Fraser Nelson

Fraser Nelson

Fraser Nelson is a Times columnist and a former editor of The Spectator.

Finish that thought

“I really want the Conservatives to win the next election because…” A few CoffeeHousers have offered some endings to the above sentence, and I’d like to offer the bribe of a bottle of champagne for the best entry. One rule (sorry, Tiberius) it can’t just be “because Brown is a villain” etc - it has to be a way in which the Tories would change Britain for the better: a reason to look forward to Cameron arriving, not just to Brown departing. So far, Oz says the Tories will be cheaper and “do it for 99p against Labour's pound” – that’s the idea, but not quite an agenda to set the heather alight, as we say in the Highlands.

If not Dave, then who? The parlour game that might get serious

It is horrible to imagine. It would be a tragedy, for party and country. Even contemplating it seems lurid and, given recent events, deeply mischievous. It is certainly not something for loyal Tories to discuss in public. But, in their darker moments, few Conservative politicians will have not asked themselves the question in the past turbulent week: if David Cameron were to be run over by a bus tomorrow, who would lead the Conservative party?At Westminster, it is amazing how quickly today’s parlour game can become tomorrow’s leadership battle. For those who prepare properly (as the Blairites did in 1994) the rewards can be immense. In Mr Cameron’s case, what is striking is the fact that there is leadership speculation at all.

A few bright spots for the Tories

As Matt suggested, I’m getting some stick from Tories here in the Commons – mainly ones who have just seen today’s Spectator cover (Peter Brooke’s brilliant cartoon of Cameron about to be run over a bus) and asking if I’ve gone all Brutus. Quite the reverse. I merely sought to dangle regicidal Tories over the precipice and ask them to look down. Yes, things are grim. The Thames is still rising, the Daily Telegraph has a horrible poll tomorrow and the markets are crashing. But there are a few reasons for Tories to be cheerful:- 1. The Daily Mail is getting bored being so supportive of Brown, and its leader today has put him on notice.

Common mockery

It was almost like David Cameron was being bullied by the Commons today. When he stood up, all MPs cheered – the kind of sarcastic cheer they normally reserve for Ming Campbell. When he mentioned the floods and “people in this country are discussing this issue” an almighty laugh went up saying “what would you know, you were inspecting Rwandan latrines yesterday.” When Cameron spoke about Europe, the Labour MPs roared with approval saying “we’ve forced you to lurch to the right. Game over”. Overall it was bad for Cameron – even Ming Campbell mocked him. His ill-judged Rwandan trip stopped him venting fury on behalf of submerged Middle England which he should have done.

Politics | 21 July 2007

Beneath the dynamic surface, Brown is dismantling Blair’s public service reforms When ministerial limousines line Great Smith Street in Westminster it is normally a sign that the Cinnamon Club is doing brisk trade. This upmarket Indian restaurant has become so popular with MPs that it has wired up a division bell in its foyer to tell them when to vote. But last Wednesday evening the attraction lay in the building opposite, where the Trades Unions Congress was holding its summer reception. Inside, newly promoted ministers and unionists were gladhanding each other like old friends. Gordon Brown was, naturally, the star attraction.

A resignation at CCHQ

Ben Brogan reports that George Bridges, David Cameron's former campaign manager, has quit, It is a loss, he's a great guy and had a hell of a tough job. Being in charge of campaigning for Scotland and the north is like being made head of the Saudi Arabian division of Guinness. I gather his departure was not to do with a clash with Andy Coulson, and that he had been growing steadily disgruntled with the Cameroon operation for some time. So when Coulson was appointed, Bridges didn't even know (as Francis Elliot tells us). A rather puzzling move: Cameron needs all the talent he can get right now.

Keeping climate change in perspective

Richard Littlejohn is perhaps the funniest journalist in Britain today, but it’s a mistake to be distracted by the brilliance of his jokes. He regularly unearths the social and political trends making a direct impact on people’s lives. Today its the “global warming racket” – how councils are hiring “carbon advisers” on £30k a year. Hull Council has 30 staff working on “environmental issues”, he says, none of whom proved any help when its flood defences succumbed. This is my problem with the global warming “debate” – it skews priorities, and allows councils to assemble a highly-paid green Gestapo while losing track of their basic duties (like keeping council tax bills down).

Signs are we might be heading for an early poll

What today’s polls say to me is “early election”. If Brown keeps this up into the recess, his honeymoon will stretch through the summer. Remember, the Tories need a ten-point lead to win an overall majority. I’ve been amazed how much ammunition Brown is discharging. He could have announced Super Casinos in the autumn. He seems to be in a sprint, not a marathon. Perhaps because he knows the finish line of this parliament is not too far away.

Coming soon: A Cameroon blog

Reading the blogosphere must often be a frustrating business for David Cameron. But I gather a more supportive site is on the way. Fiona Melville, a member of his leadership campaign who left the party just two months ago, is working on a website which my sources tell me will have a “modern liberal Conservative view”. I hear “Platform Ten” is its working title. A Cameroon loyalist website? It’s not funded by CCHQ, although the people involved are certainly former staffers and ex-Tory candidates. And I gather, Steve Hilton himself initiated this project seeking an alternative to ConservativeHome, which has been a little too effective at reflecting the unhappiness of many grassroots Tory activists with the Cameron leadership.

City Academies and Super Casinos, RIP

Putting City Academies under the care of local authorities is like putting chickens in the care of wolves - as Mr Brown knows very well. So it’s goodbye to Mr Blair’s market reforms, although the Prime Minister has subcontracted the wielding of the knife. Witness his twin strategy: he keeps Lord Adonis, joint architect of the scheme, in place. But he robs him of the control he needs. Remember, Adonis was literally in the High Court fighting local authorities who resent any threat to their power base. How much progress will City Academies make now that local authorities have control? But on a day when Brown has effectively abolished Blair’s wretched super casinos in a throwaway line in parliament, who’s going to care?

