppose properly, still less to govern generously. Brown may here be holding off his critics until he can find the solution, but this needs to come after the countermagic. I’m not sure it’s enough L.

    Outcome

    Seedguide Ash – Green – Treefolk Druid

    “May you shade three generations of seedlings.”

    That sounds like a blessing for a third term, but not a fourth. It may be too late to win the election, though the appearance of the Vodalian Mage might mean that it is not yet too late for Heimdall to take Loki down with him. Again, another ent card, one more dynamic than an oak, but less all-mighty. Brown needs to learn to think on his feet and this card genuinely I believe does show that, but I’m not sure that flavour text really gives me confidence that when the Mage appears, he’ll go the distance against him. Tackling Loki might produce a result, but the message here is – Labour might have won a third term, but a fourth may not after all be within their grasp.

    Significant events: June/July

    Aspect of Mongoose – Green – Enchantment – Aura

    This card protects the creature to which it is attached during the game from the spells/effects of another player. It may be that for now Brown is actually “shrouded” (a keyword imposed on this mechanic after this card was printed) by his own resilience and game-playing. A temporary card, but a better one than possibly expected. One thing I have been struck by this year is the lack of disastrous cards in Brown’s forecasts, and to a certain extent the Prime Minister is the last to fall of any public figures in disgrace; we have had four in the last thirty years, plenty of hopefuls, but no-one quite up to challenging even Mouse-totemed Major until he lost in 1997. This is why I am so down on Boris Johnson’s prospects – it takes a really special person to be in this position and keep going through such chaotic and unpredictable times. Brown is special by having faced down his critics and put the cap on things to an extent that he did come third in the European Elections, not fourth, and as such kept his job. But I knew that all along – I may not have been able to articulate it, which would be the mark of a much better psychic – and this card brings little surprises in store for the next five weeks at least.

    Significant events: August/September

    Makeshift Mannequin – Black – Instant

    “This vulgar mimicry will end” – Desmera, perfect of Wren’s Run

    See, it works. This card suggests decay and undeath, and a difficult month for all concerned; Brown is barely left standing, a shop’s dummy of a prime minister, but the black in this card gives me comfort that what I do “see” – or perhaps a better word is “feel” – happening begins to happen. The impact is increased by this being the first black card in the spread, allowing me to pinpoint the troubled months for the PM much more than conventional tarot. Brown is reduced by events to an empty shell. Whether he can recover, whether he will be sacked, whether he will just go down to defeat at the eventual election, I don’t know solely from this card, though Desmera’s edict here may reflect that as much as the Seedguide Ash’s flavour text augurs only three terms for Labour. I don’t think this suggests a leadership crisis so much as a feeling of inevitability, but it fits with the idea that the Vodalian Mage is on his way for the Tories to deal with their Skittering Monstrosity issues.

    Responses

    Elvish Scout – Green – Elf

    Although the Elves of Havenwood lived in isolated villages, their swift communications allowed them to act as a single community.

    Brown evidently has the resources here to maintain some sort of shell of authority by being more aware of what is going on than his giants. Owlperson once explained he believed it was impossible to be a politician without some sort of conscious ability to anticipate the future and plan for it; he originally explained that this meant consciously psychic, as he says he is, but perhaps this could be downgraded to a situation where being a senior politician really means that one is switched on subconsciously to know what your giants are doing and pre-empting them or knowing which ones are harmless (because they are compromised by capital gains tax fraud or a bath plug claimed on expenses) and which ones are so abstemious as to be worth taking note of and cultivating as allies – in Owlie’s words, better inside the tent pissing out than vice versa. Given this, Brown’s response to issues is to keep his eyes and ears open and although he does project the image of someone having multiple drinks in that proverbial Last Chance Saloon, he does know what is going on. Until someone can outwit him – though it may not be being outfoxed that he is particularly worried about, since Cameron’s plans are as vapid and empty as ever, betraying his background in advertising rather than sound government once the going calls for something more solid than spin – Brown is safe, but such safety must not be confused with the actual ability to expand and develop territory; it is him clinging on to the hope of a fourth term despite history telling us that might not help the Labour Party in the slightest.

    Conclusion

    Basalt Gargoyle – Red – Gargoyle

    The red-in-tooth-and-claw cards often don’t care too much about the creature’s toughness – the damage they can withstand – so long as they can deal a lot of damage to the enemy. The first deck I seriously played in this game was concentrated on dealing as much damage as possible directly to the opposing player because they were in love with a card – Dark Confidant – that routinely damaged them each turn. But this card solidifies itself with more resources poured into it, such that it can safeguard its own position on the battlefield. Brown is trying to do this, and he is able to do it so long as he isn’t directly harmed either by his own side or by his opponents. As his opponents do more damage to themselves he is all right. But the reckoning will come when he no longer has the resources to pump himself up – and that requires opponents who are themselves strong enough to launch a campaign which is righteous enough to do battle with, being honest here, someone who has the inner righteousness to at least see off his current rivals. Once we get to a position where the bad have been swept away – as happened, ironically, with the three resignations during election week – then Brown may start to get into real trouble.

  • 23 June 2009 – Making a bit more Magic – part 2: The Conservative Party



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    Another look at the Tories’ fortunes through the lens of the Magic The Gathering trading card game.

    At end of play, we found out that a single person will put Labour to flight later on in the autumn. Since the card was from the blue suit – suggesting to me a Conservative figure – we now have to see whether at the same time as trying to chart the Tories’ progress through the summer – choppy waters and all – we can flesh out the “Vodalian Mage” who turned up. I don’t feel this is Cameron – he is vulnerable and does not surprise many people these days, and is too immersed in the system to be too dangerous any more, particularly as Pluto has left the talkative, idealistic and somewhat vapid sign of Sagittarius (no disrespect to any Sagittarians out there – my Moon, and that of Owlperson, is in Sagittarius itself) into the earthy and more direct sign of Capricorn, guaranteeing some sort of flashpoint over the course of the next few years. This astrological symbolism is measured in years – from 2009 to 2024 – but Pluto’s move into Capricorn only solidified political battles which have hitherto found little ability to root themselves in anything approaching fine loam and sprout roots. Pluto has been in Sagittarius since 1995, which roughly coincides with the end of the period in which bigger more intense battles were fought elsewhere over ideological substance, and the beginning of the recent phase marked by words speaking larger than actions – the so-called threat from terrorism which did culminate in 9/11 but then turned out to be a paper tiger as regards the real danger to the West. The credit crunch has had an impact – Pluto moving into Capricorn – but Pluto in Sagittarius failed to produce any serious challenge to the western status quo which the Soviet Union embodied during the period of Pluto in Scorpio and before.

    As I begin to understand astrology better (and I have an interesting article still to write on my research into electoral fraud, the last election, and astrological predictions for it; I think this also has to do with the Vodalian Mage or the person I think it is) I will write a bit more, but the Tories deserve as much scrutiny as Labour do. So without further verbiage...

    PART 2: THE CONSERVATIVE PARTY

    Situation

    Wing Storm: Sorcery

    A thousand wings beating as one can choke the sky itself.

    I think the Conservative Party here is choking itself by the number of voices it is trying to speak in and the number of people it is trying to appease. Though it keeps airborne, it may have peaked and gone over with itself damaged by the expenses scandal; though this may hurt the government more at the moment, it will drag the Tories down if they begin to choke themselves because of it. I am drawn to the picture, which shows an old man elf defending himself against a storm, against perhaps death by a thousand cuts. An overwhelming barrage might just help, but it is no substitute for sorting their own selves out and then focussing on barraging the government coherently and with suitable weight behind their words.

    Opposing Forces

    Svyelunite Priest: Creature – Merfolk

    “Early Vodalians worshipped Svyelun, goddess of the Pearl Moon. Later, she became a more abstract figure.” – Sarpadian Empires, vol V.

    Here we have the weight of tradition and of history preying on the Tories and holding them back. It is not so much inertia but the difficulties of coming across as a genuine alternative to current chaos rather than being seen as part of it. We have a reference to Vodalia, which although a minor part of the Magic universe is the homeland of our elusive Mage. In opposition to the current party is not good – the Vodalian Mage will work for the Party eventually but he is currently not “of” the party, confirming my suspicion he is not Cameron himself. The more general reading for this card is the stagnation and mindlessness of what the Tories have to put out, and their reliance on abstraction than on concrete momentum to match the times.

    Public appearance

    Deep Spawn: Creature – Homarid

    The Homarids are cousins to Merfolk, in this specific set (“Fallen Empires”, published in 1994 and one of the early game expansions), a race of lobster-men. The card has the ability to evade what is going on at the moment, to stop themselves being the targets of people who would otherwise be targeting it as part of the problem. In a sense the benefit of the doubt is still with the Tories. It could change, however, as we move further on.

    Inner realities

    Homarid Warrior: Creature – Homarid Warrior

    Again, the party believes it is canny enough to evade the public’s wrath, leaving Labour to suffer at their hands. I’m not sure – and neither is Owlperson – how long this will last but the party at least conforms to public appearance, suggesting that people are seeing the reality of a political issue for once in a very long time.

    Roots of current situation

    Vodalian Soldiers: Creature – Merfolk Warrior

    “You think you know everything there is to know about battle? You know orc droppings! Underwater combat is three dimensional. Those thrice-damned Vodalians don’t attack in ranks; they attack in schools.” Irva Jursdotter, pp David Cameron

    Another few words from the wise Irva Jursdotter. Here the Vodalians represent the way in which the Tories believed that they would escape from the phase we have entered without much harm and they would be able to take on all comers over their own deep issues here. But when the situation becomes as three-dimensional as it has – and by that I mean that people begin to act in genuine dismay rather than as manipulative as the era of Pluto in Sagittarius has been – there are only winners when people seize the moment and take their rulers – and the so-called Opposition – to task. This is when the problems start – it is up to the party now to solve the issues involved without losing their own momentum – such as it ever was – towards government. Vodalia is not necessarily in opposition to the rest of the party here – the card is not in a negative or ill-dignified aspect – but on the other hand the Tories were in the main taken by surprise when the expenses scandal broke and thus are worthy of a slightly less positive reading to this card at the moment.

    Seeds sown by current situation

    Grinning Ignus: Creature – Elemental

    “Take care what you offer the ignus. Food, perhaps. Coins. But nothing flammable!” – Stovic, village eccentric.

    The Tories end this section of the traditional “cross” with a warning – try not to fan the flames of the expenses scandal or its aftermath, particularly not by machinating against the new Speaker for petty party political reasons. Otherwise their house might catch fire too. In other words, a standard “sow the wind, reap the whirlwind” warning.

    Existing resources

    Ogre Leadfoot: Creature – Ogre

    When the goblins need more scrap for the Great Furnace, they simply let the ogres loose and follow in their wake.

    Again, here we have the Tories unleashing a storm hoping that it will damage Labour more than it does them. A consequence of Pluto in Sagittarius is that words often speak louder than actions; and this may have lead the Tories to believe over successive leaderships that the way back into government merely means shouting louder than their opponents. As in the Boris spread, this suggests also that they are using someone else to further their own ideas rather than taking control and directing the forces at work. They may believe this worked for Tony Blair over the year of 1996, where successive complaints regarding society as a whole – such as the Dunblane petition and Snowdrop Appeal – went through the Labour Party. However this is repeating here as farce as the Tories try to manipulate their limited policy means into a way of making capital out of nothing, or even out of a negative situation which embroiled them too. Clumsy use of existing resources, in other ways, which has the potential to get out of control and wreck them quite spectacularly.

    Personnel Issues

    Clockspinning: Instant

    A way of manipulating things which is more controlled but again expensive to sustain or repeat and ultimately – pardon Owlperson’s French when he says this – “pissing into the wind”. (Owlie: politics makes us all speak in language which would be otherwise unacceptable to any serious commentator; witness Bob Crowe’s use of language which required multiple asterisks on the front page of the Metro during the Tube strike.) The Tories are trying to put the clock forward to desperately protect – and perhaps remove – those of them that look particularly vulnerable. Again, a suggestion of desperation and it also seems that they too fear the Vodalian Mage, if Owlie’s interpretation of why they would want to have an election – or to put the clock forward on personnel issues – is correct. He also dares to say that this is better than tarot as it is more obvious to me what is going on in which position, and again confirms Cameron too knows – at least subconsciously – who the Vodalian Mage is.

    Issues with the new Speaker

    Fatal Attraction: Enchantment – Aura

    Not one they would like to have seen, but perhaps they can still use him themselves, or use the situation to really prop themselves up – with the constant danger that their machinations against him smack of the inability to settle down and let things get back to normal. Bercow’s appointment has thoroughly annoyed them and has earned him enmity from all quarters of the party – Owlperson says this is partly justified, but the way in which these plots have been made public is symptomatic of why the Tories cannot really be in the position yet to govern the country in everyone’s interests. The party and Bercow will come to blows, and this will not be pleasant for either the Speaker or the Conservative leadership. A situation best left alone – but the tensions are too high for that.

    Direction

    Gilt-Leaf Ambush: Tribal Instant – Elf

    This basically says to me that the tribal instincts in the Tories are like those in Labour when they used to harp on about the miners and what Thatcher was doing to them. It is difficult to see the Tories curing themselves of their petty tribalism and distinguishing themselves from the naked self-interest of Labour. Labour tripped themselves up over Margaret Beckett, but this card suggests that the Tories’ attempts to claim Labour are trying to “fix” the election by introducing PR or have appointed Bercow Speaker merely to spite them show they are walking into ambushes that Fate has left for them. This impresses very few people I know, except the most nakedly tribal among them. I have learned through bitter experience myself that to really understand government you have to stand outside your own party on occasion. Not as far outside it as John Bercow, admittedly, but such that you gain perspective on your own failings. Ironically it was tribal old Owlperson who taught me that but then again he shocked me quite a lot when we got to know each other two years ago that it helped my political self-discovery to an extent where I understand this particular situation and the consequences of tribal ambushes everywhere.

    Solution

    Fistful of Force: Instant

    Again, the Tories need to whack forward; they can’t go back to the languid stalemate of the past few years. The “Clash” element of the card, where random elements decide what is going to happen next in the game, suggests that possibilities can be found but that their magnitude – and hence their impact – is still up for debate and may not fully depend on them.

    Outcome

    Skittering Monstrosity: Creature – Horror

    Most living things were weakened and stunted in the ruinous aftermath of the Phyrexian invasion, but a few grew more horrid than ever.

    In other words, the expenses scandal has warped things so badly that what comes of the current Conservative Party is distorted and contorted so much that its original purpose is now stunted and focussed solely on naked self-advantage rather than the government of the country in the interests of all – which the Tories, once installed (harder than it often looks) are usually quite good at. The current incarnation of the Conservative Party is showing that the Nasty Party never really went away, and that Cameron cannot control it; he is part of it himself if he cannot do so. Luckily the appearance of a new figure will kill this abomination, but for now it remains on the game-board, oozing nastiness everywhere.

    Significant events – Summer

    Think Twice: Instant

    “Great books are meant to be read, then read again backwards or upside down!” – Ettovard, Tolarian archivist

    The card’s keyword is Flashback, which hits me as a clue to what comes out of this thinking period; and then it suggests that the party has to search high and low for a clear and lasting solution. As I said, the Vodalian Mage is a Tory, but he may not be a Conservative – not at this point or in the way Conservative currently means. The party has to solve this issue – one more of leadership, direction and strategy as well as the issue of what to do with the Skittering Monstrosity – before it can progress, and this has to happen this summer to have any chance of impressing the public in the run up to an election. Happily, this is an event card, not an advice card, so it does.

    Significant events – Autumn

    Spore Flower: Creature – Fungus

    Labour had “Spore Cloud” in its cards, but the product of that cloud belongs to the Tories’ autumn predictions. The skittering monstrosity that the party has become has gone to be replaced with a blossom of hope. The plant is still fungal, but the exhaustion in the posture of the woman in the card at least means that the party has come to rest and found its voice in a seemly manner conducive to the kind of public debate that creates a government rather than merely wins elections. Thankfully, this coincides with the return of the Vodalian Mage and confirms he is a Conservative.

  • 23 June 2009 - Boris: Will he be PM? Specially for Angel-Neptune-Star, my Twitter friend


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    I've had a request to read for this by a friend from Twitter, angelneptustar, who despite our differences in opinion - she is more Conservative at present than I am - has had the patience to put up with my rants for a while now. She requested a reading on Twitter about Boris Johnson and his chances for PM, and although I am initially sceptical and am inclined to say no outright - for matters of mundane opinion as well as higher guidance - I want to see what the cards say about Boris' real purpose here. Not ruling out a higher station for now, but the obstacles against Boris as PM are currently high, particularly if the Tories do pull off an election win. Since he would have to relinquish his post as Mayor, with three years to run on that ticket that would make him have to wait until the next but one general election; he would also have to work his way up to the top through a potential Conservative Cabinet and survive the intense scrutiny of performance not in opposition but in government. While he is - according to Owlperson who lives within his jurisdiction - a fairly all right Mayor, his response to the scrutiny committee suggested to me that he would not survive the harsher scrutiny a Prime Minister or senior Cabinet minister would face in office, and I'm not 100% sure that behind the facade he really appreciates the magnitude of even the London job. He would do better concentrating on other projects - but that's just my opinion.

    Spiritually speaking, Boris is in fact an angel incarnated, with a frog totem (which gives him his bouncy nature and his buffoonish enjoyment of the good life; other frogs in politics have been David Mellor - previously Minister for Far Too Much Fun - and Ann Widdecombe, again someone whose cheery and optimistic outlook on life nevertheless has led to her skimming over the surface rather than forging a brilliant (Shadow) Cabinet career on the back of her initial rise to prominence as the nemesis of Michael Howard. Howard fared much better than Widdecombe in the end because of his Bubo Scandiaca owl totem allowing a deeper and less superficial basis to keep him going in tough times and to work harder to achieve what he wanted in government and opposition. In Widdecombe's case her love of celebrity and diletanttism, coupled with a common attribute of frogs - a deep idealism sitting ill-at-ease with the demands for compromise in government. Boris' angelic nature makes him a place-holder for tasks which might otherwise fall to those who would use them for darker purposes. When we are talking of purposes at a higher level, we have to look at the bigger picture. Boris fits because he is charismatic, but lacks the more dangerous ambition that might corrupt him. With Pluto in Capricorn passing the baton to us in terms of cataclysmic events, we need all the help we can get.

    What do the cards say? Sticking with the Magic cards, let's have a look.

    Reasons for Boris to be here in the first place.

    Ogre Leadfoot: Creature - Ogre

    "When the goblins need more scrap for the Great Furnace, they simply let the ogres loose and follow in their wake."

    If Angel will forgive me in comparing the Tories to Goblins, it seems that Boris represents the harbinger of Conservative rule returning, but the chaotic nature of the red card "suit" in Magic suggests something random and unplanned to Boris, which is balanced only by the ability of the job to grow on Mr Johnson. I think Boris is not necessarily aware of this, but there is a certain way to which he was used by the Tories last year to put up a better candidate who could trump Livingstone, and indeed the closeness of the result suggests it was Boris' personality which finally won it rather than the Tory label. So Boris is firstly here to restore the Tories to a governing position, though he is manipulated from behind the scenes - not a good quality in an ultimate leader.

    Reasons Boris went for London.

    Fatal Attraction: Enchantment - Aura

    Again, a red card. The card is one used on an opponent's creature, not on your own, as it damages the creature, either crippling it turn after turn or killing it outright. Thus perhaps Boris, again at the request of his party (though it was more complicated than that, according to Owlperson), was used against Labour, not for the Tories. Such a short-sighted view of political necessities - such as the ability to govern as well as just win - will only exacerbate the negative influence of Pluto in Capricorn in the year to come. The old order - that currently in sway and that which Pluto will wipe away - is more concerned with scoring victories, whether Labour's "historic third term" which has been historic in all the wrong ways, or the Conservatives' coup in London - lives to win rather than govern. This is crippling not only both parties but government itself - and thus the negative aura around this card.

    Boris as a man

    Thick-Skinned Goblin: Creature - Goblin Shaman

    The shaman of the tribe is responsible for keeping track of all its treasures, including angry pets and cursed lamps of fiery doom.

    I'm sorry, Angel, I don't mean that Boris is a bad goblin, merely that in keeping with the cards around him, he is at least maintaining something in the way of a balance, making a go of running London, and taming angry pets like Sir Ian Blair or his own officials. He is going somewhere, but in the context of what cards are in my reading pack at the moment, I'm not sure this is entirely optimistic as a result.

    Boris as a politician

    Nightshade Assassin: Creature - Human Assassin

    Again, an equivocal card. Boris is "playable" as a joker, a wild card (though not our Vodalian Mage) and someone to strike hard and take others by surprise. Labour perhaps thought they could win indefinitely with Ken, and my cousin believes that Ken may not be long gone or gone long. Boris needs to deepen himself and not be such a tool - literally - if he wants to be PM, and even then I'm not positive he will be. In fact, I'm quite negative on that score given the cards surrounding him.

    Boris' roots

    Basalt Gargoyle: Creature - Gargoyle

    He is resilient; he bounces, in Owlperson's words. There is nothing really explicit here - aside again from the firey side of his nature (Boris is an air sign, a Gemini, but these cards suggests he might have several fire signs around him) - except a feeling that his resilience does count for him rather than against in any power struggle or leadership bid. But this can't tell the whole story - we need to look at how he would govern the country if given the chance.

    Boris' seeds in politics - what is his legacy?

    Pendelhaven Elder: Creature - Elf Shaman

    The elder who carries the ancestral mantle of Jacques le Vert is tasked with his ancient mission: to protect the creatures of Pendelhaven.

    Boris does give strength to others; the leadership issue here is muted but present; again however he has fulfilled that promise with London and I don't believe Owlperson agrees that the future is mutable enough to allow him to slip a few years in Downing Street onto his CV. But this shows us that Boris has developed something enough to sustain him after he leaves the Mayoralty; a backseat position perhaps; advising, explaining, teaching, acting as a raconteur for the next generations but not in a foremost leadership role. I do "never say never", but Prime Ministers are not chosen on the whim of a few years as a bon viveur; Owlperson counsels that to him this card says venerable journalist and even eminence grise rather than kingmaker or indeed king.

    Prospects this year

    Krovikan Rot: Instant

    Boris doesn't appear to be able to escape Pluto in Capricorn either. The difficulties for the whole country are intensifying, and he is neither immune nor the immediate answer, although the Elder above suggests he survives the coming storm, although Owlie adds: barely. The "Recover" keyword suggests that Boris is salvageable, but the card does promise danger ahead for all concerned. Sadly I'm not sure Boris is best placed to make the most of this crisis as a leadership contender.

    So - PM - yes or no?

    Lightning Storm: Instant

    Danger strikes first. Boris is not in parliament, so he faces a struggle to get back in. No doubt paths may be smoothed - Kensington and Chelsea might surprisingly end up vacant, though Rifkind has been glossed over as far as I've seen during this scandal - but if he wanted to be in a position to make the most of this issue or this crisis he is not for the moment a contender. Lightning may strike for him, but it may equally strike him down. Going by Owlperson's information, it is more likely to be the latter, because he like most others in this saga has behaved with lax abandon and not kept himself out of the fray for later. Our Vodalian Mage friend has done just that. Boris may be a wild card, but he is not the Vodalian Mage.

    In a sense, Boris will never be PM because he just is not the right person at the right time. He is not even yet in the running, and if the Conservative Party wants a serious crack at government, then they have to stop looking for fresh meat and capitalise on the situation at hand. Although as I have established Labour will be put to flight by one of us - I still think of myself as a Tory, if at the moment rather manque - it might not be Boris as the timings, totems and characters of the relevant people conspire against him, and the Tories in David Cameron already have a candidate for now (although again, Cameron is not, I believe, the Vodalian Mage).

  • 23 June 2009 Making a Bit More Magic – Part 1 Labour



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    I remember where I was when it was whispered in my ear that perhaps I would enjoy Dungeons and Dragons. Just like that, in the relevant department at Hamley’s, I became a big fan of the fantasy role-playing game; my best friend Zoe was into it as well and an avid fan of the Pern Dragonrider series by Anne MacCaffrey (which I have never read to date, preferring Feist, Weis and Hickman and David Eddings for my fantasy bread and butter). Escaping into a world of gargantuan lizards with noble elves sat on their back, trying desperately to grapple with Lord of the Rings in the queue for school dinners at Wycombe High School, and imagining myself and my friends as heroes in our own fantasy universe, there are immense parallels at time between art and life. Looking at life through these eyes makes it a bit less mundane. Although perhaps we have to come down to earth at some point (gastric flu really helps in that regard, twenty four gruesome hours of being sick and then the two-day hangover afterwards – not nice), the current goings-on at Westminster to me have brought back some of the excitement of an epic fantasy cycle where the keys to the kingdom really do hang in the balance.

    On and off I have, since that afternoon in 1992, enjoyed the odd game or five not only of Magic: The Gathering (not simply “Magic” because of the difficulty in copyrighting that single word for a single game, but hereafter “Magic” with a capital M will refer to the trading card game, or TCG) but of Dungeons and Dragons itself, and although the expense can become prohibitive at times and I duck out for a while, it always drags me back in. In the spring I went to Brighton for a couple of days and, due to the interminable diet of pop-non-fiction I was reading (“Blood River”, the trip up the Congo by Telegraph journalist Tim Butcher didn’t hold my attention, being a mere catalogue of his trip rather than a really coherent whole book, and on starting Lewis Page’s “Lions, Donkeys and Dinosaurs” – a polemic against waste and bureaucracy in the military – during a rather dull dinner at Zizzi’s on the first night, I went out the next morning and found a shop selling knock-down copies of the Forgotten Realms series of books...and I was hooked back in again. It helps that Owlperson claims he was the one who whispered into my ear about D&D back in 1992; and if you believe that, you’ll believe that the Krynnish cataclysm is being played out in front of our very eyes this summer at Westminster.

