ToryDiary: Does it matter what David Cameron wears to the Royal Wedding? Philip Booth on Comment: Why contracting out of the state pension should remain Eric Pickles on Local government argues thatlocal newspapers are vital for democracy and shouldn't be undermined by freesheets from the Town Hall that are nothing more than propaganda Also on Local government: The battle for Nick Clegg's backyard - Labour likely to oust Liberal Democrats in Sheffield ThinkTankCentral: The Conservative Policy Forum wants to know your views on what will be the UK's main industries and economic activities in the years to come Second poll in two days gives No2AV campaign a 16% lead - UK Polling Report "You’d think they were condemning the foulest of war crimes. But, no. This is the ludicrously intemperate language with which the LibDems seek to challenge the arguments against the obscure AV voting system, which they believe would give them more seats. Elsewhere, Vince Cable speaks of widespread ‘revulsion’ against ‘offensive’ Tory policies – just days after accusing the Prime Minister of ‘inflaming extremism’ with his low-key (and probably empty) remarks about limiting immigration." - Daily Mail editorial > Yesterday's ToryDiary: Are the Liberal Democrats genuinely angry about the No2AV campaign or are they playing politics? The Prime Minister blocks plans for Gordon Brown to head the IMF... ...but he is attacked for "belittling" Gordon Brown... "David Cameron has been accused of being "vindictive" after indicating that he would block any attempt by Gordon Brown to become the managing director of the International Monetary Fund." - The Guardian "Mr Cameron is under no obligation to back him. And the Prime Minister made a reasonable point when he suggested that the IMF should look eastwards, to China or India, for a suitable candidate. But he could have argued that without indulging in derogatory comments about the former Prime Minister, saying that the IMF needs someone who "understands the dangers of excessive debt, excessive deficit" rather than "someone who says that they don't see a problem". Neither Tony Blair nor Margaret Thatcher ever belittled John Major or Jim Callaghan in such a fashion." - The Independent editorial > On ToryDiary yesterday Tim Montgomerie reported: Cameron says we don't need a "washed up", debt-denying politician like Gordon Brown running the IMF U-turn on immigration? Miliband: People 'lost trust' in Labour on immigration - BBC "Are you awake, Ken Clarke?"... The Sun describes Justice Secretary as yobs' "best ever mate" The Battle for Scotland "Prime Minister David Cameron is hitting the Holyrood campaign trail, ahead of the 5 May Scottish Parliament election. Mr Cameron is making a speech in Inverness as the main parties continue the fight for votes before polling day." - BBC "...a Tory-SNP alliance has many things going for it. It would, in reality, be the continuation of the deal that has delivered budgets for the nationalists for the last three years. That deal has worked well because the politics - and economics - of Salmond and Swinney are not that far from those of Annabel Goldie, or even of Osborne and Cameron. Small-state, low-tax, pro-business, fiscal conservatives. And an SNP-Tory coalition would be a dream scenario for Cameron. Not only a way to box off the Scottish "legitimacy" problem he has cared so much about. But yet another way to exclude Labour from power. For the SNP and the Tories have a common enemy - Labour - and a common aim: to render them irrelevant. Watch this space." - John McTernan in the Scotsman Scotland's experience of AV makes awkward reading for both camps - John Curtice in the Independent Coalition in brief: I may be a bit over the top occasionally, admits Galloway "It may turn out to be the quote of this Holyrood election campaign. George Galloway in what appeared to be his first-ever moment of self-doubt confessed: “Hyperbole can sometimes be a fault of mine.� The rather startling admission came as the man who has used his talent for hyperbole to sometimes devastating effect launched his manifesto for the election on May 5." - Times (£) And finally... David Cameron as a hippyParliament: Cameron warned against appointing more peers
Lib Dems hit out at "outrageous" No2AV campaign
"David Cameron is set to shatter Gordon Brown’s hopes of becoming the next IMF chief, saying the organisation needed someone ‘competent’ to run it. In a withering attack, the Prime Minister said the former Labour leader was not the ‘most appropriate person’ to lead the International Monetary Fund because he had never admitted the UK had a ‘debt problem’. Mr Brown is reportedly hoping to take on the £270,000-a-year managing director role at the IMF – but he must be nominated by the  Government. Chancellor George Osborne says he is prepared to veto the appointment, saying it would be ‘an insult to the British public’." - The Daily Mail
The Sun Says: "Read Page One of The Sun today. Jersey-Lou Perry, a girl aged four, has had her lovely face shredded with glass after thugs threw a brick into her dad's van because he dared to ask them to stop kicking a football at it. Here in one terrible incident we see the price Britain is paying for craven surrender to the mob. Who has the guts to stand up for decent dads trying to protect their kids? Justice Secretary Ken Clarke is the best mate yobs ever had. He doesn't believe they should go to jail. Our police are run by politically-correct robots. Our courts crawl to Europe and put the rights of murderers and rapists and paedophiles before law-abiding families."
"This is how David Cameron might have looked if he had chosen peace and love over politics. Get on the wrong side of the Prime Minister in this gallery of alternative Camerons, however, and you may meet ‘punk Dave’, with blue hair and a sneer worthy of Sid Vicious. Then again, there’s also ‘goth Dave’ – similar to Robert Smith of The Cure – with a face as gloomy as the economy, ‘rapper Dave’ sporting a baseball cap that would be the envy of William Hague, and angelic ‘choirboy Dave†99. This bizarre Cameron family album was created to promote an annual music festival which begins on Sunday in the Prime Minister’s constituency of Witney, Oxfordshire." See more images of Cameron in the Daily Mail.
Wednesday, 20 April 2011
Tory video warns 3rd placed candidates could win under AV
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