Latest from Coffee House

Latest from Coffee House

All the latest analysis of the day's news and stories

Why I’m cynical about politicians ‘doing God’

Alastair Campbell famously declared that ‘We don’t do God’, yet it is customary that part of an election campaign includes wooing Britain’s minority faith communities – be they Sikhs, Hindus or Muslims. Boris and Corbyn are no exception. In recent weeks, both party leaders have donned saffron headscarves while visiting Sikh temples (gurdwara). Both have

Robert Peston

Are Boris and Corbyn both playing us all for fools?

A question I don’t expect my colleague Julie Etchingham to put to the two party leaders in ITV’s debate is the one that has been nagging away at me for days: why is the policy-making that will underpin the election manifestos we’ll get from the parties over the next few days so lacking in intellectual

Alex Massie

Nicola Sturgeon’s ‘two referendums’ ploy is nonsense

Nicola Sturgeon has not hitherto often been considered a humorist but she is busy revealing a new side to her character in this general election. This is pleasing for many reasons but not least because this election already needs some levity.  Consider the article written by – or, rather, for – Sturgeon and published at

Katy Balls

Why the Tories have to talk about fox hunting

At what point did the Conservatives’ 2017 campaign start to go off the rails? A lot of Conservative MPs point to the manifesto launch and the creation of the so-called dementia tax. However, many view comments Theresa May made during a stump speech on fox hunting as just as damaging. The then prime minister said

Tom Goodenough

Croydon could be key to deciding Boris’s election fortunes

Croydon Central’s last Tory MP wrote the book on how to win a marginal constituency. At the 2017 election, Gavin Barwell subsequently lost his seat. Now Barwell’s ex-Downing Street colleague is determined to win it back. So what went wrong last time? And will things really be different for the Tories two years on? Mario

Robert Peston

Jo Swinson’s anti-populist pitch

I emerged with three thoughts from my interview with the Lib Dem leader Jo Swinson, which is three more thoughts than I often have after interviewing a senior politician. First, her attack on Labour was massively personalised as an attack on Jeremy Corbyn, who she says is not fit to be PM, rather than on the party itself.

Isabel Hardman

Boris Johnson’s corporation tax u-turn could backfire

The Conservatives are naturally very determined not to repeat the mistakes of the last election campaign, particularly when it came to the way the party’s manifesto was ‘dumped’ on an unsuspecting public in the middle of the campaign. Campaign aides say the 2017 mistake was not to roll the pitch in the run-up to the

Katy Balls

Jeremy Corbyn’s opportunity to unite the Remain vote

As the election campaign enters its third week, the Conservatives are enjoying a 17-point lead, according to a YouGov poll. However cautious Tory MPs are quick to point out nothing should be taken for granted, as this is broadly speaking where the Tory party was at this point in the 2017 campaign. But for Labour

Julie Burchill

In defence of narcissism

I am that rare thing, a vice-signaller; a breed defined by the fact that unlike our virtue-signalling opposites, we delight in presenting ourselves as somewhat worse than we are. Reasons vary; sometimes we were Bad People in the past and changed but (like teenage wallflowers who grew into table-dancing divas and still describe themselves as

Sam Leith

Sordid confessions of a Centrist Dad | 17 November 2019

I have a shameful secret. I’ve been watching these… videos online. Amazing what you can get in a couple of clicks these days. Being what the Corbynistas deride as a Centrist Dad, I have taken to seeking out short films of taboo figures like Tony Blair and Barack Obama, talking about current affairs and being

Nick Cohen

The Troubles with Brexit

At times, it can be hard to avoid the preachy style of reviewing that talks to readers in the tone of a teacher ordering you to eat your greens. This, I’m afraid, is one of them. If you know what’s good for you, watch Spotlight on the Troubles: A Secret History on BBC iPlayer and

Could Philip Hammond return to selling second-hand cars?

What will my former school chum, Philip Hammond, do with himself now? He’s thought better of standing as an independent in the coming election, cut his losses and walked away from parliament. I wonder if he’ll be tempted to return to his roots. When I knew Phil ‘the Goth’ at Shenfield Comprehensive in Essex, he

Gavin Mortimer

Boris could learn from Macron’s approach to extremism

Boris Johnson and Emmanuel Macron have more in common than just a desire to ‘get Brexit done’. The pair also recognise the threat posed to the West by Islamic extremism  – and the Prime Minister can learn from the growing determination of the French president to stand strong against the hardliners and in defence of

The Tories need a more radical tax plan

Today the Conservative Party announced that it would cut business rates for shops, cinemas and pubs. The proposal sounds great, but the moment you look at the detail, you groan. There’s a percentage cut… to a discount… that applies to a subset – yawn. Has someone brought George Osborne back? Recent polling shows that the

Ross Clark

The unseemly race to increase the size of the state

‘Elect me once more and we will finish off socialism for good,’ declared Mrs Thatcher before the 1987 general election, or words to that effect. Not so fast. Thirty two years on and we are engaged in an unseemly contest as to which party can increase public spending, and with it the size of the

Katy Balls

The voters the Conservatives plan to persuade to win a majority

In this election, the Tories hope to persuade voters who have never backed the Conservative party before to turn blue. Key target seats lie in parts of the Midlands and North that are historically Labour. As I say in this week’s magazine, to help candidates and activists take on this new terrain, the party has

James Kirkup

Corbyn and McDonnell want you to attack their broadband pledge

The Labour plan to nationalise broadband is a good illustration of why the Corbyn-McDonnell team are much better at politics than their Conservative critics realise. It is also more evidence that the allegedly radical socialist Corbyn is actually engaged in an almost Blairite exercise of calculated branding and positioning. If you read certain newspapers and

A British Broadband Corporation is Labour’s worst idea yet

If you wanted to completely destroy a modern twenty-first century economy there are various places you could start. You could print money to finance unlimited government spending. You could put up tariff barriers on all your main imports. You could even try raising the minimum wage to £30 an hour, while cutting the working week

Steerpike

Does CCHQ think Boris will lose his seat?

One of the strange things about this election is that the Conservatives could quite conceivably wake up on 13 December to find they have won a majority, but their prime minister has lost his job. In 2017 Boris Johnson only won his seat of Uxbridge and Ruislip with just over 5,000 votes, placing his constituency