Embed from Getty Images --> Turn-out looks as if it has been extraordinarily high for this referendum, not that that is making it ...
16 take-aways from the referendum campaign
Embed from Getty Images If Boris Johnson has had a pretty mediocre - even poor - Brexit campaign, then the quiet man of the Leave team has h...
Gove's Star Ever Rising
If Boris Johnson has had a pretty mediocre - even poor - Brexit campaign, then the quiet man of the Leave team has had a great one.
Johnson remains popular with Tory grassroots and amongst the general public, who persist - contrary to all the evidence - in seeing him as the most trustworthy politician when it comes to speaking about the EU.
Gove, however, has severed his links with Cameron and the party modernisers, carved out a new furrow and become the Leave campaign's most potent debater. While Leave supporters were collectively swooning over the great man's performance in the Question Timed debate yesterday - possibly because they've rarely heard one of their own side string words together with fluency and meaning, even if the substance was still being held at the door - even commentators who are not amongst Mr. Gove's natural support base were conceding that he'd done a good job. Three of the Guardian's writers were inspired by Mr. Gove to produce delightfully crafted assessments.
Michael Gove has also seen a surge of support from grassroots Tories who would like him to be their leader. The Conservative Home survey in June showed that he remained the firm favourite. Discount his repeated protestations that he isn't fit to be leader - given sufficient support and a few nudges from senior colleagues and I'm sure Mr. Gove will overcome his reluctance to stand - and the former friend of Dave may be the man charged with negotiating our departure from the EU as Prime Minister.
It's possibly at that point that he might wish he had been a little more thorough on the detail of life after the EU.
Embed from Getty Images This is appalling reading . Well, it's appalling reading if you're not a racist, homophobic, mysoginistic, ...
Ugly, Ugly, Ugly - A sane man tweets a Trump rally
This is appalling reading. Well, it's appalling reading if you're not a racist, homophobic, mysoginistic, immigrant-baiting, Muslim-banning bigot who also wants to beat up anyone who disagrees with you.
Jared Yates Sexton is a professor and political writer, and he went along to a Trump rally in Greensboro, North Carolina. What he encountered there was a microcosmic representation of the Trump campaign in all of its ugly, discoloured reality.
Amongst the Confederate flags, drunken attendees, tasteless T-shirts and open misogyny towards Hillary Clinton was a palpably nasty atmosphere. In the end, Yates concluded that yes, of course Trump should be defeated in the same way that a virus needs to be stopped in its tracks, but that the bigger question was how on earth to combat the deeply unpleasant, hate-filled people who are giving Trump such an extraordinary reach.
Of course Sexton is educated, a liberal, a man who thinks about what he's watching and doing. Of course he approaches the Trump rally with a sense of foreboding and perhaps even slight derision. Perhaps someone else would have gone along and seen a happy band of cheerful soldiers celebrating together and rooting for their unafraid champion.
But read his tweets for yourself and see if you think he was making it all up, or reporting accurately from a terrible event. I wish it had been the former.
[Hat-tip to Politics.co.uk's Ian Dunt, who re-tweeted the Yates tweets]
Donald Trump has been roundly condemned by the liberal classes for his extraordinary ability to turn a tragedy into a bit of narcissistic se...
Trump's narcissistic bigotry is well reflected in America's right-wing land
When even respected MPs change their minds on the EU debate it might be fair to ask what chance the rest of us have in understanding the iss...
Can you find rational arguments about the EU?
To be fair, Sarah Wollaston, the Conservative MP who has changed her mind from supporting "Leave" to supporting "Remain" has done so largely on account of her unwillingness to support a campaign that bases one of its core arguments on a lie. Their widely publicised claim that leaving the EU would save £350 million a week has been derided in most quarters as at best misleading, and now Dr. Wollaston has determined that to support such an erroneous campaign would clearly be wrong.