    What I enjoy about Magic is that there is an intelligence and strategy about the game, and a wide community. While it will never surpass chess as a game of kings – for obvious commercial as well as practical reasons – the game is proving resilient enough to survive the “fad” phase and enter a venerability for commercial products that rivals D&D itself – in fact when the original D&D company folded in the late 1990s, Wizards of the Coast, who launched Magic in 1993 as the first ever TCG took it over. I don’t want this to become an infomercial for the game or the company, but the lead designer Mark Rosewater is one of the best bloggers-that-never-were with his articles on designing the game providing a deep insight into the psychology of the game as well as the necessary puff-pieces for new product. Reading his columns is like reading something that cuts through a lot of the verbiage and spin put out in newspapers and magazines these days and although to appreciate a lot of the articles you would need a basic appreciation of the game itself, I’ve come to value his weekly column because it chimes with the way I too see the world – not just as a series of mundane exercises in pointless manipulation, but as an adventure where someone can really change and create something – a grow-your-own-adventure, if you will. He also writes thousands of words at a time, proving to me you can be a successful columnist and not have to compress your writings into a single page. An archive of articles can be found here.

    On to the meat of my own column – since I’ve titled this Part 1: Labour it must follow that there will be something political about it. I only really want to test the cards out for now, to see whether they provide a sharper definition of the real issues facing the party (or, in the case of the Parts 2 and 3 and possibly 4,863, other parties, other figures, and other situations that might arise). I will go back to using tarot at some point, and perhaps vary from week to week or situation to situation, but having 10,000 potential cards to choose from – not all of them in my own collection – there are possibilities to define the situation at hand sharper than using the tarot, which despite having a potential 156 outcomes – assuming one card spreads and reversals – is often too symbolic for my intuitive mind to compute what it precisely means. Magic speaks in real-world animal symbols (the Ashcoat Bear I mentioned in my last article), in activity, in language which uses active situations rather than archetypal symbols. For someone able to clairvoyantly see what each card means, tarot remains a universal means of fortune-telling with a focus. For someone like me, who is at this stage of my development very decidedly “off” but in communication with spirits who guide and advise rather than foretell, it makes it easier for me to understand what messages I am being given, particularly about poor old John Bercow, the most recent subject of my Magic readings.

    Without further ado, here is a simple Celtic Cross spread for the way ahead for the Labour Party. All links go to the Gatherer database which provides an image of each card I draw. Apologies to Wizards of the Coast if I tread on any copyright issues here but I don’t plan on trying to infringe these, merely using the cards under fair use clause.

    PART 1: THE LABOUR PARTY

    Situation:

    Ray of Distortion: Instant

    Labour are currently in the position of apparently being in office but not in power. But is this really the case? The warping effect of the current scandal, the lack of coherent and concrete opposition, and the ability of New Labour to get out of similar depths of electoral unpopularity in the past suggest to me that we are not seeing the real depths of the situation and we need to filter this of partisan barracking and the fact that the Tories seem to be equally at a loss to control what is going on. The difference between now and, say, 1996 is that there is no one power base in parliament, just a petty melee of hopelessness on both sides. The Ray of Distortion thus counsels us not to view anything as a fait accompli quite yet.

    Opposing forces:

    Deeptread Merrow: Creature – Merfolk Rogue

    “My success at navigating the Dark Meanders irritates the Inkfathom school. They consider themselves peerless divers, but I try to remind them that they cannot own commodities like bravery and cunning.”

    The issues which Labour neglect are increasing plots rather than calmer seas ahead, particularly as regards their leadership, and there are also concerns that their own scheming – seen this week over Margaret Beckett – will damage and derail hopes of a return to more policy-orientated discussions, where they do have the advantages. Letting plots get out of control could be fatal if it damages their ability to govern and their ultimate majority in the Commons.

    Public appearance:

    Herbal Poultice: Artifact

    “Apply orange leaf to a wound at dawn to clean it, at dusk to prevent the same injury from happening again” – Kithkin superstition

    If Labour were ever to recover sufficient to win a general election, it might be now while their opponents are caught in the same parliamentary trap and unable to make serious play of their own virtues. If the Prime Minister can grasp that he is still perhaps regarded as the best policy-maker out there he may save his politicking until things get firmer for him. The public may even be recovering from their feeding frenzy and beginning to trust again, though much more of this pettiness may permanently seal everyone’s fate. Thus Labour must not lose sight of their public policy agenda, but it may become difficult to rely on it in the long term.

    Inner realities:

    Wanderer’s Twig: Artifact

    For every tree who falls, there are countless sprouts waiting to rise.

    This is broadly positive card, again, with the caveat that deadwood has to be cleared away still. The party is running out of raw material, but maybe within the mulch of their backbench there still remain potential candidates to replace the fallen, and the soil may still prove to be fertile down there.

    Roots of the current situation

    Changeling Berserker: Creature – Shapeshifter

    Labour were able to rebalance temporarily, and are ploughing on towards the next election hopeful they can sort things out to make sure they scrape through. This momentum may not be very stable, and like berserkers in games and fantasy fiction, they may find that the struggle exhausts them so much so any current victories may well end up pyrrhic. Dealing with this mutability and changeability is the secret to solving Labour’s issues and trying to go forward.

    Seeds sown by the current situation

    Primal Forcemage: Creature – Elf Shaman

    Their calls unheeded by the withered forests, nature shamans channelled the life force of their brethren.

    Labour summon courage seemingly from nowhere and begin to get the situation under control. They find the energy from somewhere, certainly, but it is a rather temporary and one-shot energy and it is still unclear to me who will come out best from this situation.

    Existing resources

    Freyalise’s Radiance: Enchantment

    Again, another card referring to keeping the situation under control and the worst aspects at bay until a more lasting solution can be found. Although most of these cards suggest sudden spurts of energy and solutions found to immediate problems, they can only at best keep the situation at arm’s length and are not lasting or permanent enough to really solve Labour’s internal problems. There is no real ability to sustain this power without massive resources, and I’m not sure Labour possess this mettle any more. Whether the opposition can do things better is an issue (Owlperson begs to interrupt here with that) but that is a matter for the Conservative part coming later.

    Personnel issues

    Brassclaw Orcs: Creature – Orc

    “A whole skin is worth a thousand victories.” – Orcish Veteran of the Battle of Montford

    Labour need to rely on the courage and the perseverance of their top brass to keep the government going and replenished after resignations after the expense scandal; but they cannot really here rely on people who are desperate to save themselves at the expense of others. The situation veers between wanting to keep Labour alive in government as the Tories for themselves managed in 1992, and going down to a lesser defeat now to maintain a parliamentary presence better than that that happened to their rivals in 1997. The situation has been dragging towards petty personal ends for months, which worries and upsets someone who cares about the state of the country that has to live through this lack of firm command on both sides. How can we be led by cowards when we need lions to deal with the grave global issues we face? Perhaps we are about to understand the consequences of short-term politicking by both parliamentary factions.

    Issues with the new Speaker

    Orcish Spy: Creature – Orc

    “You idiot! Never let the spies mingle with the Orcish regulars after completing a mission. Now we’ll never get them to fight!” – General Khurzog

    If Labour really did install John Bercow as Speaker because they wanted to get one up on the Tories, they may manage to destabilise the Opposition because of the possibility that this reflects badly on the competency of the Opposition to balance the neutrality of Parliament with their own petty ends. The squabbles don’t seem to be abating – but have thrown a new player into the ghastly mix. Bercow might have been mingling with the regulars, but Owlperson confides that the card is more appropriately read as a warning to Labour not to expect him to be a safe pair of hands either – that Bercow has always been a law unto himself and represents the nadir of the idea of neutrality rather than a true upholder of Parliament’s honour. Labour inserted him, the Tories lost their nerve and rose to the bait – and Parliament is dragged further downhill.

    Direction

    Combat Medic: Creature – Human Soldier

    “We’d no sooner knock ‘em back on their heels that that accursed sawbones would show up and patch ‘em back together again.” – Ivra Jursdotter, pp David Cameron

    Interpreting this rather cynically, Labour do have an amazing tendency to calm down and face-forward. The healing element of this card suggests that, although the longer it lasts the harder it is to stop the momentum destroying everything, the party is not dead yet and is actually recuperating after a torrid spring. The cards have never lied to me; they may be obtuse at times but the clear message here is a respite from the fray and the restoration, however temporary, of some sort of health.

    Solution

    Icatian Priest: Creature – Human Cleric

    “May you be strong and valiant, to defeat the enemies of the pure.” – “Leitbur’s Prayer”

    Again, it is not over for Labour, because they have strong friends still and from their own ranks will come someone to assist them to at least survive the summer, although whether it will be strong enough to repair the damage totally is another matter. This complements the Combat Medic because it restores pride and hope after the immediate medical aid given to the party when it comes off life support. The battle is not over and the war not yet entirely won, but at least skirmishes may prove more successful in the near future.

    Outcome

    Carapace: Enchant Creature

    “The tougher to crack, the sweeter the snack.” – Kakra, Sea Troll

    Labour have proved more resilient than the Tories have because they have a shared ideology (Owlperson is suggesting this even as a Conservative himself). The Tories’ strengths lie elsewhere, but although the flavour text suggests some ominous ending, it still enables Labour to harden and stiffen the party’s resolve; though the ability of the card to sacrifice itself to regenerate – or revive the chosen creature – means that there may not be a second chance if the hide is pierced this time.

    Significant events during the summer

    Spore Cloud: Instant

    The fog in this card suggests that the situation begun in May will trundle on all summer and damage the party’s ability to focus on anything but the chaotic and poisonous system. There isn’t much hope of a return to normal; and of course spores mean fungus will spread to anything Labour try and use to dampen down the flames. The party should concentrate on politics for the summer with conference in hand to try and begin things anew, though the rest of the readings for the autumn and winter foretell wider Parliamentary chaos ahead.

    Significant events during the autumn

    Vodalian Mage: Creature – Merfolk Wizard

    “Come back, cowards! Everyone knows Merfolk can’t wield magic!” – Pashadar Dirf, Goblin Flotilla Commander, last words

    This to me is the wild card in the situation. The flavour text points to someone that Labour do not perceive as a threat but suddenly surprises everyone by becoming one before Labour can do anything about it. I will have to see this from the Conservative side, but Owlie says this is why he suggested using the Magic cards rather than the Tarot because they offer more direct ideas on the issue of who will sort this out for us. The blue of the card suggests this figure which Labour fail to take seriously will be a Tory; but I can’t imagine Brown being surprised by Cameron, who seems as complacent as ever, and I will have to look at their personal cards for a clue to who the Vodalian Mage is. Still, it gives us a nice name for the Wild Card, even more pithy than Wild Card itself.

     

  • 23 June 2009 - For the record...



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    I will be returning to active duty ASAP, I have been away for a week having a bit of relaxing Me time while MPs continue having their own Us time. I took a trip up to Wales, Cardiff, up through the valleys by bus via Merthyr Tydfil to Abergavenny, then by train to Hereford and back down to Reading via Newport. Photographs are available here on Facebook.

    The other thing I need to post about is our new Speaker, John Bercow. Owlperson tells me he is a grey horse spirit, which for him flags up some interesting pointers regarding his own prophecies. He also said that although he himself did not back him - for various personal reasons - he is relieved that we now have a Tory speaker again, our first since Bernard Weatherill was appointed in 1983.

    I think I better read for Bercow. Over the last week I've got back into Magic: The Gathering (mostly as something to read rather than something to buy as although I am now in the black for the first time since 2006, I am loathe to go back into the red again without good cause. I have in the past used the trading cards as a freeform card oracle set; the graphic fantasy images lend themselves well to epic and interpersonal readings, and Owlperson can be kept happy with the various "Strix" cards released in the latest block, Shards of Alara.

    All links point here to the Magic: The Gathering site card database, The Gatherer.

    On we go. The passage in italics for certain cards (but not all) are the included flavour text for the cards. This always assists with a reading as it is a small vignette associated with the card in question.

    JOHN BERCOW - the Speaker at the End of the Universe

    Situation on assuming office:

    Runed Stalactite: Artifact - Equipment

    When a changeling adapts a form no other changeling has taken, a rune appears in the caverns of Velis Vel to mark the event.

    The situation for Bercow - and for all of Parliament - is one which is mutating into new and unseen directions. The situation was exceptional, and the timing of Michael Martin's departure was exceptional and the government's interference was also exceptional. It also creates a precedent, and the aura surrounding the card is the intensification and complication of a developing pattern, rather than a situation which is settling down into a comfortable modus operandi.

    Outward Aspects of his Election:

    Goldmeadow Harrier: Creature - Kithkin Soldier

    "It's a proven fact that sling-stones from the dawn side of the riverbank sail the farthest and truest" - Deagan, cenn of Burrenton

    This card suggests to me that Bercow is the insurgent candidate and sailed through the impasse Labour had come to in the decision whom to "stitch in" to the important post. He was a natural choice, and had little difficulty in the end because of the machinations of those who wanted to exercise political patronage (Labour) or their own vanity campaign (Widdecombe's idiocy). This just confirms Bercow was a natural candidate because he came without baggage - despite his past equivocation in the Conservative Party counting against him in Owlperson's eyes when it came to the actual election - and an obvious-but-not-obvious accession also holds pointers to the future of the situation as well as his own rule as Speaker.

    Inward Aspects of his Election:

    Deeptread Merrow: Creature - Merfolk Rogue

    "My success at navigating the Dark Meanders irritates the Inkfathom school. They consider themselves peerless divers, but I try to remind them that they cannot own commodities like bravery and cunning."

    Bercow did also draw on his own ability to machinate and assumed power, rather than office. This is a darker card, because it suggests that Bercow used the system to his advantage as much as Labour or Widdecombe might have done, and in him Labour have a false friend because they remember his past enthusiasm for their policies while underestimating his loyalties to the Tories. However this is not the sort of thing that is likely to balance out the overpowerful partisan streak in Parliament and restore a centre of gravity - it is all about partisan advantage. Both Labour and the Tories will be disappointed in this - but so ultinmately will Bercow if he had to manipulate things as much as this card suggests to me.

    Roots of his Election:

    Herbal Poultice: Artifact

    "Apply orange leaf to a wound at dawn to clean it, at dusk to prevent the same injury from happening again." - Kithkin superstition.

    Simples - the desire for healing and the belief that the system will sort itself out. Whether or not this is possible or not will follow in other cards.

    Seeds sown by his Election:

    Wanderer's Twig: Artifact

    For every tree who falls, there are countless sprouts waiting to rise.

    There is the look of the dowsing rod about this card, and the mechanic brings forth a new "land" card to power the spells which the game casts. New ground is broken, but with this text here, it looks as if more will have to be cleared to facilitate this regrowth and renewal.

    Labour reaction to Election:

    Changeling Berserker: Creature - Shapeshifter

    There is quite a direct reference to a renewed sense of fight within a Labour party who cannot control things directly any more and may feel that they are at the mercy of even a tame Tory speaker. Although the speakership rotates, it seems that Labour have had control since 1992 - since, in other words, the Tories started to dip in control over their government. The mechanic text suggests however that "Champion"ing their factions to balance Bercow out might be on their mind. If so, expect berserk reactions to this and a renewed struggle for control.

    Conservative reaction to Election:

    Primal Forcemage: Creature - Elf Shaman

    Their calls unheeded by the withered forests, nature shamans channeled the life force of their brethren.

    Expect the Tories too to believe that they are in some sort of control. Although the Speaker becomes a functional independent, the Tories are obviously quite happy to have one of their own in the Chair, albeit one who in Owlperson's view ought to have done the honourable thing as Quentin Davies did and crossed the floor some time ago. The card doesn't lie, and perhaps Cameron now can believe he is the power behind the throne, even if he is not yet on the throne itself. A dangerous idea, but one which comes from the deepening of party interests without corresponding dignity in government and opposition, which has reduced politics to this shabby state in the first place.

    Direction for Bercow over the summer:

    Freyalise's Radiance: Enchantment

    Bercow here maintains a snowy, chilly calm over Parliament while calling for reinforcements to assist stem the growing tide of difficulties. With things not settled yet, some firm hand is needed to keep the opposing forces here in balance and see whether it is possible to reform and regenerate without having to force a wholesale breakdown in parliamentary systems. However it merely holds the situation in stalemate, and the cumulative upkeep mechanic here - the card gets progressively and even exponentially harder to maintain - gives the impression that it will not hold for very long.

    Direction for Bercow after the summer:

    Giant Harbinger: Creature - Giant Shaman

    The danger here lurking is not held in abeyance for long and the costly balance of the summer leads to further difficulties later on. My own expectations have pinpointed September and October as potential flashpoints, and the giant, looking at the small gains he has made over the period of balance, is once again on the warpath - and as the card dictates, he is bringing several larger, buffer friends along. No card with the word Harbinger is going to predict the situation being put to bed.

    Solution to this year's situation for Bercow:

    Makeshift Mannequin: Instant

    "This vulgar mimicry will end now." - Desmera, perfect of Wren's Run

    In more ways than one, this isn't the card I'd like to see for a newly appointed anything. The card props up a dead creature and makes it brittle - the player has to sacrifice it if someone targets a spell at it specfically. Frail, vulnerable, and undead. Not really a great solution for our new speaker, but as I've been expecting this situation in general to lead to something greater and more powerfully cataclysmic, I can't say I'm surprised.

    Outcome for Bercow this year:

    Crush Underfoot: Tribal Instant - Giant

    Using MTG cards as oracles are always blunt and direct (they told me last year that the Russians were going to beat us in the Olympics by showing me the card Ashcoat Bear - symbolic of course of the Slavic Titan) but none so much for this. Loathe as I am to prophesy that Bercow is only going to be temporary, the way things are going this year I would be surprised if there wasn't a sad and rather dangerous end to this tale, especially with Pluto having entered our British star sign Capricorn and letting off its firework laden load.

    That's all for now. Chilling, but thrilling to use the cards again to read fortunes with.

  • 14 June 2009 - Bowing to the inevitable

    Just a short post today to tell you I have set up my Facebook profile and if you want to network with me, please join in.

    It's taken a while to get me hooked but eventually I had to let my cousin David Hunter show me what was going on.

    My profile is viewable here:

    FACEBOOK...

  • 12 June 2009 - Rotten Boroughs part 3: The mystery of the missing press releases – Sierra Alone


    I am being forced by my parents to muck out the Augean Stables, aka my bedroom, and in among the debris is an old file I used in the summer of 1999 while working for the Labour Party at Millbank Tower (interesting as to how it was built on the site of an old prison, I’m sure some Labour members would agree with me there, but never mind that either). In the file is a heap of miscellaneous papers, cartoons, photocopied Conservative Party leaflets, press releases from Smith Square...sorry, hang on a minute, what?

    Yes, I worked on Excalibur. Yes, I broke it.

    For those of you not old enough to remember life before Labour, Excalibur was an infernal machine that gathered data for the Labour Party’s “Rapid Rebuttal Unit” both in Opposition and in the early years of Government. What Labour did with it was feed thousands of clippings about MPs – usually Opposition MPs but also their own backbenchers and figures like Ken Livingstone and Tony Martin who occasionally misbehaved – in order to be able to call upon a complete record of who said what when. Opposition leaflets were also acquired – again, legitimately through the public domain, or probably from libraries (my university library ticket to the British Library of Political and Economic Science was an asset as far as this research was concerned). This is not exactly news – it was all rather more of a compilation of public domain information rather than a deliberate espionage organisation.

    Except for the large pile of Conservative Party News press releases which we were also feeding through the OCR scanners into Excalibur.

    I stole one. Well, borrowed it as a souvenir, scribbled some bizarre and unconnected notes on the back, and stashed it in a pile of other papers which include the tenancy contract on the flat I rented in my second year at university. Sometime after this, the servers storing this mountain of information crashed and never to my knowledge got going again.

    I took one about the Sierra Leone affair and it is a list of parliamentary questions from Michael Howard to Robin Cook. It is a forwarded fax (from a withheld number, surprise surprise, otherwise I could have googled that, too) of a press release fax to the “Parliamentary and EU News Service”, a press agency which files stories for major newspapers and broadcasters on, well, Parliament and the EU (and in this case the “Arms to Africa” affair which arguably made Mr Howard’s reputation as an Opposition spokesman as well as a government minister and, as Owlperson notes, essentially won him the leadership five years later). What they were doing sending it, and others like it, on to the Labour Party, is a question which I’ve only just asked myself. It’s nothing really remarkable, it’s not exactly an receipt for “12 pints of blood and a replacement cape” marked FAO Fees Office – but it’s still not really something that should have ended up being fed into a Labour Party computer, as Owlperson notes.

    Someone essentially working within a press agency leaked it and others to the Labour Party; the time at which it was sent, 8.33 in the evening, suggests it was done after hours as well.

    If Mr Howard would like it back, my email address is louise.stanley@live.co.uk.

  • 11 June 2009 - We found something else interesting...Shahid again


    Interesting blog from Watch Your MP - The Watchman - Shahid Malik is now trying to claim his faith gives him an excuse.

    Philip Mawer, Gordon Browns adviser on ministerial interests said "I understand the point Mr Malik makes about the influence on him of religious and cultural norms in the Muslim community relating to payments made in cash, but the absence of a rental agreement and of receipts meant that he was left without a clear audit trail to show the payments he had made." And that was, “unfortunate”

    From The Watchman blog.

    It could of course apply to other shonky businessmen too, of all persuasions and none - the latest issue of a magazine which appears regularly at work warns newsagents to be on their guard over minimum wage laws and other legal issues. Religious and cultural norms, my arse - classic evasion of responsibilities from people who ought to know how to manage their affairs, more like.

    How much more crass can this get?!

  • 11 June 2009 - Still life in the dead horse yet...


    And the saga, quite unexpectedly to me and my sixth sense, decides to continue.

    George Osborne is the latest target, and the Times picks this one up and runs with it, with the Torygraph having gone back to its pre-expenses front-page format.

    Flipping...heck.

    And the outcome? A mini reading falls from the Dragon Tarot box.

    III Swords, VIII Cups, IX Wands

    All the usual suspects here - an embattled MP, a cruel blow to his lower body and - bob's your uncle - time to spend more time with the family, friends, and Oleg Deripaska's yacht (remember that?).

    It's not the biggest story of the day but more will come out of this than it first feels, although I am getting that the impact is delayed until after Shahid Malik's case is finally sorted out.

  • 11 June 2009 Labour chickens and Tory eggs: a discussion of what public spending should do less - and what it should do better


    Andrew Lansley seems to be in trouble for giving the Conservatives’ game away on spending cuts.

    The issue to me is not the necessity of cuts – it’s the way in which they would implemented. Labour have always had an advantage when it comes to the development of public service management. Many Labour MPs have a background in the public services – Laura Moffat, long championed by this blog, was a nurse before entering Parliament – that it seems their expertise at some point does feed into the system.

    What Labour do right

    The services are quite probably at their best ever in modern history. Although John O’Farrell, in his masterpiece of Blairite hagiography, “Things Can Only Get Better”, describes his own guilt at castigating the Tories for an NHS which really worked perfectly fine when his kids got to know the business end of it, after 1997 the health service has really only got better and no longer means waiting lists in terms of months, but weeks. Walking through my local hospital after a consultation over my congenital heart problem which sends me tachycardic at times of stress (nothing serious, it was what laid Tony Blair low in 2003-04 and when I was hospitalised with it myself in August 2004 that was the first thing my Labour activist now-ex-boyfriend pointed out when he phoned me to check I was all right – oh, the joys of being armchair politicians!) I did realise that the whole point of Labour was to sort out the services we all – though maybe not Tim Montgomerie – rely on and bring them into the 21st century. It is overstating the case to say however, like in The Sun before the 2005 election, that schools and hospitals no longer need voucher schemes from supermarkets to make ends meet (in fact I spent most of the summer of 2005 collecting leaflets to prove that this was another direct barefaced lie from the Labour press...) but certainly in my lifetime there is no doubt which party understands the concepts of public administration better.

    This is obviously a double-edged sword. Arguably a communitarian society needs public, centrally funded services, but does that necessarily mean that these services mean that the government can and should construct a baroque structure, providing for every contingency and developing a straitjacket rather than a safety net? Can we really, honestly afford free prescriptions and the exponential increase in the uptake of prescription drugs to treat ordinary ailments that such schemes have seen, for example? Even Labour baulk at that (and Salmond’s plea for a Westminster bail-out from the English to support such a scheme when English prescription charges now stand at £7+ was probably what killed off Scottish independence for the time being, at least under an SNP government). What role should public services play in society, how should they be managed (I liked the Tories’ Right To Choose, based in the real world of continental models for reform and development, and feel that reform and streamlining the system should be on the agenda rather than just swinging, short-term, alarmist cuts that will never wholly eliminate waste) and what should government actually do? No-one is saying that health and education should be privatised to save the Exchequer a few bob. But what about the electoral oversight provided by bodies such as the Electoral Commission? What about assisting the homeless or mentally ill? How should services be administered and is there any role for charities or other bodies which are more directly faced by the people they are helping than, say, a Whitehall department?

    What the system should do less – and what it should do better

    At university, we had a visit from a representative of Centrepoint prior to a “sponsored sleep-out” (read: all night, open air street party with token itinerant drunks thrown in free of charge...well, we were all students at the time). The Centrepoint thesis struck me deeply as being an agenda for radical reorganisation of non-essential public services (by which I really mean, health, education and social security, three things which government only can really cope with on a national scale). Although he welcomed New Labour’s approach to housing policy (which was probably expected of him given that he was addressing Labour Students) – mainly, that Labour actually had one which didn’t involve selling off council houses to prospective Tory voters – he proposed that this policy could go a lot deeper into involving Centrepoint, that is, working with organisations closer to the actual problem – homelessness and what to do about it. Groups such as the Reading Resource Centre, a mental health charity I worked for in 2006 – I left when it was clear they were overstaffed and I was underemployed – are often best placed to cater to people who are most vulnerable and in need of direct assistance. I can also testify to the glacial bureaucracy of the benefits office leaving people stranded for months without a proper psychiatric or psychological assessment and being left to make do on benefits without assistance to find a job which may help people with mild depression or autistic-spectrum disorders more than enforced unemployment or cash-in-hand moonlighting to make ends meet. The government made a tentative attempt to address this problem by forcing new claimants of incapacity benefit to attend sessions with the Shaw Trust. But as far as I can see the Shaw Trust cannot help people get a job, it can only support people in work as far as they need condition management techniques. Talk about a chicken-and-egg situation.

