Monday, May 12, 2008
Brian Paddick's election diary
Initially there was very little money, even less strategy and a great deal of frustration as I realised the media – and to some extent the public – cared only about the two high-profile candidates, Boris Johnson and Ken Livingstone.
I struggled through a nine-month campaign in which the third force in British politics, for reasons beyond our control, became daily more like the third farce.
Labels: London
Sunday, May 11, 2008
Pelicans in the news
In Florida:
In London:A woman required 20 stitches to her face after a pelican crashed into her in the sea off Florida, apparently diving for fish.
The bird, which died in Thursday's collision, ripped a gash in Debbie Shoemaker's face as she bathed near the city of St Petersburg.
The city fire chief said he had never heard of a diving pelican hit a person.
Families and tourists in a London park were left shocked when a pelican picked up and swallowed a pigeon.
The unusual wildlife spectacle in St James's Park was caught on camera by photographer Cathal McNaughton.
He said the Eastern White pelican had the unfortunate pigeon in its beak for more than 20 minutes before swallowing it whole.
An RSPB spokesman said: "It is almost unheard of for a pelican to eat a bird. Their diet should be strictly fish."
Hmm. Pelcians seems to be doing a lot of unprecedented things all of a sudden.
Watch the skies!
Spencer Davis Group: Georgia On My Mind
With tomorrow being Steve Winwood's 60th birthday, I have an excuse for returning to this blog's favourite band.
This performance comes from the same Finnish TV concert as the version of "I'm a Man" featured here a few weeks ago. Which means it comes from 1967 when Winwood was 18 and about to leave the group to form Traffic.
Winwood's homage to Ray Charles is extraordinary. And it raises the question of why it was that in the early 1960s a generation of white middle-class boys found such affinity with the Black American music of the blues.
I read somewhere that Pete Townshend attributed it to the fact that we were all so depressed after World War II and the austerity years. My own theory is twofold.
The first is that this generation had fathers who played jazz. This was true of Jimmy Page and his fellow skiffle players and also of the Winwood brothers, whose father was a semi-professional musician. So they grew up in households that were steeped in Black music.
The second is the influence of the church. Religion was a greater presence in middle-class life in those days, which gave British boys a musical education that was closer to the American South than anything they will experience today. Steve Winwood sang in his parish church choir for years as a boy, as did Brian Jones of the Rolling Stones. (Rod Argent of The Zombies was even a chorister at St Albans Abbey.)
Chris Welch writes in his biography of Steve Winwood:
It is all a long way from Simon Cowell and a far better musical education than anyone is likely to get today.Just like so many of the original black soul artists, Steve's earliest singing experiences were on sanctified ground. When the church organist had finished playing, taken his cassock off and got on his bicycle to go home, Steve and Muff used to stay in church with a couple of other friends, switch on the pump and get the organ going.
With Steve pedalling furiously he sang out "What I'd Say", his voice echoing to the rafters of St John's, Perry Barr.
Friday, May 09, 2008
Moura Budberg documentary on BBC4
I was wondering why people have been landing on this blog over the past couple of days after searching for "Moura Budberg".The answer is that there was a documentary about her in BBC4's Storyville series. In it Dimitri Collingridge attempted to uncover the truth about her life. Moura is his great, great aunt, just as she is Nick Clegg's.
You can watch the documentary via the BBC website for the next few days.
It comes to much the same conclusion that I did in my New Statesman piece. While Moura undoubtedly had connections in the intelligence world, the idea of her as a spy was largely the stuff of legend - and she helped to write that legend herself.
Labels: Moura Budberg, Nick Clegg, Television
House Points: Round the Horne and Liberalism
I have written about the Hornes and the Paddicks before on this blog.
Horney problems
The Bank Holiday weekend gave Westminster time to reflect on last week’s elections. Will Boris Johnson’s victory in London prove a mixed blessing for David Cameron? Has the Tories’ success in the North been overhyped? Once again they failed to win a single seat in Liverpool, Manchester, Newcastle or Hull.
