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Casting the net – More woes for the government


by Aaron Murin-Heath    
November 27, 2007 at 12:38 pm

Welcome to Casting the net, Liberal Conspiracy’s daily blog review.

More woes for the government
Gordon Brown would have hoped that the funding scandals that marred the latter days of Blair’s tenure would be over. Sadly for the brooding Scot, this is not the case. Peter Watt resigned as the party’s General Secretary last night [Guardian], after admitting that he knew a millionaire was using intermediaries to secretly funnel cash to the party. This is the latest blow to land on a government fighting desperately to retain its credibility.

Labour blogger Jon Worth asks if it can “get any worse?”, adding: “It feels like there is some sort of tornado blowing through the corridors of Westminster, relentlessly tearing into the conventions and traditions.” Paul Burgin is depressed. But the Herts-based Labour activist says we shouldn’t forget “the good work we have done and the hard work of many decent MP’s who could lose their seats over this fiasco.”

Peter Kenyon, another Labour blogger, believes that plans for the state-funding of political parties are “being dusted down by Jack Straw MP in the wake of yet another momumental Labour Party blunder over party funding.” This will delight councillor Cllr Andrew Burns who believes that unless some ‘enhanced’ form of public funding is established, the situation “will only get worse, not better.”

Steve Webb MP thinks it’s “time for a severe cap on donations – people should indeed be able to support a party of their choice if they wish, but no-one should be in a position either to buy influence or to appear to buy influence.” Other Lib Dem’rs have some questions: Duncan Borrowman asks if Peter Watt is an “idiot or liar?” and Mike Smithson wants to know just “How dangerous is the ’sleaze’ tag for Labour?”

Blogs on the BNP/David Irving Oxford Union Debate
Antonia Bance – Frontline
Hug A Hoodie – BNP debate at the Oxford Union: an eyewitness account
Andy Mayer – Hate-campaigners in Oxford
Mike’s Little Red Page – Fascists – and facists’ pandars – out of Oxford!

Elsewhere…
The Poor Mouth – Oh so she was an adulterer, well that’s alright then…
bowblog – Cynical? Moi?
Disgruntled Radical – Annapolis – the long view
Spy Blog – Biometrics – Labour Government are still clueless about the technology

If you would like your blog or site to be considered as source material for future reviews, drop me an email at aaronh [at] liberalconspiracy [dot] org with the relevant url. I can then enter it into my RSS reader and monitor it for suitable content to be included. Likewise, if you have a specific article/post you feel deserves a little more traffic, get in touch.


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About the author
Aaron Murin-Heath is a regular contributor. He is a writer based in Newark-on-Trent and Tallinn, Estonia. He is both socially and economically liberal. Aaron blogs at tygerland.net.
· Other posts by Aaron Murin-Heath

Filed under
Blog , Labour party , Race relations , Westminster


8 responses in total   ||  



Reader comments

My memory reaches back to the swift implosion of ‘Supermac’ ["I am rather out of touch with young people today", and "Events, dear boy, events"], and to Harold Wilson’s “A week is a long time in politics”.

My guess is plenty more long weeks ahead for Gordon.

A round-up of what other bloggers are saying about the party funding problem is yes interesting, but where are the views of liberalconspiracy’s contributors? Isn’t this site supposed to give a voice to the left-liberal community? Do its writers have nothing to say on what to many people is a matter of quite some significance? Is this site really – as it claims – a space to hold “intelligent conversations” and campaign for left-liberal values?

Ah thanks, really helpful background. I think I was hoping for something more recent. Maybe setting today’s events into context? Maybe I am misunderstanding what this blog is about. If it is a repository for thought pieces then that’s great. I thought maybe it was also about engaging with issues as they happen.

5. Geordie-Tory

Corruption and Crony-ism in Newcastle and North East Labour Party Politics – “shurely shome mishtake” I’m sorry I find that very hard to believe.

You see the Labour party was better when it was a genuinely left-wing organisation run by such community-minded spririts as T. Dan Smith.

I fancy a spot of property developing on that council owned land there – Now who do I make the cheque out to?????

Of course, Dame Shirley Porter was completely different I suppose, Geordie Tory? We all have our skeletons in the closet.

7. Carl Gardner

I don’t really see what this has got to do with state funding, or any potential cap on donations: after all, a cap can be circumvented if people can give secret donations either by making loans or using intermediaries.

The issue here is whether political parties will ever be willing or able to actually obey the law on party funding rather than attempting to get round it. I don’t know whether anyone’s committed offences here of course, but I suspect we’ll only ever have real compliance if, one day, someone is actually prosecuted and convicted of a party funding offence.

Surely one issue becoming increasingly clear is that we need political parties like a hole in the head.


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