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Clemency Burton-Hill
Clemency Burton-Hill

Clemency suggests


Inside George Osborne’s war room

‘Now we have got to have something to say’

Wednesday, 26th September 2007

The shadow chancellor maps out the Tory election campaign

A new map hangs in George Osborne’s office, showing the latest parliamentary boundaries for the next general election. It could have been designed to soothe the nerves of a Conservative party election co-ordinator, for it is dominated by Tory blue. A few tricks have been used to achieve this optical illusion. There is no Scotland, for example, and marginal Labour seats are painted a faint red. But overall the picture is of a Conservative country, and an election which is eminently winnable.

This is how Mr Osborne sees it — and not, he insists, just to keep morale up. ‘Although I never said so at the time, I went into previous general elections I was involved in — 1997, 2001 and 2005 — with a sense of foreboding,’ he says. ‘I felt it probably was not going to be the triumph we hoped it was and that we said publicly.’ Not this time. ‘I really feel we have a good message, a good campaign and a real prospect of winning.’ And as campaign director, it’s his job to turn this optimism into reality.

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Matthew Quirk

September 28th, 2007 6:45pm

Dear Sir, So George Osborne admits that the public has no firm idea about what a Conservative government would do – or at least he fails to rebut the accusation. Two weeks ago I received a standard letter ostensibly sent by the local Conservative Association, but clearly approved by Central Office, asking me to say what issues are really important to me. It was a shining example of the barren thinking within the party. Every issue mentioned is indeed important, but every issue is a symptom not a cause. In the Speccy you have written a good piece upon the new political class. It is a commonplace that getting people to come out and vote is really difficult. People donīt want to vote because they see a political class that aims only to perpetuate itself, while muttering platitudes about symptoms, not causes. How can you seriously want to vote for people of any party who: a. ensure they have inflation-proofed pensions at the taxpayersī expense when others donīt b. allow the Inland Revenue to tax people retrospectively? c. allow our judiciary to be subordinated to a European Court, so that it can no longer be independent of the Executive, Parliament and the Monarch? d. maintain a fiction that the new self-amending European Treaty is different from the proposed Constitution? e. allow Scottish MPs to vote on English issues, without a reciprocal right for English MPs? f. allow such a complication of the tax laws that not even specialists understand them anymore – (and anyway, why make them so difficult in the first place so that a taxpayer needs a specialist?). g. exhort people to "take responsibility" when they create regulators and fragment organisations so that the lines of responsibility are completely unclear – DEFRA, NHS, FSA and the Bank of England are but a few examples. How laughable is it that there has to be a Regulator to deal with hospital cleanliness? h. pour billions into the public services with so little to show for it? i. allow laws to be made by instruments in Parliament rather than after detailed debate What are the root causes of the dissatisfaction engendered by each of these points? a. that citizens can no longer even be seen to be equal under the law b. that no citizen can plan his business or personal affairs within a clear framework of taxation c. that elected representatives donīt understand what it is they are legislating about d. that elected representatives cannot exercise any control over government organisations e. that incompetence is built not only into government but also into political parties f. that politicians have given up the fight and "gone native" People donīt want to hear about symptoms anymore – they want the root causes dealt with – in short to ensure that government is done properly and clearly, and that what it cannot do properly or clearly is handed out to someone else who can, and who is very clearly accountable for doing so. Thatīs what Iīm hearing on the doorsteps, and the party that gets to grips with that will get the votes.


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