James Forsyth

James Forsyth

James Forsyth is former political editor of The Spectator.

David Miliband back for a second lunge at the leadership cherry

From our UK edition

David Miliband has given a provocative interview to the Evening Standard’s Anne McElvoy. Here’s how he replied when McElvoy asked him if he was up for another tilt at the leadership: “I really won’t go there. I rule nothing in and nothing out and it’s invidious, where we are now, to talk about it.” He’s

Tory backbenchers in deep water

From our UK edition

The Tories have had a bad night. First a poll put them below the 40 percent mark and now the Telegraph’s revelations have caused serious embarrassment to the party without providing David Cameron with a case where he can expel an MP from the party without suffering the call to remove several others on the

Why Brown apologised now

From our UK edition

The question of the timing of Brown’s apology is one of those rare moments when I find myself disagreeing with Pete. The obvious political thing to do would have been for Brown to say sorry on Thursday night, framing the way that the rest of the media would follow up on the Telegraph’s mega-scoop. But

The Tory verdict on whose claims are defensible and whose aren’t

From our UK edition

Paul Waugh reports that Michael Gove and Andrew Lansley will be doing interviews with the BBC about their expenses later on. This suggests a confidence on their part and that of Andy Coulson that their cases are explicable. Both seem to have genuinely changed which one was their first home for real life reasons rather

What’s next on expenses?

From our UK edition

Here is a quick take on some of the questions being discussed in Westminster right now: Are the Telegraph done when it comes to Labour and Tory frontbenchers? The Tories seem confident that there is no more to come out about their top team. The situation on the Labour side is less clear. How will

Tories tainted by expenses revelations

From our UK edition

There is a danger with these expenses stories that we get inured to them, that nothing shocks us any more. For this reason the shadow Cabinet is benefiting from being featured fourth not first in the Telegraph’s series. The revelations are bad. The actions of Francis Maude and Chris Grayling strike me as most serious.

The Telegraph on the Tories

From our UK edition

The Telegraph has posted a preview of its coverage of the shadow cabinet’s claims, which will feature in tomorrow’s paper. Here are the key points: “Tomorrow the Telegraph will disclose instances where Conservative MPs have gone to great lengths to ensure their country properties are maintained at taxpayers’ cost. One shadow minister has had piping

Another blow to the Budget’s credibility

From our UK edition

The expenses scandal is becoming more depressing all the time. There are no apologies forthcoming and too many politicians want to circle the wagons against any kind of scrutiny. As Jonathan Isaby notes, Theresa May is refusing to say any MP has behaved immorally and is instead “blaming the culture that has grown up in

Labour spent £1.2 million on the election that never was

From our UK edition

Unsurprisingly, expenses stories dominate the Sunday papers. But an interview with Peter Watt, the Labour Secretary General during the Blair-Brown handover who had to resign over the Abrahams affair, caught my eye. Watt’s main point is that he was left hanging in the wind by Brown but his comment about the election that never was

The Iran problem hasn’t gone away

From our UK edition

It has been pushed down the news agenda by the economic crisis and by the focus on ‘AfPak’ but I still think Iran is going to be the biggest test of Obama’s presidential leadership. There are no good options when it comes to how to deal with Tehran’s nuclear ambitions. But letting Iran go nuclear

Until all the expenses are out, it will be the only story in town

From our UK edition

The Guardian’s superb scoop revealing the Bank of England’s worries about a coming third wave of the financial crisis would normally be big news but in the current circumstances it is gaining little traction. No other political news story is going to have cut through until all the expenses stories are out there. The Westminster rumour-mill is buzzing

Now, the Telegraph shines a light on junior Ministers’ claims

From our UK edition

One doesn’t know whether to laugh or cry reading the Telegraph’s latest piece on MPs’ expenses. The paper reports that: “Phil Woolas, the Home Office Minister, claimed for items of women’s clothing, tampons and nappies. The parliamentary rules only allow expenses which are “exclusively” for MPs’ own use so it is not clear these items

The Demos Party

From our UK edition

 You know a Prime Minister’s authority is shot when at an event a Cabinet Minister is speaking at, all the jokes from the platform are at the Prime Minister’s expense. James Purnell smiled wryly as they were cracked, but there was uproarious—not nervous—laughter. There was none of the frisson that would have accompanied such a

Telegraph reportedly planning to do the shadow Cabinet on Monday

From our UK edition

The word doing the round amongst us hacks is that the Telegraph series on expenses will cover the shadow Cabinet on Monday. This, though, is subject to change. Apparently, the Telegraph’s own journalists aren’t even sure what is running when.  There is, apparently, some really bad stuff in there about certain members of the shadow