And, closer to home… Why, when the Liberal Democrats are such strong supporters of proportional representation, do we do so badly whenever it is used? And why, presented with the opportunity, did more Londoners not give the Brian Paddick their first preference and opt for Boris or Ken with their second?
My impression is that we have become extremely proficient at flooding individual wards or constituencies with workers and squeezing third-party votes during those campaigns. But are we as good at winning people’s support for a Liberal agenda between elections or across a whole city?
One consolation from the London campaign was the revelation that Brian is a relation - second cousin once removed, to be precise - of the Round the Horne star Hugh Paddick.
Round the Horne was the cult radio comedy of the 1960s. In it the urbane Kenneth Horne proved, long before Humphrey Lyttelton, that you can get away with the most outrageous innuendo on the BBC so long as you have impeccable Establishment style and connections. Hugh Paddick is best remembered for playing Julian to Kenneth Williams’s Sandy in the show.
But a connection between Round the Horne and Liberalism should not be such a surprise, because Kenneth Horne’s father was a Liberal MP. Silvester Horne, who sat for Ipswich between 1910 and 1914, was a Congregationalist minister and a celebrated orator and preacher.
Kenneth was a little boy when his father died. When in adult life he described Winston Churchill to a friend as a great orator, that friend replied: "Yes, but then you never heard your father speak, did you?"
Some would conclude that the son who revelled in the smut of Round the Horne can have had little in common with his clergyman father. But Kenneth Horne was not without a puritan streak too. He once said: "I am all for censorship. If ever I see a double entendre I whip it out."
Thursday, May 08, 2008
Great tits and Jan's cock
Norfolk Blogger has quite rightly awarded Headline of the Week to the BBC for its:Great tits cope well with warmingMalcolm Redfellow's World Service also notes this story and goes on to inform us that the RSPB has banished the word "cock" from its website. This leads him to reminisce:
Long years ago, Malcolm worked alongside a lovely, if slightly too-innocent-for-her-own-good teacher. She insisted on using Ian Serraillier's 1956 great story, The Silver Sword, as a class reader. (It may subsequently have been edited or re-written: it certainly seems to have gained a new title, Escape from Warsaw). The problem was that one of the characters has a pet chicken, and this (as Malcolm painfully remembers) provokes the immortal line:
"Jan placed his cock on the table."
As soon as the set of books was removed from the stock-cupboard, Malcolm, would take great care monitoring the class's progress in reading the story. He fully appreciated that he would be summoned to suppress the minor riot when the psychological moment arrived.
Labels: Awards
Steve Galloway stands down as City of York Council leader
I mention this because Steve was a Liberal councillor when I was a student in York nearly 30 years ago. In those days the idea that the Liberals might one day run the city would have seemed pretty fanciful. Steve's career is a reminder of how far we have come.Steve Galloway is resigning as leader of City of York Council, after five years in charge.
The Liberal Democrat chief, who has been a councillor for 35 years and party leader for the past nine, said he had enjoyed his time in the top job, but it was time to hand over to somebody younger.
Steve was also the Liberal candidate for the York constituency at three general elections, but in the Alliance years the seat was allocated to the SDP and fought by someone called Vince Cable. I wonder what happened to him?
Labels: Liberal Democrats
John Stuart Mill's tomb

On an Overgrown Path (from whom I have borrowed the photograph) writes:
He is buried alongside his wife in the cemetery of St Veran on the outskirts of Avignon and his tomb, seen in my photos, is marked 'En hommage à John Stuart Mill Défenseur des Femmes'. The plaque has been added by Centre d'Hébergement et de Réinsertion Sociale "Stuart Mill", a refuge for women victims of violence in Paris.That blog also has another photograph showing the plaque in greater detail.
Labels: John Stuart Mill
Cats for Obama

With supporters like Leo from Antioch, CA, how can he lose?
Thanks to Paula Keavney.
