
Sunday, 7 February 2010
Is Sentencing Haywire?

Elfin Safety - Protect and Survive

An Example of a Well Dressed Englishman?

Our Latest Defence Policy - Tell the Enemy Your Plans

Saturday, 6 February 2010
Another 'I Spy' Government Programme

Bush At War

Scotland leads The Way!

Feb 04, 2010
Scotland records coldest winter in almost a century reports The BBC. Scotland has suffered some of the coldest winter months in almost 100 years, the Met Office has confirmed. By combining the temperatures of January and December it showed they were the coldest since 1914 - the year data started being logged. Elsewhere, it was the coldest December and January in Northern Ireland since 1962/63 and the coldest in England and Wales since 1981/82. Sub-zero temperatures and snow blew into the UK from mid-December. The average minimum overnight temperature for January is usually at freezing point, but in Scotland it was regularly below -5C.
01/25/2010 der Spiegel International.
Frost Bite
Cold Snap Causes Deaths in Eastern Europe, Germany
Cold weather in Germany and Eastern Europe in recent days has caused deaths and major disruption to transportation systems. Parts of Europe have been snow-covered for a month, but that coating turned into a layer of ice in many countries in recent days.
A continuing cold snap across parts of Europe over the weekend and into Monday caused the deaths of more than 40 people in Romania, Bulgaria and Poland. It's a cold spell that also stretched across much of Germany, leaving people here shivering as temperatures plunged as low as -15 degrees Celsius (5 degrees Fahrenheit) early on Monday morning.
Now just in case you get a bit cocky up there read on;
Deadly Cold Strikes Eastern Europe
Germany’s cold spell, however, has been minor compared to temperatures being experienced in Eastern Europe. A government spokesperson in Bucharest (Subway Station shown) reported that ice cold temperatures of -34 degrees Celsius caused the deaths of 11 people in Romania in just 24 hours, with a total of 22 deaths registered in the last five days as a result of the cold.
Of course if we should have a well deserved warm, sunny summer the Ponzi -Storm troopers will be out in force again. If we do and they are, just remember how much egg they are having to wipe of their faces virtually every day since mid-November!
A Monkey Wearing a Red Rosette
Friday, 5 February 2010
Guest Post by Strathturret
1982 Glasgow Hillhead
The second significant by-election was the 1982 Hillhead contest whilst I was living in Hyndland, Glasgow. The sitting Tory MP at that point, the last surviving Glasgow Tory MP Tam Galbraith had died (sounds Irish I know). Like Douglas-Home he too was a genuine toff, being a landowner, Royal Company of Archers member and father of Thomas Galloway Dunlop du Roy de Blicquy Galbraith, 2nd Baron Strathclyde or Lord ‘Fatty’ Strathclyde a current member of Cameroons shadow cabinet.
Hillhead was in the west end of Glasgow and at that time boasted the highest percentage of university graduates of any UK constituency.
This was the period of the rise of the SDP (Social Democratic Party). There was speculation about the realignment of British politics and potential collapse of the Labour party. Roy Jenkins was one of the leaders of the SDP who had been Labour Home secretary and Chancellor in Wilson’s 1964-70 government and had been later president of European Community. The leading SDP people had left the Labour party in disgust at its leftward drift. The Liberals had at this time a loose alliance with the SDP and stood down in favour of Jenkins candidature for the Hillhead contest.
Jenkins was a grand figure much mocked for his speech defect; he pronounced his name as ‘Woy Jenkins’. He also had an image as a bon-viveur; he liked good claret apparently. There was much excitement that if this ‘big beast’ got elected to parliament this would increase the momentum of the SDP and the likelihood of major changes to the UK’s two party system.
The Tories chose a young Glasgow lawyer Gerry Malone who was controversially a Roman Catholic. The Labour candidate was David Wiseman and SNP candidate was vet George Leslie, a veteran of many by-election campaigns. The extreme anti-catholic Pastor Jack Glass stood against the forthcoming papal visit and an SDP spoiler who had changed his name by deed-poll to Roy Jenkins also stood. He withstood a legal challenge from the real SDP.
This was again a campaign with much ballyhoo, masses of leaflets and national media interest. I remember one packed public meeting at Hyndland Secondary School where the entire ‘Gang of four’ spoke. At this point the SDP were led by the ‘Gang of Four’, all former senior Labour people. There was Jenkins, David Owen, Shirley Williams and William Rodgers. In fact Rodgers who was least well known was the best speaker that night in my opinion. The SDP had been formed the previous year and the gang of four soubriquet was a humorous reference to the Chinese cultural revolution of the 60s led by a ‘gang of four’ which included Mao’s wife.
The SDP was essentially a right of centre, pro-nuclear weapons, pro EEC Labour party for people who could not stomach the leftward drift of Labour under Michael Foot. In essence, New Labour before Brown and Blair? Eventually they fully merged with the Liberals to form the Liberal-Democrats. Plenty of scope for a meaty Ph.D thesis on this fascinating topic for a latter day Gordon Brown!
So Jenkins won what was a genuinely exciting and close contest.
There was a certain amount of speculation afterwards that Malone’s religion lost it for the Tories. Although I would have thought Galloway who eventually beat Jenkins must have suffered from the same disadvantage?
Malone moved north in search of a seat and had a spell as an Aberdeen MP before losing there and moved south where he lost another safe Conservative seat in Winchester. Talk about being serially unlucky or incompetent! Jenkins held the seat until 1987 General Election when it was won for Labour by ‘Gorgeous’ George Galloway. However, I think boundary changes had made the seat more Labour friendly. Jenkins took a peerage and became an academic where he doubtless quaffed much claret.
My verdict was that both by-elections were great fun but neither changed anything much. Alec Douglas-Home was the tail end of 13 years of Tory rule, in many ways the end of the old order. Macmillan’s government was stuffed full of his old school friends and relatives. Quite unlike the modern Tory party.
The much talked about political realignment in 1982 never happened. The SDP merged with the Liberals and gradually subsided into being another flavour of Liberal Party. Labour recovered under Neil Kinnock and particularly John Smith and swung rightwards. Then Tony met Gordon and together with Alastair and ‘Bobby’ New-Labour was born. The rest they say is history.
By-elections of the century come along every decade or so!
Strathturret
Acknowledgement to Alan Bold’s biography of MacDiarmid.
England's NHS Capital Spending to be Cut by 22%
Hootsmon Headlines