    A Community Resource

    This is where Resource picked the pieces. As a social centre it provided crafting activities (of a high standard, particularly in terms of artwork for sale in the “gallery”; mental ill health can often be alleviated by creative expression if it is of a mild condition), a dingy little café which I was always afraid to eat in lest I pick up some stray salmonella somewhere, and gaming rooms. The centre also helped people who could handle employment find jobs (fine when you are not in a recession; my departure unfortunately coincided with the beginning of the credit crisis in mid-2007 so what it is like for people now I don’t know). I helped organise a week-long course with professional consultants who coached those able and willing to return to work to build skills like contacting employers with CVs, interview technique and assistance to imagine what kind of work they would enjoy most, something unfortunately lacking with potential employers, particularly from the public/local administration sector who approached us with a suggestion that they take on two lucky “mentally ill” people on a job-share placement which in my view put Resource’s cause back several decades. When I left Resource was trying to build up branches in Newbury and Wokingham to continue its work with people who could be genuinely helped; and one of my last projects was to apply for funding from the European Union social fund. The Church in Reading also does a lot of work with the mentally ill, particularly women, and the homeless under the auspices of CIRDIC (“Churches in Reading Drop-In Centre) and CIRWC (“Churches in Reading Women’s Centre”). I volunteered for both these organisations while unemployed last year.

    Success in cultivating these kind of social organisations – and in developing a cadre of young people who through voluntary or even compulsory social service whose horizons might be widened by assisting with them – could be a real way in which government can withdraw from just doling out public money hand-over-fist but produce real results and real reforms without appearing to be mean with cuts which would arguably damage the fabric of society in a dangerous race to the bottom because of a short-term, temporary economic downturn. A one-size-fits-all approach to social provision in these areas failed people at the most vulnerable end of the system – and people who would in other circumstances want to work but were not provided with the means to do so and thus remain on £100-a-week benefit slavery. Community bodies like Resource on the other hand develop and expand genuine links between able volunteers and professionals and the people they need to be helping. These people in turn thus go on to become productive members of society rather than the living dead passed between mental health care teams – not always the most sensitive or compassionate of people – and the DWP.

    The problem with the Tories – and the solution for them

    However, overall, public money does need to be used wisely. Cameron is at a loss in proposing anything which remotely resembles a real framework for the public services he purports to support. He talks about waste as if it was readily identifiable – and fails to understand that Yes Minister is a thing of the past. Instead of a body like the Electoral Commission, he proposed a return to Home Office regulation of elections. Pardon me, but after the research I’ve done – on his own party’s behalf – that’s like telling a fox to look after the Department for Poultry, Eggs and Easter Bunnies. He must have spent his years advising Norman Lamont and Michael Howard in a weed-induced haze if he really believes government by Whitehall anonymity is really the best solution. Public money cannot be saved by targeting arbitrary waste – when this waste seems to equal “anything Tim or Quentin don’t like” – nor can it be spent by daily reference to the Daily Mail. While I am rightly sceptical of recent Labour initiatives (the plans to cut benefits to force alcoholics to seek treatment suggests to me, who worked with one case at CIRDIC, that we would have a lot of starving alcoholics living in the streets because you cannot wean someone off booze or other addiction simply by cutting off the money supply – they will spend any money they get on alcohol first and then food, clothing and accommodation) or their ability to make necessary savings or reforms to the ornate edifice of public bureaucracy, the Tories make me fearful that we will somehow manage to elect a bunch of wannabe Thatcherites who make the Grantham grocer’s daughter look like a Soviet minister of centrally planned industry.

    Instead, the Tories do have the opportunity to articulate a clear alternative to the corporate statism that Labour embody. This could be achieved by networking groups like Resource and CIRDIC throughout the country, funding them (by streamlining other parts of the social security network and making genuinely sure that those that can work do work) and generating ideas for reforming the current unwieldy benefit system which doesn’t even give tax credits automatically to those who qualify, instead making them go through a costly and time-consuming application procedure that must cost more than the credits do themselves (cheers were heard from Wokingham Conservative Association in 2005 when Gordon Brown tried to pre-empt the Tories’ £500 automatic universal council tax rebate for those over 65 – by cutting it to £250, for one year only, and making it conditional on application...so that hopefully no-one would actually ever get it). That’s only one example of Labour’s public spending Achilles’ Heel: it costs more to administrate these things than it does to provide them.

    If there is any life left in the Conservative Party after recent weeks spent banging their heads against the electoral wall, hoping for a random “Open Sesame”, planning for government should mean exploring ways to get more out of the system and to generate a real communitarian alternative to corporate statism, not strangling the public sector in arbitrary ways for the convenience of arrogant Daily Mail readers (the majority of whom, judging by the comments pages on their website, live in Australia anyway). A joined up approach to seeing how the public sector can be streamlined and devolved to rather than dismantled and degraded by quick-fix solutions is a must for any possibility of Conservative government and it makes the strongest case yet in the wake of Lansley’s comments – for a return to the top flight of people with genuine government experience – and quickly, because time is now running out in earnest, particularly if a general election may be this side of Christmas.

    Coda

    There is a sad ending to the Resource story that makes this kind of thinking all the more necessary and is one of the reasons to explore this approach to reforming and streamlining public services. I left Resource in early 2007 because of frustration at not having anything to do. More fool me. But when I caught up with people at CIRDIC a year later, they told me that the EU had cut funding to the charity – necessitating the closure of the Newbury and Wokingham branches – probably because of issues with the new entrants into the EU, Romania and Bulgaria, being more needy than bodies in our rich Western European state. Reliance on international funding killed Resource and Labour promised to match any funding which was withdrawn – which due to the recession meant that of course the promise was broken, as so many others have been. When someone is paid £100 a week to do nothing all day when they are capable of being helped by such an organisation to go back into productive work, that is the criminal aspect of all of this. But the DWP just ends up doling out the money and is too big to notice the individual. As I said – criminill. ;-)

  • 10 June 2009 - What a surprise...

    Reinstated minister Shahid Malik, after convincing Brown that the skeleton in his cupboard was just an anatomist's mannequin, has been caught out yet again: two houses simultaneously on the Fees Office books.

    As the stag said when the doe came to bed: Oh dear.

    Will this be a record for shortest ministerial posting? The Queen of Swords at this point asks us to draw our own conclusions (i.e. probably not), but he's not looking incredibly good all the same.

  • 10 June 2009 - Mutatis mutandis...the Expenses Scandal meets Cash for Questions


    Sorry for my absence. I had issues over the weekend and thought I'd take a break for a few days properly now that the elections are over.

    Now the BBC, however, rouses me from my gentle slumber and gets in on the probity debate and goes after vested undeclared interests.

    You'd have really thought that since Neil Hamilton and Jonathan Aitken inadvertently lifted the lid on this issue fifteen years ago it would have been rammed home by now. Not so. Whether or not it will catch light now the recent scandal has died down to smouldering embers, I don't know, but sitting here watching the BBC report it seems they are trying rather hard to re-ignite the bushfires. It's important - but without I suspect the reach of a national newspaper and the newsprint availabe to cover the issue in detail, it won't really get going...or will it?

    There are a lot of questions arising from these elections, particularly for the main parties, but as I suspected now that they have taken place there is a feeling around me that a line has for the moment been drawn under this episode - but - and this is a big but - the damage is in my opinion done. Separating desire from belief has been difficult but over the last month I've been more interested in this because it seems to solve a number of problems around what I've been feeling all this time and makes me feel like I've stumbled into a Disney cartoon about Mickey and Pluto on a train.

    No, don't laugh. When I was young I had a VHS tape of various obscure cartoons. Mickey and Pluto are travelling on a train to Pomona in California. Mickey is told by the guard that he has to leave the train because he is forbidden to bring dogs onto it. Cue a lot of running around, hiding Pluto in suitcases which fall open from the luggage rack, dressing him up as a baby, Mickey's wife and so on. No dice. Mickey and Pluto are tossed unceremoniously off the train and sit stranded on the rails. Sighing, Mickey turns to Pluto..."We'll never get to Pomona now", he says sadly.

    They look up. Right up at the Pomona station water tower.

    The moral of the story is - life tosses you about with seemingly petty concerns and difficulties, and just when you feel like giving up - you arrive, somehow, at the destination you were aiming for anyway. Answers always come in the way that teach you the lessons you need, even if they are painful and you often don't understand what is going on. This jigsaw has taken me nearly six years to put together, and I feel that this, although mild in content and not feeling as if it could go as far or as wide as expenses, looks like a new chapter opening for us.

    Oh well. As the Beeb has just pointed out anyway, in 20 billion years time Mars or Venus will smash into the Earth, obliterating us completely. Compared to that, 1688 and all that seems preferable.

    QUICKIE READING FOR THE DEVELOPMENTS

    Situation before the elections - VI Cups

    At the election the biggest issue was housekeeping and how the electorate assessed the issues in totality. This probably staunched the flow of votes to the minor parties, though it didn't help Labour in particular. The children to me appear to be smelling the plants; the electorate was perhaps more animated and more directly focussed on their candidates and on their government/opposition than in previous years. (The benefits of exorcising much of the emotion around the situation to me has restored something of the psychic perception I had while I was still fumbling around on Mickey's train. Now I'm in Pomona I can see clearer myself and don't have to rely so much on my guides to assist.)

    Situation after the elections - II Pentacles

    The Two of Pentacles is always depicted as a churning sea, though not as a chaotic maeltstrom, rather than as a clockwork mechanism driving the situation forward, whether for good or bad. The momentum has not left the system, but has rather overcome previous inertia to produce a steady and now inexorable erosion of confidence in government and opposition.

    Differences - Queen of Pentacles

    When the expenses scandal broke neither government nor opposition could really get a grip on the issue because of tendencies within both parties which damaged them in the eyes of the public. Cameron offered his usual gimmicks and paid for it by having his own damaging mortgage claims splashed on the front cover of the Mail on Sunday. Brown suffered because his stolid persona could not grasp the enormity of what was going on until too late, though he survived largely because the Tories' vote suffered alongside theirs - or didn't grow enough to give them a clear road to the finish. (I wish Foxy would stop being childish about Brown trying to "fix" the vote. It doesn't give me a lot of confidence of his ability to govern if he is prepared to claim that the government, by proposing a justified if irrelevant solution to the current crisis of confidence, is not at least playing foul. Justifiable accusations of election fraud aside, it just makes him sound petty and vindictive, rather than mature enough to face the electorate in government. It's something you expect from the UKIP pamphleteers and their leaflets about the Illuminati (relax, Owlie says they don't exist, though the Bilderberg Group is a more prosaic group that acts in a similar manner; though Blair was a more enthusiastic member than anyone before or since) at the local horticultural society, not a mature leader of the official Opposition. King of Swords says that this is a jab in the right direction - PR is certainly not the answer to any question currently being posed, and as the polls stand it might well establish a permanent Lib-Lab coalition if the Libs would have Brown - but not with enough weight to carry the day. Live by the sword, die by the sword, as Michael Forsyth said when he lost Stirling in 1997.)

    Apparent result for the Tories - VII Swords

    A result which saved face but a left crucial part of their arsenal behind them on the wrong side of the expenses scandal. It was a "steal" in some respects, but their vote in the European elections only came to 1% more than in 2004, and the vote in the Tory shires produced a mediocre result at 38%. The Seven can be interpreted either as swiping victory from the jaws of defeat, or not being able to carry everything away. The public realise this and are more sceptical about Cameron's ability to do anything other than robotically demand a general election and claim Brown is trying to fix the electoral system. Must try A LOT harder.

    Apparent result for Labour - The Hermit

    It's lonely at the top, and no-one needs to tell Brown that. He looks as if he is governing alone, and although I am relieved that my vote was not wasted, he is crippled by his inability to appoint people from the ranks of elected MPs without having to bring back the semi-disgraced Shahid Malik. Brown is isolated and may only make it to the next election by default. I feel for him deeply, but if not Cameron, and not him either, then who? I think I know the answer, but I'm still trying to cut through enough of the emotional fog in my mind to clarify it, so I'm not going to stake my reputation by saying what I really think about the whole issue of who will take over in Number 10. Brown can't go much further on, but I don't think Cameron has the ability to win either now, and that's obvious from the election results as well (since it was Michael Howard's downfall in 2004 that ruined 2005 after months - now years - of empty spin and Tory hubris). An isolated, sad card, ruling by default because no-one else is up to the job. We need another leader worthy of the name on either side to face the election.

    Internal result for the Tories - Ace of Cups

    A challenge for  the Tories is to overcome the curse of 2004-05 and take the initiative here. It means focussing on the real significance of policy and not becoming too robotic with slogans. Last time round Howard and co had a good slogan - "Labour are all talk" - but constant repetition drove me and others round the bend. Cameron risks doing this with his desire for an election, and petty point-scoring. The Tories do have a chance offered here but it needs to be taken, the cup drunk from, ingested, digested and regurgitated in some substantial way before they can convince the electorate to swallow 10% worth of cuts in public spending. This is the big issue now - can they face up to it properly or will they just trust in the vagueness of current output to damage Labour enough? Neil Kinnock might have the answer.

    Internal result for Labour - Page of Wands

    Labour are most definitely no longer really in control and can only nudge events to guide them in the right direction rather than actually steer and drive government forwards. We are in a position where we have neither government nor opposition - in 2004-05 we still had both, of a kind. This is the way history is made: when the status quo drains away to almost nothing and no alternative is obvious. It's just as well Nick Griffin cannot match Adolf Hitler in the charisma stakes otherwise we and our democracy and traditions of openness would be history.

    Direction for the probes into MPs' conduct - Ace of Pentacles

    A continuing substance and form is given to this line of enquiry and the building of other issues on the foundation laid by the initial scandal is predicted by this card. It's a dark sun formed by the pentacle in the card, but it is the case that this ruining of the reputation of our legislature is not going to go away; it will strengthen and solidify and damage things to come.

    Advice for Tories - IV Wands

    Put some structure into the plans for government - people want an election, but they want something to vote for, rather than against. It is arguable that Labour lacked in 1992 what the Tories lack now - and they have had 3 1/2 years to establish this form and substance. A strong and sturdy structure needs to be constructed - ASAP.

    Advice for Labour - IX Swords

    Danger is going to be ever-present. The intensity will wax and wane, but there is no relief from problems or difficulties merely because Gordon was not ousted in the aftermath of the elections. They need to hide their eyes from the more lunatic fringe (Charles Clarke in particular) and listen to the voices that really mean something and come from the real grassroots. That means discerning those voices, of course; but since disaster is not immediately round the corner, there is still a lot to be gained - or salvaged - from this time if the Prime Minister can find the gravitas and dignity to carry on. He has this in spades - or swords - so I believe he can limp on, but he must be aware of problems. Owlperson notes that he is more astute than people give him credit for but he sometimes strings crises in his authority out far too long for comfort, believing he can pull them back quickly. He did so on Monday with aplomb, but he increasingly resorts to the kind of bullying Owlie didn't think he was capable of, so Owlie says that although a leadership challenge is still a way off, he needs to deepen his relationships with his backbench and grassroots and be brave, bold and consistent on the good things about Labour policy. (Owlie also notes that he did not get where he is today by belittling or jeering at his opponents, one of the reasons he feels so sad about his friend Foxy's techniques of leadership.)

    Warning for Tories - VIII Swords

    There is a trap that the Tories have fallen into and may not be able to leave easily - the trap of the siren call of their own yes-men convincing them there is no problem with the results and the UKIP votes will all come back to them at the general election. They may find it is difficult to move out of this trap of silly point-scoring, having built the last three and a half years around them. There is a way forward, but it involves - at the moment - being cut to pieces whichever way they go. They have to go on, they can't go back - but it involves real pain, which might prove fatal for the next election. Their choice. Stay, and definitely lose. Go, and destroy themselves, and rebuild, and win. But it is not possible to do nothing.

    Warning for Labour - II Swords

    Indecision is fatal. There is a need here to make the decision now on how to fight the election. There is no honour in defeat if it destroys what the party stands for. Although I am caught between the two parties electorally - I want to vote Tory but find myself unable to back Cameron, and prefer Brown as a governing PM - I share more values with Labour and would like to see a more communitarian aspect to Tory policy as I believed Howard was more capable of than Cameron. Therefore Labour have to stop obfuscating, equivocating, hesitating and deviating, and do what I did on Thursday - put their policy before their electorate. They may be pleasantly surprised, but any more dithering and the Tories will get their act together.

    Issues developing until July 1 - Knight of Swords

    It does get worse. It gets faster, and the fires started by the expenses scandal are whipped by the Air of the Knight of Swords (Air acting as Fire, or a backdraft, to parody the style of the Beast himself, Aleister Crowley) into another inferno. It's not the BBC's article that does it, it's simply the churning momentum and the lack of systemic balance and equilibrium. It's not this week, it may be next week or the week after that it truly develops, but you can almost guarantee that, having been given the advice above, poltiicians will not take it. There is no-one of the substance or mercurial intelligence of Howard or Blair left in the system with any power or authority - merely a plodding donkey in Brown and a ranting Firefox (to coin a phrase) like Cameron. Thus things are almost guaranteed to get worse before they get better.

    Solution developing until July 1 - Page of Cups, reversed

    I could have told you that there would be a reversal in here, as I picked the cards up at random. The reversed Page drains the meaning from the upright card, as all reversed cups do. The Page is a student, acting on advice, with steady emotional bearing and the beginnings of control over those same emotions. The solution here is to relinquish control over the emotions, to bare all in the hope of finding a solution to the problems which damaged the main parties so much. A relaxation of control is, however, accompanied by the undoing of lessons learned - as bluntly as Shahid Malik going back into the government he was dumped from because Brown has no-one left untainted. It proves Owlie's point - the jobs will go to the cheaper ones in the end. Loss of control and relaxation can heal - but also destroy. It will do both.

    Outcome at July 1 - IX Wands

    Another month of Parliament embattled and fearful of the public. The mutation of the scandal is taking place - we are fully into Gemini by now - and Air only intensifies the talking and ideas being bandied around. By July 1 we will be under the influence of Cancer. My mother is Cancer - loving but harsh and often too pragmatic for her own good. Thus the defensiveness persists, and will persist until something radical deals a striking blow from within Parliament and from without.

  • 6 June 2009 - The full results and cards to match


    The debate seems to be going on between those who don't understand history (2004 and now all this) and those who do. No-one can say that the Tories didn't do well (ish) and Labour didn't do badly (ish). But I'm prepared to ask the cards to cut through things a bit, after presenting the results as a whole after 34 of 34 councils have finally declared.

    CON - 1476 +233 --- Percentage of vote if replicated in a general election 38%

    Card: IX Cups - As I suspected. This is good but it represents a peak of sorts - the excess and abundance goes to the Tories' heads somewhat (as witnessed on Conservative Home, whose headline is "More beautiful than Caroline Flint"...erm guys, she's still Labour...) and this could get them into hot water because it represents a fall in past form.

    LIBDEM - 473 -4 --- Percentage of vote 28%

    Page of Cups, reversed - Failure to capitalise here on dissatisfaction mainly because people are now orientated towards choosing the next government rather than registering a protest vote. They have ceased to be the receptacle of protest votes for those disillusioned with government; however, my gut instinct is that the Tories still need to raise their game substantially to avoid themselves just being protest votes.

    LABOUR -  176 -268 - Percentage of vote 23%

    King of Wands, reversed - Inability to make the running or fight back here dragged them down but they may still retain some sort of ability to try and make sure they take things seriously. The card is reversed, but it is still a "good" card - a card of largely willful activity even if only in the realm of events rather than policy - and by working hard they could still come back to win as the Tories did in 1992. I'm still not convinced that things will be easy for either party - due to the influence of Pluto in the astrology charts at the moment - and I do feel the summer will get worse for all concerned. Furthermore, the removal of people like Purnell, Smith and Blears (and with Alan Sugar now in government, I do feel Gordon took my jocular hint the other night that he should kick out those with their hands firmly lodged in the communal biccie tin) may initially tie his hands to having to use peers to fill the gaps, but over time he may well be able to "grow" new talent to take over. While Pluto still lingers, however, there is danger still to come for all.

    Questions in general - V Pentacles, reversed - The analysis needs time to sink in for both parties and both parties need to look at both clouds and silver linings. The 38% result is not wholly good for the Tories, and although people perhaps don't want to hear that at the moment, these percentages have to be looked at in conjunction not only with 2004 but with the previous years' cake-walks for the Tories. This is the devil in the detail which has to be squared with the current euphoria/depression prevailing in the media, and more sober analysis, while difficult, needs to be highlighted by those with a genuine interest in the future government of this country.

    Answers in general - The Hermit, reversed - Again, it might not be heeded until it's too late. Everyone does this, but none so much as now. The Labour government is, unequivocally, in some sort of convulsion which, although resembling the second Major term, may still be heading for 1992 rather than 1997. Cameron for his part looks dangerously like he is going to play Kinnock to Brown's Major - by being too upbeat and too uninterested in anything but spin and snake-oil - which would do him more harm at the general election he so badly wants (he may live to regret calling for one if Pluto has its way), but Brown also needs to act in a less overbearing manner (if indeed he does this at all and it's not just an unfortunate image he has attracted by being the successor to the messianic - and Titanic - Blair who enjoyed Labour's years of plenty but not their corresponding years of famine). But with the Devil staring at me constantly from the "outcome" of the European election spreads I have done, I'm not sure whether either leader will take the hint. More's the pity.

    Direction - Labour - IX Pentacles, reversed - The inability to use the productivity that remains to them and the impatience with the system that can still destabilise what remains. However the system still remains solid; it is more a question of Labour losing their way somewhat rather than completely dissolving; they still have the levers and reins of power and thus could end up with the inertia of the incumbency forcing its way to a small majority next time round, particularly if they can puncture Cameron's armour, dented already in the expenses scandal.

    Direction - Tories - VI Swords - An attempt to find a new modus operandi, but one that leaves them at daggers drawn - the crossed swords in the middle of this card resonate quite distinctly. I'm not sure they have an easy ride - and as I said above, they need to knuckle down and sort things out so they have a reasonably coherent agenda by conference. It is what Michael Howard did during the summer of 2004 after breezing towards the elections that proved to be his downfall (or, as Owlperson is quick to point out, being breezed towards them in the hope by party spin doctors that they could get him to the election without him - which is what they have always assumed they can do because of the way they think Blair won 1997...but Blair at least had substance to back up his spin). They will do this - this is a direction card rather than advice - but since the swords are drawn, they will find it difficult to keep disagreements from flaring.

    Advice - Labour - IX Swords, reversed - Labour need to swallow any pain and discomfort - there is still a country to govern. The reversed Nine suggests the danger and nightmares posed by the upright card can be relieved, but the issues still remain and are only kept at bay by a superhuman effort to keep them from swallowing people up. However, the Cabinet are no superhumans. Expect some fireworks, but not as much as some people might hope.

    Advice - Tories - III Wands, reversed - Try to keep the energies from disintegrating as well. Try to keep things in the air, try to juggle the demands of the situation, and try to balance spin with a little bit more substance - the public need a reason to look beyond the sleaze spinning around both parties, and are not likely to warm to the Conservatives if they insist on hollowing themselves out in a mad dash towards the finish line rather than a genuine attempt to flesh out solid policies. The polling results put them in a danger zone as although they are wiping Labour out, they still need that magic 42% to overcome the inertia posed by such an imbalance in party seats at Westminster. Although Anthony King in the Mail suggested they could still win with 38%, Labour's vote at a general election is likely to rebound, and overcoming the 150 seat deficit they need to make up to win an overall majority will take more than 38%. Solidity needs to follow spin and sleaze.

    Solution overall - VII Wands, reversed - The obstacles for both parties become bigger and there seems in this card to be a limit to how much either leadership can stay afloat over the summer. Increasing stakes mean increasing risks are taken, but the public will not forget the expenses scandal in a hurry, and will not forgive either government or opposition for appearing to be on the take in the middle of a deep recession. Politicians should avoid thinking that these elections draw a line under the scams and hypocrisy of the last month, and forget politics as usual as a result. It doesn't look like they can, but they must.

    Outcome - Ace of Cups - This presents the parties with a challenge, and an opportunity for both to learn.

    For Labour, the challenge is the VI Wands, reversed - to try to put these bad results behind them, remember that they were third in 2004 with a similar share of the vote and went on to win again, and to balance their personal goals with the solidarity and purpose Labour have always found. (Owlperson remarks that going into any public building and seeing the depth and complexity of the services we have come to expect makes him as a Conservative fearful that his own party still sees the system as something to be forcibly streamlined and that Labour at least understand the social agendas and social policies that go to make up the real world in which people have to function. The bureaucracy might be over-endowed and under-controlled, but at least it is Labour who really understand and care about the conditions in which it operates, rather than the current Tories who see it as a way of funding tax cuts and do not really understand the complexity of formulating social policy to fit the needs of the client base. In government he says he saw the Tories come into power in 1979 with ideas about how to rip out waste, excess and other mismanagement but not how to create an alternative system, leaving the health and education systems vulnerable to a pantomime Conservative government seeking ways to cut without mercy and without understanding the subtleties of managing social policy. Just witness the desire to abolish the Electoral Commission as a waste of money - that will stop me from voting Tory, for starters.Owlie says that the person who begins to understand social policy will be the one who takes over as the next Tory prime minister. However, Cambo has no idea where to begin except with a flashy headline and some smoke and mirrors about unfeasible tax cuts. Next!) Labour already understand losing, but they also know how to turn it round positively as well as negatively.

    Tories - Strength - self-control and the ability to stop themselves going off the deep end. I feel that this represents Foxy being curtailed somewhat - from damaging things with a Kinnock-esque assumption that he can win by default, from becoming vapid and empty in his rash calls for an election when he doesn't even have a manifesto, from underestimating the power of Labour to pull itself back from the brink. The party needs to rein him in and appear more collegiate, balanced and cleansed of harmful elements in the Shadow Cabinet such as Gove and Maude (Peter Oborne is still insistent on this and it could yet backfire as Brown has had his own clearout). That is the challenge - and the solution? VI Cups - they are living in Arcadia, in their own private world. No chance.

  • 5 June 2009 - Ian Gibson resigns to force a by-election

    This just in. Ian Gibson has resigned to force a by-election in Norwich North. Mind you, the people who are resigning on the whole lack the authority because of the expenses scandal to really challenge the PM's authority, and looking back, Labour are exactly in the same position as the Tories were in 2004 after those local elections - down but not out. A very similar result is shown - Tories 37%, LibDem 27% and Labour 26% has been translated into Tories 38%, LibDem 28% and Labour 23%. The Tory gain of ~+250 seats has not eclipsed the Tory gain of +283. So the by-election could well be anyone's guess.

    Quickie reading as a prediction:

    Labour - Wheel of Fortune

    Something happens to elevate their prospects rather than denigrate them; or at least the result is not as fixed as some people would wish it was.