The claims and counter-claims about the money we could save if we left the EU, or the immigration problems that could be solved if we left the EU, are responsible for many people suggesting that it is impossible to define a rational argument about it. And yet, if you bother to spend just a small amount of your time for research about what everyone agrees is a crucially important vote, you can scratch beneath the rhetoric and identify some clear points.
One person who has done just this is a guy called Nick Carter-Lando, who has taken the time to analyse the statistical claims being made about immigration and the economy, and posted on his facebook page a piece that is remarkably clear and rationally presented. I'd commend anyone to go and read the whole thing - it isn't too long, given the amount of material he is trying to cover.
Amongst some of Mr. Carter-Lando's key conclusions include the point that immigration, based on the highest estimates, makes a difference of at most 2.8% (that's 1 in 35 people) over ten years; and that removing our net contribution might indeed save us £8.5bn a year, but that such a sum (spent several times over by Leave campaigners in their rhetoric) is a drop in the ocean of, for example, the NHS budget of £116.4bn a year.
We have been ill-served by much of the tabloid press in this campaign, most of it firmly in the Brexit camp and most of it majoring on scare stories about immigration. But we have always known that our tabloid press is sensationalist, scandal-mongering and only tenuously linked to the truth. It is actually up to us as individuals to be trying to make our own rational case for leaving or staying in the EU. The weight of expert evidence so derided by Michael Gove (who needed to compensate for the complete lack of any expert evidence for his own case) does point overwhelmingly towards a Remain vote as the best option. But rationality may yet play only a small part in the referendum outcome.
Democracy may be lauded as the "least worst" system available to govern countries, but there is a reason why most countries at lea...
Do voters fail democracy?
Even so, there is normally some sort of correlation between reason, truth and decision making. Not amongst voters though - at least if the current Yougov poll on trustworthiness is to be believed.
According to this, the most trusted politician on the EU debate is Janus' own disciple, Boris Johnson. Wise watchers of the EU debate have long been able to mock Johnson's snappy and easily made move from EU supporter to EU opponent. The blog "Pride's Purge" has a great post essentially setting up a debate between the two Boris Johnsons, while the Guardian's Jonathan Freedland really went to town on Johnson's iniquitous approach to truth in an article aligning him with Donald Trump.
But perhaps the last word should go to the Guardian's Andrew Sparrow, reporting the poll findings:
My favorite month of the year is over! I always like May, as it is springlike and jolly, plus it includes Mother's Day and my birthday! ...
Looking Back: May
Running: In May my totals were 215.6 miles running / 40,000 ft climbing, 6.6 miles hiking, and 5.36 miles cycling. So far, I am on track for my running mileage and climbing goals but I need to step up my cycling goal. The month of May involved two races, a 100k and a 50 mile race, which makes it easier to keep the mileage numbers up. However, soon I will need to ramp up even more in order to conquer the dreaded 100 mile race in August.
Silverstate 50M -- bit o' snow this year. |
Selfish, Shallow and Self-Absorbed (4/5)
How to Slowly Kill Yourself and Others (3/5)
The Measure of a Lady (3/5)
Cleaving: A Story of Meat, Marriage and Obsession* (3/5)
Tender Points* (3/5)
The Terror* (3/5)
Travel: This month involved a few local trips. I went to Reno for a race, which ended up being a 9 hour drive due to snow conditions (on May 21!!). I also had a great time in Tahoe with friends, doing some snow running/hiking, swimming in Donner lake and eating our weight in hamburgers. Other than that, the only other travel has been near the Bay Area for race spectating and participating.
My friend KH -- snow running near Castle Peak. |
Do you have a reading or running goal this year? What is your favorite place for a weekend getaway near you?
On the surface Michael Gove had a better run at the EU debate than his boss, David Cameron did last night. Gove came across as an impressiv...
Gove v Cameron
But Michael Gove had an easier audience, which was probably vetted to make sure no teachers attended. Gove's audience struggled for killer questions and were allowed to ask rather tendentiously linked ones relating to the election fraud case and his own leadership ambitions. No such cosiness was extended to David Cameron, but as has been pointed out by several commentators, the difference here is that Cameron was always going to present a better target for show-casing audience members looking for their 5 minutes of fame for the simple reason that he is the Prime Minister.
