Monday 27 June 2016

What happened to Project Fear, George?

George Osborne press conference at HM Treasury

George Osborne always has a fairly pallid complexion on the sunniest of days. But the chancellor hadn’t been seen in the light since Britain voted for Brexit so he looked particularly ashen-faced on Monday morning.

Osborne made a 7am appearance in the Treasury in an attempt to sooth the markets and reassure the nation with a keep calm and carry on message.

How long his own political life continues is a question he demurred from answering.

Osborne had three strong messages for the markets.

He said Britain has a strong, resilient economy ready for the stormy seas ahead because he had “fixed the roof” with five years of austerity (his mixed metaphors not mine).

There was plan for Brexit all along, a contingency worked out with the Bank of England to shore up the banks and the markets with £250 billion of loans.

He will not trigger Britain’s withdrawal from the EU through Article 50 until a new Prime Minister is in place, at least the Autiumn.

And there will be no emergency budget until the Office of Budget Responsibility assesses the fall-out of Brexit, again in the Autumn.

So no emergency budget, no punishment for the voters for going the wrong way. Whatever happened to Project Fear, the dire warnings of a £30 billion black hole in the British economy that would follow Brexit? Was it just a bluff?

Far from it, I suspect. Today was about reassurance not fear. Osborne warned it would not be “plain sailing” but that Britain is the fifth biggest economy in the world and prepared to absorb the economic shock. But if the economy goes of a cliff, there will be plenty to fear.

He also made an important point which, regardless of what you might think of his politics, displayed his calibre as a politician.

He said: “I do not want Britain to turn its back on Europe or on the rest of the world. We must bring unity of spirit and purpose and condemn hatred and division wherever we see it. Britain is an open and tolerant country and I will fight with everything I have to keep it so.”

He also appeared to rule out resigning in the near future, and asked whether he could serve in a government committed to leaving the EU, Osborne said: “It is my country right or wrong. And intend to fulfil my responsibilities to the country.”

Osborne will make it clear in the next few days what his plans are for the Tory leadership. His options appear to be to back Theresa May as a Stop Boris candidate or take a punt himself.

Either way we haven’t heard the last of him, or of austerity. 


What happened to Project Fear, George?

George Osborne press conference at HM Treasury

George Osborne always has a fairly pallid complexion on the sunniest of days. But the chancellor hadn’t been seen in the light since Britain voted for Brexit so he looked particularly ashen-faced on Monday morning.

Osborne made a 7am appearance in the Treasury in an attempt to sooth the markets and reassure the nation with a keep calm and carry on message.

How long his own political life continues is a question he demurred from answering.

Osborne had three strong messages for the markets.

He said Britain has a strong, resilient economy ready for the stormy seas ahead because he had “fixed the roof” with five years of austerity (his mixed metaphors not mine).

There was plan for Brexit all along, a contingency worked out with the Bank of England to shore up the banks and the markets with £250 billion of loans.

He will not trigger Britain’s withdrawal from the EU through Article 50 until a new Prime Minister is in place, at least the Autiumn.

And there will be no emergency budget until the Office of Budget Responsibility assesses the fall-out of Brexit, again in the Autumn.

So no emergency budget, no punishment for the voters for going the wrong way. Whatever happened to Project Fear, the dire warnings of a £30 billion black hole in the British economy that would follow Brexit? Was it just a bluff.

Far from it, I suspect. Today was about reassurance not fear. Osborne warned it would not be “plain sailing” but that Britain is the fifth biggest economy in the world and prepared to absorb the economic shock. But if the economy goes of a cliff, there will be plenty to fear.

He also made an important point which, regardless of what you might think of his politics, displayed his calibre as a politician.

He said: “I do not want Britain to turn its back on Europe or on the rest of the world. We must bring unity of spirit and purpose and condemn hatred and division wherever we see it. Britain is an open and tolerant country and I will fight with everything I have to keep it so.”

He also appeared to rule out resigning in the near future, and asked whether he could serve in a government committed to leaving the EU, Osborne said: “It is my country right or wrong. And intend to fulfil my responsibilities to the country.”

Osborne will make it clear in the next few days what his plans are for the Tory leadership. His options appear to be to back Theresa May as a Stop Boris candidate or take a punt himself.