    Conservatives - VIII Pentacles, reversed

    Again, not the omens Cameron might have wished for here as the card of hard work and building blocks on the road to ultimate success overturns and undoes a lot of hard work. If this is going to be a re-run of 2004 (at the very least - funny how Gemini elections work as opposed to Taurean ones), then the main challenge from the Tories will have been damaged rather than enhanced by these elections.

    Liberal Democrats - The Hierophant

    A chance to make a surprise gain if they keep honest and rational about their chances. A good strong campaign with realistic expectations, but better chances than the Tories above, interestingly enough.

    Result overall - III Pentacles, reversed

    This undoes the foundations of the system - it's not a surprise result so much as one which begins to loosen and shake things up as opposed to cement and build them towards the general election.

    A general assumption about this: Labour will probably prolong this writ as long as necessary - just as the Tories did not move the writ for Henley until after their Nantwich victory, suggesting to me that there was and is more insecurity in their ranks than they dare show - and may well hold it on the same day as the contest in the former Speaker's seat too.

  • 5 June 2009 - I got it...well, almost.


    I'm sorry. I couldn't hold out any longer.

    I didn't look at the election results until now, I was too scared/excited/frustrated/whatever, but it looks like I got something right. I needed to bite the bullet before going in to work tomorrow (it's impossible to work as a newsagent without having to read the newspapers) but this will sugar the pill somewhat.

    The Tories on 30%+ rather than 40%+. I divined 36% simply by getting Deep Zeke to try and force himself through my mind's difficult filter and they got 38%, less than they need to win the election. Michael Howard got similar in the local elections a year before the 2005 election, and Foxy still has almost as much as his predecessor to make up in terms of seats, something that to my mind has always militated against an outright Tory win in 2009-2010 for me, though of course my guides and especially Owlperson - whose future career hinges on his psychic ability to surf the waves of fortune rather than be dragged under - have ideas up their sleeves about that) and allowing Labour to squeeze through the gap rather than be annihilated.

    My friend from Twitter, Robert Currey (@robertcurrey) has some interesting ideas about political astrology; I may ask him to write for the blog in exchange for free advertising here (if he would be willing to do this). I'm going to push the boat out and report the gist of his findings; and say neither Brown nor Cameron can resist Pluto's negative influence on the political scene. If it comes from my lips that Cameron may find himself in leadership hot water fairly soon (particularly if Sunday is catastrophic for all main parties) then I will also say that so will Brown, since in my Loki v Heimdall scenario both equally matched Norse heroes. Interestingly, two years ago when I first made the connections between Brown/Heimdall and Cameron/Loki, the "official" internet versions (Wikipedia and Encyclopaedia Mythica) have changed their tunes from "Loki kills Heimdall and dies of his own wounds" to "Loki fights [Heimdall], and the two kill one another."

    Some mini spreads just to check the direction of things towards our own Ragnarok. Owlperson will assist (since this evening I have heard his voice clearer rather than just "thinking" what he is saying to me.

    BROWN

    Situation - X Pentacles

    OP: Brown could not actually have hoped for a better result and without editorialising too much as a member of the opposition I can actually say it doesn't surprise me that he is looking a lot more solid than he did two or three days ago. With the three resignations most of the troublemakers have gone, and the two women escapees have largely burned their own boats by being caught with their hands in the till. Like Blair at this point in 2004 he is actually stronger rather than weaker for this set of elections, and it doesn't look as if the European elections will change much on Sunday/Monday.

    Questions - IX Wands, reversed

    OP: There is still danger from outside but perhaps this is also indicative of the stockade coming down and a new dynamic coming through; but Brown has to watch his back nevertheless since a surprise rush from his backbenches is still possible if he lets his guard down too much. The question for me is now if rather than when, as Brown has had more lucky escapes than Houdini, but he needs to keep watch against it.

    Answers - The Devil

    OP: Sadly it may still be possible to winkle him out, though with the Tories substantially down on the % needed for a clean sweep at an election, the currrents inherent in Mr Currey's Plutonian forecast may yet bring him down. He will go down fighting, thanks to the difficulties for the Opposition with this result, but nevertheless the explosive maelstrom still swirling around Westminster may conspire to destroy rather than rebuild.

    Direction - Knight of Wands

    OP: Brown still has some power of control over his party, backbenches and ministerial team; though much diminished from the all-powerful King, and in the area of Wands (which tend to govern events when reading for politics rather than the main policy agenda), he can still push out the boundaries looking for ways in which to promote his own agenda rather than succumb to others'. However in doing so I believe this suggests he is going to provoke more than he bargained for, particularly with this card in proximity to the Devil above. The situation is not strengthened by these results any more than Brown could control the toxic waste spewed forth from the Telegraph over the past month.

    Advice - The Moon

    OP: Brown needs to keep his cards close to his chest and not reveal his hand until he is ready either to go to the country (and that looks less likely than it did a week ago, thanks to the 38-per-centers) or needs to put a manifesto in place. He is apparently considering a draft "mini-manifesto", according to Nick Robinson, but is equally unlikely to let his critics see his weak spots again. Last year he managed to survive a torrid summer - now he only has to survive a summer in which the Tories are equally fearful about the way forward as their support retreats from its high water mark last year.

    Outcome - V Cups

    OP: I get the feeling that this card means that although Labour are disappointed, they are not devastated. The summer will be dangerous for everyone, so there is a silver lining (as the Independent was the only one to point out yesterday). Labour will succeed if they can see the benefits of staying together rather than disuniting. Brown has already moved to elevate a senior and respected figure to the Lords to replace Caroline Flint - Baroness Kinnock is not as attractive as Ms Flint but is probably more weighty and influential a figure. I don't think this is the end for Labour - just as this time last year it was not the end for Blair. The Tories need to do much better here - I think for reasons of loyalty I might have to hand over their reading to Clarence before Mr Fox reads my true opinions of him underneath.

    CAMERON

    Situation - The Hermit, reversed

    Clarence: Thanks, Owlie. This card is bad because Cameron does not have the intuition or insight needed to go forward or mend his direction. All he sees is the +217 gains and clean sweep of councils - he does not see the haemmorhage of vote that will not allow him anything more than a narrow defeat at any potential election. The difficulties of not having this insight is that with it, he would begin to do a lot more work and put a lot more content into his spin. He might live regret the wins here. A dangerous start.

    Questions - Queen of Wands

    C: Cameron has been merely responding and reacting to events so far during his leadership rather than trying to substantiate himself and build a rounded persona capable of governing the country. He deals in magical manoeuvres which bring short term gain, but not getting the 40% he needed here to carry the general election without a fight, he is needing to answer this Queen with a lot more weight and gravitas than previously shown.

    Answers - II Cups

    C: The way to do this seems to be to meet the party half-way and build a stronger structure on the foundations he has laid. The party must stand for something, and there must be internal accord with it. Although there is much still possible, he has to get by now on action and substance rather than waiting for Brown to fail catastrophically. Back from the brink, Brown still poses a genuine challenge. This challenge must be met head on, like-for-like, rather than ducked and avoided on the way to an ivory tower.

    Direction - The Star

    C: There is hope in this situation because more councils have been taken in the north; however again there must be a solid basis built for this hope and this is where Cameron might yet fail. Man cannot live on hope alone.

    Advice - The Lovers

    C: Cameron must begin to form a genuine solution to Labour, rather than continue to rattle on with his spin and dismissive solutions to major problems. The depth in this card is the depths to which Cambo must go to cement his party in the driving seat, rather than just win by default. 38% needs to be improved upon radically to win a proper majority.

    Outcome - Queen of Pentacles

    C: A time of administrating, and of managing something, but not wholly developing in the direction of something solid. The Queen is, as I remarked a while ago, a spin doctor, not a minister. Cameron must do better to generate real solidity because the 38% issue is that the election no longer looks guaranteed.

    Owlperson: Just a small comment. These cards have potential in them, but not fulfilment of this potential. As an elected and public Tory I don't want to say too much but if we are still talking about potential rather than fulfilment, both parties have an uncertain future - Brown with real problems, Foxy (yes, it is my name for him) without real flesh on our bones.

  • 4 June 2009 - Thank you very much...

    ...I'm not as alone as I thought.

    Thought it was magick at work - now that's what I call good campaigning. The only thing changing my mind was a clear night's sleep. That "Star" card I pulled back in April for Labour's result was really bugging me but I now know better . Although I'm not going to call this at all - I don't want to do so until I have to, I need some "me" time with my "deep throat" guide Ezekiel - henceforth Deep Zeke - I can't channel him in the way I can Clarence or Owlperson, who I reached for the first time in over a year this morning with a hypnotherapist - I'm just really pleased I had the courage of my convictions on this one.

    Going to take a break from the blog until all the results are in - see how far I get without logging on, LOL (I've even shut down the Google Desktop news ticker, although I think if Armageddon hit tomorrow - or Monday - they'd still be printing headlines like "Fiery mountain hits earth - oil hits $50 a barrel", just like the FT would lead "End of the world: ECB slashes interest rates"...). See if I can feel what's happened and then log on Monday morning and share my thoughts.

    See you then - or earlier if I really can't keep away.

  • 4 June 2009 - I felt like I ought to say this, just in case someone finds out

    I voted Labour in the European elections. I'm sorry, I couldn't help it.

    After weeks of anger at the expenses scandal, I went to bed with my mind fully made up that I was going to vote Green. I woke up knowing what to do. I went and did it at about 7.15am (I always vote early, for some reason I can't sleep beyond 6am on polling days, even the Much-Piddling-In-The-Swamp town by-election) and I haven't felt better in a long time. I'm not even going to apologise for it. One's vote is an expression of one's conscience, not something to be used in anger or greed.

    You see, without Hazel Blears and Jacqui Smith, the Cabinet looks a lot cleaner than it did in recent weeks. Hopefully, Alistair "Captain" Darling will take the hint, but bizarrely the sleaze quotient of the Cabinet has gone down remarkably since those two resignations and Labour will be better without them.

    Meanwhile the Tories still have to put their house in order, and conveniently forget the old mantra - what goes around, comes around.

    Funny old world, as someone said.

  • 3 June 2009 – Taurus and Gemini part 4: The Conservatives at the European elections


    Tory donor Lord Kalms is withdrawing his support for the Tory party at these elections and telling people to vote for a fringe party – he is choosing UKIP.

    So this, like the current Cabinet resignations, is lighting a fire under Cameron as well as Brown. Donors often speculate like this but the core support usually holds up under fire unless there is a serious point to be made. Stuart Wheeler was kicked out of the party in April before the expenses scandal got going but the main casualty of the expenses saga was Norman Tebbit, who urged voters to abstain rather than vote Conservative. Kalms is flirting with dismissal, but he is not the only one who should by rights go – Gove and Maude still remain, after all, even after the Cabinet bloodbath today. In a way Gordon Brown missed a trick – he could have said at PMQs, had he been more confident, that he had had the main problems removed from his Cabinet – now it was Foxy’s turn to reciprocate. Instead Vulpes Vulpes has lost not only another large donor but a sizeable part of his poll lead in the course of trying to win people back by government-by-SMS. He – and the arrogant Dan Hannan in the Torygraph – need to start listening to disillusioned councillors like Stuart Munro before they too go the way of the Blears.

    On with the reading.

    READING for the CONSERVATIVE PARTY for the EUROPEAN ELECTIONS on 4 June 2009

    Situation – The Devil, reversed

    C: The card here shows that the situation is inescapable for the Tories – the more they project outwards and crow about the situation Labour is in, the more their retinue flake at the edges, and the more their situation too becomes untenable. After the charge of the Light Brigade (“Into the valley of death/Rode the 600” – which is also eerily repeated at the end of Briggs’ seminal apocalyptic graphic novel, “When the Wind Blows”) the aftermath of the inescapable truths about parliamentarians’ behaviour is largely concerned with reaping the whirlwind sown over the years of largesse and over-indulgence. The Devil intensifies and becomes even more unpredictable; Hannan’s arrogant “ostrich politics” (L points out this comes from the Polish phrase strusia polityka) article underlines the incapability of politicians to even contemplate their own impending doom.

    Owlperson: Hannan illustrates an uncomfortable situation and as a fellow Conservative I do actually know and respect him more in private than in public. I don’t believe he can write otherwise. But Clarence does actually point out that we are not allowed to speak our minds without scrutiny from the media, and I can’t name myself here for that reason (also because filtering my mind through Louise’s means some important detail is actually lost, enough to render my own statements mere observations rather than predictions). Hannan would hate to point out the real situation on the ground in a national newspaper printed on the morning of an important and watershed election. But perhaps if things did get reformed and party discipline was able to relax somewhat – something that may not happen in my lifetime but which I would consider the sign of a mature and grown-up democracy – it would be easier to tell the truth. But Hannan may not see that truth – few deep partisans do – and this is the sign of the Devil, that we are blinded by our own opinions and cannot see the deep divisions in the country, and that is our own downfall, not the fault of the public.

    Situation with Kalms – VIII Wands, reversed

    C: Kalms throws a spanner into the works and jams the cogs and gears that are driving the Tories forward. He is stopping the clock here – the Tories are damaged and delayed by this because even their older supporters are leaving them in droves. It pushes the case for his own dismissal towards Foxy, and there is a danger here that he may try another smaller party – and end up liking it. Foxy needs people to stay onside, and he is losing support from a lot of staunch Tory quarters.

    Situation with Munro – Justice, reversed

    C: Mr Munro has worked hard for the party as a councillor and a local activist and his enthusiasm is dampened by the current frustrations – visibly. Justice reversed here says the situation he believes is unfair to him and to others like him who feel let down by the high command. His frustrations may yet destabilise Cameron and lead to something more dramatic when the Tories fail to reach what they desire from these elections.

    Conservative Party nationally – Queen of Wands, reversed

    C: The party has had difficulty convincing people that it can respond to this crisis in a way in which the public will thank it for in the short term, if not the long run if current leadership remains. The reversed Queen indicates a lack of responsiveness, and this can be seen by the derisory ideas for reform put forward before the recess – nothing that showed any progressive Conservative thinking, a warmed-over New Labour tactic of using ephemeral technology to spin and proselytise rather than involve, integrate and encourage participation, and a reliance on gimmicks that are the hallmarks of this leadership, in which one half-baked plan is put forward after another without any kind of coherency of thought or overall ideas for action. The limp wrist has been exposed and the party can’t go anywhere momentous for duck islands and moat-dredging.

    Conservative leadership – V Pentacles

    C: Here the leadership misses the point and is a disappointment to donors, members and activists all. The leadership is hamstrung by its complicity in this situation, and is only saved from going under by big struggles within the Cabinet. The lack of substance has meant the party has tried to search for opportunities to play a long game, but the expenses scandal hit it harder than perhaps the Torygraph even expected and this has made their job all the more difficult than it already was.

    Conservative Party in the field – VIII Cups

    C: The party is restless and, illustrated by Stuart who is standing down at the next council elections from his post in Swallowfield, moving on into other spheres of interest because the outcome is now uncertain again after years of illusory plenty. It is trying to find a stable raison d’etre, it is trying too many ideas at once and not consolidating itself as a party of government, it is looking for cheap fixes, and it is doomed to – at least – find the Cameron well has run dry and to try another figure in the hopes of finding that magic formula that assisted Labour back into office after years in the wilderness.

    Projected result – Page of Wands, reversed

    C: The party knows it is going to be battered, and it knows that this will be painful and hamper its abilities to win the next election. All that is unknown is the actual figures.

    Actual voting behaviour – III Cups, reversed

    C: Those that have voted Tory will not necessarily do so this time round. It is difficult to see what is going on here, but the party is over at Westminster. People here vote according to their interests, but there is little success augured here unless the Tories are braver and cleverer and try to substantiate their gains by putting together something to save Parliament from damnation. People will not vote Tory willingly, and the party will lose some of its momentum as a result.

    Difficulties – The Star, reversed

    C: Again, this is becoming relentless. An inauspicious card again – hope is illusory and short-lived – and the Tories look uneasy and unprepared for any sort of European progress, still less equipped to fight for a place in government.

    Solutions – The Lovers, reversed

    C: The grassroots and backbenches have to take the leadership to task. With Kalms’ pronouncement they lose another prominent donor through indecision, inaction on some of their more senior problems in the expenses scandal, and Hague’s squirming on Newsnight scraped away a few more votes. There needs to be an inquest and sackings and there needs to be blood on the carpet before Cameron can even pretend to be ready to go into the run-up to an election.

    Outcome of the result on the night – Queen of Pentacles, reversed

    C: Similar to Labour, the lack of control and material direction over the party at the moment translates into a bad showing, or worse than needed to win a general poll outright. It may be time for Cameron to reconsider his personnel – or even his own position – if he cannot make any sort of hay while Labour burns.

    Outcome for the foreseeable future – VII Swords

    C: There is some chance that the Tories can pull things together again, but it will take delicate handling and balance to do this and it may require the swords to be wielded against close allies. If Cameron can’t do this, someone else will.

    Outcome for the long-term – The Chariot, reversed

    C: Again, there is a chastening effect here and a reduction in momentum which brings the party’s problems to the fore and demands that they be dealt with. The expenses scandal will not die hard while Maude and Gove remain on the front-bench; and Cameron’s own questionable mortgage has already laid him low, albeit as an also-ran story which has not had any sizeable impact on his leadership quite yet. These results force the party to re-assess their situation and deal with the problems.

     

  • 3 June 2009 – Taurus and Gemini part 3: Labour at the European elections


    The state that the Cabinet is currently in is not, to say the least, a very good one, but one thing Owlperson points out – while still maintaining that it looks worse than it is and that can damage the government even if now harm was initially meant – that Jacqui Smith and Hazel Blears were probably pushed, rather than jumped of their own accord. It is difficult to see the reason for a broadly optimistic reading, but the idea that the two worst offenders of the expenses saga have now left the government might be taken on board by Cameron – if he could get past his own difficulties with regards to his mortgage.

    Clarence suggests we cut to the chase this evening and do not follow this particular reading with any more of a lengthy pre-amble than necessary. Focussing on what the cards say is important for balance and information, and there is still a fourth part to this series to publish by the end of tonight so that tomorrow (I have an appointment with a hypnotherapist tomorrow morning and have to work in the afternoon) we can clear the decks for breaking news.

    READING for the LABOUR PARTY for the EUROPEAN ELECTIONS on 4 June 2009

    Situation – IV Swords, reversed

    C: Labour finds itself being thrown out of a sleep into which it was reclining before the expenses scandal really broke open. The sleep was not that of a party which could afford to rest on its laurels; it was more a trance which kept it focussed on delivering as a government and avoiding the worst dangers of disruptive politics. This scandal has been deadly for Labour as well as for the main opposition, but at the moment the focus is fixed on the government and Cabinet difficulties, so the deadly machinery represented by the pattern of swords on this card is cutting deep into the party’s electoral chances. However the card does not represent insoluble problems, rather just the deep and painful realisation that it is sliding precariously down the slope towards oblivion.

    Labour party nationally – Page of Cups

    C: Interestingly enough, like the Star card we drew for Hazel Blears’ resignation, and mirroring the card of the day, the Page of Cups shows a humble and eager to learn party trying to make up for lost time. The Page of Cups facilitates learning on an emotional level, and the attempts, however graceless and blunt, to face up to festering problems and putting them right. The idea that Blears and Smith have resigned leaving the government in chaos is one thing, but the resignations pave the way for better man management, fewer bent politicians in office and certainly a party which perhaps realises that these women are more toxic within the Cabinet than outside it as they will be very shortly. Contrition and humility produce a party who understand they are on the back foot and are accepting advice from the press and from the people who still genuinely want to support them.

    Labour leadership – The Star, reversed

    C: Brown is living on borrowed time right enough, and the dangers here seem to be that the lack of optimism can suddenly cloud over any depth of vision within which Brown seems to have in abundance. He knew, for example, last year, that circumstances in the global markets would soon conspire to make a strong PM with economic clout more attractive – “no time for a novice” resonated for a while during the winter when this was needed. He may still make it to conference – someone on Newsnight last night said that only inertia prevents a leadership challenge before then – and then turn it round again as the economy improves. But this is underestimating the power of the expenses scandal to continue throughout the summer and the potential it has to wreck any such plans he might have had before that to revive his flagging fortunes. Cameron has a similar problem because of the extent to which he himself is implicated in it, but Gordon’s government is currently on the agenda and being ripped open. The Star reversed does mean that hope is still there, but it is rapidly running out, and without hope there can be no recovery this year to match last year’s bounce-back.

    Labour party in the field – The Lovers, reversed

    C: The Labour Party has been tarnished and tarnishes itself by being scared of the electorate. We do not yet know the mood in the Conservative Party, but the Lovers card, which is quite a common pull at the moment, suggests the lack of faith in partnerships on a grand scale, and a lack of decision-making and context for the party to operate within.

    Projected result – The High Priestess

    C: There is a depth to which Labour know the result and are keeping their own projections quiet while people speculate. They are intuitive enough as a party to know what people think of them and intelligent enough to know how to respond to people’s concerns. To the extent that this card is good, the result will be good enough to keep things from going under entirely. There will be no general election or leadership challenges under the auspices of this card, because the anticipation in the party has reached levels to which they have already read the writing on the wall and Brown has acted accordingly with his more corrupt minions. The result will not shock anyone, and thus building has already begun to reconstruct the Cabinet in order to go forward afterwards; though for how long given other portents I don’t know.

    Actual voting behaviour – Queen of Pentacles, reversed

    C: The reversed Queen is damaging enough but represents the distrust of the administration as a whole and is based on the foundations of the expenses scandal more than anything else. The reversed Queen could also be seen as the end of Jacqui Smith and Hazel Blears, both powerful administrative figures who lacked the probity or charisma to survive this year but could in the future have a potential to return to the front line under new management once their penance is served. People will vote on this line, and the events of the past few days have damaged the Conservatives (with Hague’s shambolic performance on Newsnight and Cameron’s mortgage hitting the Sunday papers), so holding off a Swords card in this position might staunch a real exodus to the opposite side as opposed to towards minor parties easily excluded from a general election.

    Owlperson: Clarence, from my point of view this is right but you have to remember that this Cabinet will not see the General Election in. You and I know that this represents the end of the two senior Cabinet women, and the short-term view of the electorate in that respect, but beyond tomorrow the possible scenarios are all under the auspices of the Devil, which means the danger and excitement – and potential for cataclysmic surprise – are all more likely than a smooth progression out of this scandal and towards a potential election. Although I cannot reveal who I am in real life, being only a channel of someone participating in the situation at the moment (more to protect Louise from unwanted cease-and-desist letters than because of personal modesty), I know the situation from the inside and know that the situation will only intensify as the summer draws on, not dissipate.

    Difficulties – VII Swords

    C: A play with surprises, as a well-known spread is called. The Seven of Swords dictates an unexpected surprise – a rout is not what I really mean, because everyone is predicting a rout – but this surprise may be in Labour’s favour than in their disfavour. A tactical stroke is able to save them from a proper pasting, just as the projections on the night last time round were putting Labour and Conservative neck-and-neck but the actual results brought a clear lead of 27 (Con) seats to 19 (Lab), for Howard’s Tories. This could be to do with the march of the smaller parties, or it could be that Labour have already reached the bedrock of their support, or that the Tories lose seats too. Whatever, the Seven suggests that a factor hitherto unconsidered enters play at the last moment. We will not know until Sunday what this is, but this is Labour’s fight to win or lose.

    Solutions – The Chariot, reversed

    C: Labour need to play down expectations. In some ways, they do that masterfully – witness the way they put it about that they believed they would lose Glenrothes, only to win it very safely.  This may be what they are doing, though at least part of the danger here is real and not just emanating from their spin doctors, and talking themselves down in order to hide good results from canvassing has a danger inherent in it that they will put off otherwise faithful supporters because they look like a losing ticket. It is evident that they will have a difficulty regaining some sort of momentum and they need to look at other methods of campaigning rather than blind charging ahead. John Major’s soap box springs to mind.

    Owlperson: I agree but it is also a lessening of momentum in general and the possibilities that what was convincingly faked in Glenrothes is now utterly genuine. No-one in my experience campaigning is saying they will vote for either party and they are not hostile to me – because I’m one of the people who hasn’t abused their expenses – but they are giving my party the bum’s rush and going for a third party choice, either LibDem or fringe. I can’t see Labour regaining any momentum after this or rebounding to any extent, but the comfort for them is that we are both in the same boat. Dejected Mr Munro finally realises the game is up if he has not yet announced his retirement from the council: he may know a lot more than we do as well. We shall see what this means.

    Outcome of the result on the night – II Wands, reversed

    C: This stands for the stagnation rather than decline of energies and actually it’s not a bad omen, despite the reversal. It represents a carriage stuck in the mud, rather than anything catastrophic. I think the result will be bad but the expectations will have been worse, just like the Conservative result last time round in 2004. It will ruin any chances of a Labour revival before the autumn, and as Owlperson is at pains to point out, that may decide the shape and form of the next government as the summer boils on.

    Outcome for the foreseeable future – IV Wands

    C: A counter-intuitive result in that structure and stability have been re-established in this card and some form of balance achieved. A delicate structure is formed – it can be knocked down again very quickly – but the equally bad result projected for the Conservatives is likely to make Labour look like they have had a lucky escape.

    Outcome for the long-term – Ace of Wands

    C: This is what Owlperson is trying to say – that the energies are only accumulating because of the expenses saga rather than dissipating. The direction and focus of this card is dangerous if what looks like it could happen is bad. Labour cannot win – that is certain – but the landscape will be transformed and overhauled before any party can truly say they are onto a winner. For Labour this looks like a gun pointed at them, but both of us guides know that it is both parties which will be in the firing line. Clarity and focus are provided here – but at what cost and to whom, as yet only God knows.

  • 3 June 2009 - Another bite at the Hague cherry


    Gerald Warner is on tip-top form this week.

    From the comments section looks like the Tories did lose votes over Wee Willie Winkie on Newsnight after all.

    Like on many issues it is more the politicians who fascinate me than the policies, and I am a Euro-agnostic after dabbling in federalism at university and going on a rather sickening goody-two-shoes Young European Federalists' junket to Vienna where in a role-playing game about the Council of Ministers, I was the only one playing the game as if I was a real Foreign Secretary - that is, dealing with what was best for my own country (I think I represented Timbuktoo) rather than what was best for the EU. Erm, isn't that what the Council of Ministers is supposed to do?! I got a (verbally) smacked botty as a result. Oh dear. I only went because the year before we had some rather off-the-cuff (and off-the-record) drinking games; and I still blame them for making me miss my connection to Dublin where my mother was living at the time on the way home for Christmas.

