Blogs
Make Low Council Tax Main Labour Policy
Tribune: Labour finances nearing meltdown
PROGRESS: What if the next election produces no clear winner?
Are The Tories The True Progressives?
Do you think the Tories even talk to each other any more?
Livingstone calls on Labour to learn lessons from London
Appeal for Crewe and Nantwich
The Tories are working hard and David Cameron is urging voters here to "Send Mr Brown a message".
We've never needed your help more.
The Tories think they have it in the bag. But - as results last week in Slough, Oxford, Hastings and Ipswich show - when we work hard on the ground we win elections.
That's why I've set our (small) campaign team here a huge challenge - on Saturday and Sunday we want to deliver 20,000 leaflets and talk to 4000 voters.
We can't do it without you.
If you can spare any time at all this weekend PLEASE come to Crewe and give us a few hours of your time. I promise it'll be fun - there's a great spirit here on the campaign because we know how important it is to show the Tories that we are still the right Party for the people of Crewe and Nantwich.
Turn up any time at our campaign HQ - 173-175 Nantwich Road, Crewe, CW2 6DF.
Labour First's last stand to control the Party?
Police will harass yobs in new plan to tackle antisocial behaviour
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article3891917.ece
Jasper takes aim at Kate Hoey
Membership
The Politics of Public Behaviour
This week has seen ministers rallying to the cause of collectivism – whether in response to climate change, child poverty, or other social issues like obesity. Where the Tories promote ‘social responsibility’ and the role of civil society, ministers argue that it is the state that creates a fair society and helps people take control of their own lives. Demos has a new publication out today called The Politics of Public Behaviour, in which Andy Burnham makes that case.
Abortion debate: keep party politics out of it
It is because of examples like this that I am just a little sceptical about the new campaign launched yesterday by the Tory MP Nadine Dorries. A former nurse, Ms Dorries is leading a parliamentary campaign to reduce the upper limit for abortion from 24 weeks to 20 weeks when the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Bill is debated in the Commons later this month. The last time the law on abortion was amended was in 1990 – given the fact that both medicine and science have advanced significantly one cannot agree that a review of abortion legislation is long overdue.
At present, all legislation on abortion in Britain is considered as a matter of conscience and decided under a free vote. What worries me is that some MPs and campaigners may use the forthcoming debate as a means of polarising attitudes where the issue of abortion is seen only of terms of being a vote winner, or a vote loser. Yesterday’s Daily Mail led on the launch of Ms Dorries’ campaign and will no doubt be a strong advocate of the need for a change in the present law. Britain has a long and enviable record of allowing its elected representatives to make up their own minds in matters of conscience. The danger, as I see it, is that some of Ms Dorries’ colleagues may well be tempted to frame the debate about abortion in such a way that it heralds the first tentative steps to try and establish a political arm for the Christian right in Britain.
Ms Dorries has stated that the campaign is not a religious campaign (yet 6 out of the 10 organisations linked to it are backed by Christian evangelicals) nor, we are told, is it politically motivated. Let’s hope it stays that way.
Retail Workers Demand Action on Workplace Abuse.
Partnership into Power - you haven't long
The false dichotomy
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