1pm ToryDiary: Leigh vs Portillo
BritainAndAmerica: America still accounts for half of world defence expenditure
YourPlatform: Cllr Phil Taylor from Ealing is optimistic about Tony Lit's chances in the by-election
ConservativeHome.com's June survey of readers' opinions is now live - click here to have your say.
DEAD CAT BOUNCE?
"The
new Prime Minister has kept up a machine-gun rattle of new announcements and
initiatives, panicking the Lib Dems with his job offers, poaching a
Conservative MP, distancing himself from Blairite men and measures. Many Tories
are looking on in vertiginous awe. Some, having indulged Mr Cameron while he
remained ahead, are feeling mutinous. They should keep a sense of proportion.
Every new leader gets a honeymoon: Mr Cameron's is wearing off just as Mr
Brown's begins. That said, if our poll jolts some Tories into displaying a
little more urgency, it will be no bad thing." – Telegraph
leader
"Mr Cameron, who has been warned by whips that MPs across the party have become alarmed by the Brown bounce in the polls, signalled at a private dinner of Tory MPs that he will start to embrace more traditional core issues such as Europe, crime and family breakdown." – Andrew Pierce in the Telegraph
CAMERON INTERVIEW
"We met yesterday afternoon for Mr Cameron’s first interview since Mr Brown’s elevation to the premiership. As the flood waters slowly ebbed away in the Leeds canals, he was greeted with a mixture of nervous adulation from party members and rude disinterest from people recognising him as they walked by." - Alice Miles and Helen Rumbelow in the Times
"David Cameron came out fighting today, mocking Gordon Brown for a brand of “McPolitics” as polls showed that the new Prime Minister was winning voters back to Labour." - Times
CALLING A REFERENDUM WOULD SHOOT THE TORIES’ FOX
"By agreeing to a referendum, Gordon Brown has a real opportunity to show that he responds to popular sentiment - while distancing himself from the Blair era of spin, showing that he is a man of integrity, and, incidentally, shooting the Opposition's fox yet again. If he does not, his premiership will start with retreat and obfuscation." – Ruth Lea in the Telegraph
HEFFER AGREES WITH DAVE...
"Dave and I are in accord. We sing, in perfect harmony, from the same proverbial song-sheet. You cannot get a sliver of tissue-paper between us. For Dave has said that our new Prime Minister should call an immediate general election. He couldn't be more right. You see, given the state the Conservative Party is in, that general election would almost certainly be lost, as our poll today seems to indicate." – Simon Heffer in the Telegraph
TERRORIST THREAT AS REAL AS EVER
"The youths who attend radical mosques fulminate about Iraq, but their hatred runs deeper than politics. They hate a popular culture that they themselves consume, in the form of computer games, conspiracy theories, internet message boards and (in some cases) cheap flights to Islamic countries where they are properly indoctrinated. The lesson we should learn is that the distinction between a domestic and foreign terrorist threat is disappearing." – Telegraph leader
"Friday morning’s foiled attack underscores that Britain
remains in a state of war, and is a central front in the global war against
terrorism. New Prime Minister Gordon Brown must demonstrate courage, resolve, and determination in the face of a mounting threat. Indeed his own legacy as British leader may be defined ultimately by his ability to deal
with the most important issue of our time — global terrorism and its support by state sponsors such as Iran and Syria." - Dr Nile Gardiner in the National Review
"We would do well to remember that it was secular faith that inspired much of the terror of the last century. The fantasy that society can be progressively transformed by violence inspired some of humanity’s worst crimes, and it casts a poisonous spell today." – John Gray in the Times
"It is time the Government admitted that all the compromises forced on it by the provisions in the European Human Rights Convention are inadequate." – Times leader
OTHER NEWS & COMMENTARY
The Sun
lists several outside appointees to Brown’s advisory roles including a surgeon,
Sir Alan Sugar, and Tesco’s Sir Terry Leahy.
Lord Stevens turned down a ministerial position - Times
The Conservatives have lost control of Mendip Council after one councillor went independent – Western Daily Press
Western Daily Press also compares the lives of the wives of Brown and Cameron. Both went to Bristol University.
"The early release from prison of 1,000 criminals including burglars, drug dealers and fraudsters marked Gordon Brown’s first day of office yesterday." (The BBC's website doesn't seem to have covered this) - Times
The Daily Mail digs up information about Brown's staunch Tory family (doing what it does best).
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Please use this thread to highlight other interesting news and commentary...
























"A new report today shows that Gordon Brown should make a decisive break from the policies of the past decade if the UK is to overcome its deep-set problems of economic and social division. The report shows that the key policies of recent years, higher spending, increased taxes and a greater role for central government, have blocked public service reform and created new pressures on vulnerable groups, such as young people. Successful public service reform and lower taxation would help to deliver âa new politicsâ which empowers citizens rather than government." - 



























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