Isabel Hardman

Isabel Hardman

Isabel Hardman is assistant editor of The Spectator and author of Why We Get the Wrong Politicians. She also presents Radio 4’s Week in Westminster.

Tories will keep NHS ring fence, Cameron to announce

From our UK edition

The Tories will protect the NHS budget, David Cameron will announce in his speech to his party conference today. Extracts of the Prime Minister's speech, which he will deliver in Birmingham later today, include a promise to 'protect the NHS budget and continue to invest more'. Cameron will repeat George Osborne's argument that 'you can only have a strong NHS if you have a strong economy', and will also mention his own personal commitment to the health service, saying: 'From the country that unravelled DNA, we are now mapping it for each individual. Cracking this code could mean curing rare genetic diseases and saving lives. Our NHS is leading the world on this incredible technology. 'I understand very personally the difference it could make.

Tory nerves over Osborne welfare gamble

From our UK edition

Will George Osborne get away with his conference gamble that hits working families? The Chancellor's speech would have received a far worse reception on the front pages of today's newspapers had it not been for the announcement on GPs offering a seven-day service. But it remains a topic of debate in the party. Today at a lunchtime fringe, the Chancellor tried to defend his two-year freeze on working-age benefits by arguing that he had taken uncomfortable decisions for a Conservative, such as raising corporation tax. He also was careful not to appear to be gleeful about cutting welfare, an impression he has given in the past.

Leaked lines to take for Tory MPs show party nerves about Ukip

From our UK edition

Tory conference has been much more upbeat than last week's gloomy offer from Labour. But just in case the party had turned up in a bad mood after the defection of Mark Reckless, MPs were given a series of lines to take which involved them telling any broadcaster unfortunate to ask that the gathering in Birmingham was demonstrating 'energy' and 'positivity'. Those lines to take, leaked to Coffee House, show the party preparing for a week of awkward questions about Ukip taking their voters and overshadowing their conference. One of the questions is 'have Mark Reckless and Ukip overshadowed your conference?' The answer is: 'I disagree.

Theresa May was a tough act for Boris Johnson to follow

From our UK edition

Boris Johnson and Theresa May both fancy a pop at the Tory leadership and both gave speeches today that showed they were keen. That much is so well-known that it is a little tiring to analyse either speech simply in those terms (though it's worth noting that Boris supporters have been very keen indeed to tell us that this was a 'grown-up, loyal speech that shows he has a track record of delivery. Boris has a vision that is optimistic'). Both did a good job of rallying the troops in the conference hall, although in quiet different ways. May was sober but passionate about the threat posed to Britain by Isis, warning that the terror group could acquire nuclear weapons. She quoted the Koran on stage to demonstrate that Isis was twisting the sacred texts it claims to be fighting for.

Chris Kelly distressed by Ukip rumours and has denied them to closest family

From our UK edition

Like all MPs suspected as potential Ukip defectors, Chris Kelly is being hounded by colleagues, whips and journalists all desperate to find out what he's up to. He and his family are distressed by the pressure that the MP is under and suspect that Ukip are putting his name about to create a smoke screen around the next defector. Kelly has told his long-term girlfriend that he is not defecting. His girlfriend's mother is Nadine Dorries, who says Kelly is so loyal to the government that she's quite 'disappointed' he doesn't take more principled stands against it. But she is confident he will not defect. Neither, in case you're wondering, will Dorries.

Turncoats, ‘dickheads’ – what the Tories think of Ukip

From our UK edition

The Tories are bracing themselves for another defection to Ukip which may or may not come today or in the next few days. MPs and whips have been chasing after Adam Holloway and Chris Kelly as the figures who seem the most at risk, and have been extracting the sort of point blank denials that Mark Reckless claims to have never been asked for. Daniel Hannan has been denying again that he is leaving his party, while another rumour is doing the rounds that the next defection could be from a London Conservative working with Boris, rather than the Commons or the European Parliament. MPs are angry and determined to put as much pressure on Reckless as possible, not least because many of his colleagues feel betrayed.