Labels: Cats, US Politics
Wednesday, May 07, 2008
Local election results point to more Lib Dem MPs in Sheffield
The Sheffield Star has been looking at the local election results in the city last week and calculating what they could mean at the next general election.Just a bit of fun, as Peter Snow used to say, but very encouraging all the same.The Star can reveal further misery for Labour, which once counted Sheffield as one of its heartlands:
- Heeley MP and junior Foreign Office minister Meg Munn would lose an 11,000 majority and crash to a narrow defeat by the Lib Dems.
- Hillsborough MP Angela Smith, who is standing in the new Penistone and Stocksbridge seat, would come third, with the Lib Dems winning the seat and the Tories, who see the constituency as a potential target, second.
- Labour's comfortable 7,000 majority in Sheffield Central would be wiped out and the party would only just beat the Lib Dems. Lib Dems could take seat by securing a handful of extra votes.
- Only Brightside MP David Blunkett and Clive Betts, who represents Attercliffe, would be safe - but with reduced majorities.
- Conservatives would fail to make any inroads into Lib Dem leader Nick Clegg's hold on Hallam.
Labels: Liberal Democrats
Stephen Pound in "Here We Go Round the Mulberry Bush"

In February 2003 the Daily Mirror reported:
Yes, the film features this blog's favourite band. It is even better than that. The film was made just as Steve Winwood was leaving Spencer Davis and setting up Traffic and both groups are featured on the soundtrack.Steve Pound has revealed that he had a showbiz career in the late 60s before he became a Labour MP. He appeared in a movie called Here We Go Round The Mulberry Bush, shot in glamorous Stevenage.
"I appear twice in this film," brags Pound. "Once at the then Stevenage Locarno where I am seen in the crowd watching the Spencer Davis Group, and latterly as a nimble bus driver - with the sun glinting on my flowing auburn locks, a fag in my mouth and a copy of Labour Weekly sticking out of my back pocket."
There are several clips from Here We Go Round the Mulberry Bush on Youtube. It is even possible that Pound features in this one, which shows teenagers dancing to a post-Winwood Spencer Davis Group.
You can also enjoy the opening titles, a scene with Barry Evans and Adrienne Posta and (not from the film) this clip of Traffic playing the theme song.
There is a sad postscript to the film. The star of the film Barry Evans, who was brought up in children's homes, went on to appear in a couple of television sitcoms, but his career never really flourished. He was found dead in unexplained circumstances at his bungalow here in Leicestershire in 1997 and an open verdict was recorded by the coroner. There is a little more about his death in his Wikipedia entry.
Labels: Films, Spencer Davis Group, Steve Winwood, Trivia
Tuesday, May 06, 2008
Lib Dems look set to run Derby
The Liberal Democrats were tonight on the verge of controlling Derby City Council after the Tories said no to any power-sharing agreement.
The decision was made at a group meeting of the Conservatives in the city.
The only way Labour could have held on to control of the city was if the Conservatives had agreed to work with them in exchange for seats on the cabinet as they have for the past two years.
Labels: Liberal Democrats
Hazel Blears in "A Taste of Honey"?
This blog loves British films and trivial facts. And one of its favourite trivial facts is that Hazel Blears appeared in A Taste of Honey as a little girl.At the time of Labour's deputy leadership election she reminisced to the Daily Mail:
I have not seen the film, but this interview suggests that this photograph from Britmovie shows a five-year-old Hazel Blears with the film's star Rita Tushingham."The director wanted a couple of street urchins in the film and saw me and my brother playing in the street, asked me mum if we could be in the film and, being the proud working-class woman that she is, she made absolutely sure we had our Sunday best clothes on and were all scrubbed up.
"So, if you ever see A Taste Of Honey, right at the beginning, then you'll see two of the best-dressed urchins that you're ever likely to see.
"You can see me in the opening credits. I'm wearing a tartan skirt and am bouncing a ball.
And then there's Stephen Pound in Here We Go Round the Mulberry Bush...
