Labour: Time for a Re-Think

June 12, 2011 By Malcolm Blair-Robinson

On the face of it Labour has problems. It is not proving an effective opposition. Its economic policy is weak and largely discredited. New disclosures of the damage done to the Labour government and the country by the Tony and Gordon feud are history, but bad nevertheless. So is evidence of warnings over excessive government […]

Robert Gates: Historic Speech

June 11, 2011 By Malcolm Blair-Robinson

Robert Gates’ speech in Brussels was remarkable. It sets out an analysis of America’s relationship with Europe and how this will develop, which corresponds closely to views expressed in this blog and in my book 2010 A Blueprint for Change.I have long promoted American disengagement from Europe and from NATO, not because I am hostile […]

Labour: Is The House Still Divided?

June 10, 2011 By Malcolm Blair-Robinson

All political parties have a left, right and centre. Labour was the same, but with a difference. It had two competing leaderships. One in Downing Street was official , the other in the Treasury was like a rebel government in waiting or a political insurrection. The latest revelations in the Telegraph, which appears to have […]

Archbishop Williams

June 9, 2011 By Malcolm Blair-Robinson

The Archbishop of Canterbury had made a dramatic political intervention. There will be some who will say that politics are nothing to do with the church, but they would be wrong. Under our constitution, the Church of England is one of the pillars of the state and central to the monarchy. For centuries religion was […]

NHS. Does it Work?

June 8, 2011 By Malcolm Blair-Robinson

The answer is, if the crisis is acute, yes very well. This positive answer to a simple question becomes a lot less positive the more routine the diagnosis or treatment required. This is not because people are incompetent. It is because they are being asked to run an infinitely variable facility within the strictures of a rigidly programmed service. I […]

Government By U-Turn

June 8, 2011 By Malcolm Blair-Robinson

Ken Clarke’s proposals made sense. Among those trying to deal with the problems of the largest prison population in Europe, the cost to the taxpayer of unnecessary trials, the trauma of victims and many other issues, his proposals had wide support. A media centred drama then broke out following a misunderstood remark. Now, following the […]

Osborne v the Economists.

June 6, 2011 By Malcolm Blair-Robinson

A bunch of economists, most would classify themselves as left wing and Keynesian, wrote to the Observer yesterday calling for an economic plan B, because growth was too shallow. Each time I turned on the TV news one or other of their number was being interviewed. I listened with an open mind each time. I […]

Libya: A Strategic Moment

June 5, 2011 By Malcolm Blair-Robinson

This blog has never approved of this adventure. Nevertheless it is happening. It is futile to bang on about why it should not be when it is; now we need to see what can be done. William Hague’s Foreign Office has restored its reputation as an independent and important diplomatic force in the world, after […]

Greece: Nemesis for the Banks.

June 4, 2011 By Malcolm Blair-Robinson

There appears to be agreement for another Greek bailout. There is also increasing noise about a coming default, perhaps described by some other spin, but amounting to the same thing. At present it is very difficult to see where the economic activity to get Greece out of its debt morass is going to come from. […]

Boosting Exports: Osborne Should Act

June 3, 2011 By Malcolm Blair-Robinson

There is now sufficient evidence from economic data to come to a more sophisticated conclusion about Osborne’s programme than the narrow political ping pong of cut or less cut. Broadly the cut side of the plan is right and on track. The state is too big, many quangos and agencies are either pointless or dysfunctional […]