Showing posts with label Sayeeda Warsi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sayeeda Warsi. Show all posts

Friday, December 27, 2024

The Joy of Six 1304

Peter Oborne reviews Sayeeda Warsi's memoirs: "For many years, Warsi devoted her life to the UK Conservative party. When she joined it two decades ago, it seemed to embody everything she believed in: family values, decency, tolerance, fairness, the rule of law. Slowly, the UK's first female Muslim cabinet minister's eyes opened. She came to realise that it wasn’t like that at all. In Muslims Don't Matter, she records the betrayals, the bullying, the abuse, the insults." 

"The nation’s bank clerks showed their gratitude for their extra days of rest by subscribing to a testimonial for Lubbock, who used their gift to fund two school scholarships." Kathryn Rix introduces us to Sir John Lubbock, father of modern bank holidays.

Will Young talks to Byline Times about the pressures of fame and the stories he believes are still to come to light about reality TV music shows. Me? I voted for Darius.

A London Inheritance reads London After Dark by Fabian of the Yard.

"Ellis’s torch could not illuminate the railway bridge, but he feared the worst. The railway line was about fifty metres from where he had stopped, so, leaping a barbed wire fence, he sprinted to the track and ran towards the locomotive, waving his torch." AndrĂ© Brett tells the story of New Zealand's worst every trailway disaster, which took place on Christmas Eve 1953.

"Homes would be adorned with ivy, holly and mistletoe, as well as laurel, conifers and bay. Yule logs burned and tapers were lit. Carolling was a popular activity that involved dancing as well as singing. Gifts would be exchanged during the festive season, but more typically at New Year rather than on Christmas day." Diane Watt on Christmas in the middle ages.

Friday, November 08, 2024

The Joy of Six 1286

"Liberal democracy depends upon a sense of shared citizenship, a relatively stable society and an inclusive economy without too great a gap between rich and poor." William Wallace puts his finger on an important truth: economic inequality is a barrier to liberal politics.

Robert Saunderson on what the Conservatives must do if they are to recover from July's rout: "The party must resist three fantasies that have loomed too large since the election: that defeat was less severe than at first believed; that its failures in office were the fault of traitors or non-believers; and that there are easy solutions to the dilemmas that now confront it."

Meg Gain listened to Sayeeda Warsi speak about the tendency to a growing acceptance of racism and Islamophobia at the Stratford-upon-Avon Literary Festival.

"Seeking to silence him once and for all, Jersey’s government also slapped Syvret with a superinjunction in 2012 – an action undertaken via a secret court proceeding, which took place without his knowledge, and forbade him from speaking about the four individuals he had named." Stuart Syvret describes how he was forced out of Jersey for doing his job as a senator.

"In one of the Rolling Stones’ most crucial songs, Sympathy for the Devil, it’s not Keith Richards’ guitar that defines the melody or propels the piece. It’s a series of stark piano chords, struck by a studio musician, that give the piece its earth-shaking power." Jim Farber on the genius of the pianist Nicky Hopkins.

Shane McCorristine asks why ghosts wear clothes or white sheets instead of appearing in the nude.

Thursday, September 26, 2024

Sayeeda Warsi resigns from Conservative Party

Embed from Getty Images

Sayeeda Warsi was once a living symbol of the changes David Cameron claimed to have made to the Conservative Party. Today she resigned her membership.

I'm surprised she has lasted as long as she has. 

Back in 2011 I blogged about the way the Tory right tried to turn an invited lecture she gave at the University of Leicester into some kind of scandal.

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Grant Shapps' Tory chairmanship is already a car crash

Grant Shapps' Conservative colleagues must look back fondly on Baroness Warsi as a safe pair of hands.

I blogged the other day about his many, er, misfortunes involving the internet - an area in which he likes to think of himself as something of an expert. Today came news of what look likes a major blunder he made while still a housing minister.

Over to Architects Journal:
In late 2011 former housing minister Grant Shapps slammed the contentious Pathfinder housing market renewal initiative - a £2.2 billion programme which once complete would have seen around 400,000 mainly Victorian homes and local landmarks in the North West flattened - as an ‘abject failure’. 
He subsequently unveiled a £35.5 million cash pot of capital grants which was to be shared between the 13 authorities, funding renovation work and assisting families ‘trapped in half-empty ghost streets’. 
However a Freedom of Information bid by SAVE revealed that the money was being channelled towards further demolitions and yesterday the organisation was granted leave by Mrs Justice Lang to bring full judicial review proceedings against the government.
Or as the standfirst on the Daily Telegraph telling of this story puts it:
Grant Shapps, the former Housing Minister, accidentally signed off a regeneration project without realising it would demolish the house in which Ringo Starr was born, a court heard today.
To be fair, the memo may have used long words or semicolons or something like that.

