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Friday, April 9, 2010

Paris!

It's where I'll be this weekend, so no politics for a couple of days. Which will probably be a good thing.

See you next week!

Chris

P.S. Still leaning towards Lib Dems. Maybe France will make me Conservative (but I doubt it).

Stroud 1, Cameron 0


David Cameron has admitted to a "gaffe" in his general election campaign after forgetting the name of a seat his party is trying to win in Gloucestershire.

When asked by BBC News which seats were being targeted, the Conservative leader mentioned Gloucester and Cheltenham but forgot Stroud. He said: "I'm desperately racking my brains, which one have I missed out?" Given a clue, Cider With Rosie, a novel set in Stroud, he said: "Of course... My first gaffe of the campaign."


Mr Cameron said: "Funnily enough, Cider With Rosie is one of my favourite books. I'm terribly embarrassed." He told BBC Gloucestershire presenter Mark Cummings: "You've got me - middle stump."
Mr Cameron's constituency in Witney is on the border with Gloucestershire. Stroud was a Conservative seat for nearly 50 years before it was won in 1997 by Labour's David Drew, who is the current MP. Boundary changes for this election have led to Minchinhampton moving from Stroud to the Cotswolds constituency, swapping with part of Wotton-under-Edge. Stroud is a key Tory target seat for next month's general election.

Candidates so far announced in Stroud are: Conservative: Neil Carmichael; Labour: David Drew; Lib Dem: Dennis Andrewartha; Green: Martin Whiteside


Says it all really.

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Last PMQ's

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/shared/election2010/liveevent/
Fun times. Cameron's focusing on the war: dare he focus on the economy? Keeps using the word "deceived". It's not really working.

National Insurance.

Public services.

Blergh.

Strong performance from both leaders of the party to be fair.

Still a bit too close?

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Called It!


Will it be like 1992? 1970? Or in the case of a hung parliament - 1974?

One thing's for sure: it won't be like '97 or '83 for either Labour or the Conservatives. It's going to be close. If the Tories imply that they're running away with it, it will work against them. The electorate will not tolerate arrogance.

One month to decide. At the moment: Lib Dem. The TV debates could swing it. Clegg needs to come out fighting; Cameron needs to convince the voters that Osborne isn't his weak link; Brown needs to learn from his mistakes.

And they're off!

Morning!

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/8604326.stm

All very exciting!

Chris