    The only exam paper I got a First on at university however was a paper in which - for a "Democracy and Democratisation" module in my third year at the London School of Economics - I wrote that the EU does not represent pure democracy, but for trading and environmental policies, which cut across borders, it was often practically necessary to override pure democracy to enable agreement between nation states. This supra-national body meant that shibboleths of my lecturer/professor's course were dealt with (you couldn't do that course if you weren't prepared at some stage to stand up and denounce American politics as run by mere money - when it is hardly possible to run a nationwide campaign without sums that would put a British MP's claim to shame) but in a way which guaranteed that I had not only read the books on the course but had understood them properly as well.

    I am voting Green for the European elections, perhaps as a result. Again I am agnostic to say the least on climate change. Fluctuations happen over such long periods that the average human lifespan will only register a gradual warming or gradual cooling, and although changes in the Earth's structure do affect human communities in large cataclysmic developments - just ask the Viking farmers of Greenland - in general terms the Earth was warmer at the time of Christ's birth than it is now, with thriving viticulture in the south of England under the Pax Romana. Green activists will always seize on natural modulation in the wind patterns to claim that this does not disprove climate change theories, it merely develops them. The winter this year, in Owlperson's opinion, was as normal British winters should be - cold, slightly snowy in rural areas, definable prolonged periods of near- or sub-zero temperatures. The twenty-year refrigerator effect brought deep snow to London and much of the south east (it was the week in which I was working at 7am on a number of days and walking through the snow as it was falling was just amazing), but then the environmentalists started to crow about - of course - more extreme weather, and that this just meant that somehow global warming was happening elsewhere. Of course. There has to be a reason to perpetuate the pseudo-science involved in a lot of climate change discussions. I do know someone for who environmental science is a hobby (she's only 16, I do hope she doesn't grow out of it). We need more people prepared to look at this rationally and take the debate forward, when gardeners in the Observer remarked at the beginning of the spring that plants had composted properly beneath the snow and ice this winter and the general outlook was similar to that of twenty to thirty years ago before we discovered global warming/climate change to frighten people with and had to make do with the Russians instead.

    However I do want a party which has a commitment to using the EU for what it is there for - supranational decision-making. With Labour and the Tories damned by their pathetic responses to the expenses scandal, and the LibDems still partly complicit, the whole hog is necessary to be gone because of a need for a positive vote for positive reasons. 

    Europe enables these decisions to be taken at a level . I do believe any moves to solidify the presidential powers of the Commission and Parliament are doomed to failure because the treaties enabling this calcification have to be passed by so many countries it only takes one or two to hold the process up until . I predicted at the time of the greatest fuss over Lisbon that the treaty would end up as toilet roll in Sarkozy and Merkel's (communal?) bathroom. I would vote No to it, even if the only reason for doing so is seeing Tony Blair end up as President of Europe rather than consigned to the dustbin of the Faith Foundation history that he currently is. But we need to stay in it to win it, and the Conservatives' half-in, half-out stance just won't really do much for Britain in the long run except ensure that we remain subject to laws and their influences without really being able to have much of a role in drafting or formulating them.

    Federalism won't work with 27 member states and the sclerosis will eventually collapse the EU back into a trading bloc and wealh redistribution network, as it really is in most respects now anyway. Michael Howard's "made to measure Europe" is the best hope while the Council of Ministers remains in control, purely because no Minister on that Council would sign away powers they would rather keep for themselves.

  • 3 June 2009 – Taurus and Gemini part 2: Local elections for the Conservative Party


    It looks like the resignations of Hazel Blears and Jacqui Smith have taken the spotlight from Cameron and his £350,000 repayment bill (the mind boggles as to why he felt that it was necessary to claim, as that is a mere 1% of what he is worth). Gerald Warner in the Torygraph has written a good post on the subject but perhaps the government in meltdown is a rather more salient story for the moment.

    So how will the Tories actually do in the local elections this time? Will the voters of Lancashire and Derbyshire (to name but two of the councils up for grabs this time round) give the Tories a clean sweep? I’ve been out for lunch up to the neighbouring village of Riseley, and met the local councillor Stuart Munro out delivering leaflets; he didn’t sound as happy as he normally does (he normally claims to have hundreds of volunteers for the party knocking on doors, though I have never seen one out with him) and that’s saying a lot because he did seem rather non-committal as to how it was going. I am lucky in that I can pose as whatever party I want to, having been involved with a fair number of them – I can even be a disgruntled Labour voter, a disgruntled Tory and probably in the near future a disgruntled Green. (I told him not to drop me a leaflet, and that I was voting Green, but no, I still got one. Yuck.) I enjoy that more than being a supporter – or glory supporter – of anyone as it usually elicits more intimate information from all sides and none. I haven’t tried being a LibDem yet but if this keeps up longer and the opposition don’t get their skates on then I will approach the LibDems for the general election, then perhaps after the next election become a disaffected LibDem and slag them off here.

    I am the cat who walks by herself, and all places are alike to me. Rudyard Kipling had me nailed J.

    Anyway, Clarence is itching to get on with the reading for the Tories, so let the fun commence.

    READING: THE CONSERVATIVES at the LOCAL ELECTIONS on THURSDAY 4 JUNE

    Situation – VI Wands, reversed

    C: The Conservatives are not going to get much of the promised vote here and their moment of triumph is in abeyance because of the poor overall result for national parties. This seeps through to the council elections too – it is already evident that the north is still a fairly no-go area for the Tories, and taking councils there is still difficult. The Salford by-election, held during the expenses scandal, was still a result for Labour, with the BNP coming before the Tories. So any victory is likely to be pyrrhic in nature, in that although they may well come nominally first, the spillage from the national picture is still likely to hit them hard.

    Conservative Party nationally – The Empress

    C: The party nominally sits in judgement of the status quo and is commanding the same lead in the polls in which it found itself in April and early May, though of course the Independent poll may be more indicative of the mood since Cameron’s mortgage came to light. The Empress is a card which plants a body in a sitting position; it does not necessarily mean complacency has set in but it means that someone is waiting for events to come to them rather than able to direct them. It may not work in this situation where the party needs to overcome the handicap of its own shocking expenses problems and overcome an inertia which stems from before the scandal broke. Patience may help it in some respects, but it needs to combine this with a more dynamic posture in order to look like it would be a successful government.

    Conservative Party in the places where people are voting on county councils – Strength

    C: Again, not necessarily a bad card but a card in which control and discipline trump external movement, either positive or negative. Strength solidifies the Empress as above, but it denotes a caution and the exercise of restraint rather than a dam-busting exercise in capturing these last remaining councils. Not a bad omen, but not a card which augurs much explosive success.

    Results of the vote – II Swords, reversed

    C: Not a good card, not an excessively bad one, but nothing to write home about. The balance is disrupted, but this works against the party rather than for it. The rupture in the main firmament has been injurious to the confidence of the party’s activists on the ground; although the government provides the main sideshow this week, the chaos and destruction are only going to intensify when a stalemate is produced as opposed to a promised rout. With Labour already clearing out its deadwood, it makes it more difficult for Foxy to justify keeping his own pilfering politicos, and the damage this could do is to knock over any promising results even from the elections seen as less dangerous to the main parties. Also, if people are voting on local issues, then the Tories may lose the national popularity they have and be forced to confront their own weakness on the local front from the beginning of this year where they have failed to gain local seats from Labour where they ought to be winning hand over fist. Even in Jacqui Smith’s and Hazel Blears’ backyards, they have failed to capitalise away from the glaring national headline poll results. So not a good night for the Conservatives.

    Outcome on the night – Queen of Swords

    C: The devil is in the detail. The Queen of Swords forces people to look rationally at the situation to find any strengths or weaknesses, but the emotional and subjective nature of the media attention means that anything less than what the Conservatives need to show to win convincingly next year – if it still is next year – will be taken as a sign of weakness rather than as a sign of progress. The Queen forces us to look penetratingly at the whole situation, rather than just react spontaneously to an overall feeling. If the Tories had looked harder at 2005 then they would have seen the result differently. The Tories need to look hard at this result to learn the lessons they need to learn; will they? The Hermit, reversed, says that this kind of introspection is possible and likely, but will not produce a good result for anyone concerned. The devil really will be in the detail, and the Tories will always find a way to do themselves down.

    Owlperson: I disagree, Clarence. An alternative reading of these two cards is not that they will – I know the party deeply and know they can be equally blind to success and failure if they want to be, rather than taking both into account – and the Queen says to me that there will be a hard lesson delivered to them but they will choose not to learn it (the reversed Hermit). Although we agree, it is too soon to say that the party will collapse in on itself; after all the result from last night’s reading on the Independent poll was a slightly more positive card, Temperance; because the focus is on the government for now the government will lose more from these elections than the Tories will. However the result will be such that the momentum which the Tories have lost will be only further eroded because the results here will be warped by the times in which we all “live”. The lessons from the elections will be heeded only if they are forced into listening by the press; and what we are all wondering is when or if those lessons will be rammed home by another such poll putting the Tories down to 30% again.

    Built in problems/margin for error – IX Swords, reversed

    C: The Nine reversed is lessening the fear of manipulation but still shows some suspicion around the results. The Tories would obviously never call foul on any result which didn’t go in their favour, but some of their more vocal blogosphere supporters very rarely have such scruples. The election is more likely to be problematic when the result is known days or weeks before the poll is held. We are past the point at which the postal vote results would be known. The Tories have more reason to fear manipulation than Labour do – judging by the results for this position on the Labour spread – but the fear is lessened by the fact that because the media “know” the Tories are going to win, the fear is negated or pushed to the back of the mind because the Tories may well be benefiting from the theories posited in the Rotten Boroughs articles. (See posts passim.)

    Any other factors – The Hierophant, reversed

    C: Conventional wisdom overturned. The results are dangerous in that they, like all elections up to and including 1992, are unpredictable in a time of such great political agony as this. There is less ability to predict these results, and far higher stakes than would normally be the case. The period in which the media or the government could tell which way elections would go is over, as witnessed by the Glenrothes by-election in the autumn; the strategists may be deliberately seeding the press with misinformation to make any real result look better; and the element of fixing might be more or less depending on the desire of the media to see change. Polls have plunged for both main parties over the last month; the Conservatives suffered a large hit yesterday and local canvassers no longer seem as bullish as they were when they started canvassing (Redwood appeared in Swallowfield, Louise’s home village) early in May before the scandals had got going and appeared more confident than Stuart did this afternoon on his own. There is no prediction here which will guarantee a win or lose, and the danger for the Conservatives is that their poll results may have changed too late to rescue them.

    Outcome in general going forward – The Devil

    C: A decisive and destructive influence in all its forms; the Devil always means that the querent succumbs to desires and conceits that are intense and turbulent. The surprise is in the result, which leaves those involved in this reading reeling from the sharp rebuke the electorate give them; and these are the elections which were believed to be relatively immune from national considerations. The Devil is the unleashing of fury and anger in a situation where there needs to be restraint, grace and magnanimity. It can only end in tears.

  • 3 June 2009 - Blears gone. What a surprise!


    Hazel Blears is stepping down from the cabinet. What is the betting she was pushed?

    My hunch says that the people who have resigned this week have been the ones who have had the messiest expenses of the whole scandal - and that they have realised they have no more credibility left ahead of tomorrow's polls and have done the decent thing in leaving office. I hold no brief whatsoever for this crowd of loonies, but Jacqui Smith's resignation and the resignation of Blears today just gets rid of two grossly overpaid underachievers.

    The Star for this shows a kind of hopefulness that with those two troublemakers gone, Labour actually have ditched the problem cases. Whether Alistair Darling - equally damaged - goes too, I don't care so long as it points the spotlight at Cameron's own nest of corruption too - including a big fat cheque for the £350,000 he has made on his house at our expense. Bloodletting may peversely make Brown's cabinet stronger rather than weaker.

    Remember that sauce for the Labour goose is sauce for the Tory gander. I don't want an election until all those guilty of this morass of sleaze have been wiped from the face of the earth.

    Meanwhile the Torygraph seem to have a vendetta against our friend Mr Howard. Nice one, Michael. Why they have chosen to cover his poor excuse for largesse by making out that his expense claims are anything untoward. The Lovers suggest a need - an almost parasitical need - for the Telegraph to argue this out and that it may reach a conclusion that exonerates him rather than condemns him to the same fate. Reading the Torygraph article, I am hard pushed to see a taxpayer funded mortgage or capital gains, duck islands, moats, or even a Snickers bar. It's nice to see the BBC providing a forum for one of the cleaner claims to be defended as well as getting out the ducking stools or an order of service for auto-da-fe. The Lovers suggest a resolution for Howard that transcends this and enables him to make more choices later about his own future. Would that others were so lucky.

  • 3 June 2009 - William Hague --- blood on the carpet over Lord Ashcroft


    William Hague gets the Paxman treatment.

    Reading for this:

    Hague - Page of Cups, reversed - a refusal to take Paxman seriously and answer the question properly. Not going to do him any good, as it doesn't do many politicians good to tangle publicly with Paxo.

    Going forward - The Star, reversed - again, another difficult encounter which makes Hague - normally fairly trustworthy a figure - look shifty and awkward over something that could be a matter of legal concern.

    Effects now - The Lovers, reversed - bound to make up a few minds against him personally and doesn't look good for anything which would see him assume the mantle of leadership, just as Howard was in the wilderness after his Paxo going-over.

    Effects later - VI Pentacles - not so bad as the balance remains steady, but no momentum or dynamism in this card means that Hague may find himself becalmed later. In the current climate, not a huge issue and likely to remain steady, but if affairs begin to be scrutinised more closely, it could get difficult.

    Effects of the question asked regarding Ashcroft's tax status - VII Pentacles, reversed - likely to undo progress in several key areas as the party moves on into a likely election.

  • 2 June 2009 – Going forward from here – Taurus and Gemini – part 1: Local Elections for the Labour Party


    This article was written yesterday before I looked at the Independent ComRes poll.

    The title of my blog refers to the yearly cycle which plays out, much like a horoscope, to foreshadow what will or might happen in all our lives and dealings with each other. I believe, thanks to Owlperson’s ideas, that astrology works a lot like a fixed version of the tarot: a system of divination, rather than causation. The casting of a card such as the Wheel of Fortune, which prior to 8 May governed the immediate future in my readings for the political fortunes, does not actually cause the twists of fate. Similarly planets and stars do not affect us personally, but they can give us a clue to what happens. Mars entered Scorpio yesterday and threw my relationships off-balance; or rather, Mars entered Scorpio yesterday and this foretold that my relationships with a special someone would be a bit choppy. After a good night’s sleep I’ve decided not to dump him but to forgive him, just as my horoscope suggested I would. (Maybe a self-fulfilling prophecy, maybe not; I was still pissed off when I went to bed, though that was easier than I expected.)

    In this way, we find that Taurus usually governs elections – early May is the most usual time to go to the country in the local elections as well as the last general election, and these results tend to be critical points for government and opposition. Until 2005 a Taurean election (as opposed to a Gemini election in June, which usually returns a sitting government) had had the tendency for power to change hands. I got very excited in 2005 as a result, and as my figures (see the Rotten Boroughs articles I posted early in May) suggest, we perhaps should have had a change of government. The potential PM’s £17,000 garden centre bill notwithstanding (though Owlperson is strangely distant on this as if it won’t matter in the long run, and in the mean time Howard, like Butterfill, is leaving parliament anyway, though Owlperson is tugging at my sleeve and forbids me to go further along that line of thought), Taurus should have given us a change as a result. This year, Taurus has not had the outlet of elections to hand us change in that manner, so gave us this chaos instead. (Other years without a Taurean catharsis have been similarly chaotic – 2004 saw the rise of UKIP and 2001 foot and mouth.) There are years of differing intensity and I am not really a good astrologer quite yet. But we have now left Taurus behind – the charging bull – and entered Gemini, the Air sign, which should deliver a vote which actually leaves us more in control of the status quo but also defining the consequences of the expenses scandal and allowing less bean-counting and more defined – and even aggressive – action. I am not sure what is causing this particular year to be so intensely violent, when other Gemini elections have been more tranquil for the governing party – but a Gemini election itself rarely delivers change on any significant level (1983, 1987 and 2001 all cemented rather than winkled out a governing party, even one with increasing levels of robust opposition and after, in 2001 at least, a nationally damaging crisis).

    I still don’t believe, however, that the expenses scandal will go away – questions remain for Alistair Darling and David Cameron in particular. Rather, Gemini will begin to discuss solutions – permanent, drastic solutions – to the problems rather than allowing the scandal to evaporate. There is a certain sector of the press talking fatuously about “revelation fatigue” as if we’ve had our fun and it is now time to get back to normal. They may want to – as Owlperson says, they have most cause not to let it get too much out of hand for fear genuine public anger will be unleashed – but the situation in Gemini (openness) leads to Cancer (fluidity in the right directions) and Leo (fiery bursts of energy – normally dissipating in the silly season but this year perhaps a culmination of anger and excitement). The possibility at the moment of an autumn election Owlperson says is realistic but Virgo and Libra are signs in which things begin to solidify again in preparation for the new parliamentary year. Libra in particular is the time of the dramatic shifts in polls which we have seen over the past two years, and the shifts of Libra (coincidentally when the party conferences are held in line with these shifts in opinion) put paid largely to Brown’s desire for an October election (though it was the shift itself that caused this not the actual reason for the shift).

    Anyway, this is just by way of saying – prepare for a shift now from revelations to destructive influences on the status quo, but don’t expect a miraculous collapse for Labour: Gemini will not allow this. Instead, the omens do not look good for either party, and I am going to read for these elections and then leave the situation open until Thursday night and Sunday night because I have been warned by my guides that the situation was not as simple as I first thought. Part of being psychic is knowing how to interpret things as detached from them as possible, and although Owlperson is a political guide – I have others with whom I am going to read now – this makes it more difficult to judge the actual events because of conflicting emotions, desires at odds with what I subconsciously know to be the truth, and the rather hurtful moment of truth when hubris hits home. Developing psychic awareness is a process of detaching oneself from the subject of your readings; it’s much easier to do it for things you don’t have a vested interest or ardent love of. Such as Newcastle’s recent relegation to the Championship – I had no difficulty predicting relegation because of the lack of direct relevance to me of the football results. But try it with Boris Johnson or Barack Obama – both of whom I had a gut feeling about, but neither of whom I would have voted for.

    So let your gut do the talking – and stand well back. I am using my kestrel guide Clarence for this reading – he is telling me not to write all the meanings down, but I am telling him it helps those reading this to focus on the meaning of the card and it helps me relax my mind while reading, enabling a more accurate forecast to come through. He accepts this...so onwards and upwards.

    READING: LABOUR at the LOCAL ELECTIONS on THURSDAY 4 JUNE

    Situation – Page of Wands

    The Page of Wands is a messenger, usually of good fortune, heralding great events affecting your chosen career. He is energetic, loyal, idealistic, resourceful and honest; the best kind of friend one could hope for. He can represent either the attitude you need in order to accomplish your aims – the part you must play toward someone of greater influence – or the person you should turn to for help to carry them out.

    Clarence: this is a first for me, Louise hasn’t used me for a while because I’m not as fun as Owlperson for her and he crowds us other guides out. Now I have a platform, I can tell people here how fun it is to view the 21st century through the screen of a computer as when I lived 150 years ago we would have marvelled at the technology available – we were tinkers not cybernauts in my day and age. Anyway.

    This card is Labour at the moment – the Page here is struggling with maintaining his grip on power (represented by the wands) but they are holding on, in annoyance to their bitter opponents and bitter rivals. People’s hostility is general and widespread, yet Labour have not been obliterated simply because the Tories are in it up to their eyeballs as well (expect fireworks on Mr Fox’s side too due to these results.) The Page struggles but is always cheerful – that is why the card is upright. The good fortune is hidden perhaps in the broad prognosis for Labour, but there are difficulties for all and the government is still in office, if rather battered. A valiant effort, in other words, fought against a rising tide. Full marks for trying.

    Labour Party nationally – V Cups, reversed

    Unexpected news arrives, and possibly in the form of a surprise visit from an old friend who will life your spirits and suggest new ideas and ways forward. They may also remind you of past events that you would rather forget, but try if you can to learn their lessons.

    C: These cards are awfully specific, and I feel this represents the situation revealed by the expenses fiasco, and means that Labour were dumped into it through their own short-sightedness. That is the printed meaning of the card. The more general reading for the Five reversed is that every cloud has a silver lining, and this again comes in the shape and form of the Tories. Simply put, the reversal of the Five of Cups means that the party appreciates the two cups that are still full and is not solely aware of the three that have been spilt. In other words, the message of discomfort under a Tory government still resonates with its core vote but also with a wider spectrum of people and this still counts for something. It may not necessarily translate into votes on Thursday, but since people have hinted that they will vote on local issues rather than national issues, and the Tories have not done well in local by-elections recently (even in Redditch, Jacqui Smith’s erstwhile seat), local issues may pull the party back from the brink. This is just hinting at the many silver linings possible in a cloud this size, but it does mean that Labour may not be toast simply because in many places local will trump national.

    I need to stress that what I can say to this card is unimaginable while the government is in such difficulty and that the Tories are just plain nowhere either. A genuinely fair election is not possible until after this scandal escalates and destroys the old order, but we upstairs are working on ways to make sure this goes far deeper than just money; but for the mean time, there is a silver lining here for Labour that the Tories are just as idiotic and chaotic, meaning stalemate rather than a complete pasting.

    Labour Party in the places where people are voting on county councils – IV Pentacles

    Due reward comes after a long struggle, but you need to shrug off any lingering bitterness or sense of grievance if you are to enjoy it. There is some danger of you becoming a miser. Enjoy your good fortune, but also share it with others who probably did far more for you during the difficult times than you realised.

    C: This card usually means “defence” or “defensiveness”, contrasting with the Nine of Wands which has a similar meaning in that it is defence of money, power, or other valuable property. Therefore Labour is defending – successfully – some of its treasure effectively because prior to the expenses scandal it was evident that the Tories were not gaining from Labour unpopularity (viz, the Salford by-election a week or two ago, which Labour held despite the local MP Hazel Blears being at the forefront of the blossoming expenses scandal) – but this card just means defence, not offence, and Labour still stand to lose badly in the places where there is a genuine contest between Labour and Tory. Fortunately for Labour this actually means they can successfully defend northern strongholds (Derbyshire and Lancashire particularly) where the BNP will gain at the Tories’ expense. Labour are not campaigning hard against the BNP for nothing.

    Results of the votes – IX Cups reversed

    Your success is limited by miscalculations, imperfections, and carelessness. Complacency and an exaggerated sense of your importance spoil what should otherwise be a time of celebration, alienating many who would otherwise support you.

    C: Of all the cards in the tarot pack which could represent Thursday night, this is actually the best possible result: just a mild hangover, not a complete rout. As any serious kestrel will tell you, the way to analyse things is through the eyes¸ and Labour still will be able to pick out the successes (in terms of holding on rather than gaining) and make sure the issues are dealt with. The government will still collapse, but not necessarily because of this result, but because of other national and international pressures during this summer.

    Outcome on the night – X Swords, reversed

    A slight but temporary illusion of success is forecast when the card is in this position. However, misfortune will follow if you do not take advantage of this reprieve and build up your defences against disasters that almost certainly lie in wait just around the corner.

    C: The card here is not as dangerous yet to Labour as it looked – it’s ruin delayed, not immediately imposed. Labour have a couple of months at best to make good on this card but it is better not to say too much at this stage. Labour are not done for yet, not even after this result. It means that the Tories will have failed to advance north of the Midlands, on the whole, and although they do conquer a couple of councils there will be fewer casualties than expected. At any rate, disruption and destruction for Labour – and Gordon Brown – lie further on, not now. This also imposes a problem on the Tories as well, because they do fail to advance far enough to ruin Labour’s herd mentality.

    Built in problems/margin for error – King of Swords

    In astrology the character of Saturn in his benign aspect closely resembles that of the King of Swords. He represents power, authority, and the law, splitting complex attitudes with the edge of his sword. His judgements can at times seem lacking in tolerance of human frailty, but are never unfair. The card usually represents an authority figure that the querent can look to for justice.

    C: The manipulation inherent in what she has posted in the Rotten Boroughs articles – which I helped her write – are not now repeated at elections in Britain in general. The Glenrothes by-election was legitimate because it was possible to give the people the benefit of the doubt rather than make them accept the result imposed on them by the press and the manipulators.

    Anyway, this election will be decided fully by the people. I can’t tell L what happened to bring the balance back within the system but any result that is a surprise to the media is genuine enough. The ambiguity creeps into the system where the media trail the poll for weeks beforehand and anoint a winner before polling day. In this situation, justice will be done – there will be no manipulation, or, if there is, it will not make a huge difference to the overall outcome.

    Any other factors – VIII Wands, reversed

    Disharmony, quarrels, and rivalry all threaten to upset your plans. Rushed commitments come back to haunt you, and impatience could lead you into other choices that you will equally regret. Be cautious, and wait for the conditions to change.

    C: Labour can always rely on difficulties within their opponent’s camp to work in their favour, and this card suggests that although the chaos around the situation has reached the intensity that has toppled a cabinet minister, this will be balanced out by bloodletting elsewhere because of equal corruption within the opponents’ camps. All this means here is that rushing around finding scapegoats for equivocal results suggest it may turn into a bloodbath but not as a result of these elections. The situation here is of a balloon being let down gently rather than popped – Labour are in danger of going out with a whimper, rather than a bang.

    Outcome in general going forward – II Cups, reversed

    Disappointment, quarrels and misunderstandings threaten to end in the breakdown of partnerships either in love or work. Beware of rash decisions you will later regret. It’s worth trying to work through the difficulties first.

    C: In keeping with the idea that Labour have a chance to hold on here, the future looks dangerous but the results are nevertheless rather more equivocal than originally thought. This card shows a dip for Labour, and a breakdown in personal communication within the Cabinet, but not a complete meltdown. These elections will be better than predicted – still not brilliant, still not earth-shatteringly triumphant. Labour will limp on into the summer – but the really torrid part is still to come. Watch this space, as people say nowadays. Perhaps even Owlperson will be allowed his own slot, but I will do the other readings in this particular series myself.

