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.

Labour’s ‘for now’ policy on an EU referendum

From our UK edition

The Tory spinners were in an exceptionally good mood after PMQs today. The general feeling was that Ed Miliband had messed up, and this wasn't helped by his aides having to clarify that when he told the Prime Minister that 'my position is no - we don't want an In/Out referendum', he actually meant that currently they don't want an In/Out referendum now. 'The position has not changed,' said one party source. 'We do not think that an In/Out referendum is a good idea. We will not do anything which damages the UK economy.' But they added that they were not ruling one out forever. And they were not ruling out a referendum commitment in the manifesto, either. So this is another 'for now' position, rather than a commitment of any sort.

‘Mrs Bone was singing in the shower’: PM’s EU speech delights Tory MPs

From our UK edition

David Cameron should savour today as the moment he finally satisfied Mrs Bone. I've been calling round Tory MPs, and Peter Bone, often a thorn in the flesh of the Prime Minister with his probing questions that his wife wants clearing up, is happy with the speech. He says: 'I could hear Mrs Bone singing in the shower room and it included the words "for he's a jolly good fellow".' Bone explains why his household is filled with such joy this morning: 'I am in a very good mood. A year ago, if I had said to you the Prime Minister is going to renegotiate the terms of the EU towards a Common Market and then put it to the British people in an In/Out referendum, you would have said I was barking mad.

Cameron’s red meat EU speech: five key points

From our UK edition

Cameron has finished delivering his 'red meat' speech on the European Union and answering questions from journalists. You can read the full text here, but here are five key points to take away: 1. The Prime Minister is a pro-European sceptical about the current EU settlement It actually took Cameron a long time to reach his vision of a new Europe because he was so busy praising its history. We had a whistle-stop tour through the EU's creation, dotted with praise for its peacekeeping mission first. He was clearly keen to emphasis his pro-European credentials as much as he was to criticise, saying: 'I am not a British isolationist' and 'I speak as a British Prime Minister with a positive vision for the future of the European Union'.

David Cameron’s EU speech: the Coffee House guide

From our UK edition

Downing Street has tonight released the following extracts from David Cameron's speech on the European Union, which he will deliver tomorrow at 8am. Here's your guide to what we know so far: 1. An unwilling EU could sleepwalk Britain out of the union 'I speak as British Prime Minister with a positive vision for the future of the European Union. A future in which Britain wants, and should want, to play a committed and active part. 'If we don’t address these challenges, the danger is that Europe will fail and the British people will drift towards the exit. 'I do not want that to happen. I want the European Union to be a success. And I want a relationship between Britain and the EU that keeps us in it. 'That is why I am here today. To acknowledge the nature of the challenges we face.

Tim Loughton vs the Department for Education, round 2

From our UK edition

The battle between Tim Loughton and the Education department rumbles on, with new foot soldiers joining the fray. The latest shot fired in the war comes from Labour's Stephen Twigg, who has demanded an investigation into the quotes we ran on Coffee House last week from a senior DfE source which described the former minister as a 'lazy incompetent narcissist obsessed only with self-promotion'. Twigg has written to the department's Permanent Secretary Chris Wormald, saying the following: 'You will be aware that both special advisers and civil servants are bound by a code of conduct, which precludes them from making personal attacks.

Cabinet agrees ‘difficult decisions’ due for 2015/16 spending review

From our UK edition

Ministers aren't just getting ready for March's Budget: they're also trying to work out a 'budget setting process' for 2015/16. The content of that slimmed-down departmental spending review formed the discussion at today's Cabinet meeting, with George Osborne and Danny Alexander leading. It's not clear when this spending review will be announced, other than that it will take place in the first half of 2013. But the discussion centred around that old chestnut, the 'difficult decisions'. The Prime Minister's official spokesman said: 'They set out that there was going to be a budget setting process for 15/16 in the first half of this year that the treasury will set out more on that process in due course.

