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.

He’s behind you! Michael Gove is the pantomime villain who inspires Labour

There was plenty of panto on the conference floor this week in Manchester. Ed Miliband encouraged delegates to boo several villains in his speech, and one of them was Michael Gove. In fact, Michael Gove popped up as the villain on Tuesday and in the Labour leader's question-and-answer session yesterday, too, and again when Stephen Twigg spoke just before the close of the conference today. This is odd: of all the reforms that the coalition government has introduced so far, Gove's have been the least surprising to Labour members given he's pushing ahead with what Tony Blair and Andrew Adonis started. There was one baffling moment when a delegate started heckling a year 11 academy pupil who was delivering quite a lovely speech about her own schooling.

Labour conference: Stephen Twigg to launch New Deal for teachers

It doesn't seem entirely fair that Stephen Twigg's speech has been left to the final day of the Labour conference, when many have packed up and left Manchester already. But today Labour's Shadow Education Secretary is to announce more reforms to education as part of the party's new One Nation project. The idea is to make teaching an 'elite profession for top graduates', and Twigg plans to achieve that by offering incentives for high-flyers to work in tough schools such as paying off some of their student debt, funding for teachers to do master's degrees and a National College for Teaching Excellence to develop new teaching standards. The centrepiece of this New Deal for teachers is a doubling in size of the popular and successful Teach First programme to 2,000 placements.

Labour conference: Ed Miliband will attend TUC anti-austerity demo

If we learnt nothing else from this afternoon's question-and-answer session that Ed Miliband held with delegates, it's that Labour delegates are quite as eccentric as Liberal Democrat members, if not more so. The junior coalition partner has long enjoyed the reputation of having an eclectic following, but those gathered in Labour's hall had bought an equally surreal selection of props with them today. They were waving Welsh flags, builder's helmets, sparkly bags, light-up handheld fans, light-up pens, scarves, crutches, something that looked strangely like a strip light, flashing lights, and open umbrellas. The idea, as well as making the conference hall look rather like a bazaar, was to catch Ed Miliband's attention by vigorously waving said strange object.

Ed Miliband’s next big test as Labour leader

The good thing for Labour about Ed Miliband's speech yesterday was that he didn't talk about the deficit, or welfare or other thorny issues which make certain sections of the party very grumpy indeed. The Labour leader made only fleeting references to cuts to public services, too. So there was little to disagree on. It is when he comes to tackle issues such as these that Miliband will see his party mood sour considerably from its cheery response yesterday. The problem is that on these issues, the party is still struggling to work out how far it should go to meet voters' demands without betraying what it sees as its core values.

Richard Branson forces government into a great train U-turn

Sir Richard Branson is not a man who takes kindly to failing to get his own way. That was why few people were surprised by the Virgin boss' furious response to the government's decision to award the West Coast Mainline to his rivals First Group. It wasn't fair, he protested, and thousands of people seemed to agree, signing a petition criticising the decision. This morning it transpires that Branson's frenzied campaign against the contract actually led to the discovery of an enormous mistake at the heart of the bidding process. Civil servants checking their sums before a court case questioning the decision realise that they had in fact got those sums wrong. They had made mistakes in calculating the effect of inflation and passenger numbers.

Labour conference: Miliband and Balls talk inheritances

One of the more sombre passages in Ed Miliband's barnstorming speech this afternoon was when he tackled the thorny issue of what a Labour government would actually do about the cuts. While both the Labour leader and Ed Balls are keen to regain the trust of the British public on the economy, they are also trying to introduce a counter-narrative to the 'are you ready to trust Labour with your money again?' line that Nick Clegg produced last week. Just as George Osborne and colleagues have spent the first two and a half years selling the line that they are 'clearing up the mess' of the last Labour government, Miliband and Balls are now increasingly talking about the economic inheritance that a Labour government might receive in 2015.