The BBC's election night coverage
Either those responsible were actually drunk at the time, or they assumed that most of the audience would be. But this was local election coverage. Most normal people don't sit up most of the night waiting to hear whether Reading has moved to No Overall Control. Those who do have the obsessive interest in politics required to tune in to this sort of show want to know facts, put into context by basic, easy-to-follow maps and graphs.
Far from helping to explain anything, this skit served only to confuse matters. I think the message had something to do with Lib Dem poll numbers, but it's hard to tell exactly what. It reminds me of one of Humph's convoluted metaphors designed to illustrate the concept behind One Song to the Tune of Another.
"It might help to think of the Lib Dem leader as a Wild West gunslinger and the percentage share of the vote as old cans hanging from strings in an old-style saloon. Nick Clegg's task is to use his gun - that is, his campaign team - to "hit", that is, reach, the "tin cans", or the target number of votes. But, I hear you ask, what do a lot of empty beer cans rattling around in a bar have to do with the Liberal Democrats? In the studio we've got Charles Kennedy."
Labels: Television
BBC website calls Crewe and Nantwich "a safe Labour seat"
We shall see.A Belfast beauty Queen is set to fight a by-election in a bid to "glamorise" the House of Commons.
Gemma Garrett, who is the current Miss Great Britain, is standing in the safe Labour seat of Crewe and Nantwich.
Monday, May 05, 2008
Richard Holme has died
There are full obituaries on the Daily Telegraph and Guardian sites of this prominent Liberal and Lib Dem adviser, who was able to move from David Steel's side to Paddy Ashdown's without breaking step. He narrowly failed to win the Cheltenham seat on several occasions.
Anyone joining the Liberator Collective in the 1980s was required to regard Richard Holme as a hate figure, but he was always charming when I came across him.
Labels: Liberal Democrats, Liberator
Peter Black vs Boris Spassky
They called Fischer vs Spassky the "Match of the Century" - until now.Labels: Chess
New Routemaster buses: I was there before Boris
From my essay in Liberalism: Something to Shout About, which was published at the 2006 Liberal Democrat Conference:[Public] order is best seen as a by-product of people going about their ordinary business rather than the result of enforcement action by the authorities.
Perhaps the next Lib Dem London Mayoral candidate should campaign for a new generation of Routemaster buses and promise to employ conductors on them.
Labels: Boris Johnson, London
Sunday, May 04, 2008
Brian Paddick and Hugh Paddick are related
I thought this piece of trivia might prove too good to be true. But this page on Graham Taylor-Paddick's website shows that Brian Paddick is the second cousin once removed of the Round the Horne star Hugh Paddick (far left in the photo).I found it via Brian Paddick's Wikipedia entry.
Now read about Kenneth Horne's father, who was a Liberal MP. Or if you are young, read about Round the Horne.
BritBlog Roundup 168: Is Boris good enough?

This week's nominations were dominated by the local elections, and the London Mayoral election in particular. So with thanks to NewsBiscuit for the photograph, let's get on with it.
Those elections in full
First a mention for the three bloggers who were featured on the BBC election coverage: Luke Akehurst, Iain Dale and Alix Mortimer. They all did a much better job than Jeremy Vine or David bloody Dimbleby.
And also a mention to Andy D'Agorne for recognising that the elections did not just take place in London. He went to Sheffield and saw strange goings on involving postal votes and taxis.
So to London. Susanne Lamido (that's Susanne with an 's') attended the count at City Hall, and The Daily (Maybe) has all the results.
"One of the ten cleverest men men in Britain" is worried that Londoners did not understand the electoral system, so I suppose we should be too. Pandemian has some ideas for making voting more exciting. And Burning Our Money gives reasons why you should have voted early and often.
So how will Mayor BoJo do?
Guido Fawkes declares the official liberation of London, whereas Rachel in North London fears the city has elected a celebrity buffoon.