Either way we haven’t heard the last of him, or of austerity. 


Sunday 26 June 2016

Half-time at Westminster on Sunday

For the Daily Record blogsite

In the 48 hours since the shock result was announced the atmosphere around Westminster has changed again.

The media tents on college Green have gone from being an entertaining circus for the masses to administering the political equivalent of battlefield first aid.

This is where MPs and commentators now come to work out who has been shot and injured in the latest exchange of fire.
Across the road it feels as if no one is in charge in the empty parliament to which MPs return on Monday morning.

The Prime Minister is effectively gone, refusing to trigger or lead the Brexit talks.

The Brexit bandits have gone to ground, neither Boris Johnson or Michael Gove or their leadership ambitions are anywhere to be seen.

The chancellor George Osborne has been posted missing in action as confidence in the UK economy crumbles.
It doesn’t seem that the Brexit campaigners have a plan or that the government appears willing to have one either.

Meanwhile Labour’s senior officers have mounted a bloody coup against Jeremy Corbyn. He is currently barricading himself behind legal opinion stating he can still head a party he has proved to be incapable of leading.

In the vacuum Nicola Sturgeon has used a string of media appearances to warn the UK government not to stand in the way of a second independence referendum should she decide to stage one.

Simultaneously she has raised the possibility of the Holyrood parliament blocking UK exit from the EU by refusing a legislative consent motion (a Sewel motion) that would pass the law into Scottish statute.

In normal times we would say a move like that could trigger a constitutional crisis, but it is small beer in the constitutional bombsite of Britain we are stumbling through just now.

The situation is, at best, unclear, but you can see the blunt beginnings of a quid pro quo there in the smoke and dust.

The Scottish Tories would oppose a second independence referendum, Scottish Labour is oppposed too, but keeping options open. 
And if a second Scottish referendum is on the cards, then why can’t there be a second EU referendum too? 

The Lib Dems would go into an election campaign committing the UK to rejoin the EU. A general election might be held before any negotiations to leave are completed.

The majority of MPs in Westminster are pro-Remain and the old sage Michael Heseltine has suggested it would take general election to constitute a new House of Commons to sign off on Brexit. Or another referendum, he said. 

Tony Blair has said not to rule out a second referendum and Angela Merkel’s press secretary has raised it as a possibility.

So, no sign of the government on the bridge, no alternative from the Brexit campaign, the opposition sliding into civil war, and the Scottish First Minister threatening to hold the UK hostage.

Top that with the possibility of a general election or a second EU referendum, or both, on the horizon and you can see why it begins to feel as if events have slid out of everyone’s control today.

 Oh, have Ireland scored a goal against France? 

Ian Murray, Labour's Scottish unicorn, to resign from shadow cabinet


For the Daily Record online blog this morning

Ian Murray was marked down as "negative" on Jeremy Corbyn's little lists of enemies within that leadership aides drew up this Spring.

The Shadow Scottish Secretary, and Scotland's only Labour MP, was mildly surprised to say the least. He'd only spent the previous seven months publicly defending the new leader.

But just how "negative" Ian Murray is, and how long that list of enemies is, Jeremy Corbyn is about to discover.

Murray is Labour's Scottish unicorn, there is only one Scottish Labour MP and while other Shadow cabinet vacancies can be filled, Murray is irreplaceable. There is no one who can credibly take his place

Murray is expected to be one up to seventeen members of the Labour shadow cabinet to have resigned their post by the end of today. That would leave Corbyn encircled with perhaps 12 loyalist shadow cabinet members at his back when he faces a motion of no confidence tomorrow.

Since having his own jotters marked Murray has had no hesitation in telling Corbyn he is a liability as Labour leader. The Edinburgh South MP was one of several shadow cabinet members to speak out against Corbyn during the shadow cabinet meeting in the post-Brexit rubble last Friday. 

The leader must have sensed the move against him then because the mounting coup was sprung early by Corbyn himself. He called Hilary Benn in the early hours of Sunday morning having read that the Shadow Foreign Secretary was on maneouveres against him. 

Benn was sacked on the phone in the middle of the night and in dawn's light Heidi Alexander, the shadow Health Secretary, resigned with "heavy heart". 

We don't hear much about Heidi Alexander in Scotland as health is a devolved policy area. But she was instrumental in making the government blink in its dispute with the junior doctors in England.

