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Thursday, 8th October 2009

Live blog - Cameron's speech

David Blackburn 1:46pm

13:50 JF: I am in the conference hall which is already filling up. Word is that various candidates will be sitting behind Cameron.

14:02 JF: The backdrop for the speech is blue sky and fluffy clouds. Message: optimism.

14:04 DB: To emphasise an optimistic future, the Tories are playing ELO's Hello Mr Blue Sky. What a pity New Labour monopolised Things can only get better - a mantra that has never been more true.

14:12 JF: We have the text of the speech now and it looks like Cameron will set out his vision for Britain post recovery. One thing the speech does is make clear that Fox will be defence secretary.

14:18 JF: The theme is family, community, country and why big government is hurting all of them.

14:20 DB: The video has started. The message is vote Brown and get an apocalypse. The Tories will lead Britain from recession to recovery.

14:23 DB: No Sarah Brown 'My hero' moment. But oh God! Bono, via videolink, praises the ring-fencing of  the International Development budget. Turn up for the books; I wonder how the Statesman of the Year is taking that. Real coup for the Tories to bag the man who likened Brown and Blair to Lennon and McCartney.

JF: Who can we vote for to get Bono out of our politics? One big news line in the speech, IDS will serve in a Cameron government: that means that ten members of the shadow cabinet won't make it into the actual cabinet

14:30 DB: If IDS will serve in a government, does that mean the leadership might be considering his radical duopolistic welfare system?

14:32 JF: Huge applause for the footage of Boris being elected, not Mowlam levels though. And here is...

14:33 DB: Cameron is tough as well as toff: this will be difficult "we know how bad things are", but the view from the summit will be worth it. There is an intensity and seriousness about his delivery. As Clegg did, he kicks off with Afghanistan.

14:37 DB: Pledge on equipment. Here comes the ill-kept Dannatt secret. Dannatt will serve because the country and Whitehall are at war. Sustained applause for 'Our Boys'., very sustained.

JF: A standing ovation in fact.

14:38 DB: Cameron implies that the death of his son Ivan has focussed his ambition and his beliefs. The state is your servant not your master - there is a society, but it exists free of the state. Community and the family are most important aspects of British society "and Britain needs those values now...that is why I am in politics.

Brilliant sideswipe at the criticism that he's privileged: I want everyone to have the opportunities I had.

14:44 JF: When Cameron speaks about his family you get a sense of the emotional connection the party feels it has with him

14:45 DB: Cameron couches the debate on traditional battle lines: Labour's answer is more government, the Tories' is a society of responsible individuals. Sharp gag about the Attorney General being living proof that more government and more law is destructive. Repeal will be the order of the day but he doesn't elaborate - this is a rhetorical exercise and a good one.

14:48 JF: Responsibility has long been a favourite Cameron word and it does sit well with his countenance. The economics lesson is clear and well done.

14:51: DB: His detirmination and seriousness are speaking to an audience outside the hall. The contrast with Brown's rabble-rousing is very stark. No flourishes as yet - the mood is sombre. There's probably a bit of yawning going on in certain quarters.

1453 JF: Indeed there is: Ken Clarke keeps coming into shot on the big screen but he looks like he would rather like an afternoon nap

14:55 DB: Bit of red meat about the Saviour of the World: it was Brown wot did lost it. That'll wake 'em up.

14:58 DB: Onto Welfare. Cameron is angry that single mums who return to work are paying 96p in the £1. Callous Labour have left the poor poorest. "Don't you dare, Labour, blame that on the 'wicked' Conservatives." He's extremely angry and the language is brusque - powerful stuff, but has he overstepped the mark?

JF: The section on the huge marginal tax rates for those coming off welfare into works gets a huge standing ovation. And they are on their feet again for Cameron's denunciation of Labour's record on poverty.

15:06 JF: Restrained applause for the line that you should not live off the hard work of others. In years gone by, that would have had them on their feet

15:08 DB: Plan to set the NHS free from targets, management and reorganisations and give it "back to people". Still sticking to the hostage to fortune real terms spending increase. The pledge undermines the Tories' claim to complete honesty and realism in economic matters.

15:12 DB: More of the usual lines on crime and terrorism - with specific reference to Grayling and Grieve unfortunately...

15:15 JF: More good school places was the name of a pamphlet written by the head of policy for the Tories for Policy Exchange. Birth should never be a barrier is the message.

15:16 DB: "I am passionately in favour of out United Kingdom"

15:18 DB: End of ID cards gets a huge round of applause

15:19 DB: Passing reference to Climate Change and its importance.

15:22 DB: References to the broken politics. It is polticians who must change to effect a change in the nature and size of government; it's an extension of the individual and collective responsibility argument. But he doesn't elaborate beyond the spare remarks of Clegg and Brown on the subject. Missed opputunity to reach the dissatisifed national audience.

15:24 JF: Did Cameron just commit to trying to repatriate powers from the EU?

15:30 DB: The last section is a forceful piece of rhetoric - despite all the pain, the view will be worth it. Cameron is tough, serious, realistic and honest. Not at all a novice: "I am ready to be tested".

This was a sombre speech that matches the mood of the nation, but it was visionary. He repeated "I see..." a number of times. It's philosophical underpinning is that government contributes to decline and is actually driving it. Collective responsibilty is the solution. It was an audition to be Prime Minister; I would be amazed if it's unsuccessful.

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Comments Post comment

Patricia Shaw

October 8th, 2009 2:54pm Report this comment

It's like a primary school teacher addressing the nippers.

About as uplifting as a submarine.

