Europe needs to get real on defence; Britain needs to get real on Europe
13 February 2025
Post
25 January 2010
2 minute(s) read
Recent Posts
545. Burnham Beats Reform: Britain’s Next Prime Minister?
Has Andy Burnham’s huge victory against Reform in Makerfield shown the Labour Party how it can beat Farage? What does this defeat mean for the right, and how tricky will the coming months be for And... Continue19 June 2026
Posted by Alastair Campbell
544. How Trump Is Weaponising AI and Martial Arts at the White House
Has Britain become a “vassal” state, dangerously dependent on the US for our most vital national security capabilities? What does Trump’s martial arts birthday event on the White House lawn tell... Continue18 June 2026
Posted by Alastair Campbell
543. The Disaster Britain Still Can’t Escape and Trump’s Iran ‘Deal’
What is the true cost of Brexit? How have British and European far-right politics evolved since the historic Brexit referendum, and can liberal democracy survive it? Is it possible to see Trump’s Ir... Continue17 June 2026
Posted by Alastair Campbell
Let’s make Farage wear Brexit like a badge of shame
In a world of chancers and charlatans, we need facts at our fingertips as vital ammunition for the battles ahead: Beating Reform and joining the EU... Continue17 June 2026
Posted by Alastair Campbell
Alastair Campbell’s diary: Meet the Trump hire who says the president is now out of control
Former chief of staff Mick Mulvaney would have stopped the money-grabbing mixing of political and family business... Continue15 June 2026
Posted by Alastair Campbell
193. James Cleverly: Why Has There Been A Radical Shift On The Right?
What does James Cleverly think of Nigel Farage and Reform? How does Cleverly explain his unexpected exit from the Tory leadership race? What could the future of AI in Great Britain look like under dif... Continue15 June 2026
Posted by Alastair Campbell
542. Starmer Loses His Defence Secretary: What Next?
What does John Healey's shock resignation mean for Keir Starmer, whose position is already on the line ahead of Andy Burnham's crunch by-election in Makerfield? Who might replace Healey in one of the ... Continue11 June 2026
Posted by Alastair Campbell
541. Trump’s World Cup Mess and Kushner’s Albania Deal
As the Trump administration blocks a referee from entering the US, is this the most political world cup of all time, and just how messy will it get? Can the Democrats flip the Senate, and would it act... Continue11 June 2026
Posted by Alastair Campbell
Judging by the policy so far, he could launch his entire manifesto in a handful of tweets.
I watched on the BBC News Channel. Thought the journalists gave him a pretty easy time of it. He did not answer the hard questions on the economy. I also wanted someone to ask him about the comments of one of the mothers of the victims of the child brutality case, who said Cameron had been wrong to use their case for his attack on so called broken Britain.
Cameron weak on substance. Watched Brown though and he was looking tired and energy-less
Here’s where I think Cameron’s problem lies:
When listening to him speak, about anything, I don’t what he’s in politics *for*.
Blair had a clear message. And although his presentation is at times not as good (getting better though), so does Brown. Like them or loathe them most people know what they stood/stand for.
My feeling of DC is that he’s spent so many years (yes it’s been that long) talking about ‘sunshine’ and ‘E=MC2’ that when it comes to the real debate he’ll be seen as reactionary in his views.
The electorate like vision, not revision.
Oh, and he speaks to everyone like they’re 5 years old.
Whenever I read blogs from AC on David Cameron I wonder if he has cut and paste most of the text from articles written about Tony Blair in the mid 1990s? Especially the attacks on policy and substance. He should come up with some original thinking.
Cameron was given quite an easy time of it at his public meeting here in Harlow last year too: but that was because the public and media couldn’t help but warm to him.
The Harlow Star’s (lib Dem) reporter admitted Cameron is impressive. That reporter took issue with Nick Robinson’s claim that the meeting was a Tory rentacrowd affair; numerous people from other parties attended the meeting who could have given Cameron a very hard time had they wanted to, the reporter wrote, yet they treated him with respect.
Why? My guess is they were gobsmacked to see a party leader on the hustings, answering honest questions with honest answers, questions taken at random from any member of the public of any party, the way politicians used to, before Thatcher’s and Blair’s spin doctors began micro managing democracy out of UK politics.
I stand corrected if I’m wrong, but when did Mr Blair or PM Brown ever do that, Alastair? Never, as far I can recall. When PM’s Blair and Brown came to Harlow, they came unannounced and they did not hold public meetings.
Cameron respects the public and democracy. Unaccustomed as we are to such respect, we sort of warm to that, it reminds us of the old days.
Whatever Cameron’s credit card debts are, they pale into insignificance with Brown’s – several trillion and counting, and no plan to pay it off.
Hahaha. The good old days of what? PR?
Cameron IS the spin doctor. That is, Blair and Brown are politicians, the former with spin doctor aides.
Cameron doesn’t need that. Because he IS the spin doctor.
That’s all he has and ever will be.
That’s the difference. And if one wants spin THAT much that you’re willing to vote a spin doctor into the PM job then it just shows how trite your view of life, the universe and everything in it, is.
Sure, one needs to understand the media a lot better than Brown seems willing to, but I don’t believe I’m alone in wanting someone a lot less ‘lightweight’ than Dave BlueBlood to actually make the decisions that matter.