Europe needs to get real on defence; Britain needs to get real on Europe
13 February 2025
Post
4 September 2009
2 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
Didn’t see but agree it is infuriating the way they assume all we want to hear is what they think. There are one or two voices who have experience and a bit of gravitas and are worth listening to. But the idea that every tom dick or harry who works for the BBC has great wisdom and knowledge is plain wrong
I’m not sure he did make the case that well. And he certainly has not been making it well over the piece. When troops are engaged in war, the Prime Minister of the day must be out there explaining all the time. I am sure your old boss would have done
Sky just as bad. I’ll let you off though, as you gave them a bit of a kicking earlier in the week. The problem is they assume once they know something, or they have heard something, everyone has. They get bored too soon
“a safer Afghanistan means a safer Britain..” The premise is flawed, in fact it is probable that the opposite is true…The UK has been sucked into an un-winnable war…He should know with his government’s experience in Northern Ireland that terrorists will never be beaten by war and in the end it will come down to negotiating with the Taliban.. and this could take 30 years…. how many more cortèges driving through Wooton Basset will the British public accept before withdrawal becomes politically necessary?
I think it is time for Nick Robinson to be replaced. After so many good political commentators( who didn’t show their colours )his appointment was a disaster.
I definately agree with you re broadcasters learning to broadcast the news-makers more than the news-gatherers. I also find Nick Robinson quite boring on TV and he must be very frustrated with Robert Peston having poached most of his market share of political news on the BBC. However he did redeem himself somewhat, I thought, with his program ‘Moats, Mortgages and Mayhem’, still on bbc iplayer and well worth the listen. Nick Robinson speaks from the heart I think and seems more human rather than monotone.
The whole world seems to have turned against GB, including the BBC, but you might be in part to blame for that Alastaire. Afterall it was you who got Greg Dyke fired from the BBC and replaced by a right-winger.
So in a not so small part, you have added to the downfall of your own party by installing by default somebody at the head of the BBC who is encouraging people to vote for the volves in sheep’s clothing, David Cameron and his nasty party.
I know you and Tony Blaire did some great things for the country but that wasn’t one of them.
Alastair,
Totally agree. I’m a current and long-standing government senior press officer. I wouldn’t mind if they followed a Gordon Brown speech, or other ministerial speech, with acres of analysis, but they too often show a snippet of the actual speech and then “what Nick Robinson thought of it.” Happens on the Today programme, too.