Freedom of Information - Is It Being Controlled by the Scottish Government?

The Decision on Abdelbaset-al-Megrahi

Thursday, 4 February 2010
Unionist MSPs Accused of Trickery

FMQs 4 February 2010

'Banks Must Pay Back Bailout Cash'

Wednesday, 3 February 2010
Haiti's Children

Preview of This Month's Wikio Rankings

A preview of this month's Wikio rankings:
Ranking by Wikio |
Scotland's Budget Bill Agreed

Kinloch Rannoch's Demand for a Doctor Rumbles On

Holyrood Accused of Dirty Tricks

Climategate - Is This the Beginning of the End?

Tuesday, 2 February 2010
By-elections of the Century - a Guest Post by Strathturret
Strathturret has kindly written the following which may well rekindle memories in those of us of more 'mature' years and it will certainly be of interest to younger generations. May I thank him for allowing us to share his reflections. (The second part will be published later this week).
By-elections of the Century (No 1)
I have been lucky enough (being a political anorak from an early age) to have lived through two by-election campaigns described at the time as the ‘by-election of the century’.
1963 Kinross & West Perthshire
1963 was the year which contains my first political memory, which was the Christine Keeler scandal. This involved John Profumo the War Minister in Harold Macmillan’s Tory government who eventually resigned after he had lied to parliament about having an affair with Ms Keeler a nightclub hostess, who was also involved with a sundry collection of business men, gangsters and a Russian spy. Being young I did not understand what it was all about but I do remember saying to my mother, ‘Why don’t they call a street after Christine Keeler?’
I digress. I think we were on holiday in August when our Tory MP and Scottish Office minister Gilmour Leburn died. George Younger of the beerage was lined up to be the new Tory MP for Kinross and West Perthshire; at the time the safest Tory seat in Scotland. Then Macmillan’s problems escalated from his war ministers dalliances with a good time girl to his own water works. He resigned in October believing he was seriously ill and a new leader had to ‘emerge’. This excitement broke at the Tory Party Conference of that year. The capable Rab Butler was the favourite but just as in 1957, when Macmillan had succeeded Eden, he was overlooked in favour of the 14th Earl of Home who was foreign secretary at the time.
Home, as plain ‘Lord Alec Dunglass’ had been bag carrier to Chamberlain on his infamous trip to see Hitler in Munich when he had returned with his famous ‘piece of paper’. Now a peer Home seemed an unlikely leader to take on the newly elected technocratic and streetwise Labour leader Harold Wilson.
However, Lord Home emerged as the new Tory leader. The only slight problem was he did not have a seat in the House of Commons. However, a recent change in the law exploited first by Tony Benn allowed him to renounce his hereditary peerage. That’s where the timely death of Gilmour Leburn came in.
Gentleman George Younger stood down as prospective Tory candidate and was soon rewarded with a safe seat of Ayr and Sir Alec Douglas-Home as he became was selected as the Conservative & Unionist candidate for Kinross &West Perthshire. We then needed the formality of a by-election when the new prime minister had to get himself elected as an MP. So highly unusually there was an interregnum when Sir Alec was PM but neither an MP nor peer.
This was a period of great excitement in Crieff which was the largest town in the constituency and its central point. Could the PM be deposed? This was an unprecedented situation, constitution crisis, etc, etc. There were mock elections at school, everyone was wearing Tory badges much to the annoyance of Labour supporting teachers and one of my school friends was pictured shaking hands with the PM on the front page of the Daily Express, then the biggest selling paper in Scotland. The national press and TV and radio people besieged the area. The editor of the local paper appeared on the 'Tonight' political programme. At that time ordinary people considered it a huge honour that a man such as Douglas-Home was going to be their MP. The national press depicted Douglas-Home very much as a typical ‘grouse moor’ toff.
