Fraser Nelson

Fraser Nelson

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

Remembering Clarissa Tan, 1972-2014

From our UK edition

Our much-loved colleague, Clarissa Tan, passed away in the early hours of this morning. We’re all stunned here at 22 Old Queen Street – she had been fighting cancer for some time, but until a few weeks ago she had very few symptoms. Now, she has gone. I first met her seven years ago, just after she had won the Spectator’s Shiva Naipaul creative writing prize. She was living in Singapore but we kept in touch by email, and I was struck by her gorgeous use of language, her eye for a story, her ability to understand any subject – no matter how complex – and write about it with humour and insight. Even in emails, she seemed incapable of writing a sentence that didn’t put a smile on your face. She had a potent combination of a hard head and a light pen.

Why Sajid Javid could end up at the top of the Tory tree

From our UK edition

Sajid Javid's promotion to Culture Secretary will not surprise his many fans. And it underlines an advantage that the Conservative party has over Labour right now - the talent in its back benchers. The Tories, quite simply, have far more MPs who could be Prime Minister - thanks to the hugely successful recruitment process that David Cameron ran after becoming leader . One of them is Sajid Javid, who is interviewed by the Mail on Sunday today – this was done (as ever) months earlier by James Forsyth in the Spectator (his interview here). They're both worth reading, as I suspect Javid is one of these guys we'll be hearing a lot more from in coming years.

Clegg, Farage and the poverty of Britain’s EU debate

From our UK edition

Two of the writers I most admire have fallen out over the Clegg vs Farage debate. James Kirkup calls it for the Lib Dem leader (his reasons here) and Peter Oborne for Farage – but I’m in the happy position of being able to disagree with both of them. I think they both lost, and I explain why in my Daily Telegraph column today. Clegg has decided to ride the Ukip wave, positioning himself as the patron saint of Europhiles who loathe the sight of Nigel Farage. He will be calculating that there are more of them than LibDem supporters. But I regarded their debate on Wednesday as rather sterile, laden with clichés and extremist positions. I don’t think that the EU is an evil empire with 'blood on its hands' as Farage bizarrely claimed.

The genius of the Spectator’s Peter Robins

From our UK edition

Some of the best journalists in Britain rarely, if ever, have their names in print. One of them is my colleague Peter Robins, the genius chief sub editor (or, technically, production editor) of The Spectator. In his Times column today (£), Matthew Parris has a story about Peter. Here it is: 'If you sometimes feel you’re getting gobbledegook from this columnist you should realise how much worse gobbledegook you’d get were it not for that most self-effacing of species, the sub-editor. I blush to remember the errors from which this page’s subs have rescued me.

Budget 2014: what Osborne didn’t tell us about the crunch to come

From our UK edition

Getting to the truth of a Budget is far easier under George Osborne's new system. His creation, the Office for Budget Responsibility, now writes its own report  (pdf here) and it's like having your own mole in the Treasury flag up what the Chancellor would rather gloss over*. I read its report over the weekend - it's too rich a document to skim on Budget day. I found a few charts that CoffeeHousers may be interested in. The graphs are all about Osborne's decision to defer tough decisions - what James Forsyth brilliantly called his Saint Augustine tendency: give me fiscal discipline, Oh Lord - but not yet.

Tory wars: Cameron invites Boris to have a go, if he thinks he’s hard enough

From our UK edition

I'm not sure how many winnable Tory seats still need a candidate, but the Prime Minister has invited the Mayor of London to get in the ring. Here's what he said in an interview with James Corden, who was guest editing The Sun for Sport Relief: Corden: If you are in a room together, like even if you are at the Olympic stadium and he [Boris] is sat the other side of the stadium… Cameron: …he still makes me laugh… Corden: …and you are sat the other side can you feel his eyes piercing at you going… Ghaaaaaaar – I want your job!?! Cameron: That is brilliant. No. It wouldn’t be a great job to have if people didn’t want it. There is nothing ignoble about wanting my job. But I thought he did brilliantly over the Olympics.