Labour conference: Angela Eagle’s policy Trumpton

At the very end of a rather long and wonkish fringe about Labour's policy review last night, Angela Eagle started describing what she called an 'electronic town square'. She'd already told the audience about Star Trek salutes, so this town square, which sounded rather like Labour's answer to Trumpton, was quite in keeping with the slightly quirky discussion. But the electronic town square is even more interesting than Star Trek because it's an example of how the party is trying to update the way it creates policy and engages with its members and members of the public.

Labour conference: Ed Miliband brings his personal story to the fore

Ed Miliband wants voters to see a little bit more of the man he is this conference, and his speech today is expected to be very personal, giving even more vivid glimpses into the Labour leader's life. He will draw on his own upbringing in the speech, pointing to his parents' experience as Jewish refugees and the education he received at a London comprehensive. Although this is being billed as the most personal speech Miliband will give, it's not as though he hasn't delivered speeches before about his identity. In his first speech as Labour leader in 2010, for instance, he told the hall that he wanted 'to tell you who I am' and described his parents' flight to Britain in quite some detail.

Labour conference: Ed Miliband to announce big educational reforms (but won’t mention GCSEs)

Each day of the Labour conference covers a different aspect of Britain that Ed Miliband wants to rebuild, and tomorrow's theme as the Labour leader gives his speech will be rebuilding the education system. Miliband will announce plans for a new Technical Baccalaureate which starts at 14 and runs until 18. The idea is to target those children who will not be going to university, but who, according to Miliband, do not currently have the same road map for their future as those going down an academic route. Describing these students as the 'forgotten 50 per cent', he will say: 'In the 21st century everyone should be doing some form of education up to 18, not 16. That gives us the chance and the obligation to develop a new system from 14 to 18, in particular, for vocational qualifications.

Labour conference: Jon Cruddas to create Labour’s own Big Society project

Jon Cruddas is frightened. Not of what he describes as the 'bloody big' task of leading his party's policy review, but of the future direction of the Conservative party. Throughout his lunchtime interview with James Purnell at the Labour party conference, Cruddas brought up Britannia Unchained, the latest book from a group of Conservative MPs about how Britain can become a world leader, and about what is currently holding the country back. The party's policy review chief said the vision presented by those MPs was 'quite frightening' because of its stance that the 'state is totally malign', and its support for what he described as a world where 'if you sink or fail it is because of your own calculations'.

Labour conference: Len McCluskey perks up delegates

Labour delegates were clearly out late last night, as it took them quite a while to get going this morning. It was only when Unite general secretary Len McCluskey took to the stage in the conference hall that there was a resounding round of applause for the first time in several hours. He even garnered cheers from delegates, and a small standing ovation when he sat down from one block of seats in the hall. The reason? McCluskey was continuing his hunt for cuckoos in the Labour nest, urging Ed Miliband to abandon the policies of his New Labour predecessors. The biggest cheer from the floor came when he said this: 'We can tell the country that the next Labour government – the one all the polls are telling us people desperately want – will act.

Labour conference: Blank sheets of paper are all the rage on EU policy

It's no secret that the Conservative party is in a bit of a pickle about Europe at the moment, and Douglas Alexander quite wisely chose to exploit the ravine that is ever growing between eurosceptic backbenchers and the Prime Minister in his speech this morning. But where does Labour stand? Well, that's still not entirely clear. This is what the shadow foreign secretary said about the Tories and Europe this morning: 'Just two years into Government and that’s David Cameron in a nutshell: out of touch at home; out of his depth abroad. But what’s the Conservatives’ strategy for the EU? Nothing, it’s a blank page. What's the Conservatives’ strategy for the G20? Nothing, it’s a blank page. What's the Conservatives’ strategy for the WTO?

Labour conference: Ivan Lewis fakes a battle with the Tories over aid

Ivan Lewis used his speaking slot this morning to launch a series of attacks on the attitude of many Conservatives towards international development spending. 'Conference,' he said. 'It turns my stomach when I hear multi-millionaire Lord Ashcroft demanding that support for the world's poorest should be slashed. The nasty party is back. It's the same old Tories.' These are the sorts of attacks that you can imagine Labour delegates going wild for. But it was difficult to really trust that Lewis actually believed what he was saying to the hall. His speech was muted, workmanlike, and the applause dutiful. He did accept that 'we won't be able to reverse the government's decision to cut the projected aid budget by £1.7 billion'.

