The Sketch: Cameron's tune is sweeter than PM's 'karaoke Conservatism'
Thursday, 15 May 2008
The several elements of the PM's reputation have gone downhill like a herd of Gadarene swine, yes. But as a fair-minded person – and I'm moving away from reporting into the realm of imaginative fiction to say this – he looked good yesterday. His voice was strong, his manner confident, his assertions vigorous. He'd just borrowed £2.7bn to keep a 7,000 majority in Crewe, and at £400,000 a vote it was obviously a price worth paying. His sober, authoritative manner was deployed to show he was back in business.
His newly supportive back bench had been whipped to whoop. They hated it when Nick Clegg referred to the one million people who were still worse off after the Budget re-write. When he rose for his second question with the words "The fact remains", they created an entirely new parliamentary noise. An underlying roar of irritation laced with shame, and grace notes of yips and yelps. I hope it didn't come across on television.
David Cameron continues a faultless innings. Modest, purposeful, playful at times, and that rare political ability to do human. He is moving into a new and significant phase of his long campaign. He is now starting to win the argument. Part of this is the result of Brown's defective rhetorical strategy in fourparticular areas.
1) The PM can no longer say that Tory tax cuts inevitably mean cuts in public services. That line of attack had its boom days, but now it's bust.
2) The charge of "no substance" was dealt with in Cameron's reply to the "draft legislative programme" or Cones II. There was "lots we welcome," he said, because "we originally suggested it". The constitution for the NHS, flexible working, an independent exam regulator, "the list is almost as long as the draft Queen's Speech".
3) Brown wants us to believe that the Tories are merely pretending to be nice to get into power, whereupon they will disallow working-class access to health and education. Good things "can only happen under Labour," he said. Seriously. But presumably, once in power, Tories will do what is necessary to stay in power.
4) "The Tories are the party of 15 per cent inflation, three million unemployed and 75,000 repossessions a year." This has now got whiskers on it. And what happens to Brown's argument when we have 100,000 repossessions this year? The same thing that happens to Brown, I suppose.
PS: Peter Lilley noted that Gordon was offering morelocal control of police in one paragraph followed by a slew of central policing targets in the next. The PM was indulging in "karaoke Conservatism". He "recites the words but doesn't know what they mean".
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Brown was on radio yet again this morning. It is getting hazardous to turn on the radio for fear of finding you are listening to him being interviewed by some unfortunate presenter. Brown seems to have the tap full on - drivelling away non-stop to us voters. Doesn't he realise that all the time he is drivelling he isn't getting on with ruling the country. Or rather, trying to.
I am sick of the sight and sound of him. I used to say that re Blair but Blair wasn't this much in our faces. He did seem to know when to stop drivelling.
Interesting too to see that Labour have again stolen a raft of Tory ideas. Don't get upset, Dave. It's the highest form of flattery, isn't it, to be copied, and also shows how completely bereft Labour are of any ideas of their own.
Roll on the election.
Posted by R.W. | 15.05.08, 14:31 GMT
Simon Carr does not seem to have watched the same PMQ's as I did, Brown stuttered and started his way through this session, with the aid of a dozen sycophantic Labour questions, and time after time, as usual, referred to what happened 15 years ago. If a week is a long time in politics, whatis 15 years?
Posted by macnamara | 15.05.08, 07:23 GMT