James Forsyth

James Forsyth

James Forsyth is former political editor of The Spectator.

The faith of Obama: a secular messiah

This Christmas is the last occasion when Barack Obama will have time to reflect and think at his own pace for the next four, and probably eight, years. It offers him a brief gap between the crazed schedule of the campaign — last year he was campaigning on Boxing Day — and the pressures of

Is Mandelson really going to become Lord of the Dance?

This story seems almost too good to be true: Peter Mandelson is, apparently, going to make a guest appearance on Strictly Come Dancing tomorrow night. The Belfast Telegraph reports that: “The Secretary of State for Business is expected to take to the dancefloor alongside celebrities Lisa Snowdon, Rachel Stevens and Tom Chambers to wow the

James Forsyth

Class confusion

The Daily Mirror is, to put it mildly, obsessed with David Cameron’s social background. But Paul Routledge demonstrates an alarming lack of knowledge when he fumes that: “Deregulating the City, so bankers could steal the cash and get rich was [Thatcher’s] idea. Cameron is hard-wired with them. They’re his tribe. He gets his money from

James Forsyth

A question of priorities

At his press conference this morning, Gordon Brown said that he would reply to David Cameron’s letter about meeting with the civil service in due course. It is an improvement on a spokesman’s answer last weekend that, “The prime minister is in Afghanistan, so it is not top of his list of priorities” But it

James Forsyth

Mandelson and Charlie Whelan <em>have</em> met

The enmity between the Blair and Brown camps seemed to be perfectly captured by the fact that Charlie Whelan had to resign after Mandelson’s first resignation. The Blairites were convinced that Whelan had leaked the story and the principle of an eye for an eye and a tooth for tooth demanded that Whelan go too.

The new CW

One of the political winners of the last quarter of this year has been Ed Miliband. He gave one of the best speeches of the conference season and then was promoted in Brown’s reshuffle to one of the sexiest portfolios in government. James Macintyre in his predictions for 2009 says: “Ed Miliband will emerge as the

James Forsyth

One meeting Peter Mandelson isn’t invited to

Westminster is in awe of Peter Mandelson’s power. There is no doubt that he has almost unparalleled access and a remarkably wide-ranging remit; as Rachel Sylvester noted he sits on 33 of 39 cabinet committees. But it seems there are still some Brownites who are not yet ready to welcome him into the inner circle.

James Forsyth

Comic – but not in the way intended

This press release from the Tories just landed in my inbox: Commenting on Harriet Harman’s comparison of Gordon Brown to Superman, Shadow Cabinet member, Chris Grayling, said: “Gordon Brown is the Lex Luthor and not the Superman of British politics.  He gets us into a deep mess and all his ideas about how to get

James Forsyth

PMQs live blog | 17 December 2008

Gordon Brown is in Iraq today, avoiding the final PMQs of term, so we have Harman versus Hague again. Contrary to what people expected, Harman has held her own in these encounters. The Tory benches could certainly do with cheering up today, though. 12:05 Harman starts off with condolences for the family of the British

Not the Christmas present Cameron wanted

The latest ICM poll for the Guardian has the Tories dropping below forty percent. The party is down seven points on last month at 38 percent but it is still five points ahead of Labour.  The Lib Dems are on 19. It seems that it is doubts about their economic competence which is pulling the

James Forsyth

Reasons to disregard the “parallels” with 1992

There’s a lot of talk in Westminster at the moment about the parallels between now and 1992. Those who think that Brown can win the next election argue that 1992 shows how a governing party can win in a downturn and from behind. But looking at the polling from 1992, which admittedly got the final

James Forsyth

From hug a hoodie to hang a banker

David Cameron’s speech this morning was a clever and important piece of political positioning. By calling for the full force of the law to be brought to bear on those in the City who have acted illegally, Cameron is moving to defuse the idea that the Tories are on the side of the bankers not

James Forsyth

Today’s star

The cost to the taxpayer of public sector pensions and how much more generous they are than private sectors ones is going to become an increasingly big political issue in the coming years. The deal that Alan Johnson brokered with the public sector unions back in 2005 ducked pretty much all of the tough issues

No marks for taxpayer value

If anyone doubts the crazy excesses of the quango culture read the Mail on Sunday’s report on Ken Boston, who has finally resigned as head of the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority over the SATS marking debacle. Boston was paid more than seven times what his predecessor was. What on earth was the justification for this

James Forsyth

Brown should stop being so petty

In Britain there is no transition period for a new government to bed down in. Instead, the leader of the opposition becomes Prime Minister as soon as they have been to see the Queen after their party has won an election. Since the 1960s oppositions have had discussions with civil servants in the lead up

James Forsyth

Poll puzzle

Two new polls out this morning suggest that no party can be confident about winning the next election outright. The Tories lead in both, but in the Com Res poll their margin is only one point and their six point lead with YouGov would not be enough for an overall majority on a uniform swing.