    3 June 2009 - I have since persuaded Louise to use cards without printed commercial meanings. Much simpler.

    --Clarence.

     

  • 3 June 2009 - Political card of the day


    My guides have given me leave to start this again.

    Today's card is the Page of Cups.

    Clarence: This is usually associated with learning but here it represents contrition and acceptance of one's fate - the cup is held out to request filling up for the Page's own benefit, rather than acting as a steward to his master. What goes into the cup only today will tell, but with Gordon Brown's cabinet in a mess (for him Death, reversed suggests a dangerous period, one which may ultimately be fatal but one, Clarence says, which will see things utterly collapse elsewhere as well - if he goes down, so does Westminster) and Cameron repaying £350,000 in capital gains tax (for him, The Star reversed - it made a huge impact on the Tories' poll ratings, and Cambo can find no warmth or joy in Brown's own debacle), the Page represents our political class waiting for the public's verdict tomorrow at the polls.

    Please vote - it's the only way of sending a message and it may turn out to be the best time to ram that message home to all the incumbent parties. Please also vote as you do in the Europeans for the local elections: independent/minor party councillors can be a lot more constructive at local level than at national level. I still support the big two for government - which one depends on the time the election is held - because we do need governments which are able to do things rather than the sclerosis often associated with weak coalitions. I don't have a vote at the local poll tomorrow, but I would vote Liberal Democrat against the sitting Tory I helped to elect in a by-election in 2005, because somehow Cameron has to repay more than just his three hundred grand pilferings from the public purse. He cannot run the country with any credibility either, and the sooner we get a strong and clean opposition leader who hasn't been fiddling around with his mortgage, the better.

    I hear the 31st cheapest is still available.

  • 2 June 2009 - Permission granted - thanks to Arctic Tern


    smithmp

    A wonderful image from Arctic Tern's fantastic and witty blog. I asked Arctic if I could nick it for mine and he said yes. Terns are nice like that :).

    There are two Angela Smiths, by the way - this is the Sheffield Hillsborough MP. Owlperson notes this is interesting as the local football team who play at the doomed Hillsborough stadium are nicknamed the Owls. Angela Smith, he notes with interest, is one herself.

  • 2 June 2009 - Latest victims, as usual.


    The next head on the guillotine is Bob Ainsworth's. More TVs, a sofa, the usual...bung it all on, no-one will know. Blah, blah, blah.

    The picture shows him standing beside a fighter jet - he is (currently) minister for the Armed Forces - which would have been funny if it had been claimed on expenses.

    Clarence is going to do the honours for his card.

    Strength, reversed

    Clarence: A loss of control, pure and simple. Ainsworth had the means to pay for these items himself (though it would indeed have been comical to have the jet claimed on expenses, I doubt it would have got passed the Fees Office, who reduced his claims for the TV and sofa to the maximum possible), but chose not to listen to his own conscience and thus must confront and be confronted over his own excessive troughminstering. It must be noted that the card also refers to the ease to which he is jettisoned, though this will have to wait for the moment as it is not as tortuous or outrageous as the dry rot or the Kirkbride files, which could themselves be a novel worthy of Jane Austen.

  • 2 June 2009 - Tories crash to 30% in latest Independent poll - fact or fiction?


    The Tories, after remaining fairly consistently at 40% for the last couple of polls in other newspapers, and running a 22% lead over Labour in one of the polls released yesterday, have now crashed to 30% in the latest Independent ComRes poll, which is their monthly survey and shows a 15% collapse in support since the beginning of the expenses scandal. The poll was taken over the weekend - 29-31 May - and may have therefore been influenced by the revelations on Sunday of Cameron's own problematic mortgage: it's the only thing that really changed for the Tories over that weekend and seems a plausible explanation. Monday's polls would have been completed before the Mail on Sunday revelations.

    I have written one part of a new series covering the coming European and local elections in detail, and am working with another guide, my kestrel totem called Clarence (who does prefer to appear as a human, since he has had one life in Victorian England as a merchant in East London along the lines, he says, of Arthur Clennam in Little Dorrit). Clarence, being more detached from life than Owlperson, and less Tory (he voted Liberal, he says), can assist better, though he does want to say rather more about me than I would like to publicise at the moment. However, fair dues. He is my guide after all.

    I am going to use him to help analyse this poll since it is a surprising result (I had to really look hard at the cover to credit it, or to work out whether it was like the previous Independent poll whose headline figures were still at 40% for the Tories but when you put in those who had said they weren't going to vote at all it fell to 31%) but this is a headline figure. It is taking a long time to get my head around this.

    And Howard is in the clear - as the 31st cheapest MP despite gardening bills that initially made my eyes bleed and caused my own Southampton moment yesterday. I can look my blog posts about him in the eye and say - well, I told myself that a long time ago, I was just too scared to look. Owlperson is very happy at this too.

    All right, enough about my misty-eyed fantasies ;). Clarence urges me onward and is going to set me the questions to ask the cards for this. I am channelling him directly here.

    Situation - III Cups

    Clarence: the card here refers to the situation being far more fluid than previously thought. The Three of Cups does normally represent fun and laughter, but here the energies need to be read rather than the "meaning" that people often ascribe. The energies are in free motion. Usually this translates into fun and gaiety, but there is a warning here that water is sloshing around and stirring up emotions which are in direct opposition to each other - the delight of the 22% lead tempered and opposed by the misgivings over Cameron's mortgage which have seemingly caused this collapse.

    Clarifying here, it is possible to see that The Tower means that the collapse in the poll rating has come about because the leadership was far too complacent and having too much fun in the government's collapse. A direct omen of things to come and one which the Tories would do well to understand that from here on in things get a lot messier for Cameron than they promised before the weekend.

    Louise is also asking me why she didn't feel this coming. I am saying that she has shut herself off to the possibilities in this situation because she doesn't want to believe what is going on. The thrill of the chase I ordered a halt to when the revelations about Howard came out - something too personal for her to relate just yet - but for her protection I made sure she took time out from posting to re-orientate this blog away from a wild chase after errant MPs towards a more constructive and more detached analysis of the situation.

    Veracity of figures - IPSOS MORI (Tories 40%, 22% lead) - The Hermit

    Clarence: The Hermit symbolises withdrawal to an inner space and the development of an understanding distinct from others. The way it relates to the IPSOS MORI poll giving the Tories a 22% lead is that this is taken in conditions which have since changed. It was true to itself, but there is no longer a clear distinction between the Tories and Labour since Cameron himself was revealed to have more than a £680 wisteria clearance bill. It holds its own truth, but a truth which has gone for the mean time.

    Veracity of figures - COMRES (Tories 30%, 8% lead, neck-and-neck with Others combined) - VII Cups, reversed

    C: The upright Seven is indicative of a veil drawn across the situation, either because we are not permitted to know, or that the outcome still depends on our own actions and the future is not fixed in this regard. (To those able to see perfectly, the future is as fixed as if it had already happened, because otherwise clairvoyance would not be possible. But to see perfectly, you have to have passed or have access to talents beyond the reach of many mortals. There are only a handful of people who have this perfect second sight, and I am not at liberty to transmit their names to Louise, though she knows one of them already.) The reversal of the card is the revelation of reality to those who have previously not been permitted to see it. Thus this poll is as relevant - or moreso - than the previous poll because of the change in atmosphere on Sunday as regards Cameron's own complicity in the scams the MPs were running. Suddenly his scrutiny committee might have the power to strip him of his seat. Suddenly the future looks much more shaky for stability at the top of the Conservative Party, which we will read for in a moment. All we need to know here is that a veil has been lifted at last and there now follows a reorientation on a par with Howard's own "Southampton moment".

    Underlying reactions - IV Pentacles, reversed

    C: The Four of Pentacles reversed means that what had been carefully gathered in and was being successfully defended has been disrupted and scattered through a lack of care and attention to what kind of revelation was possible. Cameron appears in a shaky situation because of this poll and it comes as a shock - because yesterday's result was such a good one - within as well as without. It is a reaction against his leadership because it was his mortgage that was revealed to be a scam. He finds himself being investigated by his own committee and it's having reverberations internally as well as externally.

    Underlying movements - V Pentacles, reversed

    C: The underlying motion here is to try and regain the initiative and repair the damage done, as would be expected of anyone else. We always have to give him a right of reply to this. The Five upright would suggest blindness to the real situation, possibly that people were going to surprise him and vote Tory anyway on June 4 and later on. But reversed, the card reverses the situation. Foxy can bluster his way out of this, try and manoeuvre because he still has hope and the ability to respond. But he may not really understand the real extent or damage his mortgage has done the party.

    Roots of the situation - Ace of Swords

    C: The situation took one slash to ruin Foxy's day. The Ace of Swords can be indicative in some situations of a decisive move - at least a superficial move, like Foxy's immediate announcements following the initial revelations - by the person who is moving. The Ace here, however, says that something decisive has been done to Cameron - and his tail has been cut clearly off. Perhaps Louise can be prevailed upon to post the ballad "Mr Fox" to illustrate how people are caught out in this manner. It would be entertaining to see how life often does imitate art in this and other situations.

    Seeds sown by the poll - King of Swords

    C: This card depicts a judge or the exercise of judgement in legal matters. Here it depicts a person - I know who it is, Louise is still perhaps in denial about this so I will refrain from saying his name - who L has often used this card to represent. However it more intensively represents the action of those who have the power to put these polls into effect - and the damage the Mail on Sunday really did do to Cameron, despite the media's efforts to swallow it in the hope that their preferred candidate's path into Downing Street would be smoothed rather than roughened too by this disastrous turn of events.

    Advice to Cameron - V Cups

    This card upright gives Cameron a warning, but also a solution. Louise says this often suggests that something of the situation remains. True enough. But on the other hand, Cameron must not blind himself to the poll - he has spilled most of the goodwill since the scandal broke and squandered it on what Simon Heffer called "fatuous" pronouncements in the illusion that he himself would not be questioned by the powers-that-be at the Telegraph. Howard was 31st cheapest; his successor has been found wanting, and the destructive nature of this scandal means that the situation will last for Cameron. The card therefore tells him to focus on this poll and perhaps build himself back up. However, we do not hold out much hope of that - he has never been a good learner.

    Advice to Tories - VI Cups, reversed

    Again, accept that the good times have drained away and make steps to solve the problems in the leadership. I needn't go much further on this - the party's arrogance has cost it a lot of votes now and the downturn in their fortunes is dangerous and should, in the traditional meaning of this card, shock them out of their hazy complacency and arcadian abundance into the reality and enormity of what has happened. They have been cast out of the Garden of Eden and must live in the real world, not the world they had so carefully built around themselves and their fawning media mirrors.

    Warning to Cameron - The Emperor

    This Major Arcana card suggests that Cameron is now facing a crisis of his own leadership akin to that which has plagued many Conservative leaders, and that he does not have the capabilities now to right himself before he is hammered at the polls. He is no longer top dog and must earn any respect he does get from the media.

    Warning to Tories - The Lovers

    This is a reflection of the reversed Six above and as we unpack the bad but vague cards we saw for the Tories earlier on in the spring it becomes inevitable that they will soon have to go through the process they have been through before - choosing someone who is capable of leading them back to government. Cameron was too vague for too long - they need to think about depth as well as breadth and transform the situation into a lasting union rather than a cheap fix that boils over or goes cold on them. There are still possibilities and this poll makes them all the likelier.

    Results on Thursday (briefly as we will be looking at this in more depth later) - locals - II Swords, reversed

    C: Upright, the Two of Swords means perfect but stagnant equilibrium. Balance here is disrupted, and although the party had a lot of confidence going in to this set of elections, the last month has erased a lot of that poise. It is not catastrophic as yet, but the loss of vital balance will have largely disrupted the waltz towards Downing Street that had long been the Tories' best hopes for 2010. It is not clear from this single card that the result will be catastrophic, but the stakes have been so high for so long that anything less than what they most want is going to cause problems for the leadership and destabilise the overall political situation further.

    Results on Sunday - Euro-elections - Ace of Pentacles, reversed

    C: As a result this is the gift denied. There is a disappointment here, because of the difficulties of responding to such a problematic poll there is a reverse momentum here where Cameron cannot guarantee a good result because of the scandal and because of his own fumblings. There is the possibility for a result which denies both parties the ultimate prize and provokes difficulties for both leaderships.

    Direction afterwards - VIII Pentacles

    C: All I will say about this card is that after the elections there is the possibility to repair the damage. This does not mean Cameron is wholly safe. It means that damage done can be rectified. At whose expense and to whose advantage, it is not possible to convince this medium so we must wait for it to be shown what kind of repairs are necessary.

    Solution - The Wheel of Fortune, reversed

    C: Upright, the Wheel is largely a good omen, suggesting that events again take control and drive things forward. As we have seen a bombshell like the "expenses files" can really shatter the status quo overnight, even though at the beginning we upstairs wondered whether the papers would do justice to the Tories as well as Labour. The reversed Wheel drives things downward; more events, more twists compound the already unstable situation and make it difficult to predict what will survive of Cameron's project after the elections as well as before. At least we know that both parties are equally in the firing line - and that there are people who have been spared the full forces of nature given that they have kept up their presences in the places where politics matters - the community, the party, the country and their families and friends. It is them who will ultimately prosper, not the hucksters who have driven us to despair and sold us fake options to solve the issues involved.

    Outcome for Cameron - Temperance

    C:Things are not over yet, there is some stability in Cameron's position, but not much - it flows from one cup to another. Temperance can be seen as a healing card, but he will have to recover and repair his position and prove himself to be a genuine leader rather than someone selling the public fakes from off the back of a lorry. He needs to think about his position and prove his worth to the party, otherwise they will defenestrate him too.

    Outcome for Tories - II Cups, reversed

    C: This card clearly shows a parting of the ways and interpersonal difficulties. It is not an auspicious card for a leader who has lost touch and lost credibility. If Cameron can still deliver the goods, it might not get too difficult. But if he cannot - and he may now not do so - then the Tories will always act to bring the party back into contention, and we know from long experience what that means.

  • 2 June 2009 - Pulling the plug on Jacqui Smith


    Jacqui Smith is to quit as Home Secretary.

    The Guardian just printed this on its online bulletin so there are no real details as yet (1.54pm, Tuesday) but I needed to post this even though I decided to take a break until the Euro-elections were over (for reasons of sanity, burnout, and my own Southampton moment yesterday). No such luck I'm afraid - not while the woman who started all this has finally done the decent thing and thrown the baby out with her dirty bathwater.

    No doubt someone will make another Downfall parody about this but for the moment I'm off for a walk.

    Gurgle.

  • 31 May 2009 - Tide coming in for Cameron's front-bench: Eleanor Laing and the leader himself


    Not surprisingly, while getting rid of errant backbenchers and grandees, Vulpes Vulpes has only said that his own £22k dip into the public purse was within the rules. (I don't normally link to the Daily Fail or the Fail on Sunday, but surprisingly enough none of the broadsheets seem to want to touch this...yet.) So was the duck island, but Viggers had to go. The problem with this is first the absurdity of some of the claims, second the sheer amount of some of them (this fits into the second, less amusing category - playing with big stakes here) and thirdly that they ever were within the rules. Cameron is now properly tainted by this regardless of whether rules were followed. After all, Margaret Moran's claims were within the rules, as were many of Julie Kirkbrides'. What is sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander.

    Short spread for this - the first barbeque of the season is about to get under way.

    Situation with DC's mortgage - X Cups

    The perfect solution. I feel this has more to do with the mortgage itself than with the actual issue of it making it into print. It solved problems for DC at the time and enabled the purchase of a house perhaps beyond what he could reasonably afford at the time, and thus balanced his need for grandeur with the reality of being a backbench Tory MP. He is worth £3m and his wife must be worth a lot as well - but this was funded through the public purse. Difficult questions arising from a happy and promising situation for him which were not anticipated at the time.

    Question - Queen of Wands

    The question now is reaction to it and how people will think of him further. He has been superficially strong during this scandal, making the right moves at the right time, but Conservative commentators such as Simon Heffer and Peter Oborne (in yesterday's Mail) take issue with what he has done than with what he has said. Heffer dismissed his pronouncements on government by SMS as fatuous. Peter Oborne, more worryingly, will not now vote Tory on June 4 - but for the Jury Team instead (the campaign launched by independent candidates whose PEB was firmly independent of any coherent policy sense about what these people really want from their government, presumably the whole point about politics); this temporary conversion is because Cameron will not sack his shadow cabinet colleagues such as Francis Maude or Michael Gove with the same determination as he has - rather fortuitously - cleaned out the bedblockers on the backbenches. (Owlperson remarks it is fortuitous for the next leader of the Conservative Party as well, as these people needed to go, but also acknowledges my concerns of foxy-powerbuilding in empty seats. Owlie responds that a lot of the people Foxy has approached to power-build with him turned him down.)

    So here is the card of responding to a situation rather than being in control of it (as in the King of Wands). The question then is - the response to this revelation matters more than the actual revelation itself, as although I do get the image of a backdraft effect (the effect that a sudden waft of oxygen has on a raging fire) I am loathe to say that this really is Vulpendammerung quite yet, though I must note the Tens of Swordses that came out specifically for Cameron during the end of April and early May surprised me because they didn't seem attached to any particular event card except the equally opaque Wheel of Fortune. Now the situation hangs in the balance and depends on reaction, if any, to this situation rather than it directly being fatal for the poor Volpone.

    Answer - The Chariot

    A building of powerful, unstoppable momentum, and I get the feeling that this is inherently destructive, though it may not seem so now. The Chariot can be a powerful force for good. It can motivate people to achieve some sort of stability through perpetual motion, and through just going so fast the balance is maintained. I suppose this is what Cameron wants to do. He wants to leave Brown in a cloud of dust. But slow and steady often wins the race - the Chariot card is where wheels often come off, rather than stay on.

    Direction - Ace of Cups reversed

    The good drains out of the situation before too long. There is a certain susceptibility hanging round all MPs. Brown's cabinet is damaged beyond repair, probably at least for Jacqui Smith and Hazel Blears. Cambo's shadow cabinet cannot sustain their assault on backbenchers if they too are seen to have abused the same rules. The looming elections on June 4 suggest difficulties - to put it mildly - for all major parties which cannot be written off by street-smart journalists talking about "revelation fatigue", as if they can somehow now put the genie back in the bottle before it really destroys the whole place. The cup to me looks as if it is about to spill something more toxic yet, and that for the moment the lid is still on. For how long it can be inverted yet defy gravity, I don't know. But it can't do so forever.

    Solution - V Cups reversed

    The Fives represent some sort of imbalance, some sort of difficulties, and some sort of grief or grievance. The Five of Cups is a card where something is mourned, but something, out of sight, still remains for the person involved. This inversion means that the loss is greater than that which is still there - and that which is still there has too, in a way, been lost or squandered, even without the person knowing it was there. (The Rider-Waite image is of a person crying over spilt milk from three cups, with his back turned on the two remaining cups.) Here the solution is painful, as there are no resources, no evident alternatives, to fall back on, but something must be done to remove the grief and anger in the situation and mourn the inevitable loss.

    Outcome - The Star

    For now there is hope that this might pass Cambo by in some way, that he will be judged not guilty in claiming this money and that it will not catch light. For the moment at least there are no intense questions to be asked - the flames lap a bit higher round Eleanor Laing, but since she is Shadow Cabinet - she'll survive in office. In treating the situation as harmless, DC may calm it down and turn it into something which is not discussed as intensely, but if the worst comes to the worst he is no longer a paragon of virtue and can no longer protest any serious innocence while these questions remain unanswered without a mea culpa - because we are talking morals here, not legalities, and because he yesterday called for those with dodgy mortgage claims to be investigated by Scotland Yard. The brown stuff has not yet hit the fan but it is still looking questionable.

  • 30 May 2009 - Political card for tomorrow, 31/05

    Again I have to work tomorrow morning (an assistant newsagent's life is never dull) and since I spent this evening in the agreeable company of Ian Keable, master magician (who is worth a look if he ever comes to town - the things he can do go beyond conventional magician's props and into the realm of bona fide psychic talent), I decided to do tomorrow's card today just to make sure I touched base.

    Judgement

    Again, another day in which a direct assault is made from on high to those active. I think it may refer to the two polls tomorrow, both of which are miserable for Labour (and only slightly less so for the Tories, who have not gained massively from Labour's discomfort; and the Tories have fallen below 30% on European election voting intentions, which could have a knock-on effect on the local elections as well). It also may go beyond mere numbers and bring down the wrath of some sort of God out there, angry that a £5 church collection was, yes, claimed on expenses.

    Sacrilege.

    Good night :).

  • 29 May 2009 - Away from the expenses scandal for a moment


    Two senior Tories have turned on Cameron over his policy of withdrawal from the EPP.

    Lord Patten and Lord Brittan have attacked the alliance with the far-right Polish and Czech parties instead of more mainstream Conservatives within the parliament.

    IDS withdrew the Tories from the EPP and Michael Howard took them back again. (Sounds so far like the Grand Old Duke of York). Foxy has been threatening this for years - it was the subject of one of William Hague's junkets to Brussels in early 2006 - but has apparently never actually done anything (sounds familiar). The "BNPski" parties in the Parliament may be less federalist than the Christian Democrats, but the problem for me is that without engaging with Europe, Cameron cannot hope to govern the country effectively. A governing party must be willing to put country before party - as Cameron himself admits in the Telegraph Q&A session he's just done - but this is just taking the party further to the right on all fronts. If the party cannot work with European institutions as they currently are, how do they expect to reform them?

    It might not prompt a Southampton moment for Cameron - the focus is not as intently on Europe as it was in 2004 - but it is the first time for many years I've seen Europe cause divisions in the party, and since the attack comes through a major newspaper it might just help expose Foxy as the fraud he is - or it might make him come up with some sensible and concrete policies. We can, perhaps, but hope for either outcome.

    A reading, then.

    Situation - The Devil, reversed

    This has the potential to be a big blow to Cameron, who has done well because he has assembled a going concern in the party and escaped major criticism for so long that I thought the party was dead from the neck downward. The Devil is intensified and his negative effect on proceedings here throws the cat among the pigeons when Cambo can least afford it. Jerrold Donington - my father-confessor of a spiritual counsellor - tells me also that the Devil represents a surprise element. In his reversed form, this is quite shocking indeed.

    Appearance to the media - VI Cups, reversed

    A gentle consensus is shattered and the Europhiles who supported Michael Howard - indeed, as Owlperson points out, he got more support from the "grandees" (at least those in Major's cabinet) because he was of their generation, whereas IDS and Hague they regarded as mere upstarts - are sharper in tone with Cameron when it comes to the Euro-crunch. Although they have waited until now to make their voices heard, the media may have calculated this point in the campaign allows the maximum effect on polling day without giving Cameron enough time to respond properly to Patten and Brittan's concerns; the media realises this and drops the bomb now rather than in a week's time - or a week ago when Cambo looked stronger on the expenses scandal than he has done since.

    Appearance to the public - Knight of Pentacles

    It may not matter much, since this card suggests the impact will be limited despite the cool timing, but it does actually start a small, genteel rebellion against Cameron's isolationist policy. The quest here - Knight cards often represent someone adventurous enough to strike out with a general aim in sight, and experiment with - here at least - the public mood - is worthwhile (hence the Pentacles) as the Tories here risk looking unable to govern properly within or with Europe and risk marginalising themselves in the hope that they can remain ideologically pure rather than like a coherent government in waiting. The quest may yet falter, but it is on the move.

    Appearance to the Conservative party grassroots - II Swords, reversed

    To the grassroots - those outside the Westminster village - the balance has been disrupted again overr the same issue and this is dangerous at a point where the Tories have created a fragile coalition based on ruling the country rather than overruling themselves (or threatening to do so ;) - Owlperson). With this balance overturned, things could still get choppy even during and after polling day.

    Appearance within the leadership - Death, reversed

    This is what the current leadership most feared - that the grandees would not let them promote this agenda because of the desire not to rock the boat prior to the general election. No such luck. They nearly managed it - but not quite. They face the prospect of splits opening in the party at a time at which it is extremely vulnerable over the expenses scandal, with most of the more ridiculous and complicated claims coming from the Tory benches. The leadership is in denial, and this denial needs to be confronted - with all the messy results that manifested in 2004 possible and maybe even likely.

    Appearance to the grandees in question - The Lovers, reversed

    The situation has got intolerable enough such that the grandees had to overturn the cosy consensus of denial which had built up over Europe. A constructive approach from Michael Howard did not draw their fire and he survived because of it.. Cameron's problem is that in an attempt to manipulate the party into doing his will elsewhere he has had to appease it in this area, not understanding the isolation he would face in Europe as a result. Thus the grandees - government men themselves - have allowed themselves to descend from on high and disrupt the cosy cartel within the party leadership. Another dangerous major arcana trump for Cameron.

    Internal appearance and issues within the party itself - The World

    Here this card promotes the idea of a certain fate and destiny that the party has to face up to before it can continue along the happy road into government. It is made to face up to what is going on with the European side of these elections, neglected up until now because of the towering expenses inferno. It hits at a bad time - and hits the party where it hurts, or where it should hurt. It allows the party to confront the issue, but the happy side of the World is dragged down by the preponderance of reversed Major Arcana cards in this sequence such as to dent the release and ecstasy that this card normally represents.

    Roots of the situation - VII Wands, reversed

    The reversed Seven shows issues which, having been left to fester and blindly ignored, have come back to, in common parlance, "bite you on the bum". This was inevitable, but I reckoned it was unlikely because of the dominance of the Tories in the polls. Not so any more. The Tories' lack of discussion on Europe will return to haunt the party again and again until it stops taking the easy way out and acquiescing to the seductive isolationist agenda. It will never regain any sort of power before this issue is dealt with. Period.

    Seeds sown by the situation - Page of Pentacles, reversed

    Still no succour for anyone involved. This card of growth and genuine "green shoots of recovery" in a reversed aspect means that hard work is wasted - the seeds fall on stony ground. A disruption to the game now undoes three and a half years' worth of precarious balance on this issue because of the overriding idea - "power at any costs". There is no time to reverse the policy, and this leads to a poor harvest in the end.

    Advice to Cameron - King of Wands, reversed

    There is no time to do anything - the King of Wands, usually so nimble and quick to strike down opposition, is unable to think on his feet on this occasion. Cameron must stand his ground - he can't reverse his policy now. And it may not be enough to do anything very much for his other policies because even Simon Heffer has called them fatuous. With his classic manoeuvrability dented, he must think very hard about what to do next.

