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.

Lib Dem conference: Lib-Lab fringe praises pluralism

From our UK edition

Day one of the Lib Dem conference, and the Tory jokes have started. At a lunchtime fringe event, of Labour and Lib Dems, the lights suddenly faded out and the room was plunged into darkness. 'This must be the Tory cuts!' said Ming Campbell, and the panel discussion continued by the gloomy light of the fire escape signs. It was a fairly jovial affair, but the mixture of names – Sir Ming, Jon Cruddas, Jo Swinson and Andrew Adonis – raised the deadly serious proposition of a Labour-Lib Dem coalition after the next election.

Lib Dem conference: Tim Farron keeps it muted

From our UK edition

Tim Farron's speech to this year's autumn conference was rather muted compared to his effort in Birmingham last year. The Liberal Democrat president did take the opportunity to attack both Labour and the Tories, of course, because that is his job, but he did not talk about Conservatives speaking 'drivel', or about divorces. He described Labour's record in government as '13 years of a Labour government: what a mandate, what a disappointment', and delivered the obligatory Liberal Democrat attack on the banks.

Coffee House Interview: David Hall-Matthews calls for Clegg to ‘get smarter’ at coalition

From our UK edition

David Hall-Matthews is the chair of the left-leaning grassroots grouping within the Liberal Democrats, the Social Liberal Forum. He explains his qualms about the way Nick Clegg is currently handling the coalition relationship to Coffee House readers, and calls on ministers to be bolder in calling for 'adjustments' to the government's economic policy.   As the coalition agreement was hammered out between the Liberal Democrats and the Conservatives in May 2010, the grassroots machinery in the party was swiftly cranking to life. Four leading members of the Social Liberal Forum, then just a small group within the party comprising over a hundred members, raced to London to discuss their strategy as their party joined forces with an old enemy.

David Laws to announce increase in pupil premium

From our UK edition

The first minister up on the stage at the Liberal Democrat conference this afternoon is new education minister David Laws. He has an announcement which will please those in the audience: the party's flagship pupil premium will increase from £600 to £900 per child. This is what he is expected to say: 'I can announce today that next year the Pupil Premium will increase again. It will rise from £600 to £900 per child. Last year it paid for over 1.8 million pupils. Just think what we have done with that policy. A secondary school with 1,000 pupils, a third on the Pupil Premium, will be receiving around an extra £300,000 next year due to this Liberal Democrat pledge being delivered.

Thrasher Mitchell’s toxic tirade

From our UK edition

Andrew Mitchell spent two years detoxifying his image at the International Development department, wearing charity wristbands and talking about polio vaccines. But however much success he enjoyed in creating a persona of a reasonable, mild-mannered man concerned with poverty (and our leading article this week disputes whether the programmes he led were anywhere near as successful as that), the man known as 'Thrasher' trashed that reputation this week. The Sun reports that he raged 'You're f***ing plebs' at policemen who had the temerity to stop him from cycling out of the Downing Street gates.

Farage’s floundering highlights Cameron’s EU challenge

From our UK edition

By the end of his 8.10 interview on the Today programme, Nigel Farage was struggling a little. Once John Humphrys had taken him away from his hobby horse of a European Union Referendum, the UKIP leader started to wobble. Humphrys: Let's have a look at your policies. A bit puzzling, in a way, and it's not the first time a political leader has done this. You seem to want to cut back taxes, you want to roll back the state, and yet, you want to spend loads of money on loads of things. Farage: Well, we want to spend more money on defence, that is absolutely true, and we think, and we think… Humphrys: Student grants, you want to restore student grants, free eye tests, free dental care... Farage: Well, we think that what's happened to our defences is absolutely shameful.

Burstow goes rogue to attack Treasury

From our UK edition

Hell hath no fury like a government minister sacked (as proven by our anonymous 'Dumped by Dave' piece this week). Another former minister, Paul Burstow, lost his job because Nick Clegg was miffed at the way the Lib Dem had failed to flag up the dangers in the Health and Social Care Bill. He'd already formed a habit of briefing against his own department when he was in office, so it's no great shock that Burstow has decided to dish the dirt on the Treasury in the Telegraph today, claiming it is responsible for blocking reform of the social care system. He writes: 'Of course, if fixing this was easy the last Labour Government would have done it in those halcyon days when Chancellor Brown told us he had ended boom and bust. So, why did Labour fail?