Labour opposes benefit cuts: for now, anyway

From our UK edition

Last night's debate on the bill capping benefit rises at 1 per cent was far more revelatory than it might first have appeared. It wasn't Labour's conclusion that the Tories were evil and the Lib Dems (those that turned up, at least: there were nine rebels, but a further 11 Lib Dem MPs were mysteriously absent) just as bad. But the most interesting revelation was the way the party handled this exchange: Charlie Elphicke: Is it therefore the right hon. Gentleman’s and the Opposition’s policy that uprating should be not by 1%, but by inflation? Is that a commitment? Stephen Timms: Uprating should indeed be in line with inflation, as it always was in the past. This was significant.

Tory MPs to press Theresa May on Bulgarian and Romanian migrants

From our UK edition

Tory backbenchers will raise concerns about the government's preparations for the lifting of controls on Bulgarian and Romanian migrants at a meeting with the Home Secretary in the next few weeks, I understand. Conservative MPs are becoming increasingly nervous about the situation, fearing that if handled poorly, it could have a particularly bad impact on the party's performance in the 2014 European elections, as the transitional controls end on 31 December 2013. One of those worried backbenchers is former ministerial aide Stewart Jackson, who tells me he is considering introducing a modified version of the 10-Minute Rule Bill that he brought before the House in October.

The Labour MPs who could make trouble for Ed Miliband on Europe

From our UK edition

So the Prime Minister's speech is, as James hinted yesterday, going to be on Wednesday, and in London to avoid any further strikes of the Curse of Tutancameron's Europe speech. His official spokesman confirmed the date this morning. Thanks to briefed extracts and further briefings over the weekend, we now have a rough outline of what's going to be in it, which will mean it's impressive if anything the David Cameron says causes anyone in the audience to gasp with surprise. What is more exciting is what the response will be from the other benches in the Commons. Labour spokesmen on the broadcast rounds yesterday were squirming rather when asked about whether the party might offer a referendum too.

Former housing minister calls for review of benefit rises bill

From our UK edition

The Welfare Benefits Uprating Bill returns to the Commons this afternoon for committee and remaining stages. As I reported last week, rebel backbench Lib Dems, the Labour front bench team and Green MP Caroline Lucas have tabled a number of amendments to the legislation to change the uprating itself, which may provoke heated exchanges on the floor of the House but little more. But there is one more amendment for discussion which, even if it doesn't get accepted this afternoon, could well reappear in the House of Lords.

Hague fleshes out Britain’s role in the decades-long response to terrorism

From our UK edition

The Prime Minister's two statements on the Algerian hostage crisis on Friday and Sunday set some tongues wagging about what sort of a role he saw Britain playing in the 'global response' that was 'about years, even decades' to the terror threat in North Africa. William Hague fleshed that out a little bit more in his Today programme interview, arguing that the West couldn't resolve all the world's problems: 'It is a complete illusion to think that we are omnipotent in all of these respects. Of course there are many, many factors at play. I'm describing to you what the United Nations have been doing, what Western countries have been doing. We've also been increasing our counter-terrorism co-operation with western African countries - Nigeria and Mauritania and so on.

The Curse of Tutancameron’s Europe speech

From our UK edition

David Cameron's Europe speech already had a Tutankhamun-style curse on it before events forced him to postpone it, with the much longer delay from its original date of mid-autumn causing a feeding frenzy in the media, in his own party, his coalition partners, and in the opposition. By the end of last week, it was difficult to find an opposition MP or columnist who hadn't written a whimsical piece imagining they were Cameron giving the speech (or indeed twisting readers into an even greater willing suspension of disbelief by imagining they were John Major talking to Cameron about the as-yet undelivered speech as David Miliband managed to do).

David Cameron: Terrorism in North Africa requires global response

From our UK edition

In his latest statement on the Algerian hostage crisis this morning, the Prime Minister built on the interventionist language that James spotted in his Commons address on Friday. Cameron said: 'This is a global threat and it will require a global response; it will require a response that is about years, even decades, rather than months, and it requires a response that is patient, that is painstaking, that is tough but also intelligent, but above all has an absolutely iron resolve and that is what we deliver over these coming years.

War in Whitehall or plumbing problems?