Like all big by-elections, there were crank candidates; Willie Rushton the satirist stood. This remember was the time of ‘That was the week that was’ and Private Eye was a new and radical magazine! One anecdote I remember was that in rural areas a burly squad of gamekeepers were employed to eject trouble makers who dared to ask any awkward questions of the great man at meetings. Arthur Donaldson SNP leader at the time championed the party. I think the representatives of the Labour and Liberal parties were unknown and disappeared without trace.
We had a repeat of the excitement of course in the General Election of 1964 when Douglas-Home was Prime Minister and a close election was expected. This time we had Christopher Murray Grieve (Hugh MacDiarmid) standing as a Communist, who made the wonderful quip that,
‘Sir Alex is the apotheosis of mediocrity’.
Sir Alex was educated at Eton and Oxford obtaining a third class degree. He was however a fine cricketer and was one of the few MPs who had played first class cricket. He did admit that when there were complicated economics issues to be solved he resorted to getting out a matchbox and counting matches.
Indeed, his own quote on the No 10 website says:
“There are two problems in my life. The political ones are insoluble and the economic ones are incomprehensible”
The results make interesting viewing now 47 years later.
click to enlarge
There are some classic and pointed quips about Douglas-Home from Grieve (MacDiarmid) during the 1964 campaign which are still relevant today.
‘He is in fact a zombie, personifying the obsolescent traditions of an aristocratic and big landlord order, of which Thomas Carlyle said that no country had been oppressed by a worse gang of hyenas than Scotland. He is not really a Scotsman, of course, but only a sixteenth part of one, and all his education and social affiliations are anti-Scottish. Sir Walter warned long ago that a Scotsman unscotched would become only a damned mischievous Englishman, and that is precisely what has happened in this case.’
And still very pertinent in the light of Iraq;
‘He is a yes man of the Pentagon as was exemplified by his statement that the British people would willingly be reduced to atomic ash in defence of his (Sir Alec’s) notion of freedom.’
Grieve had been of course a founding member of the National Party one of the fore runners of the SNP before being expelled due to his communism. I think he was also expelled from the Communists for being a Nationalist!
In the 1964 General Election Sir Alec Douglas-Home (Con) got 16,659 votes winning easily. Labour finished second with 4,687 votes. CM Grieve polled 127 votes. In the General Election, Wilson’s Labour Party was victorious winning by 4 seats overall thus ending 13 years of Tory power.
Sir Alec had only been Prime Minister for a year and resigned as Tory leader in 1965 to be replaced by Ted Heath who was the first elected leader of the Tory party. Sir Alec was MP for K&WP until he stood down in 1974 being replaced by Nicky Fairbairn who just held the seat by 53 votes from the SNP in the second election of that year. What a change 10 years had made!
After he was elected in 1963, Douglas-Home was I think asked if he intended to buy a house in the constituency. He said something like goodness gracious no, I already have six houses, what would I need another one for! He was little seen in the constituency although I remember he caused a stooshie when he turned up at Crieff Games in 1965 as chieftain wearing a lounge suit. He said in his defence that as a Borderer he didn’t wear the kilt. At that time the Tories had a full-time agent in Crieff who I imagine did all the nitty-gritty grafting for a grandee. Interestingly, Douglas-Home was last Tory leader to be a genuine toff and educated at Eton until the arrival of David Cameron.





