Gaddafi is gone, and Libya faces a new future. Of course, the fighting is not completely over and he and his scions are still at large, but few doubt the regime is no more.
How to calculate the deficit: Can’t Anyone in Congress Count? (by John Weeks)
“In my last comment I demonstrated that the US public debt is not very large, and its annual servicing quite small. It occurred to me (and to several people who wrote to me in response to my comment), that it might be illuminating to carry out a similar exercise for the annual public deficit. You […]
The Riots: It may be the Under-Class that did it, but it’s the Uber-Class that lost it
So, the riots have come. They had an almost inevitable quality to them – indeed last December I outlined one scenario for when they would happen (see The Great Train Wreck of 2013).
The Only Thing ‘Staggering’ About These Savings is the Audacity of Claiming They Are Staggering.
Cabinet Office Minister Francis Maude claims that the government has made ‘staggering’ savings of £3.75bn in the 10 months May 2010 to March 2011. So just how staggering, and credible, are these claims?
Public Service: Mutually Assured Destruction?
When I was a Trostkyist, back before the last Ice Age, one of our favorite slogans was “workers control”. It is therefore somewhat weird to hear Tory and Liberal Democrat ministers extolling the virtues of ‘liberating the workers’ to run public services, and how they will improve as a result. The new White Paper on […]
On Coalitions and Mandates
I have great respect for the veteran political commentator Peter Riddell, and his new book, “In Defence of Politicians, in spite of themselves” deserves to be widely read. It contains much sage analysis and wise advice and much I agree with.
PS: and what’s all that got to do with Whitehall?
Dear PM, I am writing to you with some concern because of the workload fall-out from last week’s “events”. As you know, we in Whitehall are taking our fair share of the burden in reducing the deficit and there is to be a significant reduction in the number of senior staff in Whitehall departments.
News of the World: So Long, and Thanks for all the Fish and Chips
A trip to the Chippie on my Council estate in Barrow in Furness in the late 1960s had several advantages for teenage boys. We got some chips. We usually got to hang out with our mates, and even sometimes chat to some girls. But, whisper it, you also had the chance that your chips would […]
Murdoch and Cameron should act now (and Murdoch has, but not enough)
UPDATE: I wrote this and posted it, only to find that Murdoch has already made a move – closing down the News of the World! As usual tho, this seems like a manoeuvre – the Sun is to go to seven days instead. The question now is will Government block BSkyB deal and force change […]
First Celeb Phone Hacking, then Victims and now Bribing Police – this is now a crisis for the Government too
The explosive story about phone hacking, and now police bribery, involving the News of the World and Rupert Murdoch’s News International is fast escalating into a political crisis for the Coalition government.
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