When she introduced Corbyn at the staged show of unity at the TUC HQ during the referendum campaign she gave a rousing stump speech which marked her out for bigger things.

Others will turn their fire on Corbyn during the day. Ivan Lewis, Labour MP and candidate for Manchester mayor, has called on him to resign.    

Gloria del Piero MP has just announced her resignation as Shadow Minister for Women and Equalities. That is significant, she is a close ally of deputy leader Tom Watson who is rushing back to London. 

John McDonnell has insisted that Cotbyn "is going nowhere". If there is a leadership campaign Corby would stand again and McDonnell would chair his campaign, having ruled himself out as a runner. 

The shadow cabinet were planning to confront Corbyn on Monday which is maybe why this morning's events found deputy leader Tom Watson caught out dad-dancing at Glastonbury and desperately trying to get a train back to London this morning.

As his train passes each station stop, the list of Labour MPs speaking out against Corbyn grows longer. 

Watson will be instrumental in telling Corbyn that the game is up.  The resignation of the irreplaceable Murray will be the sign to Corbyn that he cannot go on

Friday 24 June 2016

Johnson and Gove come to praise Cameron

Gisela Stuart, Boris Johnson, Micheal Gove at Vote Leave press conference
Vote Leave Press Conference 11.00am

They came to praise Caesar, not to bury him, but bury him they had.

Boris Johnson and Micheal Gove tried to appear as sombre and statesmanlike as possible at The Vote Leave press conference. On stage together the allies who could now be rivals for the Tory leadership heaped praise on David Cameron. But it had the atmosphere of a wake, not a garlanded victory.

A shocked looking Johnson described the Prime Minister “a brave and principled man”, words that will taste of ashes in his mouth and “one of the great politicians of our age”

Age is an issue for Johnson. He is now terrified the young generation who overwhelmingly voted for Remain, will blame him for robbing them of their European future.

He said: “We cannot turn our backs on Europe. We are part of Europe.”

“Our children and grandchildren will continue to have a wonderful future as Europeans travelling to the continent, understanding the languages and cultures, that make up of common European civilisation.”

But there is simply no need in the 21st century to be part of a federal system of government based in Brussels that is imitated nowhere else on earth. It was a noble idea for its time but it is no longer right for this country.”

He insisted that Brexit decision would not mean the UK is “any less united”, but that sounded like one of his famous jokes falling flat.

Michael Gove looked down the camera as he sent tribute to his friend Cameron who had “led this country with courage, dignity and grace”.

Both tried to calm the volatile markets and heal the continental fissures the referendum has opened up.

“There is now no need for haste,” the former London mayor told the press conference.

He added: “Nothing will change over the short term except work will have to begin on how to give effect to the will of the people.”

Gove added that Britain would carry on in its best traditions. “We have always been an open, inclusive, tolerant, creative and generous nation,” he said.


The former journalist (they are both former journalists) who turned a newspaper column idea into a historic upheaval sounded as if he wanted to believe it. Half the country could not agree. 

Downing Street 8am

The Camerons in Downing Street

David Cameron broke Britain, he has paid the price.

At 08:20am the Prime Minister stepped out of Ten Downing Street for the last time with the full authority of his office. 

Flanked by his wife Samantha, who stood at distance with her face displaying all the emotion her husband was bottling up, he announced his resignation. 

He looked like man who bust the bank in Monte Carlo.

Cameron took a huge gamble with the country against his Etonian pal Boris Johnson and had to admit he had lost.

So he sparked the leadership contest that could see Johnson take his place.

“The country requires fresh leadership to take it in this direction,” said Cameron with his voice beginning to crack with emotion.

“I will do everything I can as Prime Minister to steady the ship over the coming weeks and months, but I don’t think it would be right for me to try to be the captain that steers our country to its next destination.”

He reminded us of his considerable achievements, a coalition, a majority and more. But he will go down as the most calamitous Prime Minister since Anthony Eden sent British troops to the Suez canal.

He will be there, as a paper Prime Minister for the summer, humiliatingly attending the EU summit next week, but a new Tory leader will be in place by October. 

Cameron said he accepted the decision of the voters but would leave it to his successor to invoke Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty, which kicks off the two-year process of negotiating a new trade relationship with the UK’s former partners.