    Warning to Cameron - King of Swords, reversed

    What Cambo says now is crucial - overreaction would see him damaged in public, and underreaction would open wounds regardless of what he really wants. He is cool under pressure - so cool as to be frozen - but this card suggests here he should avoid rash words and avoid a Southampton moment by perhaps allowing the grandees to say their piece and leave the stage. The card, however, carries an ominous warning from his predecessor that it is difficult to escape the debate of Europe for too long and still look like a credible prime minister.

    Direction - IX Swords, reversed

    This can only get worse. A storm like this can be weathered easily in normal times, but this card is like an impacted tooth - the pain won't go away and won't just be wiggled out of position like one which has just died. This card suggests temporary difficulties becoming more permanent, and pain from this is bound to follow, even after June 4.

    Solution - Page of Cups

    There is a solution to this, and it is to be accepting of other viewpoints and to resist the temptation to smear or talk down the grandees' concerns. It is incumbent now on Cameron to think about what he is doing and learn to risk his party's wrath by engaging with Europe and saying no to the fascist isolationists who make up his proposed new grouping. Will he do this? Are bears catholic? Does the Pope shit in the woods?

    Outcome - Justice, reversed

    The issue is not given the consideration it requires, and thus justice here works against those who bury their head in the sand and pretend a fundamental part of Britain's foreign alliances does not exist. The potential of this card is to ruin Cameron's day in another, and potentially devastating manner. Not before time, in my view.

  • 29 May 2009 - Political card of the day for 30 May


    I have to work early tomorrow, and will be out in the evening at a magic-comedy show at the local village hall, so am doing tomorrow's card of the day today.

    The X Cups, reversed was very stubborn and so this is tomorrow's prediction: sunny, with a few scattered showers.

    Things are getting very tense now the European elections are fast approaching, and there is an upset in the general propaganda that the two main parties are peddling, along with Nick Clegg's anger, only slightly less faked because of what his MPs have been up to. I do sense a slight lull in this over the weekend, but only a slight one - there are still more people to come and another resignation has followed tonight: Elliot Morley is to step down from Parliament after his little altercations with the media and fees office.

    This card may also have to do with the obscene amount of "golden goodbye" to be paid out to the miscreants who have jumped ship. Although Owlperson notes that it is not easy to wind things up without assistance, particularly in the event of being voted out rather than just retiring, but he still admits there is a deep need from the public for vengeance and that those who have actually been found out to have misused the system should have their assets sequestered to pay for this golden goodbye during the period prior to the general election. Those who have merely made unethical claims should have these allowances paid by the state and should not actually be allowed to claim for them. This needs to be formalised, but there is a unique chance that this is possible at the moment, particularly if Labour and the Conservatives suffer heavily in Thursday's polls.

    Here, in the reversed Ten, the cups are running dry and the potential for anyone to make any personal gain from this scandal, whether in the sense of personal egotism (David Cameron, Esther Rantzen) or propagandistic benefit (the PR enthusiasts banging away about a non-sequitur depriving the public of the discussion of just what should now be done, perhaps to prosecute those who may be guilty of outright fraud), is running out.

    A brilliant idea came to me the other day - Jacqui Smith's bath plug. Rather missed now the comedy aspect of her porn films on expenses has passed into this terrible, terrible 9/11 scenario, someone really did pull the plug on all of this.

    Gurgle. 

  • 29 May 2009 - Previously on the Daily Politics... Downfall, the Smeargate version


    Another Downfall parody video from before the expenses scandal, during Smeargate.

    Many a true word is spoken - or dubbed on - in jest.

    You can truly never have enough Downfall parodies, can you?

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eNrBqrNhdGU

  • 29 May 2009 - Everyone's favourite Downfall meme goes expenses...


    Trying not to offend anyone who could be offended, someone has put more subtitles onto the scene in Downfall where Adolf Hitler finds out that the grand counteroffensive has failed.

    No comment, but it was as ROFL as any of these takes on the masterful film which, had it been done in English or dubbed, would never have provided so much entertainment long after the original stopped resonating so much.

    Watch at your own risk. Owlperson has sensitive issues with Hitler, so in deference to him I'm not going to try and embed it, but enjoy.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gHbNPlDAUwE

  • 29 May 2009 - Best of the rest - Bill Cash faces the moolah


    Bill Cash is the next person in the spotlight, and it seems it is Cash by name, cash by nature. Poor man. My uncle is the former Tory mayor (and current Independent councillor) in his Stone constituency, and has had some choice words for Cash in the past - they would be unprintable if Uncle Phil used such language himself. Owlperson concurs with his assessment and is happy to see the usual suspects come trooping through the cash-for-just-about-everything lobby. David Cameron says Cash has serious questions to answer if, I'm sure, he can be bothered to ask them. Letitia Cash was featured in an article about Tory women five and a half years ago which inspired me to buy a belted mackintosh which, like my Tory aspirations at the moment, is missing the belt that held it together and rather makes the old Mary Whitehouse Experience character Milky Milky look suave and dapper.

    To even the scoreline a bit, Rosie Winterton is the next Labour scalp here.

  • 29 May 2009 - Political card of the day


    The political card of the day is a Major Arcana "trump", which signifies big movements, although I feel this means for the moment behind the scenes rather than in front of the press.

    Justice

    The Justice card differs from the nominally similar Judgement card in being man-made arbitration and its logical conclusion rather than divine intervention or outside force imposing an ajudication by force. Justice here means that those people who are in control have their say, and decide on the basis of clear sight and fair play. The card depicts the familiar figure of Justice - a stern woman with sword and scales - with the only difference from the modern depiction being she is unhindered by the customary blindfold. This is an earlier viewing of the figure of Justice; the blindfold is a modern interpretation of what Justice means.

    An illustration of this concept and its symbolism is the figure which adorns the gates of Dublin Castle (in Dublin, Ireland, natch...though since Leeds Castle is actually in Kent, it doesn't necessarily "go without saying"). The castle was the home of the Viceroy of Ireland during the period after Cromwell's seizure of the island and the period in which it was by and large independent but under the suzerainty of Great Britain (that changed in the early 1800s when Ireland was fully subjugated to Westminster and not released from that grip until the establishment of the Free State in the 1920s). It was the home of justice in Ireland - not just judicial justice but of the wider concept of government by the British puppet state under the "Kingdom of Ireland" and then as part of the union after home rule was abolished. Correspondingly, the figure of Justice stands looking out over the courtyard. She is as depicted on this card - without a blindfold, and with her head approvingly looking in the direction of the palace court itself.

    This is always taken by Irish nationalists to represent the notion that British justice, under whose auspices the figure was erected, was partial. The lack of a blindfold, both on the statuette and on the card in front of me, suggests that Justice entertains more than should enter normal due process of law. Juries are selected in this country on the basis of not knowing the defendant or plaintiff (Owlperson was a lawyer, he should know) and thus can arbitrate from a completely neutral point of view. However, the difference in this figure led some to regard the statue as symbolic in a direct manner that justice in Ireland was partial - to the British monarchy - and until something was done to re-establish not only home rule but full independence, then true impartial justice could never be done.

    However this concept of Justice here leaves out the idea that actually, Justice in this sense cannot be done unless we know all the facts; unless we can see the evidence before us. It is no surprise that this card falls on the day the Labour NEC "Star Chamber" meets - in secret, of course, but then this is a party matter and would be hampered by the scrutiny of the press who have their own separate agenda, largely involving the downfall of Labour and of the Prime Minister. Brown in my opinion can do a lot more thorough justice than Cameron can, largely because Cameron is too reliant on ad hoc systems played out in public with a semblance of a panel constructed with him and the whips, whilst the Labour NEC is constructed such that the membership of the party is represented in various forms and although controversies have arisen in the past (with the 1997 contest hotly fought by Peter Mandelson and Ken Livingstone largely the only time it has ever really hit the headlines; I voted, by the way, in that contest and voted for both of them) it has largely been a body ignored by the press. Labour's bureaucratic notion of justice therefore suggests that actually an unhindered justice is taking place here, and while perhaps the Irish nationalists may have had a point, the figure without a blindfold is actually a more historically important symbol of Justice than that with a blindfold (oops, almost wrote "blingfold", which would be interesting to see...maybe a spangly one which the contestants on The Apprentice could sell for us on QVC...).

    Owlperson notes that the Tories do things differently, preferring ad hoc controls on their party and debate. However, I put it to him that this has often backfired in the past. Although I often praise him for other reasons, I remember the seeming absurdity of what Michael Howard said to the party conference as Shadow Foreign Secretary in 1998.

    Last week, there was a debate on Europe at the Labour Party conference - behind closed doors!

    If you hold your debates in secret, you must have something to hide!

    Madam Chairman, we - we have nothing to hide. We are confident to be leading the debate.

    The Tories were leading the debate, indeed, but the chaos and devastation of the mid to late 1990s was such that perhaps the European debates should have been conducted in private - behind closed doors - and a consensus reached, at least at leadership level, to avoid the damaging divisions which ultimately - and sadly, when he had moved into a position of proposing his own moderate Euro-scepticism as an alternative to the reeking Europhobia which has come back to taunt the party with the prospect of sharing a group with the "BNPski" parties of Eastern Europe - damaged his own leadership in 2004 because he could not come to grips with his own party's wilful determination to have that debate in public and not in private. Where Cambo falls down is not having that debate at all and giving us potential Conservative voters the worst of all possible worlds.

    It was also symptomatic, Owlperson tells me, of other divisions in the Tory Party at the time, and cannot be taken in isolation as Labour is as equally split by Europe as the Tories, but Labour managed to avoid the debate or subsume it into internal party cohesion because they were - and still are - broadly united on other fronts. The Tories lack a single unifying element to their ideology which keeps them together during rough times. Labour have the explicit commitment to social justice which keeps them focussed on achieving and maintaining power, and this to a certain extent still holds the party together long after it should have collapsed, as the Tories did in 1992-1997, into a dysfunctional, squabbling mess. No amount of media manipulation or fire on the leadership has broken Labour ranks, even at Brown's nadir last summer. Johnson too might have done a Miliband and fired the first salvo too soon coming out in favour of PR, and Owlperson says the last person Labour will turn to in this crisis is Alan Johnson, who has no ridiculous expense claims but a skeleton lurking further back in his closet which will see him destroyed too. There will be few survivors from this who are currently on any frontbench; OP is saying he is working hard to save people on both Labour and Tory benches but that those who take over will by and large come from the middle ranks, and former cabinets, as anyone inside the current Cabinet or Shadow Cabinet are doomed to the same oblivion as their leaderships.

    Returning to the main issue, Labour's careful deliberation may deliver more lasting and concrete justice but the Queen of Wands, as a clarifying card, suggests that a lack of control over the situation in general may mean they are only now able to respond or react to changing circumstances, and not even being in full control over the responses to events means that the full extent of Labour's response to the crisis may be to exacerbate it rather than bring it under human management.

    What Owlperson and other spirit guides feel - if we can bring them down to earth a bit and make them focus on actual events rather than the view from upstairs, though I get the feeling they are enjoying this as much or even more than we are - is that this is a shift to do with 2012 and to do with another version of 1688 - and that the expenses scandal is a tip of an iceberg, and the catalyst for a really destructive shake-up of the political system. It is not something that can be palmed off by the perpetrators with PR or their own favourite solution (government by SMS being the best Cambo can come up with), it will need the sheep separated from the goats and the ability to sort Parliament out, sort the government out, and bring lasting, genuine Justice to bear. Nick Clegg's proposal that there should be no summer recess until this is sorted is fairly prescient (makes you wonder what he's been taking) and although I consider his article in the Grauniad yesterday to be just another partisan manipulation of justice and judgement, it gets close to the truth of what will be going on this summer and what we now have to do to re-enact 1688.

    In summary - Justice takes many forms, but here she works with the facts and figures, with her eyes open, not blindfolded by cynical partisanship. Expect intense fireworks, but only after the deliberation has today taken place.

  • 28 May 2009 - Julie Kirkbride has gone, and taken Margaret Moran with her


    This just in. Christopher Fraser has also done the decent thing and is standing down.

    Good riddance to Julie. Margaret ... not sure I can say the same, as I said, though she should have done the decent thing weeks ago.

    I may still sell my now useless personal testimonial from Margaret on eBay, whether I can find it or not; since it became redundant five years ago when I crossed the floor, I don't know. Apparently I am good at fulfilling menial tasks. And I don't cheat on expenses either.  In fact when I worked voluntarily for the Labour party at their Millbank Tower HQ, I got my railcard paid for and £5 for lunch expenses. It ended up costing me 25p per day as a result. On some of these claims, I could have had lunch at the Ivy every day I was there in the summer of 1999.

    So where does this leave Esther Rantzen?

    One thing is certain, though, Middle England is not pleased. An otherwise respectable gentleman came into the shop this afternoon for a paper and when he got to the door and saw the poster with a photograph of John Redwood up there (presenting a large cheque from the local am-dram society's pantomime to the charity they were fundraising for), he made guns with his fingers and went postal at the photograph. The director of the panto, the man who gave us the photo in the first place, told me Redwood hadn't impressed him - that he'd been in and out in five minutes - long before the expenses scandal broke.

    Goodness knows what would have happened if we lived in Bromsgrove...

  • 28 May 2009 - Get lost, Julie...


    ...the only person you are kidding is yourself, and possibly the Conservative Party too. You've had too many cards off me, and they are all generally bad, so perhaps you should go now and

    Cameron is too spineless to get rid of you, evidently, but the longer he obfuscates on this, the more damage she does to the party and to him.

    Women like Laura Moffat, Teresa May and Fiona MacTaggart have been in parliament happily without scamming the taxpayer. Those three may live too close to London to be taking too much in second-home allowances, but there are enough Labour women MPs who don't claim much either and enough people in general who aren't tangled up in as much mess as you are.

    The more lies and spin this woman puts out, the more devastating she is to the Tories, in Bromsgrove and elsewhere.

    Meanwhile, Terry Waite is proposing himself as another independent in the Suffolk area. The VIII Pentacles, reversed suggests his effectiveness as an MP is questionable, because Owlperson says that he would do well in government - good experience, temperate views and honest projection of himself - but would not stand for a party which could potentially get there.

  • 28 May 2009 - Political card of the day - and yet more Julie...


    Today's card is quite a nice one -

    X Cups

    Things are resolved somewhat today - or appear to be resolved - in the best interests of everyone concerned. This card however brings the caveat that things are still only on the emotional, rather than practical, plane - there is little actual substance involved, unlike in the Ten of Pentacles.

    Julie Kirkbride continues to be a menace - she is now refusing to attend a public meeting. Personally I think she shouldn't have to go through this ritual humiliation - she should just be sacked, now, before she causes any more difficulties. Her card is the Knight of Pentacles, reversed - her personal ability to do anything remotely serious is running out, very fast, and she must know that even if she is not forced out, she will be perpetually damaged goods from now until she retires. She would be advised to take the quick way out - resignation from her seat voluntarily - without having to be made to walk the plank, either by Cameron or by her local party - because this would be the best way of protecting her future career prospects elsewhere. Neil and Christine Hamilton have not exactly suffered outside Parliament, but then their chutzpah is legendary, and Julie just looks pathetic now.

  • 27 May 2009 - Another day, another Julie story


    She is going to have to go before she takes Vulpes Vulpes down with her. Catching up with The Apprentice after Barcelona's stunning 2-0 defeat of Manchester United, and to be honest, the hat-trick needs to be wiping La Kirkbride off the map of Britain. What a 21 days it has been!

    In other news, the aptly named Sir John Butterfill, MP for Bournemouth, has made a £600,000 profit after playing the property market and avoiding CGT, and Lynne Jones - a leftwinger, for Christ's sake - is under scrutiny for wallpaper and interior decorating.

    For Kirkbride, The Hermit suggests she is now utterly isolated after her brother claimed on her expenses for adding an extra bedroom to her Bromsgrove mansion.

    For Butterball, sorry, Butterfill, VI Swords, reversed, suggests that he had further ambitions which are now in abeyance after this scandal has laid him low.

    And for Jones - VI Cups - which means that she might be spending more time with her furniture in future after she is called to account.

    Labour's NEC Star Chamber finally meets tomorrow to discuss all these deselections for their party, so perhaps we will finally see some root and branch clearance of the deadwood on their backbenches and frontbench to put the Conservatives to shame.

    I can't wait.

  • 27 May 2009 - Will Simon Heffer stand against Sir Alan Haselhurst?


    Simon Heffer, as we all know, is deciding whether to challenge Sir Alan Haselhurst, just like Esther Rantzen declaring her candidacy against her nemesis Margaret Moran. Presumably he understands that would cost him his Conservative Party membership, if indeed he has one. Owlperson can't tell me whether he does or not, but I'm looking forward to him declaring his candidacy and facing potential expulsion from the party that he may or may not be a member of - and if he is, and if he wins a seat, whether Cameron unctuously co-opts him as he did David Davis' campaign last summer.

    So will he really do so? And how would he do? Let's ask the cards.

    Past - Simon Heffer - The Star

    Heffer has always seen himself as a potential politician, and his dislike of Cameron comes out distinctly in his articles (though unfortunately this makes him a useless barometer for my purposes of measuring the health of the party). Regardless, he has previously had faith in the political system, and has always played the game through the ordinary channels. Going it alone might be difficult, but at least he has a commitment to core Conservative values, and would not be a bad choice for Saffron Walden as a deep Tory heartland constituency. Owlperson is more convinced that he is at least genuinely ambitious for political office rather than Rantzen's egomania being a particular handicap when it comes to working with the machine.

    Past - Sir Alan - Judgement, reversed

    Sir Alan has evaded justice this time, and although he has fulfilled Heffer's initial request by paying back the £12,000 misclaimed money for gardening assistance, there is a possibility Heffer might still stand. Evasion of justice is a feature of a lot of these cases: the most effective judgement must be at the ballot box and those who doubt they will be able to look their constituents in the eye have already done the decent thing. However Haselhurst, once upon a time tipped to be the next Speaker, cannot outrun Judgement for long, and Heffer might still stand despite the money being paid back.

    Present - Simon Heffer - Knight of Wands, reversed

    Heffer might well be pulling back from declaring his candidature. It looks as if his initial condition on Haselhurst has been fulfilled, and the reversed knight signifies here the ending or abortion of a quest. The Wands, by their nature, are not serious cards; they are flimsy and superficial and Heffer largely proposed himself in order to bounce Haselhurst into repayment. He may still find a political outlet - and follow in the footsteps of Boris Johnson; Owlperson will not rule anything out - but for the moment it looks as if he will not actually need to stand.

    Present - Sir Alan - The Lovers, reversed

    Sir Alan is not liked, and can find cold comfort in Heffer's refusal, as yet, to declare his candidature. He may still find the going rough, and the constituency going sour on him even if he keeps his place as the official Conservative candidate, but this is now a matter for him alone rather than duel between him and a Tory-aligned independent.

    Future - Simon Heffer - King of Cups, reversed

    Never say never, Owlperson is warning. However, this card, while not particularly comely, suggests Heffer will involve himself more in active service and less in onlooking, and may have been symptomatic of a desire to step forward as a more active participant. The King of Cups is a deep, emotional commander; he is Cameron's significator in my old Four Kings leadership spread (Blair being the King of Wands, Brown the King of Pentacles, and the King of Swords the potential insurgent who might yet emerge to derail the cosy oligarchy in British politics this term round; one must always keep a wild card handy because predictions are often rather off...I have a collection of "famous last words" dating back to Kinnock and Thatcher fighting out the 1991 general election...), but here he is more active than Cameron, and more strident than the laid-back Water king. (Another King of Cups is Ken Clarke, another is Barack Obama, while Boris Johnson is a King-of-Cups in waiting if he can transform the buffoon image into genuine statesmanship.) Heffer goes from commentator to action-man, but may not actually stand in this particular seat at this particular time.

    Future - Sir Alan - VIII Cups, reversed

    Sir Alan remains sat on Saffron Walden until the next election, but may have missed his chance to go out with dignity, to recognise that his time has passed and stand aside in favour of a younger candidate without the taint of the Parliament of Manure. (Ordure! Ordure!) This card in this aspect represents a stubborn refusal to move on, move up, move out or move over, and he will pay the price in the end.

    Result of candidacy decision - Page of Pentacles, reversed

    A potential political career is nipped in the bud, and Heffer will find other soil in which to plant his further ambitions. He has ideals rather than ideas, and may not be famous enough in the outside world - unlike Rantzen - to have the profile needed to clean up in Saffron Walden. I may yet be wrong - this card also suggests he currently has a seed to plant and just needs to find the right soil, and Owlperson says if he had the decision to make over candidacies, he would offer Heffer a safe seat somewhere else because of his character and ability to do the job, say, of a culture minister, without the idiocy that came with Johnson's disastrous first foray into political office. So right person, wrong time.

    Result of election in Saffron Walden - VII Cups, reversed

    The illusions of the electorate as to the probity of their safe Conservative MP are shattered and they now have a choice between someone - and someone else. If Haselhurst lasts the distance to the election (clarifying for this, the X Cups, reversed suggests maybe not) then there is a possibility that he may not survive even if he is opposed by a candidate without the profile even of Simon Heffer. The seat is a target for independent attention, and there might be a vacancy for another independent to rock the boat sooner rather than later.

  • 27 May 2009 - Blog of interest - Sack the Parties


    While I disagree with their stance, this interesting blog has some coherent criticism of the party system, particularly where it overlaps with the personalities of their current leaders. The system has been degraded over the past century, but there was never a golden age and the rise of the political parties has solidified the situation to the extent that David Cameron and Gordon Brown have been allowed to happen. The calcification of the political system has been down to personality, not policy or procedure.

    Personally political parties are necessary in a modern democracy to maintain some coherency of purpose and government; many "non-party" systems (such as Kenya under Arap Moi) are or were unstable and puppets of the president who maintained a show parliament. Any system where independents congregate is bound to splinter into factionalism; conversely, parties who maintained a solid bloc in opposition to a dictatorship, such as Solidarity in Poland, are almost bound to break up on entry to a democratic system, since the aims of a mass movement in totalitarian societies differ from the need for government in a new democracy. In fact, in most of Eastern Europe parties which proliferated after the end of communism re-amalgamated into larger blocs. The old communist parties in Poland and elsewhere also re-established themselves as democratic movements - in Poland from 1997 to 2005 Leszek Miller and Aleksandr Kwasniewski, both activists in the old PZPR (Polska Zjednoczona Partia Robotnikow, or the Polish United Workers' Party), ruled in conjunction with the new Social and Liberal Democrat Party, or SLD. I don't believe there is any system in the world which is truly democratic where political parties are not a feature of the landscape.

    If we are disillusioned and angry at the people currently in charge - as most of us are, my father having some choice epithets to throw at David Cameron's government-by-SMS plans last night - then the people in charge deserve prosecution and jailing, rather than the system redesigned to change the face of politics. The problem is Nadine Dorries and Julie Kirkbride, Margaret Moran, Alistair Darling and Shahid Malik, not FPTP, AV+, STV or the party system. Until this is acknowledged by all three party leaders then no justice will be done.

    We do not need text messages to tell us who voted for what - we're not stupid. We just need honest people, probably a codified constitution, and most certainly an election held on our terms. Owlperson's idea is just to give us martial law and a hand-cast ballot paper: Conservative, Labour, Liberal Democrat, and SNP/Plaid Cymru in their own areas. No names, no symbols, no manifestos, no independents with an ego the size of Luton, no nothing. A new parliament elected on current boundaries would be established Put the current parties into the hands of people who would act as caretakers through a constitutional convention and series of fraud trials, with 20 years' parliamentary service and Cabinet-level experience a must (peerages may have to be revoked but that would be a small price to pay). Then we'd see what the people really felt.

    If you think that is harsh for a few duck islands and a house full of dry rot in Southampton, I think it would help sort out this country's political system once and for all and take it out of the hands of the current people who want to twist it into their own shapes for their own gain.

  • 27 May 2009 - Political card of the day


    The political card of the day is

    VIII Wands, reversed

    This is the card which intensifies and begins to direct momentum in one particular direction, but reversed it becomes difficult and tricky to control that momentum and allow it to work in one's favour. This means that however bad the situation, there is little currently to do with it than try and respond to the day-to-day revelations, rather than try and direct or channel it into useful and productive energy. This will undoubtedly escape the cynical minds of Cameron and Brown, but it adds to the pressure building up in the situation and has particular relevance for Julie Kirkbride and, Owlperson says, Nadine Dorries.

  • 27 May 2009 - Julie Kirkbride compounds the problem


    The Daily Mirror reports more about the long-running expenses scandal soap opera "Julie's Jollies".

    La Kirkbride stands accused now of employing her sister as a secretary answering constituency post. This is not unusual - the only reason Derek Conway got sacked for it and that it was a killer blow for the leadership of Iain Duncan Smith in Betsygate was because the family members in question were on the payroll but did not do anything - but Kirkbride has snubbed a phone-in interview trying to get some sense of remorse and contrition from her, and although the sister does actually do some work in return for the £12k she gets from Julie, this is no longer a good enough explanation for the employment of family members. In the 1997 book Commons Knowlege, by Paul Flynn (accused last year of using his communications allowance to maintain his fabulous party political gossip blog, now bearing a disclaimer to the contrary), he warns against employing family, though it happens a lot and Owlperson says he has no objection to the idea because the salary is kept in the family. The only objection, obviously, is that money has been paid to people within the family that do not then go on to actually do any work, leading to the downfall of Derek Conway. Kelvin Hopkins MP, who shared Margaret Moran's constituency office with her when I worked there in 1998, employed his dragon-like wife who was very particular about everyone chipping in to the tea-making duties. I have no objection, so long as work is done.

    But it looks like Flynn's "mature advice" not to employ family has become more solid disapproval and Kirkbride in obfuscating - and Cameron by association in holding off on axeing her and other Shadow Cabinet claimants - is only digging her grave and ultimately that of her timid leader who wants us to buy the fact that communicating results of votes to people's mobile phones is a coherent plan for parliamentary reform (it sounds more like the periodic and rather pathetic Blairite ideas to "increase turnout" by allowing us to vote in Tescos. I get enough mobile spam as it is (I must stop using the numbers in Chat magazine, it's my bill it's inflating) and I don't really want more rubbish from people who probably won't be getting my vote. If they want my vote, they have to actually put something forward that will help me in terms of (drum roll)...health, education and social security.

