Society

Fraser Nelson

Responding to the opponents of “Swedish schools”

Given how potentially transformative the Tory schools policy could be, it’s surprising it hasn’t attracted more enemies. But in school policy, silence is deceptive. The enemies of reform tend to operate under the radar. Local authorities, whose grip over state education is threatened, will lobby their local MP. It’s crucial to understand here that Tory councils are just as bad. They fought Kenneth Baker’s plans for direct grant (i.e. quasi-independent) schools with as much energy as Labour councils did. And already, you can hear Tory MPs voicing questions about the Gove “Swedish schools” policy – and they join a harder Labour critique. I thought I’d run through a few here.

Fraser Nelson

6 million are on out-of-work benefits

Policy Exchange hits the headlines today with a report highlighting that 6 million are on out-of-work benefits. This is no guesstimate by a think tank, but borne out by official DWP figures* released recently (but not announced, they just slip ’em up on the website) showing the count at 5.8m in February.  Given the trajectory of unemployment, it will have passed 6m now as PolEx shows and may well peak closer to 6.5m. The DWP website shows a time series for the last ten years  – see it here which gives the below picture. This is a remarkable 15.7% of the working-age population. But again, this is a national study

Cameron courts the public academics

I’ve just got back to my desk after watching David Cameron in conversation with Nassim Nicholas Taleb – the author of The Black Swan, and one of those folk hailed as a “prophet” of the Crash – over at the RSA.  Although, to be honest, “conversation” might be stretching it.  Until it came to questions from the floor, Cameron largely left Taleb to it; letting him riff on everything from the national debt to biodiversity in Europe.  No bad thing, I assure you. As for the details of Taleb’s address, there were plenty of decent quotes and observations.  He warned of the “high risk” of hyperinflation, for instance, and laid

Alex Massie

Monarchy is Better than a Republic

If you wrote this about a monarch it might seem a trifle silly; writing it about a mere politician is simply embarrassing. So, take it away Peggy Noonan: I always now think of a good president as sitting at the big desk and reaching out with his long arms and holding on to the left, and holding on to the right, and trying mightily to hold it together, letting neither spin out of control, holding on for dear life. I wish we were seeing that. I don’t think we are. Heaven help us. If the President is expected to be Comforter-in-Chief, can you have an effective, let alone a sensible,

Fraser Nelson

The flu jab choice the Department of Health might not tell you about

Which flu jab would you like this season – the one with mercury, or without? It’s a question you’re unlikely to be asked when the NHS vaccination programme gets underway in October but there actually is a choice. One swine flu vaccine ordered by the government, Panderix, contains thimerosal, a preservative which is 49.6% mercury by weight. The other swine flu jab, Celvapan, is mercury-free. I found this out by calling the Department of Health on a hunch. When governments order vaccines, and have no intention of telling patients what’s in the mix, they tend to go for the bulk cheap ones. These often contain thimerosal. But the use of

While the cat’s away, the mice will undermine his authority

So the Times reveals something we all half-knew already: that Alistair Darling dug his heels in when there was talk of him being ousted from the Treasury during the last reshuffle.  Here’s the lowdown: “Alistair Darling remained as Chancellor of the Exchequer in the June reshuffle after telling Gordon Brown that he would leave the Government rather than move to another job, The Times has learnt. The Chancellor, who is in charge of the Government this week while Mr Brown is on holiday, told him that as the Prime Minister he had every right to put whoever he wanted into the Treasury. But his insistence that he would not take

CoffeeHousers’ Wall 17 August – 23 August

Welcome to the latest CoffeeHousers’ Wall. For those who haven’t come across the Wall before, it’s a post we put up each Monday, on which – providing your writing isn’t libellous, crammed with swearing, or offensive to common decency – you’ll be able to say whatever you like in the comments section. There is no topic, so there’s no need to stay ‘on topic’ – which means you’ll be able to debate with each other more freely and extensively. There’s also no constraint on the length of what you write – so, in effect, you can become Coffee House bloggers. Anything’s fair game – from political stories in your local

Andy Burnham goes way too far<br />

There’s little denying that the planets aligned just right for Gordon Brown last week: a Tory in cahoots with those dastardly folk on the “American right”; a chance to defend that popular cause, the NHS; and all wrapped up in a funky new medium which the papers love to write about.  But there are signs that, in their desperation to keep the #welovetheNHS story running, Labour are taking things way too far.  I thought it a few days ago, when Andy Burnham called Dan Hannan “unpatriotic”.  But now the Health Secretary has exceeded himself, with a press release he sent out last night which makes a series of bizarre demands