“The British people have voted to leave the European Union and their will must be respected,” he said. 

“The will of the British people is an instruction that must be delivered.” He also emphasised that Scottish, Welsh and Northern Irish governments would be involved in talks.

The Prime Minister spoke to First Minister Nicola Sturgeon earlier in the morning. 

It was said to be a “sympathetic” conversation. She knows what it feels like to lose a referendum.  

Good morning, welcome to the revolution

Good morning and welcome to the British revolution. Riding in to Westminster this morning of Independence Day the streets didn’t look any different. Sweepers leaning against the railings, shopkeepers switching on the lights, passengers waiting for the Easyjet minibus to Luton airport. But everything has changed, utterly.

Just as the events of 9/11 dictated the last decade, this vote and this morning are the starting point of what could become a dark alley for the European continent.

At home, a second attempt at Scottish independence is a given, a second referendum now inevitable. It will be a two-bladed sword for Nicola Sturgeon and the Scottish people. The immediate instinct may be to reject Farage’s Britain, but remember half of the rest of Britain feels the same way in a divided nation.

And most Scots do not wake up today as members of Britain’s ethnic minorities, our immigration generations, many of whom will feel this rejection bitterly and personally. 

Quite frankly, the implications are much bigger than Scotland. The Europe Scots see their future in is itself endangered now.

Scotland’s constitutional divisions are nothing compared to Ireland’s historic pain which, after a generation of war, was settling into a generation of peace. Northern Ireland voted Remain, along with Scotland, but the European Union and the United Kingdom they endorsed look like a house of cards this morning.

The Dutch right-wing are already calling for a referendum in Holland. Without Britain the body politic of the European Union may not be able to take the shock.

If a revolution like this can take place in a conservative country like Britain, then anything can happen in the United States this November.

It is ironic that Donald Trump flies into Scotland this morning. He can take the anti-politics, anti-immigration sentiment the British electorate has just expressed and mould that to his purposes. 

If America signals it is turning its shoulder on the world and on immigrants, a fractured Europe will face a decade of dealing with a tide of humanity while being harried by a strengthened Russia and struggling economically in a Chinese-dominated century.


There is the day and the next number of days of politics to get through. We will see resignations, reshuffles, plots and demands as ordinary people go about their business. Tomorrow’s dawn will look and feel like this one, but the old world will unravel and change.  

Tuesday 21 June 2016

Wembley debate, the verdicts are in

Wembley debate - the verdicts for the Daily Record

Ruth “ the truth” Davidson - a big 8/10

A big step up for a small Tory but Ruth Davidson emerges with her reputation enhanced in party ranks, and in the rest of the UK where she is not that well known.

The straight-talking, the not taking a lecture response and the display of wit, closing down that tiresome “as a mother” line from Andrea Leadsom - Ruth Davidson showed she has some style.

Remainers will have been cheering her on, forgetting that she is a Tory, but a referendum creates these strange alliances.

Tomorrow Labour MPs will wake up worried that the Tories have her in their armoury. So will Eurosceptic Tories who think the party crown is theirs for the taking. 

She fired the shots but Khan packed the punches, and Francis O’Grady was a passionate voice of the workers, one rarely heard in these debates.

Boris “the bungler” Johnson - a fair 5/10

Poor Boris, he’s been looking more and more like his father as this campaign progresses. The strain of real front-line politics and getting caught out is showing.

Unable to act the clown, his favourite role, Johnson has to become Spongebag Boris, soaking up the attacks from Remain while trying to appear reasoned and persuasive.

Don’t under-estimate the incredible charm though. Like the last tv debate there will be plenty people thinking “poor Boris” as he submits himself to getting beaten up again.
Gisela Stuart and Andrea Leadsom are formidable, but they lost the calm tone they had adopted as the huge audience pushed the debaters into pitched battle.

They didn’t look happy at the end, but they might have the last laugh.

Ruth "the Truth" and King Khan own Wembley Arena


Quick fire colour for the Daily Record from Wembley

Goals, fouls, and fumbled passes, this debate had more than the average Euro 2016 game, even if the result won’t be in for another 48 hours.  

Strictly speaking the BBC’s Big Debate wasn’t sport but this cross between Gladiators and the Question Time  was raw politics - with added applause.

