Friday, 30 April 2010
A Quick Round-Up
Would you like to let the Guardian website know how much (or little) political activity there has been in your neighbourhood? Well, then you can do so here.
UK Polling Report has an excellent FAQ about polls - or rather a TFAQ, as it is the questions which are asked all-too-frequently. Go here for a run-down on why people get the wrong end of the stick about polls.
Latest voting intentions in the Guardian poll of polls.
The Indie's Deborah Ross goes out on the stump with the BNP. With hilarious consequences.
The BBC reminds us what life was like under the last hung parliament. It's 1974 and they're having hoops.
And finally, in another echo of elections past, The Daily Politics interviews the Monster Raving Loony Party.
Wednesday, 28 April 2010
Did I Say That Out Loud?
It’s not surprising that the advice given to today’s politicians is to err on the side of caution, treat every microphone as if it’s a live one, and always remember – someone, somewhere is watching and listening. Gordon Brown's little indiscretion with a radio mike today wasn't the first such incident, and it won't be the last.
How about a quick look at some other occasions when our politicians revealed maybe a little too many of their human foibles?...
Sing-along-a-Redwood
John Redwood was a pretty unpopular Welsh Secretary, and he is increasingly irritated these days to see the clip replayed of the time in 1993 when he very obviously didn’t know the words to the Welsh national anthem. Like someone in church suddenly confronted with one of those ‘modern hymns’ with the awkward tunes, John bobbed his head from side to side and mouthed something which he hoped resembled the noises which were coming from the people around him. Sadly for him, the cameras’ close-up revealed it all.
Bombing Russia
Ronald Reagan – the man who said with a straight face that there could be a ‘limited nuclear war in Europe’. He believed literally in the Biblical prophecy of Armageddon and cheerfully asserted, during his 1984 re-election campaign, that our generation could be the one to see it. Not surprising that lots of us just wanted to hide under our duvets with a can of spam and listen to Frankie Goes To Hollywood. But his best-known gaffe is perhaps the one which sealed many people’s opinion of him for all time as a dangerous warmonger. On a radio soundcheck in 1984, Reagan declared, ‘My fellow Americans, I'm pleased to tell you today that I've signed legislation that will outlaw Russia forever. We begin bombing in five minutes.’ So that’s what you get, people said, for putting an actor in the White House. We can laugh now, but at the time we thought this was as bad, as frightening, as stupid and as cringeworthy as an American president could possibly get. Which just goes to prove Karl Marx’s aphorism that history repeats itself, first as tragedy and then as farce...
George and the ‘asshole’
While seeking election in 2000, cutting-edge world intellectual and campaigner for peace George W. Bush caught sight of a New York Times reporter he didn’t especially like in the crowd. Dubya muttered to running-mate Dick Cheney that the reporter, Adam Clymer, was a ‘major-league asshole’, to which Cheney responded, ‘Yeah, big-time’. All caught on camera and microphone.
Life’s a beach
Labour Leader Neil Kinnock started his reign with a little walk on Brighton beach for the media with wife Glenys in 1983. All well and good, until he tripped and fell at the water’s edge, getting a good soaking and giving TV folks a classic piece of footage to replay at each subsequent Kinnock ‘stumble’. However, it doesn’t end there. Twenty-four years after his tumble in front of the cameras, the now Lord Kinnock took a wander down to Brighton beach again. This time, he received a four-letter barracking from the pensioners described later as ‘semi-clad’ who were protesting there about the government’s ineptitude over pension schemes. Gritting his teeth afterwards, Lord Kinnock asserted that the protestors were ‘very decent people’ and had been ‘dreadfully let down by the system.’
Master of the entente cordiale
In 2005, before Jamie Oliver had started to pull apart school dinners, another critic of the British menu came bounding on to the scene – France’s President Chirac, who remarked in what he thought was a private chat with Russian President Vladimir Putin and German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder that, ‘The only thing that [the British] have ever done for European agriculture is mad cow disease… You cannot trust people who have such bad cuisine.’ This was said while waiting for the decision on which city would host the 2012 Olympics, so maybe Jacques went for some fish and chips afterwards to cheer up. Or some vintage wine, made with sour grapes.
Don’t cross the Mersey
The ever-diplomatic Boris Johnson, the man who now runs London, wrote an infamous Spectator article in which he accused the city of Liverpool of ‘wallowing in its victim status.’ He should have known that hell hath no fury like a Scouser scorned, and within the week his leader Michael Howard had packed the wild-haired Shadow Culture Secretary on the train up North – off to the land of Brookside, the Albert Dock and the Cavern Club to apologise in person. Radio stations, TV studios, local papers – all were collared for Boris’s penance as he tried to pour oil on a troubled Mersey. It seemed to do little good. ‘I think coming here makes things worse. It's not the right response at all,’ said Mike Storey, leader of the city council.
Saturday, 24 April 2010
A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the House of Commons
There's a brief lull in the campaign. Labour are gearing up to try and win more votes by... making Gordon Brown more visible. (Strokes chin.) We don't want to point out the flaw in that plan, but... Nick Clegg is having a day off to spend with his family, who unfortunately ended up stranded in Spain. Serves them right for taking a holiday outside term-time. And David Cameron is saying something about unelected PMs having to hold elections within 6 months, no doubt with the odd Blair-esque "y'know" and with his sleeves rolled up.
So, it seems an opportune moment to allow ourselves to round up a little satire.
First, remember Gordon saving the world?
Then we have a bit of fun at the expense (no pun intended) of Mr Clegg.
After that, David Cameron goes all Jarvis Cocker for three minutes.
And let's not forget the Greens trying to be taken seriously.
We are nothing if not even-handed here at X Marks The Box.
(We realise we haven't linked to any UKIP satire, but there is nothing we could find which is funnier than their own manifesto.)
Monday, 19 April 2010
First of the Summer Wine
So, we're well into the campaign now - anybody bored yet? Even self-confessed political geek Iain Dale admits to a little ennui at this stage!
First, let's pause for some music.
Right, having got that feeble topical joke out of the way... the Leaders' Debate - aka the Compo, Clegg and Foggy show - has certainly kicked things into touch.
Gordon Brown, thanks to being the most experienced man on the podium, seemed relaxed, perhaps to the point of not being engaged enough.
David Cameron was oddly lacking in fire and a little "rabbit in the headlights" at times.
Much has been made, of course, of Nick Clegg's sterling performance and his party's subsequent amazing poll boost - but will it last? And if it does, will he still get away with addressing the audience directly down the camera, as if giving a Party Political Broadcast?
That seemed quite odd, as did the lack of any rough-and-tumble engagement from the audience. Of course, scrupulous election-period broadcasting regulations meant that this debate could not be conducted like an edition of Question Time, sadly.
So, what will the next week bring? Will the Lib Dems continue to lead the fray? Can the Conservatives rescue their ailing campaign? Will Labour capitalise on the knowledge that, with the parties as tight as they are in the polls, they could end up with the lowest share of the popular vote and yet the most seats? Will volcanic ash cover everyone and stop any politicians getting out on the road? One thing's for sure - anybody getting an overall majority is looking a little doubtful now...
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