The British jobs miracle

From our UK edition

George Osborne rather glossed over the single most solid piece of good news in the Budget today: the Jobs Miracle. His pensions announcement means that tomorrow’s papers are likely to skip over it too. But it’s worth looking at – the government seems genuinely baffled as to why so many people are finding work. As I wrote in my last Telegraph column, the Treasury does not seem to recognise a supply-side, cross-departmental success when it bites them on the nose. I’m just back from the annual Spectator Budget presentation, sponsored by Aberdeen Asset Management. We spoke a lot about this - the below graph sums it up... As my earlier blog on the "six scary graphs" shows, almost all of George Osborne's initial forecasts have proven to be laughably optimistic.

Budget 2014: George Osborne’s pensions revolution

From our UK edition

This will take a while to sink in - we simply have never seen this before in a Budget. George Osborne has just revolutionised the way pensions work; millions of people will have just found their pensions pot turned into a bank account. The punitive 55 per cent tax rate they faced if taking out more than they should from a pension has been abolished. And how much does this cost Osborne? That's the beauty. No wonder the Chancellor's aides were briefing that he'd found a very radical, very 'clever' policy. This will make a massive pre-election difference to pensioners, the group most likely to vote at the next election. This bung to Tory target voters will be off-radar to the IFS and Labour because those guys only compute tax and spending changes - not welfare or savings.

The anatomy of a political lie: ‘tax-free childcare’

From our UK edition

Today’s announcement of childcare subsidy, up to the value of £2,000 per kid under the age of 12, is welcome news. As The Spectator argued last week, this is perhaps the smartest single move the Chancellor can make – too many highly-skilled women want to work, but cant afford to as they’d face Europe’s highest childcare fees. And then the Treasury has to spoil it all by lying about the policy. The government website has this to say: The first thing parents need to know is that the scheme is not ‘tax-free childcare’ at all. So how on earth does the Treasury justify claiming otherwise?

Would George Osborne really be brazen enough to expand ‘Help to Buy?’

From our UK edition

Today's Sunday Times has news which would be laughable, if it were not to plausible. That George Osborne intends to pour some more petrol on the property market fire next week by extending his discredited Help To Buy equity loan scheme - in effect, a flagrant example of politicians using taxpayers' money in an attempt to buy votes. It's a sign that Osborne intends to use help-to-buy as an election weapon, and as loaned money doesn't show up on the deficit figures he's quite relaxed. Here's the start of the Sunday Times story:- The Help to Buy scheme, designed to help people get on to the housing ladder, is likely to be extended in this week’s budget.

What does Ed Balls have against marriage?

From our UK edition

Ed Balls has announced today that he’d scrap even the tiny tax break that George Osborne is planning to offer next year, thus drawing another dividing line with the Tories. Cameron’s proposed tax relief is not about promoting marriage, or favouring any lifestyle over another. He wants to make the government more marriage-neutral. That means eroding the bias against marriage, which is one of the most pernicious poverty traps in the British today. When I was writing for the News of the World, I was contacted by a reader who said that he loved his family, but had concluded they’d be (financially) a lot better off without him. He sent the calculations, and they were all correct.

Tristram Hunt should worry about failure in council schools, not free schools

From our UK edition

[audioplayer src="http://traffic.libsyn.com/spectator/TheViewFrom22_13_March_2014_v4.mp3" title="Toby Young and Fraser Nelson discuss the last stand of Michael Gove"] Listen [/audioplayer]Tristram Hunt seems delighted today that Britain’s first profit-seeking school has been deemed ‘inadequate’ by Ofsted. The scores of council-run failing schools, several in his Stoke constituency, don’t seem to be worthy of his ire. But when a free school stumbles, in Suffolk, he declares this to be… ‘…more evidence of the damage David Cameron’s Free School policy is doing to school standards. The lack of local oversight and a policy that allows unqualified teachers into classrooms on a permanent basis is the wrong approach.

