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Old 01-29-2007, 03:46 AM   #1 (permalink)
Ray
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Cameron must now move quickly

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Cameron must now move quickly

Last Updated: 12:01am GMT 29/01/2007

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It is like watching a particularly grisly horror film – the corpse should be still, yet it stumbles on, blood draining from a thousand cuts. Tony Blair's Government has lost all energy; its reputation for competence and honesty has been slashed to pieces by departmental malfunctions and the honours investigation. The YouGov survey we publish today illustrates the decline: only 21 per cent of voters now approve of the Prime Minister's record in office. Yet in a year that Labour's support has dropped by nine points, the Conservatives' ratings have been static. With the Government in crisis, why have the voters not yet flocked to David Cameron, as they once did to Blair?

One reason is that the disappointment of Labour – and, before that, the farce of John Major's final term – has turned people away from politics as a whole. Turnout at elections has collapsed, while those who are still voting are turning away from the major parties. The public increasingly believe that politicians do not understand or represent their views, and that the major political parties have no power — or even ambition — to ameliorate their lives. Labour's spiral into sleaze has taken the reputation of the political system down with it.

Yet there are other reasons for the Tories not as yet assuming the mantle of Government-in-Waiting. Black Wednesday destroyed the Conservatives: even though they ultimately restabilised the country's economic fortunes, they were so weakened by infighting, sleaze and public disdain that, as with John Reid's Home Office, they were demonstrably not fit for purpose.

Tony Blair manipulated the situation masterfully, reassuring the middle classes that their houses and savings were secure in his hands; but the Tories were already doomed. Labour's decade in power has seen persistent, sapping failure rather than a single fatal catastrophe. Accordingly, its policies have led to simmering discontent rather than outright revolt.

So Mr Cameron's task is fundamentally different. He knows he cannot just reassure voters that he will accept the new orthodoxy (in this case higher spending on public services) and manage things to Labour's abysmal standards. He also knows he must show that he has concrete plans to improve people's lives. Most of all though he recognises that his challenge is to develop a clearer political personality.

Much more than specific policy proposals, wannabe Conservative voters need to get to know Mr Cameron better, how he thinks about and reacts to events. Mr Blair has mastered the "normal guy" personality so that even the millions who loathe him at least know where he is likely to stand on big issues. Mr Cameron's thoughtful approach to sensitive issues has done much to redeem the Tories in the voters' minds.

But the task is not yet complete, and we need Mr Cameron to move quickly to the next stage of his political development. Even if the Government's torpor continues indefinitely, the public will still demand reasons to vote for the Tories as well as against Labour. Mr Cameron should start to reveal more of his private political passions to a public crying out for trustworthy, energetic, and above all different, political leadership.
Telegraph | Comment | Cameron must now move quickly
Labour is tottering.

Will the Tories rise to the occasion?
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Old 01-29-2007, 17:41 PM   #2 (permalink)
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Below is a report from an interview given on BBC Radio 4's Today program:

Muslim extremists are often the "mirror image" of the BNP, seeking out grievances to promote an "us and them" society, says David Cameron.
To resist extremists of all sides, he said Britain must remove the "five barriers" dividing society.
These are uncontrolled immigration, extremism, multiculturalism, poverty and "educational apartheid", he says.
The Conservative leader also said in a speech people should be inspired, "not bullied", into feeling British.
His speech came as a poll for the centre-right Policy Exchange suggested support for Sharia law, Islamic schools and wearing the veil was much stronger among younger Muslims in Britain than among their parents.
Multiculturalism 'failed'
Mr Cameron told the BBC Radio 4 Today programme: "It shows the extent to which multiculturalism has failed, because what the poll shows is that these young people feel more separated from Britain than their parents did."
In a speech to residents of Lozells, in Birmingham, later Mr Cameron will say that the ideology which inspired the 7 July bombers was one of the "great threats of our age".
He argues people must be drawn away from extremist ideologies - such as the British National Party on the one side and those Muslims who want to live under Sharia law on the other - which seek to point the blame at others and divide society, targeting the disaffected.
"Young white men are told: 'The blacks are all criminals. Young Afro-Caribbean men are told: 'The Asian shopkeepers are ripping you off'. Young Muslim men are told: 'The British want to destroy Islam'," Mr Cameron said in his speech.
"The best answer to ignorance like this is a good education."
He will say there was an "educational apartheid" between good schools and bad schools - some of the worst in deprived urban areas.
'Emerging underclass'
"A good education is important for everyone, but for children in poor areas it's absolutely vital," he said.
Poverty was also a major challenge - leading to otherproblems from family breakdown, unemployment, crime and addiction - with an "emerging underclass" of those left behind as the gap between rich and poor widens.
He said it is "an affront to social justice" as well as a "breeding ground for resentment and division".
Multiculturalism had reinforced divisions, treating communities as "monolithic blocks" not individuals and leading to social housing being allocated along ethnic lines, he said.
There is increasing translation of public documents into other languages, rather than incentives for people to learn English and "participate fully in our national life".
And ministers have to be in control of immigration, to stop it putting pressure on housing and services and creating more fear and resentment.
Mr Cameron also told the BBC ministers had been wrong to tell people to "plant flags in their lawns" - saying part of Britishness was "a sense of understatedness and restraint".
The government has launched a number of efforts to promote national identity and cohesion, including citizenship tests for foreigners who want to become British.
Chancellor Gordon Brown, widely expected to be Mr Cameron's opponent at the next general election, has also made "Britishness" one of his key themes.
Home Secretary John Reid says promoting better community relations helps tackle the rise of extremism, but created controversy last year when he urged British Muslims to "confront" extremist bullies in their communities.

Link to the report below:

BBC NEWS | Politics | Britain 'must resist extremists'

David Cameron is also talking on a popular radio station tomorrow for those who might have the oportun ity or inclination to listen in.
Although the station concentrates more on UK sport and football in particular (soccer to the less informed ), It chat show host John Gaunt (Gaunty) has had an invitation for the interview accepted.
I make no apologies for the content of the program, but from a sports point of view when driving to and from work each day (60 - 90 mins each way depending on traffic) it does keep me updated and amused .

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Old 01-30-2007, 05:33 AM   #3 (permalink)
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Thanks for the post and the transcript.

I does help me to understand what Cameron said and it does clear some of the grey areas that I had after reading the news report.

There is no doubt that extremism on either side of the spectrum only adds to the tensions.

There is also room for second opinion that good education is absolutely necessary for the population to understand core values. Even in India, the rabble rousers are the uneducated and who are easily swayed by populist politics and fiery clerics. This is more so with the Moslems since it is an organised religion where the faithful have to congregate every Friday. At the same time, I would say since the educated amongst them are not of the same genre, they are not influenced to that extent. It, therefore, does indicate that education has its value to keep issues under even keel.

It is absolutely essential that all learn and speak English and if they don't, then let them be like Little Bo Peep's sheep and only come home when they bring their tails behind them!

Last edited by Ray : 01-30-2007 at 05:36 AM.
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