Croydonian speculates on Boris's first 100 days. The more cynical Diamond Geezer has produced a newsletter for him so that he can get some ideas. And Barkingside 21 detects a climate of change in London - as well as leading me to the picture above.
Cruella-Blog has collected a range of reactions to Boris's victory. Other reactions to the elections - in London and further afield - come from Elle Seymour and Ben Brogan. More reaction still comes from Liam Mac Uaid (Respect), Dave's Part (Old Labour) and A Blog from the Back Room (New Labour).
Oh, and there was a Camden Borough by-election in Highgate on Thursday. It was won by the Greens, but comment comes from the Labour-supporting Theo's Blog and Belsize Liberal Democrats.
Miscellany
Phew! We'll give politics a rest and look at more interesting things for a while.
Other things have been going on this week. Charlotte's Web has been writing. In the Aquarium has been potting and Mother of the Bride has been hatching, matching and dispatching.
Meanwhile Feminist Philosophers has been to the Fem 08 conference in Sheffield - this week's place to be if you are not in London.
Elsewhere Amused Cynicism explains why people go anti-science, Around My Kitchen Table writes of extreme sports and adrenaline rush deprivation and Bag's Rants invites you to find the man in the coffee beans.
It tells you something important about the right and left of your brain, apparently.
Environment
Ruscombe Green worries about the bees and the bats, while How Can I Recycle This? has ideas for old washing machine drums.
Back in London, Northwest 6 reports on the restoration of some green space in West Hampstead.
Health
Random Acts of Reality has received his first letter of thanks as an ambulance man.
NHS Blog Doctor detects "a little sleight of hand from those dear ladies at the Kent Midwifery Practice".
Blogging
The nominator admits that it is not British, but Jewcy is written by Mike Godwin of Godwin's Law fame - the first person to mention Hitler in a discussion thread has lost the argument. Here he marks the law's 18th birthday. "If Godwin's Law had been a child, this year it would be old enough to vote."
And Freeborn John looks at why some people have such laudatory Wikipedia entries.
Politics
To finish off, we go back to a few political postings that did not concern Thursday's elections.
Gaian Economics urges the establishment of a "housing entitlement day".
Freeborn John has a second nomination, this one looking at government plans to force people learning to drive to use an approved driving instructor.
And Burning our Money turns up again too, looking at Gordon Brown's plans for a Great Leap Forward.
Finally, Blood and Treasure has found the perfect word to describe the prime minister.
Goodbye
Thanks for all the nominations this week. If I have missed any out or the link does not work, please let me know.
Next week's Roundup will be at Redemption Blues. And you can find the rota for future weeks here.
As ever, please send your nominations to britblog [at] gmail [dot] com.
Ciao.
Labels: Boris Johnson, Britblog Roundup, London
The National Association of Head Teachers and bad behaviour
A BBC report on the union's 2007 conference:And a BBC report on this year's conference:Parents too often encourage their children to behave badly at school by giving endless excuses for their behaviour, head teachers have said.
The National Association of Head Teachers said parents had responsibilities as well as rights.
At its annual conference, it voted unanimously to work with the government to enforce a "respect agenda" and reduce harassment of school staff.
Teachers at a conference have jeered a minister after she talked about league tables and tests in schools.
The flashpoint involved Children's Minister Beverley Hughes at the National Association of Head Teachers (NAHT) conference, in Liverpool.
During a question-and-answer session, she said teaching was a great job, but was jeered again by a large proportion of the teachers in the hall.
If headteachers behave like this, is it such a surprise that their pupils are badly behaved?
See me afterwards, headmaster.
Labels: Education
The Fifth Dimension: Wedding Bell Blues
No great sociological significance this week, just a great and forgotten record.
Fifth Dimension has the US hit with "Up, Up and Away" and also worldwide hits with a medley from the hippy musical Hair.
Not that they look much like hippies in this.
Labels: Music
Saturday, May 03, 2008
Will Tory triumphalism be their undoing?
