Irwin Stelzer says that the sharp policy distinctions of the past are no more, but that the choice ahead of the voters is still one to relish. This is his audit of the scores so far
Then there are the twin issues of crime and immigration. Brown has demonstrated his priority by starving the Home Office of funds after what one official told me were ‘discussions between the Home Office and the Treasury’. Those discussions resulted in a freeze (in real terms) of Home Office funding, and a capping of prison places at 80,000. It is that cap that has forced the early releases that have done so much to create the mean streets of many English neighbourhoods, and last week prompted the Commons public accounts committee to call for the emergency construction of more prisons.
Whether Cameron will move crime-fighting up the priority list is uncertain, but it is more rather than less likely, since his party is viscerally less sympathetic to perpetrators, and less concerned even than Tony Blair about adding to the woes of criminals with unfortunate upbringings. Will he go so far as to repeal the Human Rights Act, which is, after all, the reason that any pledges to deport illegal aliens are mere talk? Probably not. Still, for anyone concerned about crime, and with elevating safety concerns over those of the ‘rights’ of illegal aliens, the Tories are a better bet than a Labour team composed of a prime minister who, as chancellor, didn’t think this an area worth spending money on, and backbenchers, many of whom see the police as racists and criminals as the unfortunate victims of circumstance.
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Nancy Dell’Olio makes an impassioned case for Keynesian economics as the necessary remedy for the global crisis. It is to the Cambridge economist that we should turn once more
Dylan Jones is astonished to find in Sofia that the former communist country has embraced his guide to the mores of modern life — and that not everybody looks like Borat
Matthew Castray looks back on the Australian Prime Minister’s first year in office and audits an administration which has reviewed much and done very little
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Fraser Nelson says that the Pre-Budget Report killed off New Labour without landing a punch on the Tories. It has paved the way for a new Conservatism, in which Cameron woos aspirational voters, focuses on government debt and looks for responsible spending cuts
Martin Vander Weyer looks ahead to next week’s Pre-Budget Report and reflects on George Osborne’s contentious remarks about the devaluation of sterling. It looks like Gordon Brown is getting away with his borrowing binge — leaving the Tories isolated
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After a week of clamorous competition between the parties over tax cuts, Fraser Nelson offers a guide to paying for them: a programme of spending cuts that would preserve core services but shave off the fat of the Brown years. All that is needed is political will
Last week, The Spectator said that ‘Keynesianism is not the answer’. Here, Tim Congdon says the government’s economic recovery strategy is a sham based on outmoded leftist thinking
Charles Leadbeater, the acclaimed innovator and new media analyst, predicts a transformed landscape: a new ‘networked’ capitalism in which the state plays a part but cannot pick winners — a system that is chastened, subdued and fraught with social danger
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