What about the substance? Cameron was badly tripped up at the start with the question on immigration, for which he has his own careless pledge to blame, but after that he maintained a more substantive case than the largely grandiloquent but empty Gove. When asked for specifics about what life will be like if we leave the EU he tellingly chose to start with "hope". Hope is nice, but it's very unspecific. Which is the problem with the Leave case that Gove couldn't easily finesse, for all his skill as a debater - it is based on pure speculation, and speculation moreover which flies in the face of most expert testimony. That was his other serious area of weakness. In his exchange with Faisal Islam Gove had to admit by default that no expert testimony was going his way, to the extent that he tried to make a joke of it by suggesting we'd all had enough of experts anyway.
This debate will have done Michael Gove a lot of good amongst the Tory grassroots, who are increasingly desperate to get rid of their election-winning leader and replace him with a more ideologically pure, but probably less electorally potent model. The triumphant crowing of the Leave campaign in the wake of tonight's debate also suggest they believe they have a star in Gove, though given their other spokespeople the bar is not set high. I suspect the Leavers will push Gove more to the fore, but it will become increasingly difficult for a man who decried the Prime Minister as delivering up a depressing and erroneous vision last night to continue serving in his cabinet after the referendum.
One of the worst aspects of modern day political leadership must surely be the need to go and be ritually humiliated by television debate au...
Cameron is undone by a broken pledge in his Sky "debate"
David Cameron is, as one commentator has put it this morning, an old trouper in this regard and he kept his cool while under fire from the audience at last night's Sky News debate, responding passionately yet reasonably, and staying on what was a relatively clear message throughout. Whatever you say about Cameron's aloofness, his rarefied upbringing or his isolation from the lifestyles of most ordinary people, you have to respect the fact that he does these amongst the people things well. He engages, I don't think he patronises, and he really does try and explain his stances. Most of us would lose it early on, if we even had the patience to go through with such a process.
Where Cameron was genuinely on the ropes, however, was at the beginning, at the hands of an experienced political observer and interviewer, Sky's Faisal Islam. Still relatively new to his position as Sky's political editor, there seems to be a general agreement that he emerged with his reputation enhanced. Tenacious, appropriately aggressive and with a nice ability to use humour to puncture his subject, he looks as if he might be able to fill a Paxman-esque void in political interviewing (though still behind the current past master, Andrew Neill).
It was Islam's question about immigration, and specifically Cameron's oft-quoted pledge on limiting immigration, that gave the Prime Minister the most trouble. Not surprisingly either. It's a pledge he hasn't met, and can't meet. Whatever other points I might want to disregard from the shrill and constantly whinging Leave campaign, the one about his pledge undermining trust in politicians hits home.
Pledge breaking is the worst thing a politician can do, which is why it is concerning that they seem so free with making them. Cameron's old coalition buddy Nick Clegg fell the same way with his broken pledge on tuition fees. I'm surprised Cameron got caught by this. Feeling pressurised from the right, worried about the inroads made by immigration-hating UKIP, he allowed himself to appease their cries with an impossible pledge. Now he's paying the price, and it's a pity because in many ways Cameron is a reasonable man, a pragmatic political leader and a man who can give politics a sheen of authoritative respectability. An ill thought out pledge, a short-term response to a difficult and intractable problem, has undone him.
David Cameron tried to present an honest case about continuing membership of the EU to his studio audience last night. The easy accusation of a non-listening young audience member that he was "waffling" wasn't actually true. The pity of it was that he hasn't been as honest about the EU and about wider problems - notably immigration - before. Truly, politicians who frame their dialogue in the transient window of 24 hour news and social media find that ignoring the long view can have dire consequences.
Embed from Getty Images For a while I flirted with the idea that Donald Trump is an entertaining candidate. I liked the fact that he was sh...