Conservative conference: Liz Truss and Sajid Javid hit Labour

From our UK edition

Two of the brightest rising stars in the Conservative party, Sajid Javid and Liz Truss, addressed the Tory conference. After an angry day yesterday where Grant Shapps and the PM furiously attacked Ukip and their backbench colleagues piled in to savage Mark Reckless, the pair needed to use their slow to re-focus party minds on fighting Labour in the general election. They are both well-equipped for such a task: Javid started his speech with a passage on his values as a British Tory, then moved onto attacking the snobbery he encountered from the Labour Party when he was appointed Culture Secretary, and Ken Livingstone's comments that he saw Javid as a Pakistani and a banker. Javid responded: 'well, Ken, I'm British.

George Osborne’s task: to make his party enthusiastic about government

From our UK edition

There's a funny mood at this Tory conference. It has more energy than the Labour conference, but partly that energy is anger at Mark Reckless' defection, rather than enthusiasm. MPs and advisers are jittery that another defection will come at another terribly inconvenient moment. A third MP leaving the party will suggest real momentum. So George Osborne's task when he speaks a little later this morning is to turn the energy that's buzzing about the hall into enthusiasm for government. The Labour conference, for all its desire to get the Tories out of office, lacked that sincere excitement about the idea of the party being in charge. The Tories need to show that they're not running out of ideas or exhausted by government, but are keen for a majority government.

Don’t trust this woman: Tory whips warn MPs off Brooks Newmark trap

From our UK edition

If you're a Tory MP who hasn't been paying much attention to the news and is wearing paisley pyjamas tonight, the Conservative whips are looking out for you. They've sent a message out to their party warning them off the 'woman' who managed to entrap Brooks Newmark into revealing his bedwear and long-term economic plan. The message, passed to Coffee House by an amused Tory, reads: 'Please take care with a "Sophie Witams". You follow her on Twitter. "She" is the person who ensnared Brooks Newmark. Please check you haven't been approached. You should certainly having no contact and take care.' It's nice to know whips are so concerned about protecting their party's honourable members.

William Hague’s warming warm-up speech

From our UK edition

William Hague has just warmed up the Conservative party conference with a lovely, personal speech about his time as Leader of the House. It was tribal, claiming that he had never seen a frontbench that was worse or weaker than the current Labour one, and that with no John Prescott around, there was no-one to make it entertaining either. He listed his own achievements in the party, and praised George Osborne for 'completely' turning around the British economy, an interesting line not just because the Chancellor has missed his own targets, but because until recently ministers were still giving out lines to the effect that there is a great deal left to be done.

Tories accuse Reckless of lying

From our UK edition

The Conservatives have decided that the best way to respond to Mark Reckless's defection to Ukip is to accuse him of lying. On first glance, this may seem like a slightly crude strategy: of course the man was going to lie until the point of his defection, rather than say 'yes, I am thinking of going over, but don't mention it to anyone if you can'. But the reason this works is that it rather undermines Reckless's claim to be a man of principle, or at least, the Tories clearly hope it will. He registered and paid for this Tory party conference, and told his whip three days before the vote on air strikes on Isis in Iraq that he would support the government's motion. He was one of the first to reply to his whip, and the message he sent is below: 'Thanks for your message.

Mark Reckless: The away day row that made me lose my faith in David Cameron

From our UK edition

What made Mark Reckless decide to defect? Coffee House earlier revealed the timeline that led to the Tory MP standing on the conference stage in Doncaster today, but after his announcement, he sat down with a small group of journalists and explained why he'd decided that Ukip was the right party for him. It started with a row in Oxfordshire. Before explaining, Reckless first refused a glass of wine, and when it was pointed out that sipping water was a little unusual for a Ukipper, he told the group that 'I'm not a big drinker', adding sheepishly 'I had an unfortunate incident some time ago as some of you will recall'. Other Ukippers in the room were merrily consuming wine to toast their latest defection as he spoke.

