Society

Hugo Rifkind

Shared Opinion | 4 April 2009

It’s the little slights that really hurt. The ones where they just don’t seem to have thought about it. Certainly, we’re all thrilled that the great President Obama has deigned to make a visit to this little island vassal state. But why did he have to bring his own car? We have cars. Loads of them. And the thing is, Barack, ours even drive on the correct side of the road. Granted, they aren’t all so proficient at, say, withstanding a direct hit from an RPG (rocket-propelled grenade) as your multi-ton behemoth (dubbed ‘The Beast’), but you’d be amazed at the number of RPGs we don’t have floating around in

Our society must be equal to the threats ahead

There seems to have been a view developing in recent years that defines peace simply as the absence of war. If only we can avoid armed conflict, the argument seems to say, then we will live in a more peaceful world. But peace is not simply the absence of war. Real peace is accompanied by an unavoidable set of values. Freedom from tyranny, freedom from oppression and freedom from fear are essential for real peace, and unfortunately we sometimes have to fight and even to die to defend these freedoms. This is where our social attitudes, our political direction and our national security converge — in the crucial question about

That sinking feeling

The Boat That Rocked 15, Nationwide Now, although it has always been fashionable to take a bit of a pop at Richard Curtis and his ‘feel good’ movies (Four Weddings, Notting Hill, Love Actually) and I’ve been as guilty as anyone — I am just naturally bitchy, I’m afraid — I do think it is perhaps time to move on and take it up a gear: this man has to be stopped. Pallid I can take, and unchallenging I can take, happily — in fact, there is no one who likes less of a challenge at the cinema than me — but I could not take The Boat That Rocked,

The Spectator’s Grand National tips

Ahead of tomorrow’s big race, we asked a few Spectator contributors, and friends of Coffee House, for their Grand National tips.  Here are their responses: Robin Oakley Champion trainer Paul Nicholls has had 40 runners in the Grand National without winning.  He trains the favourite, My Will, but you can also get 22-1 on his Big Fella Thanks, which makes him the each way value. Peter Oborne Two horses catch my eye, both at reasonable odds. Brooklyn Brownie was bred by John Kenny, Master of the Ormond Foxhounds, won his bumper in Ireland before being sold to north country trainer Malcolm Jefferson. Brooklyn Brownie will stay the distance, enjoy the

James Forsyth

Expenses and extremists

I’ve said it before, but I think it bears repeating: those MPs who stretch the rules and abuse the public’s trust when it comes to expenses are helping the BNP and other extremists. When the public hear about Jacqui Smith claiming for a bath plug, let alone porn films; Tony McNulty claiming taxpayer support for a second home just nine miles from his main residence; and the MP for Kensington and Chelsea—Sir Malcolm Rifkind—being reimbursed for flights to Edinburgh, it fuels the sentiment that the political class are living it up at everyone else’s expense. This plays right into the BNP’s narrative about a conspiracy against the white working man.

Not much anarchy in the UK

Given the newspaper headlines over the last few days, one could have been forgiven for thinking the UK, or at least the City of London, had been taken over by anarchists. Wherever you looked there were dramatic images of broken windows and bloodied and angry protesters. But the give-away is that in every snap there are about 8 photographers. It can’t be much of a riot, if there are that many cameras recording every act of violence. The anti-capitalists couldn’t have had better circumstances. The whole country is annoyed with the bankers, with even the most mild-mannered individuals calling for their blood. The entire capitalist system has taken a beating.

Why we should worry about Pakistan

The footage the Guardian have of a girl being flogged by Taliban fighters in Swat valley, Pakistan, is a difficult watch.  As one man hits her, she screams out and begs “Either kill me or stop it now”.  Quite simply, it’s sickening, and utterly indicative of the barbarism of these Islamists.  It’s indicative, too, of how entrenched the Taliban are in Pakistan.  According to the Guardian’s source, they are encouraging the circulation of this footage as some sort of statement of intent.  Given recent events in Pakistan, you sense that the Taliban’s influence in that country is spreading, just as this video is spreading from mobile phone to mobile phone. 

James Forsyth

Darling picks an unfavourable metric

“Everything we do is about jobs,” Alistair Darling declared on The Today Programme this morning. In one sense this is the right thing to say politically, it is the prospect of losing their job and not been able to find another one that worries people most in a recession. Indeed, after the Democrats had polled and focus-grouped how best to sell their stimulus plan, they moved to a message almost solely about the jobs it would save and create. But on another level, Darling has picked the worst metric for the government to be judged on. Unemployment is a lagging indicator and the Department for Work and Pensions predicts that

Waking up to spending cuts

There’s an intriguing post by Allegra Stratton over at the Guardian’s politics blog.  In it, she cites Fraser’s ten reasons for a Tory government to cut public spending,  and suggests that there’s a “growing number” of Labour folk who are thinking similarly: “…this camp – I suppose you can call them “Blairites” – do not see any contradiction in demanding [a stimulus in the next Budget], followed swiftly by a longer term pledge to bring down the level of spending by the state. They are not thinking of one-off chops (appealing as a surgical removal of £25bn on Trident or £4bn on two new aircraft may be to some) or

James Forsyth

Should Boris be answerable to a Commons select committee?

