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Unleadership – a new word that sadly sums up Britain in these worrying times

Though some make a case for Winston Churchill and Elizabeth the First as the greatest ever Briton, for me nobody gets near William Shakespeare. He is one of the reasons English has become the pre-emin... Continue

No matter how good or bad Crosby may be, Cameron remains the problem

Quite a few journalists at last night's Portland Communications pub quiz, and one or two of them asking me what I thought of the Tories' planned hiring of Australian consultant Lynton Crosby. The gene... Continue

21 November 2012

Posted by Alastair Campbell

Hezza shows the new boys what a growth plan looks like

As I predicted on Sunday, Michael Heseltine's response to the silly briefing against him by Osborne and Co has been to crank up rather than wind down his interventionist ideas to get growth going. St... Continue

31 October 2012

Posted by Alastair Campbell

Good to see Ed Miliband focusing on economic as well as social gains of changed attitudes to mental health

Ed Miliband's speech on mental health today is a significant - and good - moment in the campaign to improve understanding and treatment of mental illness in Britain. It is perhaps particulalry signif... Continue

29 October 2012

Posted by Alastair Campbell

Heseltine comes up with sensible interventionist ideas to boost growth – so Osborne briefs against him

Michael Heseltine will be sitting with a cup of coffee at his country pile, thinking about when to take a tour of his fabulous gardens, whilst flicking through the Sunday papers, a ritual through the ... Continue

28 October 2012

Posted by Alastair Campbell

Cameron’s alcohol strategy is missing the point – a guest blog from a recovering middle class alcoholic

Interesting morning in a series of meetings covering variously alcohol abuse, Page 3 girls (and the campaign to get The Sun to drop them and so catch up with the modern world), banks and their diversi... Continue

26 October 2012

Posted by Alastair Campbell

Clegg has quietly resigned from the lightning conductor role – which is to his advantage, but another problem for Cameron

The reason we ended up with a coalition government is that the public did not want Labour back for a fourth term but they did not want the old Tory Party back either. So they chucked in the Lib Dems a... Continue

21 October 2012

Posted by Alastair Campbell

Still I can’t get Chris Mullin on Twitter, but I will, even as @vegetablegrower

For the third time, I failed to persuade Chris Mullin, who would be brilliant if he embraced it, to join Twitter last night. As fellow diarists of the New Labour era, we seem to have become a fairly ... Continue

18 October 2012

Posted by Alastair Campbell

Cameron has yet to make much mark on history; let us hope it is not as the PM who presided over break up of UK

You might remember that a week ago, following George Osborne's ludicrous statement that Tony Blair 'achieved nothing' in ten years in power, I reeled off some of the facts that negated his view. I al... Continue

15 October 2012

Posted by Alastair Campbell

Alastair Campbell is a writer, communicator and strategist best known for his role as former British Prime Minister Tony Blair’s spokesman, press secretary and director of communications and strategy. Still active in politics and campaigns in Britain and overseas, he now splits his time between writing, speaking, broadcasting, charities and consultancy.