For Ruth Davidson, the pint-sized politician from the north, this was a step-up to the UK stage. She owned Wembley Arena, she nearly took the roof off it at one stage.

And what a stage it was, with 6000 people somewhere out there in the darkness, shouting back as if they were the audience at two rival stand-up gigs, hecklers and cheerers taking turns.

Feisty is a word London journalists are having to get used to when describing Scottish politicians and Davidson won new fans last night.

Direct and fearless she went for Boris Johnson, the largest moving target in north London last night, as we demand from this Tory on Tory EU debate.

Even when in trouble, tackling the myth that the EU makes our British laws, she ploughed on until she had her applause line.

When Brexiteer Andrea Leadsom accused her of “nonsense” Davidson came back again and slammed the Brexit lies that 60 per cent of UK laws come from Brussels.

“I can’t let it stand that you tell a blatant untruth in the middle of a debate days before a vote. According to the independent House of Commons library the number is 13 percent,” she stormed.

“You deserve the truth, you deserve the truth,” she bellowed until the audience gave her the biggest roar of the night.

But when it came to small people landing big punches it was the 5’6” mayor of London Sadiq Khan who swung some real blows.

Pumped up from winning the capital last month he went for the kill on the old king, accusing Boris Johnson of “lying” about the jobs benefits for London and of hate-mongering on immigration.

“Your campaign hasn’t been Project Fear. It’s been Project Hate as far as immigration’s been concerned,” he said to huge prolonged applause.

For once the voice of the workers was heard, giving TUC leader Francis O’Grady the stage changed the terms of the debate. People heard their own experiences of work reflected back to them.

"Too often we hear the word ‘red tape’ and what they’re really talking about is getting rid of vital rights at work we all rely on,” said the TUC leader. “Can they promise us today that you will protect each and every single right we won through the EU?”

She stunned the Leave team into silence by asking if it would return a £600,000 donation from a former BNP member. 

Andrea Leadsom said that was “unworthy of debate”. So was that poster of refugees, and SNP bit-player Humza Yousaf MSP called them out on that,

“All the remain side have to talk about is Project Fear,” said Andrea Leadsom. 

With Davidson, Khan and O’Grady they were left looking  beaten and fearing the truth.   

Tuesday 14 June 2016

Remain - a game of Labour consequences

Until now the media narrative was that the EU referendum campaign would divide the Tory party and plunge it into civil war. It has, but what has been overlooked is how the outcome could utterly destroy the Labour Party.

With Corbyn dragooned onto the frontline of the Remain campaign, with his school class picture meets politburo moment at the TUC this morning, what emerges from the fog with some clarity is the bind Labour are in.

The Tories might be divided in the Westminster village but it is on the ground that Labour are in trouble in England.

Speak to Labour MPs in the north of England and the say: “get ready for Brexit”.
Their voters are divided 70-30 in favour or leaving they tell me.

One said: “It is different from the Scottish referendum campaign” (which many of them have experience of). “At least in that campaign, even if you disagreed with it, there was a destination of travel which the SNP couched as a positive. Here ,there is no positive from leaving, people would damage themselves, but they don’t care, they won’t listen to an argument. It is real post-truth politics. They are putting a pistol to their own head and saying f-you.”

But calm down, dear. There is still a week to go, and although Corbyn should have been lining up with the trade unions two months ago Labour could still pull this out of the hat, at a cost to itself.

Ironic that Gordon Brown launched his comeback in Leicester where they have already dug up the bones on an old king. But it is possible the old warhorse, the trade union movement and every footsoldier and general Labour can throw at the Remain campaign, the polls will turn.

The electorate may, at the last stretch, with the markets threatening to crash the economy, take the reluctant decision for common sense Labour is advocating. 

You can see why Labour MPs in the north have been hesitant until now to campaign full throttle for Remain -  they know their voters will hate them for it.

As in Scotland, those voters who they feel forced into making a decision of the head rather than the heart will wreak revenge. 

English Labour supporters might vote reluctant remain in the end but they will then turn the pistol on their MPs, and the politicians know it. Labour's fate might be to go down blazing to keep Britain in Europe, as it did to keep Scotland in Britain.

“We’re facing a Tsunami afterwards,” said one MP.