AndyinBrum

October 8th, 2009 3:12pm Report this comment

excellent sound bite on the 96p per £1, although didnt say how he would change it.

But over stepping the mark? I doubt it

Dave B

October 8th, 2009 3:21pm Report this comment

I'm loving all this 'big government is part of the problem' rhetoric :-)

AndyinBrum

October 8th, 2009 3:27pm Report this comment

How many times has it been used?

And are the Tories against it ;)

He hasnt used "I have a dream" but I'm sure it cant be soon

Patricia Shaw

October 8th, 2009 3:31pm Report this comment

"Im a believer "

by the Monkeys?!!

How totally appropriate.

AndyinBrum

October 8th, 2009 3:32pm Report this comment

should have used the Wonder Stuff version

Dirty Euro

October 8th, 2009 3:32pm Report this comment

Big government is not the problem. It is only a problem if it takes you luxury yacht away to pay for the operations of middle and working class people.

Chris

October 8th, 2009 3:38pm Report this comment

No, Patricia, by the Monkees; a correction at the level of your comment.

Dave B

October 8th, 2009 3:39pm Report this comment

@Andy

Thirteen

http://conservativehome.blogs.com/files/fulltextofcameronspeech.pdf

Loved it. Outstanding stuff. Roll on the election. :-)

James Daniels

October 8th, 2009 3:44pm Report this comment

Patricia Shaw. I see your comments on this blog frequently, usually pro Lib Dem ones, I think. Are you the same Patricia Shaw who was a Lib Dem candidate in Rotherham?

Alex Thompson

October 8th, 2009 3:45pm Report this comment

Excellent speech.

I think I must be a Cameroon as this speech really resonated with me. I'd be willing to canvas for this guy.

JONNY

October 8th, 2009 3:58pm Report this comment

Adult.Serious.Sensitive. At times inspirational. Above all very likeable.
A young man you could trust as PM
This will go down very well with the uncommitted.

John

October 8th, 2009 4:06pm Report this comment

The speech sounded fine and it was nice that Cameron attacked big government. The words about education were promising too. However, the proof will be in his actions as Prime Minister. If he's really against big government he'll do something about making it easier for the private healthcare sector to grow and actually be able to challenge the virtual monopoly of the state-run NHS.

Ian Walker

October 8th, 2009 4:11pm Report this comment

Clegg: I wanna be leader, please? Waaaaaah!
Brown: Tories? Scary monsters! Wooooooh!
Cameron: We'll clean up the Labour mess together, and share in the spoils together.

On the basis of that speech, Labour are completely toast.

Chumping at the bits

October 8th, 2009 4:16pm Report this comment

A good speech - affable, well-presented, passionate where necessary, and looks likely to resonate at large. As opposed to Gordon Brown's attempt to convert the already converted.

AndyinBrum

October 8th, 2009 4:31pm Report this comment

A good speach, but I'm biased because I like him.

I also thought that Brown's speach last week was good, in style, if not in substance, but CAmeron's message is better, hard times to come, but we will get through.

Was following it on the Gruniads blog coverage as well, who seemed quite impressed.

The 96p per £1 will be the one that sticks out I think - What appeared to be true anger and disgust, he's either an excellent actor or believes it. Either way, it was believable

THX1138

October 8th, 2009 4:32pm Report this comment

The Tory shadow front bench at play

http://tinyurl.com/yandwr6

Nicholas

October 8th, 2009 4:38pm Report this comment

See the Anti-Tory Trolls were queuing up to get their ya-boo posts in. Where's Georgy Boy Galloway aka Fatbloke though? Not here yet?

@ Patricia Shaw - submarines are very uplifting when you've been adrift in a dinghy with bits of cannon shell in your foot for 72 hours and one of your own pops up. Also uplifting when one of them torpedoes something big, heavy and threatening like that imbecile Brown.

Yes, indeed, submarines.

John Mounsey

October 8th, 2009 4:40pm Report this comment

Not having had a chance to see/hear this speech live, I'm impressed by DB's coverage which contains much intelligent comment as well as a resume of what's actually been said. Excellent reporting: more please!

Percy

October 8th, 2009 4:45pm Report this comment

Great performance from Dave only mildly irritating aspect having to see the insufferable Bono's videocast just before. Why do all politicians feel obliged to woo this total jerk?

Jane Holmes

October 8th, 2009 4:48pm Report this comment

Totally convincing. Facing head-on the problems we face. Not promising (unlike Brown) to continue to spend money we just don't have. Clever re the EU. All this "seeing" business: subtle dig at GB do we think?

Dirty Euro

October 8th, 2009 4:54pm Report this comment

Paying 96p in the pound. So will he increased benefits for single MILFS then. Hey maybe he has a interest if you know what I mean. What with being a posh bloke with money i am sure he has sown his wild oats.

Mr Grey Clouds

October 8th, 2009 5:01pm Report this comment

Instead of "Hello Mr Blue Sky", would it not have been more fitting for the post-Thatcher party to play the ELO's "Evil Woman"?

mac

October 8th, 2009 7:33pm Report this comment

Hey, subtle, DES, subtle. Nudge, nudge, wink, wink, eh? What a card yo . . . . . . zzzzzzzzz

Prodicus

October 8th, 2009 9:39pm Report this comment

@Percy

Sends a message: 'We have even convinced *this* bloke.' Part of the Change message - the new brand. Er - every little helps, sort of thing. And, incredible though it is to old farts like me, Bono carries weight in some quarters. Tedious, but there you go.

I was in the hall and I had to pinch myself when his face appeared in the screen. I thought I might have eaten something suspect at lunch.

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