Labour conference: anti-promise Ed Balls ‘can make no commitment’ on cuts or tax

Last week's Lib Dem conference dealt with a promise Nick Clegg wished he had never made. This week's Labour conference is in part about promises Ed Miliband and Ed Balls won't make at all, or at least not for a few years. The Shadow Chancellor was cagey when he appeared on BBC Breakfast this morning, saying 'I can make no commitment now to reverse any of those cuts or the tax rises, because we don't know what the economy's going to be like in two months' time let alone in two years' time when the election comes'.

Labour conference: Blairite cuckoos hit back at ‘dodo’ union bosses

The Blairite cuckoos so despised by the trade union bosses started singing this evening. After learning that Unite general secretary Len McCluskey wants to 'kick the New Labour cuckoos out of our nest', MPs at the Progress rally in Manchester went on the defensive. As the rally was in the Comedy Store, it was only appropriate that someone turn the infighting between the different wings of the party into a joke. Caroline Flint quipped: 'Apparently I'm a cuckoo, so I'm going to start by talking about the dodos tonight.' She paused, and then added: 'The Liberal Democrats - who did you think I was talking about?' Ben Bradshaw also received enthusiastic cheers from the audience when he said: 'We don't need to kick anyone out of this party. We don't need to silence anybody.

Labour conference: Iain McNicol sells Labour as so much more than a political party

Iain McNicol's speech to his party's conference this afternoon picked up on one of Ed Miliband's big themes from this morning's Marr interview: the idea that Labour is an anti-politics political party. The party's general secretary praised the work of Labour members on various social campaigns, and then added: 'Politics is fractured and needs mending. Earlier we stood in silence to remember those of our friends who have passed away this year including the fantastic Philip Gould. I remember him once saying politics was like a vital football match being played out between the reds and the blues. But as the players fight for every ball, strain for every goal, the crowd is drifting away. The game goes on, but the stadium is emptying. Soon there'll be nobody left.

Ed Miliband: ‘I’m my own person and I’m going to do it my own way’

Ed Miliband's main aim for this year's Labour conference is to show people what makes him 'tick', bringing across his personality to voters. He was rather wooden when he appeared on the Andrew Marr Show this morning, and made it clear that this getting-to-know-you conference won't be about a personality change, but emphasising his own true character traits. He was keen to suggest that he possesses nerves of steel in standing up to the trade unions, who the Sunday Times reports are trying to flush out remaining bastions of support for Tony Blair within Labour. He said: 'You can't say at one and the same time that Len McCluskey is saying 'you're wrong on pay restraint' and then say that we're giving in to him and he is pulling our strings.

Ed Miliband hints at realism on NHS reforms

There's a great temptation for an opposition leader to give answers praising motherhood and apple pie when taking part in a Q&A with members of the public. Especially when that session marks the start of your party's conference season and your party has set out very few formal policies so far. But Ed Miliband today, as well as announcing crowd pleasers on energy and pensions, caused a bit of a stir by accepting that a Labour government would not 'spend another' £3 billion dismantling the frameworks created by the Government's Health and Social Care Act. He said: 'There’s no more important institution that expresses, I think, the real soul of the country than the NHS, because I think it expresses a whole set of values which I think the British people share in common.

Spain draws closer to a bailout

The results of stress tests on Spanish banks will be revealed at 5pm, and the rumour on the trading floor is that the country may also announce that it is asking for a bailout at the same time. Yesterday's budget caused the markets to rally amid hopes that the country was preparing to ask for help, with economy minister Luis De Guindos increasing speculation by repeatedly pointing to the fact that the measures announced met requirements from the European Union. EU Economic and Monetary Affairs Commissioner Olli Rehn agreed with the minister, issuing a statement saying: 'This new structural reform plan responds to the country-specific recommendations issued to Spain and goes even beyond them in some areas. The reforms are clearly targeted at some of the most pressing policy challenges.