 It’s name is UKIP, the party that came second in 120 seats at the 2015 General Election.
  

Friday 10 June 2016

Look out Rio, here comes my hotshot cousin of Oz





From today's Daily Record

first met my cousin Alec Potts on a scorched playing field in the Melbourne suburbs.

Walking across the yellowed pitch with his grandfather, my emigre second cousin Ivor MacRae from Lewis, I remember our feet kicking up the dust.

Australia was in the grip of a drought but Alec seemed impervious to the heat.

The teenager stood there wielding a technical-looking bow, firing arrow after arrow down the field, every one a bulls eye. Here was a very talented young man. 

Eight years on my cousin Alec is heading to the Rio Olympics as part of the Australian men’s archery team.

It is an amazing achievement for someone who has competed internationally for only two years. Alec shot his personal best to make it to the three-man Rio team.

Rio’s a long way from his English childhood and his mother’s Scottish roots.

When his parents, Shona and Ian, moved back to Melbourne from Kent in 2007 they tried all kinds of ways to help their Anglicised boy fit into Aussie culture.

Remembering his obsession with England’s mediaeval castles they suggested to Alec he take up archery. He turned up at his instructor’s house with home-made arrows asking for help to stick the feathers on. The rest a quiver of history.

Actually, the rest is incredible dedication by Alec and his family to get to the peak of an athlete’s career.

The Scottish cousins will be rooting for Potts of Melbourne and Bayble, and Ibrox has a claim on him too as Shona grew up there. Look out for Australia’s “Robin Hood” at Rio.

BeLeavers have Britain at the exit door

Daily Record column 10/06/16

Continental breakfast or a Brexit brunch? Two weeks from now we wake up to a changed country, either having renewed our bonds to a common European future or casting ourselves off for a lonely journey on the world’s oceans.

Perhaps viewed from politics-exhausted Scotland or London, calm islands in the raging storm of the European debate, this referendum doesn’t look so crucial.

But the sucked-in whistle of Labour MPs coming back to Westminster from English constituencies tells a different story. Without getting too Han Solo about it, I’ve got a bad feeling about this.

We only have the polls to go on, flawed as they might be, which remain neck-and-neck in England and more settled in Scotland.

The average of Scottish polls shows 66 per cent for Remain and 34 per cent to Leave, though no one should be complacent.

It shouldn’t be a surprise the same division exists among SNP supporters, with 116,000 members the party is a reflection of the nation.

If a third of nationalists are Caledonian little Englanders Nicola Sturgeon has a job on her hands with her own party while also having the onus of being one of the few UK politicians who can motivate Labour supporters out of bed to vote.

I’ve written before about Sturgeon’s destiny in saving Britain from Brexit (this is filed ahead of her tv appearance).
She is capable of that selfless act even if, as John Major said yesterday, the unity of the UK as well as Europe is on the ballot paper.

Funny how in a short 24 hours this week David Cameron turned the tables by warning a second indy referendum was a real “worry”. He spoke as Scots showed they would be 56 per cent to 44 per cent against the break-up of Britain, if Britain stood alone.

But when Tories talk up independence, as they did in the Holyrood election, you know the “dream” just isn’t about to happen.

It is not the only thing the Remain side have over-cooked in the new Project Fear.

The economic predictions are dire but at least they only play on your wallet, not on the colour of your neighbour’s skin. The Leave side’s flogging of immigration fears is despicable.

More money for the NHS outside the EU, they say, fewer people entering the country, they claim. How would the NHS even function without immigrants soothing the balms and stitching the wounds?

Johnson and Farage are buffoons but for Micheal Gove to have shredded his reputation on opening this tap of toxic politics into the British well is deplorable. 

Yet the ragtag army of BeLeavers and truth-deniers could be on the verge of pulling it off. We are at the exit door. 
Why? Because, as Major said, there is more on the ballot paper than politics.

For the English this is getting uncomfortably close to a question of identity - the who are you and who do you choose to be questions Scots grappled with two years ago. 

I hope they will look at themselves in the mirror, and see they are a tolerant and open people who want to embrace the world and what it holds.

I hope they turn their back on a fortress mentality and the fantasy of nostalgic Britain where only the passports were black and everything else overwhelmingly white.

If not, then we’ll meet for brunch, and make mine a Bloody Mary.