Meanwhile, Computer Active is asking if one of the internet businesses founded by Shapps is even legal.

Sunday, September 09, 2012

Grant Shapps' problems with the internet

As I possess that rare thing among Liberal Democrats - a soft spot for Baroness Warsi - I have been amused by three Guardian stories today about her successor Grant Shapps:
And they have reminded me of an incident that took place in 2007 during the Ealing Southall by-election. As Mark Pack revealed on Liberal Democrat Voice, the following comment was posted on a Liberal Democrat campaign video:
Okay, realistically we’re not going to win though. Especially since the Tories have just received 5 defecting Councillors from Labour. Don’t quite know how they’ve done it, but the Tories have stolen a march on us this time.
It was certainly meant to look like a comment from a Lib Dem activist, but it was posted from Grant Shapps' Youtube account.

Shapps, then a shadow housing minister and the man in charge of the Tory campaign in the by-election, denied the accusation. He gave his explanation of the incident to Iain Dale, the writer of the leading Conservative blog in those days, saying that his account had been hijacked.

The comments on that post suggest that not everyone was convinced.

Tuesday, March 06, 2012

Roger Helmer is a hypocrite

...as the new UKIP MEP for the East Midlands, who has just defected from the Conservative Party, cheerfully admits on the front page of his own website:
I have always argued that a parliamentarian who finds himself no longer able to support the Party should stand aside in favour of another Conservative, and I have roundly criticised former colleagues who failed to do so, like Bill Newton Dunn and Edward McMillan Scott.
There follows a piece of casuistry intended to show that his case is different, but I do not follow the logic of it.

At the root of all this nonsense lies the dreadful list system under which European elections are fought in this country. Chris Rennard, writing on PoliticsHome, has some sensible suggestions for improving it and diluting the power it gives party bosses in particular.

Roger Helmer of all people, given his run in with the Tory chair Baroness Warsi, should support this.

Saturday, March 03, 2012

Roger Helmer joins UKIP and lets me and Rupert Matthews down

As you will appreciate, the news that Roger Helmer, one of the Conservative MEPs for the East Midlands, has joined UKIP is a bitter blow to me. It means there is now no chance of Rupert Matthews taking his place in Brussels.

At a stroke, I have been robbed of a rich seam of comic post reporting Matthews' adventures in the European Parliament - they might even had made him Commissioner for Outer Space. Now that prospect has been swept away from me.

Regular readers will recall (new ones should start here) that Helmer had intended to resign at the start of this year, assuming that Matthews would take his place as the highest unelected candidate on the Conservative list at the last European elections.

But Tory HQ obviously had doubt about the cut of Matthews' jib. I have reason to believe that these related more to do with his consorting with golliwogs and Etheridges than his enthusiasm for ghosts and UFOs. So they made it clear that there was no guarantee that Matthews would take Helmer's place if he resigned, and Helmer decided not to resign as a result.

Helmer was clearly furious about this. In today's Daily Mail he talks of the "deliberate obstinacy and recalcitrance" of the party's chairman Baroness Warsi:
"She has brought this on herself. I couldn’t make her do the right thing, but I can make her regret doing the wrong thing."
I have more time for Baroness Warsi than is fashionable in Liberal Democrat circles and it is easy to see that a male Conservative of Helmer's generation could have problems dealing with a party chairman who is a woman, from the working class, a Muslim and from a Pakistani background even before it got to having political differences.

My own view is that the situation shows how undesirable the list system is. If Helmer wants to resign the identity of his successor should be decided by the voters, not by the Conservative Party or Helmer himself.

Rupert Matthews, whether out of loyalty or prudence, has taken a very different line. Giles McNeill has the statement he issued today:
I am shocked and disappointed at Roger Helmer’s decision to betray his public promises to the people of the East Midlands and his private promises to his colleagues. 
Since Roger announced that he was standing down as the MEP, many people in the East Midlands have spent a considerable amount of time and effort in preparing for Roger’s retirement, my taking his place in Brussels and the unavoidable upheavals that this would have entailed. I myself was looking forward very much to representing the people of the East Midlands and the Conservative Party in the European Parliament. It is unfortunate that all this time and effort has been rendered useless by Roger’s actions. 
I wish to make it clear that I have no intention of following Roger to UKIP and that I will continue to serve the Conservative Party as loyally as I have in the 28 years since I joined the party. I will be working hard to ensure the return of Conservative candidates in the local elections in May and at the next European Election in 2014.
But for the time being, there will be more desk space at Three Crowns Yard.