Martin Bright writes on his New Statesman blog:And there are plenty examples of such smugness about already. Here are a couple.I was sitting on a panel in the Sky News studios at 2.30am this morning when something horrible flashed up on the giant screen in front of us. Not the tally of lost seats or the projections of what the night's results would mean if reproduced at a general election - though these were bad enough.
No. It was the sight of the Tory leader and Francis Maude enjoying a smugfest at their Millbank headquarters, all specially filmed for Webcameron. And this was just the local elections. Imagine what a general election victory would be like.
Iain Dale has floated the idea of Stanley Johnson succeeding Boris as MP for Henley, and Jonathan Isaby at the Telegraph has enthusiastically taken it up:
Maybe this is all tongue in cheek, but by-elections where the sitting member has voluntarily walked away from the seat are always difficult for the defending party. (That is why I will believe in Boris's resignation when I see it.) Even in Henley, the idea that Stanley should be the next MP because he is a Sound Chap may not go down well.The man himself does nothing to suppress the idea.
"Put it this way, I'm still on the candidates' list," the 67-year-old grandfather of eleven and former Conservative MEP has just told me.
"Obviously it would be up to the Henley association as to whether they invite me for interview, but I don't see why I shouldn't put in for it."
Johnson Senior stood in Teignbridge unsuccessfully at the 2005 general election and would be a delightful addition to the House of Commons.
And over at the Independent Simon Carr, usually so healthily cynical about all politicians, has come over all floppy and Brideshead about the new Tory leadership:
We must make allowances: Carr was himself a star of the Oxford Union as a young man and we are all entitled to our personal nostalgia. And the idea that describing someone as a "toff" is enough to dismiss their views is pretty silly. Where would it leave Tony Blair, Nick Clegg or Ed Balls himself?Some years ago, just before the last general election I was watching Boris performing in the Oxford Union, doing well in his natural habitat.
Later, in the street, among the criminal obesity and facial metal, I couldn't see how Boris could ever appeal to such a world. And I wrote that the Conservative Party didn't have a chance of being elected while Boris was a member of it.
I eat those words, and very nice they taste. Whoever wins in London, the ultimate amateur has made a fantastic breakthrough. It must shatter the world view of Ed Balls and other class warriors that the concept "Tory toff" no longer has the power to move mountains.
It's Gentlemen vs Players, and for good or ill, for the first time in a generation, the Gentlemen are in the game.
But come off it, Simon. The idea that the self-important pups of the Oxford Union are too civilised for the rest of us is nonsense. Evelyn Waugh may have gloried in the exploits of the Bullingdon, but he never presented them as moral exemplars.
Nor would anyone who has read Andrew Gimson's biography of him easily describe Boris Johnson as a gentleman. There is something shabby about his act in all senses of the word.
Returning to Stanley, one in the 1970s the Johnson family - boys and girls - all had long blond hair. And Stanley's was the longest and blondest of all. Seen en masse, they resembled the Midwich Cuckoos run to seed.
So Tories beware. Your revival under David Cameron has been based upon at least the appearance of modesty. Much more of this nonsense and the public will remember how much it hates what you really stand for.
Labels: Boris Johnson, Conservative Party
Why are the Lib Dems so bad at PR elections?
In London neither the use of the alternative vote for the Mayoral election nor the top-up lists used for the Greater London Authority elections have done anything to boost Lib Dem support.
In Wales we do very well where local authorities are elected by first past the post, and Assembly elections reflect our strength in a handful of Westminster seats. But we have yet to make much of an impact on the second "list" votes. The same broadly holds true for Scottish Parliament elections.
(Let me know if I have got any of this wrong. News was always slow to reach Market Harborough.)
Why is this?
Ironically, it is because we are very good at working the first past the post system we so despise. At ward or even constituency level it is possible to flood the area with workers, and we are very good at fighting local campaigns and at putting a tactical squeeze on the third party.