Coffee House Interview: Chris Skidmore on Britannia Unchained, ‘lazy’ Brits, and how the government should be unpopular

From our UK edition

Before it had even appeared in reviewers' postbags, the book that Chris Skidmore co-authored with four other Conservative MPs had created quite a stir in Westminster. 'Brits so lazy', said the Sun, about a chapter in Britannia Unchained which describes the British as being 'among the worst idlers in the world'. That claim provoked rage from left-wingers, with Labour's Chuka Umunna calling on David Cameron to 'distance himself' from the comments, which he said were 'deeply insulting'. But Skidmore seems entirely unperturbed by the outcry. In fact, when we meet in his Westminster office, he seems quite taken with the idea that politicians should take a great deal of unpopularity on the chin.

The pupil premium and profit-making schools could be a winning combination

From our UK edition

Ask any Liberal Democrat what their party has achieved in government, and the answer will involve the words 'pupil premium'. It was a key manifesto pledge in 2010, and is one of the policies that the party is proudest of from its time in government so far. It'll be sure to come up time and time again in speeches in Brighton, too. Which is why it's rather awkward that with two days to go to the Liberal Democrat autumn conference, Ofsted has revealed 'disturbing findings' about the way schools are actually administering the premium. Chief Sir Michael Wilshaw said the extra £600 per pupil from a disadvantaged background was largely plugging gaps in school budgets rather than helping those pupils who brought the money in.

Nick Clegg apologises for tuition fees pledge

From our UK edition

In a video message released this evening, Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg apologised for his party's pre-election pledge to vote against any rise in tuition fees. Clegg said: 'We made a promise before the election that we would vote against any rise in fees under any circumstances. But that was a mistake. It was a pledge made with the best of intentions - but we shouldn't have made a promise we weren't absolutely sure we could deliver. 'I shouldn't have committed to a policy that was so expensive when there was no money around. Not least when the most likely way we'd end up in Government was in coalition with Labour or the Conservatives, who were both committed to put fees up. 'I know that we fought to get the best policy we could in those circumstances.

Re-arranging the desk chairs on the Titanic

From our UK edition

New Tory Chairman Grant Shapps has taken the dramatic step of reinstalling the general election countdown clock in CCHQ to remind staffers that there are only 959 days until voters deliver their verdict on the Conservatives' time in government. Shapps has also got something else planned, which is to rearrange the desks. I understand that he told the 1922 committee last week that he wants to make Tory party press officers sit next to the researchers who cover each specific policy area so that they can feed one another information effectively. Currently they sit on different banks of desks. One CCHQ veteran points out to me that Shapps' exciting desk move plan isn't exactly new.

Boris continues to push Heathrow campaign

From our UK edition

As much as conference planners would wish it otherwise, one of the biggest stories from the Tory conference will be Boris Johnson's speech and fringe appearance. It would be a surprise if he didn't take at least one opportunity while in Birmingham to flag up his ongoing campaign against a government U-turn on Heathrow expansion, even if it were an apparently spontaneous answer to a question from a member of the fringe audience. As I reported last week, he has been looking for a Conservative MP to lead that campaign, and the Standard's Peter Dominiczak then revealed that the Mayor has also approached MPs from other parties.

Gove develops interim GCSE plan

From our UK edition

One of the biggest gripes about Michael Gove's GCSE reforms from those on board with the changes is that they won't come into effect until after the 2015 election. Supporters wonder why there is such a lag between ministers reaching agreement about scrapping an exam that they currently believe is not fit for purpose, and pupils sitting down to take the new qualification. The answer is that it was part of the deal that was reached with Nick Clegg, who was initially upset about the direction of the changes. The Independent reports today that Gove does have an interim plan, though. To underline the fact that he has little faith in existing GCSEs, he is encouraging state schools to put their pupils through IGCSEs instead.

Danny Alexander fires shot in fairer taxes battle

From our UK edition

Danny Alexander is clearly super-keen to remind everyone of what the Lib Dem slogan is for their party conference, which begins on Saturday. 'We need fairer taxes in these tough times,' he told the Evening Standard today as he revealed that he will use his speech at the 'fairer tax in tough times' conference to call for the income tax threshold to rise to £10,000. The rise that George Osborne announced in this year's Budget was largely claimed by the Lib Dems as their own policy, and was a diamond in the rough of a deeply unpopular budget.