From our UK edition

Is there really war in Whitehall? Tensions between ministers and civil servants have certainly spilled over at some departments, but there has, as you might expect, been a backlash over the past few days to the Times investigation into the civil service. Former civil service head Lord O'Donnell and Telegraph columnist Sue Cameron have both, unsurprisingly, defended the service. Yesterday Cameron attacked the idea of a 'war'. She reported that Number 10 had rejected this, with a source saying 'we don't have a massive crisis. We don't have government paralysis'. Reforms in key policy areas such as welfare, health and education were, she said, a sign that the civil service was working well, with its major failing apparently being too much obedience.

David Cameron to give Commons statement on Algeria

From our UK edition

David Cameron had no choice but to postpone today's speech: while it would have been a relief to get the darned thing over and done with, a navel-gazing address on Conservative Europe policy would have done him no favours in the long-term when the Algerian hostage crisis is still going on. The Prime Minister will be briefed at 9am with another COBRA meeting and will then give a Commons statement at 11am. He was horrified yesterday to discover that Algeria had launched its rescue mission without consulting the UK, when he had already asked to be informed. The Mail quotes one official saying 'We asked them not to go in with all guns blazing and they just did it anyway. They insisted this was their sovereign territory and it was their operation.

Breaking: Cameron postpones Europe speech

From our UK edition

David Cameron has postponed his speech on the European Union because of the hostage situation in Algeria where a standoff has been taking place in a gas plant in the Sahara Desert. There are conflicting reports, but it seems about 300 Algerian and 40 international hostages were taken and several have been killed in a rescue attempt. The PM has suggested that worse news will follow saying:- 'We should be prepared for the possibility of further bad news in this very dangerous fluid situation.' No10 said earlier that Cameron had not been informed about the Algerian rescue attempt before it began and has told his Algerian counterpart that he wishes he had been "contacted in advance". The Japanese government has asked the Algerians to desist.

101 questions about tax

From our UK edition

As well as confusing Hansard with talk of 'big fairies', Labour's Jim Sheridan has no fewer than 101 written questions for answer today on how many contracts a number of government departments have awarded to a series of companies known to be taking part in tax avoidance schemes. He also asks for details of how many meetings the departments have held with those companies. The questions are for the Business department, Cabinet Office, the Treasury, the Culture, Media and Sport department, Ministry of Defence, Energy department, Education department, Home Office, Scotland Office and the Work and Pensions department. They ask about ministers' and officials' dealings with Amazon, Google, Symantec, Dell CSC, Xerox, and Oracle.

More helpful advice for David Cameron on Europe

From our UK edition

By this stage in the run-up to his Europe speech, the Prime Minister must be tempted to sit in a darkened room with his fingers in his ears shouting loudly if anyone else tries to give him more advice on Britain's relationship with the EU. Today brings another wave of advice: some from friendly faces, most from foes. When Ed Miliband got to the point in his Today programme interview, after debating when it was that the Prime Minister might call a referendum, he outlined his central problem with the whole debate: 'Imagine an investor, thinking now, should I be investing in Britain, or Germany, or Denmark, or a whole range of other countries? I think if we put up a sign around Britain, saying 'we might be out of Europe within five years'.

Exclusive: David Cameron meets eurosceptic backbenchers ahead of speech

From our UK edition

The Prime Minister met a group of Tory backbenchers in Downing Street this afternoon to discuss Friday's Europe speech. I have spoken to the group's ringleader, John Baron, who has stressed the confidential manner of the discussion, but has given Coffee House readers some exclusive details of what went on. John Baron, Peter Bone, Edward Leigh, Mark Reckless, Philip Davies and Steve Baker attended the meeting. They were representing the 100 Conservative backbenchers who had signed the original letter in June calling for legislation in this Parliament for a referendum in the next. The meeting, which had a good atmosphere, lasted 20-25 minutes, and Baron and colleagues reiterated to the Prime Minister the letter's two demands.

‘Impossible’ Leveson Bill published

From our UK edition

Even though the Leveson talks are, by all accounts, progressing rather smoothly at present, there are still a few spanners stuck in the works here and there. Hacked Off has just published a consultation on all the bits of draft legislation on press regulation that are knocking about, and it includes the bill drafted by the government. Though it had been shared with those involved in the talks about Leveson, this is the first time the legislation has made its way into the public domain, and you can read it in full here. It was drafted by the government to prove that statutory underpinning of press regulation would, in practice, be impossible.