Americans shouldn't ignore Trump's racism
For a while I flirted with the idea that Donald Trump is an entertaining candidate. I liked the fact that he was shaking up traditional politics and sneakily admired the way his sheer chutzpah seemed to be getting him through the primaries.
But Donald Trump is no joke, and it will arguably be his greatest achievement to keep us seeing him as a rough-edged diamond making headway against a wretchedly corrupt establishment, instead of the dangerous demagogue and bigot that he really is.
It seems absurd at the moment that it is the Democratic Party which is in disarray, and not the party which has just seen a debt-driven real-estate chancer and reality television star seize their nomination from under their noses. The Republican high command isn't just holding its nose to endorse Trump. It is leaping willingly into the position of co-conspirator. As House Speaker Paul Ryan becomes the latest leading Republican to endorse Donald Trump, let's remind ourselves of the person that all these top politicians now believe is absolutely the right person to lead their country for four years.
This is the man who has accused his now supporter, Ted Cruz, of "coming from Cuba" and suggesting he should have been disbarred from running for president. This is the man who wants to ban all Muslims from America and who has happily perpetuated the myth that Muslims were celebrating in the streets of New Jersey on 9/11. This is the man who wants to build a wall to stop any Mexicans from entering America, and who has described Mexican immigrants as "drug mules or rapists". This is the man who has used the sly rhetoric of religious bigotry when he had a go at then-rival Ben Carson's membership of the Seventh Day Adventist Church. Slate writer William Saletan has done a great job in identifying the ten things any politician who endorses Trump needs to defend.
Trump's inherent racism and malevolence go deeper than this though. His Trump University is currently facing a class action which exposes it as a major scam, designed to rip off anyone who signed up to its courses, peddling false prospectuses of what it offered and preying on the weak and poor in order to make its money.
The judge who has been handed this case happens to be an Hispanic judge, whom Trump consistently tweets about as being biased against him, impugning his judicial integrity. He also refers to the East Chicago born judge as "Mexican" in his statements, and he made much of the judge's "Mexican" race when he spoke to a crowd at one of his rallies. Saletan again:
Trump’s attack on Friday continued in this vein. “I have a judge who is a hater of Donald Trump,” he told a crowd in San Diego. “His name is”— at this point, Trump, having raised his voice like a drum roll, held up a piece of paper and pronounced the name carefully, gesturing for effect—“Gonzalo Curiel.” The audience booed, and Trump let the moment soak in, shaking his head in solidarity. Trump told the audience two things about Curiel: that he “was appointed by Barack Obama” and that he “happens to be, we believe, Mexican.” After railing against Curiel and the lawsuit for more than 10 minutes, Trump concluded: “The judges in this court system, federal court—they ought to look into Judge Curiel.”
Donald Trump isn't a joke. He is the worst type of malevolent, minority-baiting demagogue whose relationship with the truth is so tendentious as to beg the question of whether he even understands the concept. He is a man who incites violence at his rallies and stoops to slews of personal insults against his opponents in the absence of any thought-through policies.
The British politician Edmund Burke famously noted, back in the late eighteenth century when all Europe was abuzz with the daily news of slaughter in the French Revolution, that "all that is required for evil men to triumph is that good men stay silent". I might demur about whether all of the Republicans who are rolling over in front of Trump are necessarily good men, but they are fantastically not just keeping silent, they have chosen to add their voices to the evil in their midst.
Donald Trump is riding high at the moment as his likely opponent in the autumn election is mired in her own primary battle. But if and when Hillary Clinton does win nomination as the Democratic candidate, then all those Bernie supporters, and Bernie himself, need to take a long hard look at her opponent. For all her flaws, Hillary is not a racist, and nor does she approach Trump's levels of deception and wanton bigotry. If Sanders supporters think that somehow it's ok to stay home when Hillary faces Donald, that their own purity shouldn't bring them to vote for a seasoned candidate because she has compromised too much, well then they too can count themselves in the legion of Burke's silent good men (and women), who wilfully allowed a man who will tarnish their democracy to be elected president. There are no innocent voters in this contest.
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