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Conservative Home is still the Continuity IDS

Sayeeda Warsi will be replaced says top source. Cameron needs a Pty Chrmn to bat for him in difficult times. Warsi too lightweight to do so.
So tweeted Tim Montgomerie late last night.

The idea that the Conservatives' current troubles are down to Baroness Warsi is a novel one. In fact, all Conservative cabinet ministers have been conspicuous by their absence over the past few days. It seems unfair to pick on her.

But then Tim has long had it in for Sayeeda Warsi. As I blogged back in January of this year, an unremarkable lecture the Baroness gave at Leicester University was the subject of an operation by right-wing Tory journalists that was intended to make her seem extreme and disloyal.

And Tim was happy to join in with this, tweeting:
BREAKING at @Spectator_CH The accident prone Sayeeda Warsi did NOT clear her speech on Islam.
There is plenty about Warsi for the Tory right to dislike: woman, Muslim, black, working class... And attacking her allows its members to have a go at the more touchy-feely aspects of Cameronism without appearing disloyal to their leader.

It happens that Tim Montgomerie recently wrote an article that gave a clear idea of the Tory right's agenda beyond ditching Warsi. In the Daily Telegraph he reported the results of a Conservative Home poll in which the site's readers were asked to name Cameron's three biggest mistakes.

The results were entirely predictable:
  1. Not holding a referendum on the Lisbon Treaty;
  2. Supporting climate change policies;
  3. U-turn on NHS reforms;
... and so on.

As Liberal Burblings asked at the time: "Has the news that they didn’t win the last general election not yet reached the Tory faithful?"

Conservative Home speaks  for the Tory rank and file. And never forget that it was the Tory rank and file that brought us William Hague and Iain Duncan Smith. David Cameron came close to winning the last election precisely because he did not give his activists what they wanted from him.

The average Conservative activist is now like his or her Labour counterpart of a generation ago: enthused by ideology and wholly unaware of how the party appears to the wider electorate.

It is these activists for whom Conservative Home speaks. Those who call in the "Continuity IDS" are not far wrong.

Sunday, February 06, 2011

Baroness Warsi makes more sense on multiculturalism than David Cameron does

When Baroness Warsi's speech in Leicester was the lead story in the news (before she had made) I suggested that it was not because of the intrinsic interest of what she said but because she was being set up by her opponents in the Conservative Party.

Yesterday's speech by David Cameron, in which he said that "state multiculturalism" has failed, was also a lead story. Ironically, Baroness Warsi had already said much  the same - in her Leicester speech.

Those remarks do not appear in the text of her speech (which, impressively, is on the Leicester Mercury site), so they must have been made in answer to a question afterwards.

As I recall it, she said that "state multiculturalism" foes not work because it sets one ethnic community against another. They can, for instance, find themselves bidding for the same money to build community centres as opposite ends of the same street. It also encourages people to emphasise their separate identities, rather than what we have in common.

The usual caveats about Daily Mail stories apply, but this one shows some of the nonsense that can result.

Warsi was also critical of the government schemes that set out to combat Muslim extremism. No Muslim who really is extremist will go near them, while other Muslims will probably feel insulted. Meanwhile there is danger that other groups will reason that the Muslims are getting all the money when it is they who are causing all the trouble.

I found Warsi's analysis persuasive, particularly has her speech was in favour of multiculturalism. She shows a rather Liberal faith that in time people from different backgrounds will find their own ways of living alongside one another. The full text of Cameron's speech suggests he is rather more wedded to government action.

Perhaps the moral is that David Cameron should let Warsi make this government' major speeches on multiculturalism, if only because that would infuriate those in his party who do not with him well.

Friday, January 21, 2011

The Tory right turns on Baroness Warsi

I am on the electronic mailing lists for public events held by the University of Leicester. When, a few days ago, I heard that Baroness Warsi would be giving a lecture, I asked for a ticket.

I never dreamed that this event would be the lead story on the seven o'clock news on the morning it took place.

For some reason the Daily Telegraph decided to splash on some unremarkable remarks by Warsi as though there was something startling about them:
Islamophobia has “passed the dinner-table test” and is seen by many as normal and uncontroversial, Baroness Warsi will say in a speech on Thursday.

The minister without portfolio will also warn that describing Muslims as either “moderate” or “extremist” fosters growing prejudice.

