Wasn't the broad conversation post-election about the "loveless landslide" and "wide but shallow majority"? This was quite a focal point, at least in my neck of the woods
Wasn't the broad conversation post-election about the "loveless landslide" and "wide but shallow majority"? This was quite a focal point, at least in my neck of the woods
How do I feel about the war in Iran? Like I'm on a very, very narrow bridge.
My @jewishnews.bsky.social column
www.jewishnews.co.uk/on-a-very-na...
Thanks James. That Yeats line never fails!
π§΅In todayβs Times @joshglancy.bsky.social has a brilliant write up of our focus groups he sat in on. Definitely read it in full! But I want to focus on two voters: Kylie & Eve I think have outsized importance in explaining todayβs politics
www.thetimes.com/article/b75e...
I think that specific confluence of factors has made the British public particularly furious and fed up and impatient with its political class and leadership.
I'm sure quality of politicians is a factor too, thought that may also be true elsewhere I don't know.
Well you always know best!
I mean obviously there's no monocause. But if you take Campbell's point and add in the specifics of our media environment, our exposure to GFE + austerity + Brexit + particularly high inflation + various migration issues, I think it helps explain why most PMs flopping fast.
There is a lot to be said for this letter in today's Times
Jonathan, feel free to insult my journalism as you have several times before. But please don't undermine the livelihoods of the many people who work at my newspaper by posting free links.
Richard Hermer vs David Wolfson
Born 1968, silk 2009, attorneys general 2024.
Yet the differences between them tells the story of the crossroads Anglo-Jewry has reached
My @jewishnews.bsky.social column
thttps://www.jewishnews.co.uk/hermer-and-wolfson-the-fault-line-running-through-anglo-jewry/
Theodor Meron survived the Holocaust, found refuge in Israel, helped set up the ICC, then aged 93 indicted Benjamin Netanyahu for war crimes. He stands by his decision.
It was fascinating to interview him
www.thetimes.com/world/middle...
Suitably tentative by @joshglancy.bsky.social on whether Wes Streeting is all comms and no substance 1/2 thetimes.com/uk/politics/...
Such an interesting insight from @joshglancy.bsky.social that I hope others pick up. Itβs great that Trump has caught up with us on Farage but what does he consider to be βrealβ? Is there a snake oil that works?
Has the Trump-Farage bromance cooled?
One very well-placed source tells me that the president has "lost faith" with his former pal
www.thetimes.com/uk/politics/...
SCOOP
Keir Starmer has been invited to join the Gaza board of peace by the Trump administration.
Former PM Tony Blair's candidacy for the board, which will in theory administer the strip's transition to a post-Hamas future, was dropped last year.
times-comment.com/starmer-trump
Can I point you to the extensive original reporting on this issue of the Clacton house in The Sunday Times?
www.thetimes.com/uk/politics/...
Ok. Well I am telling you it was ironic. I think most of our readers, particularly those familiar with my writing, will have realised that. I'm sorry it didn't register for you, but perhaps your distrust of the paper coloured your perspective somewhat.
Why is it dubious?
Could I point you to where I use the phrase "schoolboy racism"
It's ironic. I'd point you to my writing about Starmer and Labour as context.
'Left wing tyranny' is an ironical use of language a Reformer might use, not something I think. I'd point you to my writing about Starmer as context.
Yes, it's been uneasy, due to allegations of schoolboy racism and the Nathan Gill case, both of which I mention.
Don't quite follow your criticism here?
With almost every dominant issue of today β from welfare spending to court backlogs, NHS waiting lists, school absenteeism and the national debt β the pandemicβs aftershocks are at or near the heart of the matter.
(Β£) www.thetimes.com/comment/colu...
By @joshglancy.bsky.social
Interesting, why do you think that? Structurally is more 2022
- Two child benefit cap to be abolished after all
- Deep frustrations from team Reeves about Gordon Brown's unhelpful interventions on the issue
- Lots of blame for the chaotic budget process being levelled at Torsten Bell
My @thetimes.com pre-budget read
www.thetimes.com/uk/politics/...
Thanks James, appreciate that
Not for a bit, I'd imagine
It's a 1300 word news interview in which I did my best to describe her biography and world view.
Within the article, there is a significant focus on immigration and its attendant issues such as the ECHR, because yes I do think that is important.
It's a 1300 word, one hour interview in which I did my best to describe her biography and world view. Yes we discussed Brexit, but there simply wasn't room to go into a lot of detail on every angle. I think people learned something from it.
And the immigration stuff was just one smallish chunk of a wide ranging discussion, though it has obviously blown up massively since.