Our failure to do well when more proportional systems are used - granted they are not what we would choose, but is there evidence that we would do any better under the single transferable vote in multi-member constituencies? - suggests that we are less good at identifying ourselves in the public mind in with a positive and unique policy agenda.
Granted that is far easier said than done, but should we Liberal Democrats be praying that we never achieve our heart's desire - proportional representation?
Labels: Liberal Democrats, London
Controversial mayor to leave post
http://www.virtual-shropshire.co.uk/
Labels: Shropshire
Don't forget to nominate something for the BritBlog Roundup
Friday, May 02, 2008
The 2008 local elections
I had intended to blog the results last night, but did not get any further than offering an unrivalled service to Derby Arboretum Ward. Incidentally, we made a total of five gains in Derby and are now the largest party on the council there.But I was driven off to bed by Jeremy Vine and David Dimbleby. Vine's attempts to make the programme interesting were merely embarrassing. Why can't the BBC grasp that the only people who watch results programmes after midnight are political junkies anyway, so they don't want gimmicks. And why oh why do they have to get David Dimbleby out of mothballs for these programmes? Here's why, come to think of it.
And did I really hear Charles Kennedy say we should look particularly for the results in Somerset? There were no elections in Somerset yesterday.
As to the results, I think it fair to say that the Liberal Democrats have done significantly better than we expected. Hull and Sheffield were gained: Newscastle and (just) Liverpool were retained. And we have also done well in areas where we have MPs (Winchester, Cheltenham, Colchester) or hope to make gains next time (Watford, St Albans).
Last night's results will also consolidate Nick Clegg's position. This is welcome, though I suspect that the results had far more to do with the hard work and professionalism of our local parties than with his leadership.
The Liberal Democrats are not about to sweep into government, but nor are we going to go away. We are what we are: a party that consistently wins the support of a quarter or just less of the British people and has areas of considerable local strength scattered across the country.
Labels: Liberal Democrats, Television
House Points: A ban on junk food advertising?
Unhealthy food talk
On Friday all sensible Conservatives were away working in the local elections and Boris Johnson was busy in London. Which left just the real Tory Party at Westminster. And you can forget all that stuff about letting sunshine win the day and hugging huskies, because nothing has really changed.
The first piece of business was a private member’s bill, promoted by Labour’s Nigel Griffiths, to ban television advertisements for unhealthy food before the 9 p.m. watershed. Griffiths had an impressive range of organisations - Diabetes UK, the British Medical Association, Cancer Research UK - lined up behind him.
For the Lib Dems, Martin Horwood was an enthusiastic supporter while Don Foster clearly had doubts.
And, yes, this is the sort of bill that does divide parties. What was notable about Friday was not that there were Conservative MPs opposing Griffiths but how weak their arguments were.
Take Nigel Evans, whose many radio appearances have played a small but honourable part in establishing the Tories in the public mind as the nasty party. "Does the hon. Gentleman really want to go down in history as the man who killed Ronald McDonald?" he asked, pleased with his own cleverness.
But does anyone in Britain like Ronald McDonald? Whatever their views on junk food, whatever their views on McDonald’s, there is not a person in the country who would not rejoice if that gruesome clown were found hanging from one of his golden arches.
Other Tories were concerned with the effect a ban would have on the funding of children’s television or announced that the National Farmers Union is against the bill. And others urged the House to safeguard the advertising industry. That industry, you understand, is worth billions, but oddly its products have absolutely no effect on the behaviour of the children who are exposed to them.
So what is the Conservative answer to child obesity? Again and again they urged parental responsibility. And parental responsibility is a wonderful thing. But the thought that those parents are entitled to get together and use the institutions of a democratic society to make it a little easier to exercise that responsibility still seems beyond the sort of Tory MP who finds himself at a loose end in London on Fridays.
Labels: children, Health, House Points
Lib Dems gain seat in Derby
Derby, incidentally, is run by a Lab/Con coalition.
And there is more on Derby Arboretum here.
Labels: Liberal Democrats