Lady Warsi, the first Muslim woman to attend Cabinet, has pledged to use her position to wage an “ongoing battle against bigotry”.
Then during the day the Spectator announced:
EXCLUSIVE: Warsi did not clear speech with No. 10
And Tim Montgomerie chipped in on Twitter:
BREAKING at @Spectator_CH The accident prone Sayeeda Warsi did NOT clear her speech on Islam
Note in particular the snide "accident prone".

Having attended her lecture, I can report that this campaign by right-wing elements in the Tory part represented a ridiculous overselling of rather a mundane lecture. As Warsi herself said, there was nothing in the Telegraph that she has not said in public before. And does No. 10 have to clear academic lectures anyway?

Why is the Tory right was out to get Sayeeda Warsi? No doubt there are those among it who cannot cope with seeing a Muslim woman from a humble background in the cabinet. But I suspect the less Blimpish among them are out for revenge for her remarks after the Oldham East & Saddleworth by-election.

She told the BBC in the aftermath of the declaration:
"We had many many, members of Parliament turning up, we had some who made much comment about the fact that we weren't fighting a strong enough campaign but interestingly didn't turn up to campaign.

"I would say to those who are critical: 'Unless you were here, unless you were out delivering and unless you were knocking on doors, you really don't have a right to complain about us not being vigorous enough'."
I don't suppose she has been forgiven for that.

Besides, to the Tory right she is just another Cameroon who is preventing the party from adopting the hard-line policies that would sweep them to power (much as they did in 2001 and 2005).

But what was the speech like?

I did not find Warsi's claim that Britain is facing "a rising tide of anti-religious bigotry" convincing. In fact she hardly tried to prove it at all.

There was some good stuff, notably the parallels she drew with the position of Muslims in Britain today and the struggles over Catholic Emancipation two centuries ago. But the speech in general lacked a coherent overarching argument.

And though the term is widely used, I am not convinced by talk of "islamophobia". Opposition to Muslims or any other group does not necessarily arise out of fear: more often it arises from distaste or even envy. Besides it is easy to deploy such concepts in an attempt to rule out legitimate criticism of religion.

Her responses to the questions were far more impressive than the speech itself. She was scathing about the previous government's Prevent programme, which failed to tackle extremism, annoyed the mainstream Muslim community and suggested to other people that those Muslims were receiving preferential treatment.

She was also critical of what she termed "state multiculturalism", which tended to emphasise people's difference rather than what we have in common and could see different ethnic groups competing for the same funds to build a community centre.

And though a question blaming British foreign policy for Muslim hostility won applause from the audience (some of it seemed to come from me) she was having none of it. Her defence of British values would have melted the hearts of the Tory right if she had heard it.

I was part of a typical multiracial, multi-faith Leicester audience - I found myself sitting next to a Jewish Dawkinsite of my acquaintance.

In front of me was a young man with a blue pen who wrote out a long, critical question about the campaign Warsi fought as Conservative candidate in Dewsbury in 2005. The word "homophobia" - another phobia - featured prominently. He made no effort to ask it, but perhaps he felt better for writing it.

That campaign was later described by Pink News as follows:
Her leaflets claimed children were being “propositioned” for gay relationships.

They said: “Labour has scrapped Section 28, which was introduced by the Conservatives to stop schools promoting alternative sexual lifestyles such as homosexuality to children as young as seven years old.

“Labour reduced the age of consent for homosexuality from 18 to 16, allowing schoolchildren to be propositioned for homosexual relationships.”
All deeply reprehensible, though Pink News reports that she later thought better of these claims. And I distrust the style of argument that seeks to pin a label ("racist", "homophobe") on an opponent and uses it as an excuse to ignore anything they say about anything else.

I have often argued that the divides within the two Coalition parties are more significant than the divide between the parties. Warsi is in the half of the Conservative Party that I am comfortable being associated with - her opponents are in the half I do not care for.

And how will this row affect her? She said she came from a working-class background and had spent much of her professional career as a defence solicitor in prisons and police cells. "It takes more than a few blogs to upset me."

Featured on Liberal Democrat Voice

Friday, January 14, 2011

Being told what to do by Baroness Warsi

Commenting on Sayeeda Warsi's interview on Today today, George Eaton of the New Statesman says:
Even before today, Warsi was far from adored by Tory activists, many of whom resent being lectured by an unelected peer.
What kind of Conservatives are these? Being told what to do by an unelected peer should give any consistent Tory a little erotic thrill.

As I have argued before, the right-wing of the Conservative Party now owes nothing to traditional British Conservatism.