David Cameron should take a leaf from Andy Flower’s book

From our UK edition

Kevin Pietersen might be lurking in India while England start their test series in the country, but as of today, the batsman and part-time off-spinner knows the only starring role he'll be playing will be in a commentary box. He was left out of the squad by head coach Andy Flower and the England and Wales Cricket Board after sending friends on the South African team allegedly derogatory text messages about his then captain, Andrew Strauss. The South African team have refused to disclose what those messages said, but their spirit is not dissimilar to some of the insults that members of David Cameron's squad have been broadcasting over the airwaves recently.

Grayling shows his mettle as Justice Secretary

From our UK edition

Chris Grayling's appointment as Justice Secretary in the reshuffle was the move that pleased Conservative MPs almost above anything else. Today he showed the House of Commons why his is a popular appointment. Announcing the government's intention to appeal against the European Court of Human Right's ruling that indefinite sentences breach human rights, Grayling said this: 'Of course the ECHR ruling this morning was very much about the issue of rehabilitation, something I feel very strongly about, something that needs to be clear and present within prisons as well as after prisons. 'However, I'm very disappointed by the ECHR decision this morning. I have to say it is not an area where I welcome the court seeking to make rulings.

Lib Dems play whac-a-mole on welfare cuts

From our UK edition

The Liberal Democrats are playing a game of whac-a-mole on welfare at the moment: each time they think they've blocked one cut they don't like, another one pops up. Last night a mole they'd already whacked a year ago appeared again: decoupling benefits from inflation. The Newsnight scoop is that Whitehall is considering ending inflation-linked rises for many benefit payments - although the word is that this would not include payments to those with disabilities. This would be part of efforts to cut a further £10 billion from the welfare bill, which the Lib Dems oppose overall. Last winter the Lib Dems blocked a similar move from the Treasury, which had proposed uncoupling benefits from the inflation rate, which was 5.2 per cent for that September.

‘Denuded’ Work and Pensions committee sheds little light on Universal Credit

From our UK edition

The Work and Pensions Select Committee was much denuded this evening, chair Anne Begg told the guests: its membership had either been promoted in the reshuffle or had personal crises to attend to. In the end Begg was joined by Andrew Bingham, Stephen Lloyd, Teresa Pearce and Glenda Jackson to interrogate Iain Duncan Smith and Lord Freud about the implementation of universal credit. Their questions seemed rather denuded, too: not of detail, for these MPs do truly know their stuff when it comes to welfare reform, but of a sense of the bigger picture. During the hearing, which lasted nearly three hours, the Work and Pensions Secretary and his Welfare Reform Minister explained how they planned to encourage claimants to manage their claims online.

Justine Greening is a reluctant contestant on Mitchell’s Millions

From our UK edition

The reshuffle allowed David Cameron to place what many ministers (and sacked ministers in particular) are calling 'Osborne's spies' in each government department to help the Chancellor rein in spending. Justine Greening wasn't a typical spy when she arrived at the International Development department in a huff after being forced out of the Transport department, but as an ex-accountant, she was certainly appealing. Shortly after her appointment, Fraser speculated as to whether she would be quite so enthusiastic about playing 'Mitchell's Millions', the game of spending £30 million a day on aid, regardless of how well-targeted that money is. Greening is clearly keen to show that she's not as eager a contestant as her predecessor Andrew Mitchell.

Will Labour accept Gove-levels?

From our UK edition

Nick Clegg and Michael Gove will announce their joint plans to reform GCSEs today, a day earlier than they had originally intended. The Deputy Prime Minister appeared alongside the Education Secretary this morning on a school visit, while Gove will make a statement in the Commons this afternoon to announce the changes, which Liberal Democrats are claiming as a victory after the initial row over a possible return to a two-tier system. Clegg told reporters this morning: 'I think you can raise standards, increase rigour and confidence in our exam system, but still do so in a way which is a single-tier, which covers the vast majority of children in this country. And those are the principles upon which this whole reform will be based.