James Forsyth

James Forsyth

James Forsyth is former political editor of The Spectator.

Do you support the strikers? Vote after the jump

From our UK edition

Judging by the reaction to my post this morning and Fraser’s one on Sunday, most Coffee House commenters appear—unlike Fraser and myself—to be on the side of the strikers and against the free movement of workers within the European Union. To see where Coffee Housers come down on this issue, please do vote in our

When to talk to the Taliban

From our UK edition

Paddy Ashdown has an open letter to Barack Obama’s Pakistan and Afghanistan envoy, Richard Holbrooke, in The Times today. In it, Ashdown makes a crucial point about talking to the Taliban: “In the end it will probably be necessary, provided they will put aside the gun in favour of the ballot box. But they are

Just in case you missed them… | 2 February 2009

From our UK edition

Matthew d’Ancona calls the next election for David Cameron. Fraser Nelson says that Brown’s language about ‘British jobs for British workers’ has laid the ground for recession rage and Clive Davis is unimpressed by Peter Mandelson’s response to the strikers. James Forsyth argues that it is time to stand up to those who wants to

Righting the stimulus

From our UK edition

David Broder, the dean of the Washington press corps, notes in his column today that Barack Obama needs the stimulus package to get Republican votes in the Senate if he is to maintain his momentum. Certainly, passing such a huge piece of legislation on a party line vote in both houses of Congress would undercut

Without an educated workforce Britain is doomed

From our UK edition

One question we don’t spend nearly enough time discussing is where, once this crisis has passed, will the growth come from in the British economy. Gordon Brown serves up platitudes when asked about this, as he did on the Politics Show today, and the Tories are doing their most interesting thinking on this question in

Iraq votes

From our UK edition

Here’s the lede of The New York Times’ story on today’s Iraqi provincial elections: “Iraqis voted on Saturday for local representatives, on an almost violence-free election day aimed at creating provincial councils that more closely represent Iraq’s ethnic, sectarian and tribal balance. By nightfall, there were no confirmed deaths, and children played soccer on closed-off

Republicans Steele themselves for the future

From our UK edition

One of the biggest dangers for the Republican Party right now is that it becomes a rump, a regional party. So, it is hugely encouraging that the newly elected head of the Republican National Committee, the titular leader of the party, is from the Democratic voting, mid-Atlantic state of Maryland. The Republicans will have to

The first Brown to sack Mandelson rumour

From our UK edition

Ben Brogan’s piece in the Mail today about a possible reshuffle in June after the local and European elections which would see Alistair Darling and Jacqui Smith moved from their current posts, contains the first report of a rumour that Peter Mandelson might be sacked. It ends with this line: “There are also fears that

The blame game | 31 January 2009

From our UK edition

Matthew Parris’s column in The Times today contains this excellent advice for the Tories: “The Tory task is to move the angry inquiry forward from the geography of origin to the geography of recuperation. Which economies will heal first? Which fastest? And when chaos recedes and a weakened West picks itself up again, who will

Heathrow hilarity

From our UK edition

The contortions that Labour and its supporters are going through over the third runway at Heathrow are increasingly comic. The attraction of backing a third runway was all political to Brown central. It hoped that it would show Labour as pro-business, prepared to take the ‘tough decisions’ that the Tories duck and, above all, split

Budget Holyrood

From our UK edition

Alex has an intriguing post on the failure of the SNP to get its budget through at Holyrood. Here’s his view on what will happen next: “Will there be an election? I hae ma doots as we say up here, not least because I doubt any of the parties can truly afford a fresh campaign

Cruddas on Cameron’s progress

From our UK edition

Tory sallies into Labour territory on fairness and progress, two words that the left have long taken for granted as their own, are beginning to worry folk in the Labour party if Jon Cruddas’s interview in The Independent is anything to go by. Cruddas, who was at the launch of Phillip Blond’s Progressive Conservatism Project,

A cry for help | 29 January 2009

From our UK edition

Sky News’s John Craig has a must-read on reports of Gordon Brown’s behaviour before the vote on the third runway for Heathrow which Labour won narrowly: ‘Labour MPs claim a “tearful and dewy eyed” Prime Minister called the Labour waverers into his Commons office one by one and pleaded with them to back the Government.

The next American economy

From our UK edition

Obama’s $819 billion stimulus package has just passed the House, albeit without a single Republican vote. But too often lost from the conservation about the stimulus and how effective it will be is what the US economy will, and should, look like once this storm has been weathered. In short, where will the growth come