City bonuses need to be curbed, but more tax is not the answer 

One upshot of George Osborne’s and Alistair Darling’s attacks on city bonuses was that the FSA had not gone far enough in trying to curb excessive reward. This morning, the left leaning think-tank Compass and Vince Cable have joined the debate. They suggest that there be a ‘High Pay Commission’, to examine wage ratios within financial institutions, and that the tax system is restructured to close the gap between income tax and capital gains. Cable makes the case in the Guardian, but this paragraph struck me: ‘There is no need for a return to a 1970s-style income policy for top pay – though, of course, the government is indirectly responsible for funding

One way to slim down the quangocracy

Despite Cameron’s recent announcements on the issue, there’s still quite a few frustrating question marks over how they’ll go about demolishing the quangocracy.  One attractive is turning quangos into angos – making them autonomous by introducing market principles and ensuring that organisations operate profitably and efficiently. To a certain, limited extent, this process is already underway. An employee of the General Medical Council (GMC), a completely autonomous and profitable organisation, recently explained to me how the BMC is taking over the Postgraduate Medical Education Training Board (PMETB). The PMETB is representative of the explosion of the Quango state. Its accounts show snowballing costs, all funded by the taxpayer. In 2007-08

James Forsyth

If the Tories are to take full advantage of this moment, they must cut out the unforced errors

The last week has been one of the worst the Tories have had in a while. As Pete said on Friday, a bad week in August is unlikely to do lasting damage. But the Tories should learn from the events of then past few days: they have been thrown onto the defensive not by clever Labour attacks but by their own unforced errors. Alan Duncan was a fool to say things to a prankster who he had never met before that he did not want made public and Dan Hannan should have realised that a Tory politician criticising the NHS in the context of the US healthcare debate was going

Why the Tories are right to tackle IB claimant numbers

So far as political stories are concerned, the Sunday papers are surprisingly action-packed.  Few are more eye-grabbing, though, than this item on p.2 of the Sunday Times, headlined “Tory benefit cuts may raise jobless to 4m”.  Sounds bad, huh?  But, when you read the full thing, it turns out that the Tories may have had a good, honest idea. Basically, the ST story claims that “senior Tories” are planning to move around 1.5 million people who claim incapacity benefit (IB) on to jobseeker’s allowance (JSA) within a year of taking office.  Hence the big leap in jobless figures, from what will be around 3 million, up to 4 million.  It’s

Fraser Nelson

Why we need a proper debate about healthcare

What we’ve seen in the last few days cannot be described as a debate about healthcare. It was a session of transatlantic insult slinging – and damned lies. This raises two questions: is the future of the NHS a subject that can be discussed rationally? And is the internet taking to British politics to the inane extremes that we see in certain sections of the American media? Let’s take this #welovethenhs Twitter campaign. Contrary to several British press reports, Sarah Palin did not describe the NHS as Orwellian or evil (she didn’t even mention Britain in her Facebook entry, here). But suggestions to the contrary have helped stoke this image

Low Life | 15 August 2009

The answer to all my problems, I read last week in a fascinating little booklet on fungal infections, is a substance called caprylic acid. Left to run riot, it predicted, the fungus growing in my throat and digestive tract will cause flatulence and itching (which I already have in spades), and eventually psychosis. Caprylic acid, a substance found in coconuts and breast milk, was the best natural substance to combat it, it said. That, combined with as much raw garlic as I can stomach. Of course I can always visit a doctor and get a prescription for some virulent chemical that will have a scattergun effect and kill off the

The Turf | 15 August 2009

It is the weather men rather than the steaks most of us want to grill slowly over hot embers this non-barbecue summer. But there are consolation days and nowhere better to appreciate them than Newmarket’s July course. The staff are friendly. Nobody looks askance at those who choose not to wear a tie and the fillies in silky pastels are as beguilingly undercovered as those in a risqué Edwardian pencil sketch. Flowers abound beside the parade ring and unsaddling enclosure, and I have never agreed with my late mother, who used to complain of others’ gardens, ‘Marigolds, dear…so common.’ The July course has been pleasantly re-developed. But at my age

Farewell Freddie

Not since Ian Botham has a cricketer so captured the public imagination as Andrew Flintoff has these past few years. Flintoff’s appeal comes from the fact that he brings the game of the village green to the Test match arena. He plays the sport as all those of us who have put on whites would like to. He bats with uncomplicated power, bowls with pace and turns matches through the force of his personality. He has played as hard off the field as he has on it. But there is something very English about his excess: more booze than bling. Few other sportsmen could have charmed the nation by turning

Respectful uncertainty

The Spectator on the plight of Britain’s vulnerable children Families are the raw materials from which society is constructed. They constitute the foundations of our civilisation. And it follows that there are few more unnatural actions that the state can undertake than to invade the relationship between parent and child or even to sever it. And while there are occasions when it must interfere, the state has a profound moral duty to ensure that its intervention is both necessary and constructive. When David Cameron talks of a ‘broken society’, it is of those families who cannot nurture children that he speaks: the mothers who don’t know how to love because