How Mark Reckless’ defection happened – exclusive details

From our UK edition

Mark Reckless has been talking about moving to Ukip for months, those who know him say. It was only in the last two weeks that he decided he was definitely defecting, and only in the past few days that more people working for the party knew what was happening. Still, they managed to keep it under wraps to the extent that some journalists had gone home early, dismissing the reports of defections as overexcited chatter. The hall was gobsmacked when he appeared.

Breaking: Mark Reckless becomes second Tory MP to defect to Ukip

From our UK edition

Mark Reckless has just left the Conservative Party and joined Ukip. He is announcing his defection on the stage at the party's conference to huge cheers. listen to ‘Podcast special: Mark Reckless defects to Ukip’ on audioBoom Reckless says it is the leadership of the Tory party that is holding the country back — Isabel Hardman (@IsabelHardman) September 27, 2014 This is horrendous for the Tories — Isabel Hardman (@IsabelHardman) September 27, 2014 More to follow...

Tory plan to force through EVEL advances

From our UK edition

As reported earlier this week, a group of Conservative MPs are keen to get English votes for English laws sorted as soon as possible. Bill Cash has sent William Hague a change to the standing orders of the House of Commons which would enforce this principle immediately. He has also written to party colleagues asking for their support on this, and says he has heard sympathetic noises from the party leadership on the idea too (although it depends who you talk to as to how sympathetic the noises sound). Cash told Coffee House that it was imperative that the government avoided bringing in EVEL through legislation as it would almost certainly end up with a Supreme Court challenge.

Nigel Farage blames Labour for Rotherham abuse scandal

From our UK edition

Rotherham is only a few miles down the road from the Ukip conference, and looms large in the hall. Every speaker so far has managed to mention the scandal of 1,400 children abused and ignored by the authorities. Jane Collins' speech has riled Labour so much that Labour has accused her of being defamatory, while Nigel Farage devoted a furious section of his speech to accusing the party.

Nigel Farage concedes Ukip won’t win Heywood and Middleton by-election

From our UK edition

Not long after John Bickley had appealed to Ukip delegates to help him win in Heywood and Middleton, Nigel Farage conceded that it wasn't going to happen. In a briefing with journalists after his speech (the Ukip leader is very generous with his time for the London-based media establishment, far more so than any other leading politician), he said: 'I think it's too big a mountain to climb in that short a space of time, and I think the Labour party is saying that because they've got a very divided local party, they're not happy with the candidate, they can't get anyone out to canvass, and when they put the coaches on to go from the hall in Manchester to the office in Heywood, only 23 people got on one... they were expecting hundreds.

Left-wing revolt underway in Ukip

From our UK edition

What voters want is a renationalisation of the railways, policies that hit the rich harder, a mansion tax and definitely not an abolition of inheritance tax. This isn't a belated write-up of one of the further left fringes of the Labour conference in Manchester: it's the ideas of a group of Ukippers who gathered this lunchtime in Doncaster to discuss how to attract Labour voters. Led by Ian Dexter, a party member who has no formal role in writing the manifesto but who was given the official 'How to win the crucial Labour Vote' lunchtime slot, the fringe sounded at times more like a Socialist Workers' Party meeting than an apparently libertarian party trying to entice Labour voters over. This included spending more on healthcare, housing , manufacturing, and higher wages, he argued.

The by-election battles have begun over Clacton and Heywood

From our UK edition

Douglas Carswell has just finished speaking at the Ukip conference and his fellow by-election contender John Bickley, who is standing in Heywood and Middleton on the same day, has just given a short address too. He told the hall that 'the dam is ready to burst' and asked for members to pop in before they went to Clacton. Labour sources were last week claiming that their chance of holding onto the seat was looking shaky, which was read by many as an attempt to get their activists and MPs to take the fight seriously. But I hear that there is a fierce debate going on in Ukip between those who want to divert resources from Clacton to Heywood in order to give the fight a real go, and those who think it best to focus efforts on Carswell's seat.