Spot the Scot

Brown has a PMQs headline for us: let Cameron do the PR, he’ll be the PM. Well, his performance was better than last week. But what struck me was the Tory’s “behold the Jock” strategy. One Tory backbencher demanded English votes for English laws. Another asked “The Prime Minister claims to treat people equally, so why do nurses in his constituency earn more?” The new Shadow Scotland minister Ben Wallace (good man, keep your eye on him) raised the West Lothian Question. Even the LibDems joined in, comparing Kirkcaldy’s maternity wards favourably to those of Chelmsford. All great fun. Brown has no answer. Trouble like this is precisely why the late Robin Cook said he’d never accept a job with an England remit after devolution.

Where the UK terror cells are

The News of the World (where yours truly is a columnist) is not only top for celebrity news (they had the Wills/Kate reunion last week) but its news stories are often ahead of the competition by weeks. So I’m struck by their story that there now 219 terror cells on MI5’s map, plus a fascinating geographical breakdown (12 in Scotland, 80 in the Midlands, 35 in London). The message MI5 seems to want to put out is that one of these guys will succeed, and soon. Emphatically not the time to stop talking about the “war on terror”, in my view. PS I’m a fan of Iain Duncan Smith’s Centre for Social Justice, but just can’t agree with his suggestion of raising alcohol prices by 10%.

Politics | 7 July 2007

Don’t mention the war on terror — even if we’re winning it The war on terror is over — or at least has been purged from the vocabulary of Gordon Brown’s government. The phrase, he has decided, will never be mentioned by any of his ministers. The men who attempted to attack a London nightclub and Glasgow Airport are ‘criminals’ and not warriors. It is only a matter of terminology, of course, but Mr Brown knows the power of semantics. With no formal announcement, British policy towards global terror has changed fundamentally. Jack Straw has longed for such a day.

Appearances Matter

Perched high up in the press gallery for PMQs, I didn’t see Cameron’s superb sneer when Brown moaned he’s only been in the job for five days (seven, actually, Gordon but who’s counting?). That sneer was the most eloquent remark of all. Like American party conventions, there are two shows – the one you see in the crowd, and the one projected on television. After watching the PMQs coverage (I’m stuck in a Sky studio, about to give my verdict) it looks a disaster for the stuttering Brown and a victory for Cameron who has mastered the range of facial expressions which the camera loves. They say television is 80% how you look, and 20% what you say. Brown should remember this lesson for next week.

Brown’s first PMQs

A packed house and full of entertainment. Ming Campbell spent ages trying to make his way to his seat: people didn't seem to notice him. Brown was wearing a pastel blue tie, Cameron a red one - just one sign of the switched agendas going on. Brown is still being cautious on terror "I've only been in this job five days" he said. The House let out a horse laugh to that, and soon people were shouting "ten years" when he asked for patience.  Brown's been doing his homework and teased Cameron over Pauline Neville Jones, the new Tory security adviser, being in favour of ID cards. Cameron's response, an old quote from the Chancellor Alistair Darling saying he didn't want his life reduced to a metal strip, was classic.

Brown v. Cameron: Round one

Some thoughts on the Brown statement… 1. Cameron’s response was very good. He had varied intonation and passion – while Brown's stutter got steadily worse as he read his constitutional proposals out like a Budget-style shopping list. I fancied I saw Cameron’s hands shake a little as he faced Prime Minister Brown for the first time - but his face showed no sign of nerves. For the many Conservatives with their head in their hands right now, this is a cause for optimism. 2. Cameron played the Scottish card straight away. He can’t vote on schools in Brown’s constituency, so why should Brown and Scottish MPS decide English policy (Scots swung the university top-up fees vote, and the foundation hospital vote).

The new religion

What I love about the climate change “debate” is that when the public show themselves unconvinced about its wilder claims, the media talks patronisingly about a need to “educate.” This goes to show that environmentalism has become a religion with no tolerance for dissenters who must either be converted or burnt at the cross. Iain Dale has shown us how Greenpeace are so keen to close down debate that they only come on TV if they are guaranteed they will encounter no opposition. Given the Royal Society’s proud history, it’s a real shame that it is going the same way. That’s not the scientific way. There is huge amounts of uncertainty in this evolving science of climatology. That’s why the public is right and the Royal Society is wrong.

What to make of the Tory reshuffle

Some thoughts on the Tory reshuffle… 1. This was described to me as an “election footing” reshuffle. It’s the explanation why Maude has gone – he represented the pre-election phase, apparently. 2. George Osborne is given powers for election co-ordinator. He has no experience in the field, and will face a formidable challenge from Douglas Alexander who does the same role for Labour but has been obsessing over the mechanics of elections for years. 3. Pauline Neville Jones has been appointed to Shadow Cabinet, pending her nomination for a peerage. So Cameron, too, can assemble team of all the talents (but you can perhaps say he started it) 4.

Maude moved

Francis Maude has been sacked as Tory chairman, party sources confirm. He'll be taking up another job, though. More soon.

All bets are off

Fraser Nelson says that the new Prime Minister has positioned himself in territory that the Tories have left vacant, and is ready to fight a cultural battle to defend the ‘British way of life’ and win over the C1 voters who decide elections It was a phrase that David Cameron would never dare to utter. As Gordon Brown was giving his first speech as Labour party leader in Manchester, he repeatedly pledged to defend the ‘British way of life’. This dog whistle may have been missed by his audience, and was certainly neglected by the press, but resonated in Conservative headquarters. Immigration, an issue which the Tories have dropped as a frontline issue, is now firmly on Labour’s agenda.