Boris’s evident frustration with the House of Commons’ Transport Select Committee (footage above) is making waves. Yesterday in Parliament devoted about a quarter of the programme to it today, and Martin Bright writes that: “Walking out of a select committee hearing (however tedious it is for the Mayor of London to be asked awkward questions about the job he is doing) is just unacceptable.” But I fail to see why the London Mayor should be answerable to a Commons Select Committee for London Transport? The Mayor of London is elected by the people of London and should be held accountable both by them and the Assembly Members that they elect,

Politicians take note: expenses controversy makes you less popular

Uh-oh.  The grassroots have spoken, and it seems Eric Pickles has taken a hit for his recent car-crash performance on Question Time.  ConservativeHome’s latest shadow cabinet ratings have the party chairman’s approval rating dropping a full 20 percentage points – from 70 percent in February to 50 percent in March. Of course, Eric Pickles’ TV nightmare pales in comparison to the controversy that Jacqui Smith’s got herself mired in, and that’s reflected in a separate survey by Politics Home, also released today.  Their PHI100 ‘performance tracker’ gives the Home Secretary the lowest score ever achieved by a member of the Cabinet. I know, I know, it’s pretty obvious that polticians will become less popular when they fiddle

Why Brown shouldn’t expect a significant bounce

Let’s face it: Brown’s having his moment in the sun.  The content of the G20 communique may have been awfully thin (see Fraser’s must-read analysis here), but it’s delivered backslaps from Obama; some big, headline-grabbing numbers; and an opportunity for our Dear Leader to play the statesman.  And it seems to have worked.  Despite a few qualms here and there – and a surprisingly combative interview with Alistair Darling on the Today Programme – the overall tone of the papers is positive, and you’d expect Labour to get a poll boost on the back of it.  Well done, Agent Brown.  Mission accomplished. And yet, to my mind, the sun will

Alex Massie

G20 Photo of the Day

Photo: ERIC FEFERBERG/AFP/Getty Images Say what one will about Gordon Brown, at least the United Kingdom wasn’t represented by this clown*. *That would be Silvio Berlusconi, silly.

Does Brown’s G20 statement contain the mother of all Brownies?

Brown’s just delivered his statement to close the G20 summit, and it’s all about the big numbers.  That $1 trillion injection into the global economy made an appearance, but it paled beside Brown’s claim that “we’re in the middle of a fiscal stimulus that is worth about $5 trillion by the end of next year”.  Hang on.  Brown was talking about a $2 trillion stimulus only yesterday, so where’s the extra $3 trillion coming from?  I haven’t seen details yet, but Brown’s rhetoric – “Our central banks have pledged to make expansionary policies as long as they are necessary, and in whatever ways they see fit” – seems too guarded

Brown’s headlines take shape

Word is that the G20 summit is closing in on $1 trillion package of measures for the global economy.  Nick Robinson breaks it down thus: — Increased IMF funds: $500bn — Increased IMF Special Drawing Rights: $250bn — New Trade Finance package: $200bn No it’s not the same sort of “fiscal stimulus” that Brown and Obama have been pusing for over the past few weeks, and I’m still curious about how how much of it will be “new” money.  But it looks like Brown will achieve two of his main objectives: to come out of today claiming to have arranged something major, and to snare some nice headlines with big

Alex Massie

The Colour of Newsprint

Jack Shafer  – entertaining as ever – mounts a spirited defence of yellow journalism: “Being rambunctious to the extreme, yellow journalism is misunderstood. At its best, yellow journalism was terrific, and at its worst, it really wasn’t all that bad.” Quite so. Newspapers are an entertainment just as much as they’re a source of, like, news. That’s one reason why you can make a decent argument that, taken on its own terms, the News of the World – the yellowest of our papers – is also the best paper in Britain. Shafer adds this: One of the biggest enemies of yellow journalism in the 1890s was Adolph Ochs, who purchased

James Forsyth

Mandelson: Don’t throw the baby out with the bath water

Peter Mandelson’s op-ed in the Telegraph today makes an obvious but important point that is in danger of getting lost amidst all the talk of new settlements and a new capitalism: “In the rush to build a new capitalism, we need to preserve what worked from the old. Politicians need to agree not just what failed to work over the last decade, but what worked well. The increasing retreat of economic nationalism in the 20th century and the growing reach of open markets fall squarely into that category.” Say what you like about Mandelson, but his commitment to free trade and opening up markets is admirable. The next time a