    Sooooooo...a reading for Kirkbride and the effect of her continued corrosive presence on the Tory benches.

    Situation - II Cups, reversed

    The issue here is - I'm getting - "arrogance" and the inability to come to a conclusion which is of mutual benefit to Kirkbride and the party in general, including its leadership. The longer it goes on, the more corrosive it is, but the parliamentary demise of her husband Andrew Mackay means that if Kirkbride goes, the dynasty comes to an end. Here Kirkbride is trying to cling on when she knows she is ultimately doomed, and wrecking in the process her "marriage" to the party, and perhaps even her marriage to Mackay.

    Appearance to the public of her continued presence - VI Pentacles, reversed

    It is unfair of Cameron to be sacking the older members of his parliamentary party while keeping on someone with her nose so deep in a number of troughs. Duck islands notwithstanding, this presence gives the lie to Cameron's desire to clean out the party and show the leadership he is so proudly trumpeting, and this unfairness is likely to become toxic if Kirkbride does not do the decent thing and resign.

    Appearance to the media of her continued presence - Ace of Swords, reversed

    While she is still there, there can be no trumpeted Tory renewal, which would hand Foxy a sword with which to end the Prime Minister's reign and impose his own. Although the spectre of Howard Flight looms large (a decision which also exemplifies the reversed Ace of Swords, where Michael Howard took a hasty and over-agitated decision which left Flight without a seat as well as a position in the Shadow Cabinet, thus wrecking the delicate momentum the Tories had in 2005 to go further than they actually did), there is an opposite dynamic here which again suggests the media is not going to stand for any more obfuscation from Cameron. He needs to sack her or risk his crowing being seen as hollow, all too hollow.

    Appearance to the grassroots Conservatives of her continued presence - IX Wands

    Grassroots Conservatives are a fickle bunch, Owlperson tells me, but they are the wrong people to be dominating this issue. They are supporting Kirkbride for the moment, and struggling to close ranks around her. The more they do this, the more they damage their leadership and future prospects for government in the process, and this defensive card shows the steamroller is already heading for Bromsgrove just as it did for Bracknell in the end.

    Internal issues: Cameron with Kirkbride - VII Cups, reversed

    Cameron is actually under no illusion here that Kirkbride is damaging the party and his need to sack her is being hindered by a strong need to keep all his party crumbling in his hands. Removing the fantasies of complete control is one thing - he knows he doesn't have that over the grassroots, and he also may understand Kirkbride is a popular local MP - but his illusions are not stopping this process from coming to a conclusion. So what is?

    Internal issues: Kirkbride with Cameron - X Cups, reversed

    Kirkbride regards Cameron as a necessary evil, and a tool to get her into a position where she can form a governmental power base. This is not based on huge amounts of substance, more ambition and beliefs without back-up solidity. Nevertheless she needs him as much as he does not need her, and is clinging on because her ambition is greater than her husband's. The upright Ten would mean that her ambition is at least based in reality or potential reality. But the reversal of the card means that her opinion of herself and her importance is grossly inflated - and that she is now doing the party a lot more harm than good.

    Internal issues: Parliamentary Party's role - Knight of Pentacles

    The Parliamentary Party actually has at least a possible role in solving the problem; it is tentatively putting together an agenda of its own, whether to protect itself against the media or - in Owlperson's view - to expand its own power against the leadership which, like the Blairites of the 1990s but with far less substance to show for it, is continually abusing it and not delivering it what it needs to support the leadership. It, as the Knight, is able to assert itself only in response or reaction to Cameron, but it is learning to defend its interests and not to put up with flim-flam from above. In the 1990s, Labour had enough confidence to say to its recalcitrant backbenchers that Blair was worth putting up with, and the result was satisfaction and confidence. When I meet Tory backbenchers - or even Tory councillors locally - I am struck by a lack of confidence backing up their promises. This Knight therefore shows the confidence is growing - but in opposition and reaction to the leader.

    Roots of the situation - King of Pentacles

    Cameron has acted well in response to this situation - partly because of criticism in the Derek Conway incident 18 months ago where he delayed his action by up to 24 hours which brought some muted charges he had obfuscated and been indecisive. He learned from that. But the pressure is growing on him to do something genuine with this - sack a few Shadow Cabinet members, sack Kirkbride who is going completely off the rails (and she should take Nadine Dorries with her too). The situation reminds me of the story of the Golden Goose, where people are snared in by their own greed and look foolish. Cameron is Dummling, waddling along with a golden duck (in fact in some cultures the story is known as the Golden Mallard) - perhaps he needs to turn around, see the stream of followers all stuck to the bird, and release them. This card shows a will present - why won't he use it to genuine advantage?

    Seeds of the situation - V Pentacles, reversed

    The reversed Five shows a realisation of the real needs of this situation. The illusions dissipate and the correct course of action becomes obvious. What it entails is another matter, but hopefully this will be shown by the next section of the reading.

    Advice to Kirkbride - The World

    Take a hike, Julie. Although the World symbolises the pinnacle of someone's current existence, it also shows an ending. If she goes now, she might be remembered as a good MP who had a good innings. If she doesn't, she risks being dragged down with the rest of the rabble involved. Her husband has already lost his job, but she has multiple black marks against her name, and needs to completely call it quits before she too is bundled out of the window.

    Advice to Cameron re: Kirkbride - VIII Pentacles

    He is being urged to use her in this instance to create a genuine show of leadership. It is easy to sack superfluous backbenchers, but because Julie may be a useful member of his government later on, he is loathe to get rid of someone with her parliamentary and political experience (mostly negative - Owlperson points out she was the first to agitate against Howard both before and after the 2005 election, because she had negotiated a position with David Davis, who she backed in the abortive party coup of late May 2005). The problem is he needs to show that he is not favouring friends in this area. Kirkbride and Dorries, at least, should be jettisoned to show his ad hoc response to this crisis has real bite, before Labour's NEC Star Chamber reports and puts bureaucratic solidity onto their currently sclerotic response to their travails. If Cameron obfuscates any longer, the NEC will trump him, so he needs to work now to create a genuine direction for this party politcal game.

    Warning to Kirkbride - The Tower

    Her days are numbered, probably less than 3. She cannot win this battle and needs to jump before she is pushed.

    Warning to Cameron re: Kirkbride - II Pentacles

    The momentum is moving in Cameron's direction at the moment, but things are subject to change if he cannot do this for the political good of the people rather than his own self-interest. If he wanted Kirkbride for himself after the election, he should have called her in over this a long time ago. Things may turn against him, and his willingness to allow Kirkbride to run riot with his tacit support is moving the narrative on from how clever his initial response was to how limp-wristed his long-term ideas and pragmatic decision-making is. She needs to go - or things will move in Labour's favour again.

    Going forward - Kirkbride - IV Wands, reversed

    The stool is kicked out from underneath her. The Four represents tenuous structure, but this flimsy support is going and she cannot rely on anything to hold her weight. She will leave - and if this is not soon and swift a decision, it will bring the house down around her.

    Going forward - Cameron re: Kirkbride - Queen of Swords, reversed

    Cameron is playing with fire here - he is risking a lot on just one woman. He does manage to overturn her, but it is a decision that comes too late for credibility in "leadership". Meanwhile, she keeps on getting worse and worse. He needs to stop her causing his party grief and shame. But he is too indecisive to do much more than gradually withdraw support; therefore he is caught in a situation where conscious reason - represented by the Queen of Swords - dictates one thing, but his practical necessity dictates another. This is a difficult decision to make - can he make it in time?

    General direction - VI Cups, reversed

    The scandal has damaged the Tories' placid and gentle road to the finish, and they like Labour will be the ones to lose most from this. There is no going back to pre-scandal days - it represents an overturning of the status quo so much so that there is the risk of anarchy. Kirkbride could be dispensed with - so why isn't she? She upset the calm contentment of the party, so she should by rights leave. Why isn't more being done to remove her from Bromsgrove? Anyway, this upsets the balance in the party and moves it towards the difficulties it faced at this point in 2004. I can't say I'm unhappy with this - but all the same it is a crisis now of their own making.

    Bromsgrove result - May 2009 - The Hanged Man, reversed

    Julie Kirkbride hangs on, but perhaps only just. If there is difficulties at the Euro elections, her situation might be further weakened, as will Cameron's, but she manages to weasel it out.

    Bromsgrove result - general election - Ace of Cups, reversed

    The chance for renewal averted. The result damages the party and, all other things being equal, this has made the party unwilling to face up to the needs of their electorate - and they pay the price. It is not unlikely that a charismatic independent - again, all things being otherwise equal - could stand and depose Kirkbride herself. It is also a result which will have implications for the party as a whole.

    Solution - Death, reversed

    This is a dangerous situation; Death reversed intensifies the theme of transformation - an end and a beginning - into the deadly strike of a death with no resurrection afterwards. The situation is reaching a point where the party faces difficult choices but flunks the test - and this could get messy.

    Outcome for now - V Swords

    Something does happen to solve the problem,and put it to bed - but it is a negative, pyrrhic victory which just delays and intensifes the negativity of the situation. Labour at least has the excuse of using the NEC to arbitrate the resignations of MPs who have been caught out in this scandal; however with Cameron's ad hoc leadership, shirking the question of Kirkbride means that he cannot then change his mind; if he leaves Bromsgrove alone and decides only one half of the dubious duo needs to be taught a lesson in home economics, he has no way later of returning to the problem if, say, an independent of the stature of Esther Rantzen challenges Kirkbride. This needs solved, but it is not wholly resolved to the satisfaction of the Bromsgrove electorate.

    Outcome long-term - IX Swords, reversed

    The Nine upright is cruelty, ongoing terror and distress, but reversed it shows this distress coming to a head and being dissipated. There will be a solution, but it will be to neither Cameron's nor Kirkbride's favour.

  • 26 May 2009 - Boris' bike crash - a near miss -- and life imitating "art"


    Dangerous times for everyone.

    At Christmas there was a radio show - I think it was the Now Show, I can't think the News Quiz would be so violent - with a silly ditty that went "I hope that Boris Johnson and David Cameron/have a bike smash" or something along those lines that scans better. Although I am no fan of either of them - both should have stayed in the Eton ghetto they came from - I didn't really think that a national satirical show should have broadcast such a stupid and horrible song with no real comedic value.

    Since then, however, Cambo lost his bike again to another thief, and Boris has just narrowly averted being run over by a lorry.

    I'm not really sure how it works - was the song-writer subconsciously psychic and peering ahead with the depths of his mind (and it would have to be the depths to have the audacity to write that lyric) - or was he willing something nasty to happen to both of them?

    In which case, fate has conspired to stick two fingers up to the songwriter, and rightly so. Neither man, lightweights they may be, deserves to be killed in a road accident. It didn't get anything like the number of complaints the BBC got over Sachsgate, but I did complain at the time and am surprised at how much life does narrowly escape imitating art.

    There is a song in this manner, though it is more cryptic and more gentle. It uses animals - and the odd farm implement - to get across a seemingly nonsense rhyme, yet to me a few years ago it began to make eerie sense. See if you can spot the allusions to recent times in this bit of lyricism from a 19th century Welsh broadsheet (of the balladeers' kind). Let your mind relax, and imagine the words of the song, and see whose face - or faces come to mind. I first heard it while doing A-Level Politics in 1998 and wrote a cartoon of the first stanza.

    Other animal nonsense songs occur, some more cryptic than others. Of course, with this stuff, you have to remember that although I was - aherm - foxed by some of the verses here in 2006 when I drew the song more completely in my cartoon diaries, all of them now make reasonable sense.

    The Seven Wonders - from the singing of Maddy Prior and June Tabor

    I heard it sung yesterday morning
    Ta-la-ring-ting-ring-tethering-too
    That a ship of lead swam o'er the ocean
    Ta-la-ring-ting...
    And a ship of cork sank to the bottom
    Ta-la-ring-ting...
    That is one of the seven wonders
    Ta-la-ring-ting-ring-tethering-too

    I heard it said that the partridge
    On the shore was playing stoolball
    And the balls were made of sand
    That is two of the seven wonders

    The pruning hook got in the meadow
    By itself it was reaping
    And in a day it cut an acre
    That is three of the seven wonders

    I heard it said there was a pig
    And on its cart it was loading bracken
    And its load it was making ready
    And that is four of the seven wonders

    I heard it said that in Llangollen
    That the moon was teaching reading
    And an excellent verse it gave there
    And that is five of the seven wonders

    I heard it said that on the rock
    That the dove it kept a tavern
    With its little cup to test the drink
    And that is six of the seven wonders

    I heard it said the swallow on the sea
    That he was making an iron horseshoe
    With golden hammer and silver anvil
    And that's the last of the seven wonders
    Ta-la-ring-ting-ring-tethering-too!

    They have, hinting at the moon verse, used a bit of license in the name of the Welsh town. And to get the dove verse, you have to remember why Charlie Kennedy left office.

  • 26 May 2009 - Esther Rantzen to stand against Margaret Moran


    Title says it all.

    I used to work for Moran, who struck me as being a pleasant woman (more pleasant than subsequent MPs that I've worked for and happier to promote someone who was enthusiastic but thinks slightly too much outside the box) but it's a shame that she appears to have been tainted by this scandal because the most endearing memory is the garden party she held at the end of the summer I spent in Luton and how ordinary it seemed. I think I had been brought up to see Parliament and MPs in general being a bit like Francis Urqhuart in House of Cards - posh flats, swish demi-tasse cups, leafy London homes and extensive country estates to shoot on. The difficult thing is that Moran stands accused of gross fiddling, which I don't dispute. But personally I can't deride her too much because she did help me on the way to finding my political way, even if it was outside the Labour Party, and to understand the ordinary nature of politicians. I've also been to parties with John Redwood and Rob Marris, and both again seem human - all too human. Laughing at the idiots turns quickly to dismay that good people have been brought down by this as well - but there can be no sympathetic aspect to what is coming. 

    So will Esther - who I don't know and who is well acquainted with the high life, despite her tireless work for charity - win Luton South, will Margaret hang on - or will something else happen, a wild card enter the situation? Let's see what the cards say.

    Past - IV Swords

    Moran did begin as a good MP - and I worked for her a year after her election to the House of Commons - but she had begun to become complacent, particularly after keeping her seat last time around. She worked hard but like many MPs became far too routine in her duties and then had to deal with a partner living in Southampton, the cause of her potential downfall. This card brings stasis, a healing stand-off in which very little, positive or negative, happens. This breeds complacency and then arrogance, shown here.

    Present - Temperance, reversed

    A time in which this balance is disrupted and undermined because of external events and the revelations of problems in the system which has hitherto been churning away quite quietly in the background. The upset balance has led or is leading to resolution.

    Rantzen currently - Justice

    Rantzen feels she is an avenging angel, and this card hints that she is a real danger to Moran, who needs to be cut out of the body politic she has helped to damage. I feel a great sadness in this - not least because of the personal connection I have with her, above party politics - but it is having to deal with this cancer in general that is the greater good, and Rantzen is a means to this end in this area. I feel sorry for Moran, but justice must be done, and seen to be done.

    Moran currently - Ace of Swords

    The Ace is either doing, or being done to, and this is Moran being challenged on home turf by someone perhaps with an unfair advantage but with a genuine anger. Owlperson says that Rantzen is a catalyst, not a born winner, but he also says that the blow has to be hard and that my personal sadness for Moran is just that - personal, not political. Moran is held at swordpoint, and it is a decisive and destructive Ace that holds her now.

    Future - VII Cups

    The future is still invisible - we can see no further into this as there are still a lot of moves to be made before Rantzen and Moran face each other over the ballot box. Owlperson suggests we look at the results first for the people of Luton South, then for the election in general, then finally for Moran and Rantzen and how the story ends for them, since the future is hidden behind the veil of possibilities that may have to be left unanswered at this time.

    Luton South - future representation in Parliament - IX Wands, reversed

    The stockade falls down around Parliament, and Luton South, as a marginal, will follow the rest of the country in delivering its verdict. The protective wall has fallen and there is the sense of a rushing in - a dam breaks not only for Moran but also for Rantzen. Try as I might, I can't answer at this time whether we will see Esther Rantzen MP - Owlperson says she is not suited for parliament because of her lack of pragmatic thoughts in this particular campaign, but he also says her future is not for me to know or prejudice in any way, since the issue has a long time to roll yet. But it will still be relevant at the next election, because what is happening now will drive this surge of opinion against the current set-up - all of them except those who eventually oversee the transition period after this deadly battle.

    The Election in general - V Pentacles, reversed

    The upright Five here means disappointment or, more explicitly, not seeing the woods for the trees and missing what really matters in pursuit of an illusory goal. The Rider-Waite image is of a stained glass window giving the picture of another world of riches and splendour, though also carrying connotations of spiritual wealth, with the human figures common to all cards poor and desperate, looking everywhere but upwards to the light. In this sense, the reversed card suggests the scales fall from the impoverished people's eyes, and they finally see the glory they have been missing or have been searching for. Thus this coming election will really decide the future of the country, and will not be skewed in the direction of the people who have hitherto controlled the levers of power - and I do also mean the two-party, or two-leadership, duopoly of Brown and Cameron. They are desperately trying to prevent people looking upward, but Rantzen embodies the third way - if you will pardon the reference - even though I don't see her actually getting the benefit of this deal.

    Margaret Moran in general - King of Pentacles, reversed

    It is a shame that the King here is reversed and dethroned, because I do believe that Moran remains interested in her constituents and her unfortunate circumstances led to her being profligate with our money, rather than her spending it on feathering one's own (ducks') nest. She did work hard for her constituents in ways that they don't understand, and I see her heading for defeat anyway if she stands, though I am, as I said, not wholly convinced Rantzen will be the one who dethrones her.

    Esther Rantzen in general - Knight of Pentacles, reversed

    Rantzen is also hard at work - making she gets her own way - but the reversal here confims my belief she won't make it into Westminster (and who can say her own ambitions are spotless? isn't she just in it for herself as well?). The Knight has less control over events than the King, above, and although Esther has done things for people through her work for That's Life and Childline (as well as other media hobby-horses) she has not got the worthiness of Moran's own direction, and will just as soon be eaten by the mill she currently feeds. She isn't going to make it into Parliament, and although the future is still veiled, it is almost certain that this is not Tatton 1997, and also almost certain that this seismic change in politics will rival 1688 rather than being "1945 in spades", as 1997 was labelled by Jim Callaghan the morning after the night before. So no-one here will profit from it - but everyone will benefit.

  • 21 May 2009 - Big Foxy and the Little Duckies


    David Cameron has pledged to reduce the power of Number 10, a Guardian article pledges today. He stops short of pledging proportional representation, which apparently (and I do agree with this) concentrates more power in political elites than in the hands of voters. particularly if lists of candidates are proposed (as in the European election system due to be used on 4 June) or electoral candidates directly voted for are "topped up" by the parties from pre-arranged lists according to

    My old lecturer at the London School of Economics, Professor Brendan O'Leary (whose lectures were of course prefaced by "if you want more information on this subject, it's in my course textbook, you know, the one I wrote, available in all good academic bookshops priced £20") cited this example at the time at which Ron Davies was forced to stand down after the Clapham Common debacle, regarding the Welsh Assembly voting system. Members of the Assembly are elected in constituencies on an alternative-vote system (where the elector gets a second choice as well as a first; it is the system also used in the GLA elections, where I voted Labour first and second when Frank Dobson ran against Ken Livingstone in 2000), and "top-up" seats are allocated so the parties are represented broadly along the lines of proportionality. Alun Michael, proposed at the last minute as a leader for the Labour delegation to the Assembly*, would have to be shoehorned in to the top-up list. Brendan O'Leary confidently asserted that this ran the risk of Labour winning so much of the AV constituency vote that there was no room for any top-up candidates to be selected from their list, leaving Michael high and dry without a seat on the assembly. As it happened, Michael won his seat, only to be replaced by Morgan while I was in a beta-blocker induced haze and not watching politics after I stopped studying British politics after my first year at the School.

    Cameron's proposals sound good on paper but I would rather let the tarot speak for me as I don't believe they are what the country needs right now (in terms of cleaning up the mess left by Hurricane Jacqui-Hazel) and I don't believe that he will be able to implement them because I don't think he is going to win the election on this ticket. If he wants to be just a figurehead that's fine by me (there are plenty of people I would rather actually ran the country; Foxy still has issues with the old Mary Jane and I'd rather he wasn't stoned when Obama comes asking him to press the button on Iranistan or somewhere like that) but I'm not going to vote for him anyway so I don't really care.

    Situation in which Cambo finds himself today - The Fool, reversed

    Cameron is looking dangerously like he is making things up as he goes along. The Fool does this well, upright, but reversed it begins to look as if these ideas came to him in a dream or a drug-induced haze; they are too insubstantial to hold his weight in government (or for him to be able to be trusted to enact) and they are being proposed at the expense of concentrating on the real issues behind the expenses scandal, or the real issues facing the country. Brown might look a bit pathetic when he tries to focus the debate back onto policy - he can't do that while the Torygraph is still bleeding my eyes with its crowing headlines - but Cameron cannot win an election without saying what he would do on health, education, the economy and so on, and yet he continues to bluff his way through with the tactic of the sorceror's apprentice - with predictable results predicted by this card.

    Appearance of these proposals to the media - X Swords

    This refers to the guillotine effect - the cutting off, brazenly, of government/prime ministerial power. But this is not a good card, and it brings with it not only the dramatic slicing off of someone's power, it also curtails the debate and is a card wielded against the querent, in this case David Cameron. Cameron looks like he is being tough, but this card suggests the media considers him now too bold, too dramatic, and too foolhardy to last the course of an election, even his snap poll that he so desperately wants.

    Appearance of these proposals to the public - King of Swords, reversed

    The King of Swords makes proposals everyone wants (even if he is not always in the position to do anything about it, and is consequently a card which accentuates the position of a good Leader of the Opposition) but this reversal suggests the public will not be satisfied with it and will continue to regard what is coming out of Westminster as a smokescreen. Cameron could probably do much more to clean out his Shadow Cabinet - Gove, Duncan, and now Hague with his party political spin expenses claim are under the finger of the press - but he has chosen to wildly churn out insubstantial ideas which in the long run will damage his claim to the throne even if they currently appear strong and masterful.

    Internal appearance to the Conservative party - Ace of Wands, reversed

    A tactic which is the exact opposite of what is really needed, and the party regards this as meddling rather than the brilliantly witty bon mot which Cambo hopes it might be. If Cameron had come out saying "Gove and Duncan will get the chop, I'm sacking Kirkbride and David Davis and anyone else who has had their fingers in the till illegitimately, including myself, and by the way I will pledge to raise spending on health and education year-on-year while pruning back other areas of spending which are superfluous to requirements (this, this, this, and this)", that would be the Ace of Wands upright. Sadly, anohter opportunity to regain standing missed on pointless procedural posturing.

    Internal appearance to the Government - III Wands, reversed

    The government cannot rest easily here either; it is impossible really for them to trump this and impossible for them to pull the debate back their way; this card upright is what happens when a comfort zone (the IV Wands) is broken and things begin to move forwards again; but reversed it means this movement is forcible and not in the querent's favour - the querent being the onlooking, lame duck (if you will pardon the dig yet again; ducks seem infused into our language, don't they?) government. The race is now to the bottom, and the government is playing catch-up with the only consolation being that Foxy is chasing his tail on this issue too. 

    Roots of the situation - Judgement, reversed

    The sad thing really is that here we have a delay in actual justice being imposed on this horrific rabble, not least on those who deserve it most. The more this is delayed, however, the greater it appears as a farce waiting for anarchy to engulf it. Cameron is playing for time and hoping to beat the clock to the finish; but the more he tries to evade punishment, the more it dangles over all of our heads in the form of sheer, destructive, political anarchy. There are lessons here from the days of Allende in Chile - if none of the current lot really understand what is coming, then the worse it will be when it gets here. Who is to be our Pinochet?

    Seeds sown by the situation - IV Wands, reversed

    Illusory structure, in that Westminster and the media not involved in printing the actual story, think that this crisis can be overcome with electoral or political reforms to power, competencies, role of MPs or the method of their selection. This is the comfort zone for them - because they know nothing else - but this comfort zone is breaking down into the situation required for, in other countries, a coup or the takeover of a junta. It happened in Chile, and it happened in Argentina, and it happened in many other countries who thought they had strong political systems, but were wrong. It could happen here if no-one addressed the real problems - and no-one can, since they would risk prison themselves.

    Advice to Cameron - King of Wands, reversed

    Slow down and think about this, Cambo. Don't try and hijack something for your own cause that makes you look good now but ignores the real issue. The King of Wands delights in being first to the story, using words to create structures, promising jam tomorrow rather than delivering it today. In that sense, the reversed card urges Cameron to think before he speaks, to think on the consistency and coherency of his message rather than rushing to print with his next big idea. It is his leadership writ large, and belies an insecurity that ultimately may prove his undoing.

    Warning to Cameron - Knight of Cups, reversed

    Again, the above card from a different angle. Cameron is drunk on his own success, and his flimsy ideas mirror David Davis' fit of pique last summer: trying to change government policy by the political equivalent of seppuku when the right thingss  to have done was, since the Conservatives opposed 42-day detention, to have worked with his own side to balance things once he became Home Secretary. He was the dashing Knight of Cups who kept appearing in spreads this time last year. This reversed card only intensifies that and makes this current over-reaction by Cameron seem overbalanced - work harder to get the substance right, and then people wouldn't be so disillusioned in general. Destroying systems because of bad people in charge will not do – people want the bad people prosecuted. Cameron is fiddling while Rome burns, and although the government is not doing that much either, politics is in meltdown and a simple cup of water will not put it out.

    Direction for Cameron – The Hanged Man

    The Hanged Man means, in a directional spread, that there is a need to take a step back and reassess the situation before plunging on. Cameron cannot really fix things until he is safely in government, and the powerful surge of anti-politics cannot be tamed by electoral reform or reducing the power of the Prime Minister – both non-sequiturs when the Chancellor of the Exchequer is charging his own tax returns to the Fees Office or someone is building a duck island in his personal lake and charging it to the public purse. This is not something that can be solved this way, and Cameron will take a step back and re-assess his own position – or, more likely, be forced to.

    Direction for these proposals –Ace of Pentacles

    The proposals themselves form the kernel of future reform anyway – Owlperson admits that he sees five-year fixed terms on the cards, a revamped ;) expenses system which is much more stringent, a pay rise for