Charles Moore's reflections on the week
There has been far too much argument about the effect of ‘24-hour drinking’, due to the government’s change of the rules last year. The truth is that there is not, in reality, 24-hour drinking, and the reform has neither caused nor cured the mass drunkenness of boring young people in the centres of towns and cities. Much less attention has been paid to other aspects of the same Act. One is that the licensing of premises was transferred from magistrates to local councillors. This has politicised the granting of licences, and made people suspect that they now go to chums of the ruling parties in each council. Which greatly increases the resentment against new licences.
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Glasgow East symbolises — as few other places in Britain can — the fact that the problem Labour faces is not just lack of leadership but lack of mission. What is to be seen in this constituency encapsulates and dramatises Labour’s abject failures to comprehend, let alone tackle, the nature of the poverty which grips our council estates.
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Charles Moore's reflections on the week
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DougS
March 13th, 2008 4:01pmCharles Moore is usually among the most astute commentators going; maybe because I've only read him on British politics, because his suggestion about Mrs. Clinton is absolutely absurd. As a practical matter (and I'm sure he knows this) it just doesn't work that way in terms of picking your VP from your party opponents. But whatever McCain thinks of Mrs. Clinton personally and as a member of the loyal opposition, their view of the world, politically, is completely different. Not a shred of logic: Yes, it would infuriate the Republican base (and his advisors would prevent it), but it wouldn't get any additional votes. No one votes because of a VP. And, too, McCain esp. at 71 has obligations to posterity with his running mate . . . and anyway there are tons of excellent Republican candidates for VP. As we "Yanks" say, Mr. Moore is coming out of left field with that one. Stick to British politics, Chuck, where there are few better (looking forward to the Maggie book(s)!).