Revealed: how Nick Clegg cooked up his ‘free school meals’ pledge

From our UK edition

For those who missed Dominic Cummings, recently departed Michael Gove adviser, on BBC Radio 4's World At One, here's the extraordinary transcript which confirms what Coffee Housers will have feared. He didn't give an interview, but responded to the BBC's questions (below) about Nick Clegg's plan to give free school meals to all school pupils - even the offspring of millionaires. And to me, this sums up why coalitions are a bad idea. The junior partner gets desperate for a jazzy-sounding idea to call their own, so ambush their senior partner. An announcement is made, for reasons of spin and nothing else. No policy work is done. The expectations of millions of parents are raised, schools without kitchens are plunged into chaos, and unaffordable promises made.

What’s next for Tim Montgomerie?

From our UK edition

Normally, we wouldn’t blog about a journalist moving jobs — but Tim Montgomerie is an exception. He is an actor in, not just an observer of, Britain's political drama which is why it's significant that he has decided to step down as opinion editor of The Times, to do other things (as yet undefined). Normally, ‘do other things’ is a euphemism – but in Tim’s case, it fits a pattern. He is a serial political entrepreneur, an ex-Iain Duncan Smith staffer who set up ConservativeHome website, and the Centre for Social Justice think tank and can be found behind various other projects (PoliticsHome, 18 Doughty Street TV, and others).

Gove, Cameron and the myth of ‘state vs private’ schools

From our UK edition

Will David Cameron send his kids to a state secondary school, as Michael Gove is doing? Today's papers are following up James Forsyth's suggestion that Cameron will slum it as well. But this story takes, as its premise, the ludicrous notion of a binary divide between private and public. In fact, anyone lucky (and, let's face it, rich) enough to get into a good state secondary in London has no need of going private. And this is arguably the greater scandal. I can offer an example. I'm house-hunting the moment, and last weekend viewed this cramped wee house, with poky rooms, listed for an outrageous price.

In defence of Gemma Worrall, and her ‘Barraco Barner’ tweet

From our UK edition

Meet Gemma Worrall, the latest unlikely worldwide star produced by social media. She is a 20-year-old beautician from Blackpool, now famous for tweeting 'Why is our president Barraco Barner getting involved with Russia, scary.' Cue 7,000 retweets, publicity from Australia to Brazil, and the inevitable vicious attacks. Haters have come thick and fast, she says, describing her as an ‘oxygen thief' and worse. This morning's press gets stuck in too. 'Tweet about the Ukraine/Russia crisis is branded a new low for "dumb Britain"' sneers the Daily Mirror. Really? It can be argued that this is a new high. I’d like to cite, in my defence, Ed Miliband.

Does Alex Salmond want to swap rule from London for rule by OPEC?

From our UK edition

Another day, another hole blown in Alex Salmond's case for breaking up Britain. The IFS has today published its estimates (based on the OBR's) for Scottish oil and gas revenues, and they're less than half those of the SNP administration in Edinburgh. Salmond forecast oil and gas revenues of between £6.8 billion and £7.9 billion in 2016-17. The IFS puts it at £3.3 billion. Salmond's best-case scenario for 2017-18 has Scotland with a deficit of 1.0 per cent of GDP; the IFS's figures suggest that'll be closer to 3.6 per cent of GDP. A country like Britain can ride out such fluctuations, but Salmond may find he's swapping rule from London by rule by OPEC.

Where are Barack Obama’s ‘red lines’ in Crimea?

From our UK edition

When Barack Obama warned Vladimir Putin that “there will be costs” for violating Ukrainian sovereignty, I doubt the Kremlin worried too much. The Syria crisis taught is all about Obama and his ‘red lines’. This is a president who recoils at the idea  of any new entanglement, whose attention is on the Pacific rather than Eurasia and is less worried than any of his recent predecessors about Russian aggression. And that’s what makes this situation so dangerous: Putin wants to know where the new red lines lie, and may keep pushing until he finds out. His asking Russia’s parliament for the authority to use troops is, I suspect, is a ploy to see how Washington reacts.