James Forsyth

James Forsyth

James Forsyth is former political editor of The Spectator.

James Forsyth

Will the Labour press decide Brown has to go?

Once the local and European elections results are all out on Monday the eighth, we can expect Gordon Brown to try and launch a fight-back. Two predictable elements to it will be a reshuffle, designed to bind in those who could credibly wield the knife against him, and a constitutional reform package. As Prime Minister,

James Forsyth

The Labour limbo continues

If today’s Populus poll in The Times is accurate, then Gordon Brown’s will be fighting a last-ditch battle to save his premiership nine days from now. The poll has Labour heading for a 16 percent share of the vote at the European elections behind both the Tories, 30 percent, and UKIP, 19 percent. The Lib

James Forsyth

Politics | 30 May 2009

James Forsyth reviews the week in politics The last thing any politician wants to be seen as at the moment is a defender of the political status quo. So this week we have had Alan Johnson’s call for PR and David Cameron’s ‘power to the people’ speech. The Prime Minister is expected to lay out

Who will sing for Labour?

The Independent’s gossip column reports that Labour is having some trouble recruiting celebrity talent to us annual fundraising dinner: “Party press officers insist that they have a “surprise singing performer” to compound [Eddie Izard’s] credentials. Who could it be? The usual cast of characters (Mick Hucknall, the Bee Gees, Heather Small) refuse to respond to

James Forsyth

A gross error of judgement<br />

This story in The Sun today does make you wonder what on earth is going on: “One adult in 12 convicted of the most serious sex assaults on kids walks free from court. The maximum punishment for rape or attempted rape of a child under 13 is life. But new figures show ten people were

What are the chances of Labour dumping Brown?

Three MPs have announced they are standing down at the next election today; proof that the expenses scandal is getting more deadly for MPs as it goes on. But, in the background, the conversation about whether Brown can survive what Anne McEloy has dubbed the Ides of June is getting louder. Over at the always

James Forsyth

This time the postman is ready to deliver

The game is afoot. When you talked to Labour people about an attempt to remove Gordon Brown they always used to use say ‘if’. Now they say ‘when’. The view is that June 4th will be grim for all the major parties, but particularly grim for Labour. Oddly, the worse the Tories do, the worse

A grim international situation

Today is one of those days that remind you that the international situation is as serious as the economic one and the crisis facing our democracy. No one quite knows what North Korea means by its nuclear tests and declarations that the 1953 armistice is no longer operative. Indeed, no one even really knows who

The tragedies of Swat valley<br />

There is something depressingly predictable about the news that extremist groups are filling the void left by the Pakistani government in terms of accommodating the refugees from the Swat valley. Save the Children estimates that only 20 percent of the roughly 2 million refugees are in government run camps. The Washington Post reports that: ‘Outside

James Forsyth

No Sun Euro-endorsement for the Tories

The Sun has been shining on David Cameron recently. The paper’s call for an early election has helped Cameron out considerably and it has generally given him a pretty positive write-up these past few weeks. But today’s editorial on the European elections pointedly does not endorse the Tories: “Labour has surrendered all credibility by betraying

Cameron is talking the talk on the reform Britain needs

The headline coming out of David Cameron’s speech tomorrow, which The Guardian publishes as an essay tomorrow, will be his rejection of PR. But I’m more interested by how Cameron is again hitting the right notes about broader political reform.  Take these two passages: “I believe the central objective of the new politics we need

James Forsyth

What Johnson offers Labour

As Pete says, it is hard to see Alan Johnson’s article in The Times today as anything other than another flash of leadership leg from him. The tectonic plates do seem to be shifting on the Labour side. There appears to have been a hardening of attitudes, a recognition that their only chance of avoiding

Time is running out for dealing with Iran’s nuclear ambitions

There is a real danger that Iran acquires a nuclear capability before the US-led coalition works out what it is prepared to do to stop it. As David Ignatius writes in the Washington Post today, there isn’t any attractive solution to this problem: “The quiet, deniable covert activities undertaken so far haven’t stopped the Iranian

James Forsyth

Will Brown bring Blunkett back?

Patrick Hennessy has an authoritative piece in the Sunday Telegraph about the signs that Gordon Brown is set to recall David Blunkett to the Cabinet. Hennessy reports that Blunkett dined at Chequers with Brown on an evening when Wilf Stevenson, one of Brown’s closest friends and his adviser on ‘engaging with local communities’, was also

James Forsyth

Speaking out against Bercow

The vast majority of Tory MPs do not want John Bercow to be Speaker; I’ve only spoken to one who favours his candidacy. The Tories complain that Labour’s support for Bercow is a plot to appear bi-partisan while actually being crudely political. Today’s Mail on Sunday editorial is a punchy expression of this viewpoint: “It

It’s ending in America

As the whole expenses scandal rumbles on, the economic crisis has been knocked off the front pages. But it hasn’t gone away. Today there’s an interesting article in the Washington Post saying that while the worst is over in America, the recession in Europe will be longer and deeper. (The numbers the Post mentions about