Author Archives: Natalie Bennett

So Brown bottled it

Was listening to Ed Milliband stumble, bumble and fumble his way through an interview on Radio Fivelive this morning, reflecting on the damage Gordon Brown has done to himself. If he wasn’t convinced that he could beat a motley crew of Cameron, Redwood and Goldsmith now, how does he think he’s going to in two years’ time, now that he’s shown himself (as Andrew Rawnsley says in the Observer this morning) to be not the solid, steam-ahead man he was presenting himself, but just as poll-driven and vacilating as Blair. Rawnsley says: “This makes him look like a calculating politician. And, worse, a calculator who miscalculated.”

And where his calculations might take him next hardly bears thinking about. Given that his sole political tactic seems to be to steal the Tories’ clothes, speculation this morning that he’ll “steal” their inheritance tax proposals, which are being seen as a significant factor in the Cameron poll bounce.

I’m sure Brown will do anything he thinks popular, but how will all of those decent Labour members who are trying to work for social justice and reducing inequality bear to stay with the party when he decides anyone should be allowed a cool £1m windfall, through no effort of their own, without paying a penny in tax?

A pub quiz killer question

Who was the first person to transport live cargo in an aeroplane?

It was (later) Lietenant Colonel J.T.C. Moore-Brabazon, who was minister of aircraft production during the Second World War, and a champion of female flyers. (The animal was a piglet in a wastepaper basket tied to the wing strut of his French-built Voisin in 1909. It would appear its eventual fate was not recorded.)

(From Spitfire Women of World War II, by Giles Whittell, which is a delightful read – more soon when I can snatch the time, p.110)

Becoming a bag lady

The problem with not taking plastic carrier bags when you go shopping is that when you need some, as for bundling up collections of Green Party leaflets for collection by volunteers for delivery, you haven’t got any. So if you saw a woman slightly furtively pulling plastic bags out of the recycling bin in Bloomsbury Waitrose this evening, yes that was me…

If you are preparing for an early UK election, don’t stop

It is the nature of media coverage on such an issue to swing back and forth widely. But I’m still betting on November.
Some evidence:

Somers Town fine dining

On the Chalton Road market, under the filter shade of a healthily plump tree, watching the world go by, mushroom and tomato omelette, with rather good chips, and a cuppa, £3.80. That’s value. (And I even noticed that next door a Japanese restaurant is being fitted out – so possibilities of variety as well.)

And a Daily Telegraph that someone had left provided curiously schizophrenic reading – on one page “shock” that David Cameron yesterday used to “swear” word pissed (drunk), on national television. More “shocking”: “The word caused not even a murmur among delegates, and the BBC received no complaints.”

Several pages later, associated with this story although apparently not on the web, an outline of the legal status of the sexual practice of “dogging”, in considerable detail.

You wonder if the same editor did both pages.

We inventive humans

One thing that amazes me is how many anti-environmentalists like to claim that “green” energy sources are impractical, and will never supply what we need. But what’s lacking is not the possibilities, but the will.

I’ve just been pointed to one other alternative form of solar energy, and been musing on the inventiveness of Homo sapiens sapiens, as delightfully demonstrated in the video below…