Europe needs to get real on defence; Britain needs to get real on Europe
13 February 2025
Post
16 July 2009
3 minute(s) read
Recent Posts
15 January 2026
Posted by Alastair Campbell
489. Musk’s AI Deepfake Disgrace & JD Vance’s Minnesota Lies (Question Time)
Will the UK ban 'X' over explicit, nonconsensual deepfake images of women and children generated using its AI tool? What does JD Vance's outburst against the Minnesota ICE shooting victim tell us abou... Continue15 January 2026
Posted by Alastair Campbell
Alastair Campbell’s diary: It’s time for a European army
Keir Starmer wants Britain to get closer to the EU. The war in Ukraine and Trump’s military posturing put European security at the heart of that realignment... Continue13 January 2026
Posted by Alastair Campbell
488. Is Iran on the Edge of Revolution?
Could the Iran protests finally break the Supreme Leader’s brutal reign, or will the regime's deadly crackdown contain the unrest? If the US intervenes militarily, what would a Trump-style plan for ... Continue13 January 2026
Posted by Alastair Campbell
170. President of Moldova, Maia Sandu: Holding the Line Between Democracy and Putin
How did Maia Sandu fight Russian disinformation in Moldova? What is it like to have a war in the country next door? Will the European Union accept Moldova with Russian troops in the country? Rory a... Continue12 January 2026
Posted by Alastair Campbell
China Vs USA: Who Will Win the AI Race?
Who really controls AI; governments, corporations, or no one at all? Is AI becoming a new kind of global arms race? And, can we keep humans in charge of systems that move faster than we do? Rory and ... Continue8 January 2026
Posted by Alastair Campbell
487. Is Starmer Rethinking His Approach to Europe? (Question Time)
What do Keir Starmer’s comments on 'closer alignment' with the EU single market actually mean? After the Bondi terror attack, how can a centrist government respond to national trauma without fuellin... Continue8 January 2026
Posted by Alastair Campbell
Alastair Campbell’s diary: Maia Sandu, the leader who stood up to Putin
The president of Moldova saw off a vicious campaign from Russia by educating the public about the threat and mobilising them against it. Would we do the same here?... Continue7 January 2026
Posted by Alastair Campbell
Haven’t seen the pitch but after your post I will go searching. One ‘sporting moment’ that made me cringe even more than TB at tennis, was John Major donning protective cricket gear for a few throw-downs at Lords. Pin stripe suit trousers hastily crimped into cricket pads, I think that triggered the beginning of the end!
Not as if he needs any greater popularity buzz, but I would think people would warm to him having the odd burst of imperfection and human error here and there. Same with the lovely Mrs O – she’s not an emaciated skeleton of a woman as the magazines would have us believe we should all aspire to – she looks curvy and normal. And always amazing.
Reading your blog reminds me of the old adage, stick to what you’re good at. It’s very dangerous territory in front of a crowd or the cameras doing anything out of your comfort zone. Even walking with your wife on the beach. Aka Neil Kinnock
‘ … the rapturous welcome that he must by mow think is part of the soundtrack of life ..’ Nice.
I see Cameron was playing football at Lilian Baylis school (the one Letwin said he would rather die than send his kids to) Cameron looked in ok shape but no matter how hard he tries to get down with the kids, in sports gear he looks like he ought to be on a polo field saying ‘yaaah’ a lot
Do leading politicians get the same smell of fresh paint everywhere they go like the queen?
Why do politicians want to be all things to all people? I prefer understanding of politics/economics, compassion and honesty… who gives a sh*t if they can play football or run marathons. A bit more focus on why they were elected would not go amiss. One thing I disliked TB for was how much partying he did with popstars and other glitterati
I find it outrageous that Fox News and Co. are so consumed with the scene, the camera angles, and the pitch. Give it a break, it’s just for fun and rather irrelevant to the issues that President Obama must grapple with. Fox’s claims that the Obama team asked them not to shoot the trajectory of the ball, just in case he missed completely, are ludicrous. Even is that were the case… it merely begs the question: So what?!
The whole thing is fatuous and unnecessary. If world leaders spent half as much time doing the job of running their respective countries instead of prancing around and playing with balls, or pulling ridiculous stunts for some inane photo op, then we would all be in a better place.
FOOTBALLER TONY BLAIR – 28 HEADERS, EVERYTHING BUT TALENT
Sure, I see your point (your blog, 16 July, paragraph 9, on “TB’s greatest sporting moment” – Labour Conference in 1994)
Yes, former England manager, Kevin Keegan, can land a football on a pinhead, no question. He’s that accurate
All Tony Blair had to do was stand there, watch the ball coming, bob his head abit whenever the ball arrived. Simple
But, worth remembering that even the most gifted make everything look that effortlessly easy – including heading footballs during photocalls
Maybe I just misinterpreted your observation as an unnecessarily low-punch, an impertinent swipe at the modestness of, what you refer to as, “TB’s footballing
prowess”
As if it needed only Keegan’s fine judgement and precision placement. That alone allowed TB to clock up such an impressive tally of 28 bonked headers, back and forth. And TB himself only needed, well, everything but talent
Unconvinced, I’m remaining unconvinced. I’ll continue to applaud TB’s footie achievement, regardless
But your explanation of how he’d achieved it, did remind me of another occasion, the same year, when a young Prince William, accompanying his mother, Diana, was overheard to comment to her that the exhibition paintings on display they were both admiring, looked nearly as good as the visual art William’s father, the Prince of Wales, created
Poor William’s moment of pride in his father’s talent proved short-lived. (Because his mum was in the middle of another “anti-Charles offensive” leading up to divorce)
Whereupon dear Diana stuck the boot in, the straight put-down. And William’s harmless praise earned his mother’s gentle reprimand – the sharpish rebuttal ” … Ah, yes, but you must always promise me you’ll remember your Papa’s had ALOT of help from other people, doing his art stuff, alot … ”
As if Diana’s husband, plus his etchings and daubings, would all be trashcan fodder, but for groups of talented, visual artists visiting him at Highgrove. Presumably practically painting the pictures on His Royal Highness’ behalf
Always feels base and shameful when couples stoop to this level of bitchiness and one-upmanship, I think
Which also made me wonder how many items of kitchen crockery is your partner, Fiona Millar, forced to bounce off your own forehead, before you see the sense of admitting she’s been right all along, after all?
Right – TWENTY-EIGHT times again, bonk, bonk, bonk. There, political coincidence, eh? Boy, I bet your blog’s only telling us half the real story. So far, at least
Trevor Malcolm
==============