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30 Apr 2008 09:02:24

Wednesday 30th April 2008

4.15pm Seats and Candidates: Should selected candidates be subject to compulsory re-adoption in the event of a by-election?

3.30pm Parliament: Nick Herbert picks up on the Government delaying the release of figures on early-release prisoners... nothing to do with tomorrow's election

3pm LondonMayor: Livingstone's shredding period

12.45pm PlayPolitical: Harriet Harman gets into a muddle about whether Kate Hoey is supporting Livingstone

Noon CentreRight: Samuel Coates on why Christian Peoples Alliance candidate Alan Craig should endorse Boris

From noon: Live blog of PMQs

11.30am PlayPolitical video: 'Least said, soonest elected' - Rory Bremner paints David Cameron as an opportunist

Simonhefferacid LondonMayor: Simon Heffer does Red Ken's work for him

Jeremywright Jeremy Wright MP: The challenge of treating dementia

ToryDiary: Tory policies on crime are most likely to help win General Election

Local government: Labour haven't binned rubbish tax plans... they'll return after polling day

PlayPolitical videos:

Have your say in ConservativeHome's April survey

Click here to take part in ConservativeHome.com's monthly survey: In additions to the regular questions we are asking for your views on the health of the Conservative Right, the criteria you use to select parliamentary candidates and membership levels in your Association.

By-election to choose Gwyneth Dunwoody's successor will be on 22nd May - BBC

Boris Johnson emphasises compassionate agenda on eve of poll

"Tory mayoral hopeful Boris Johnson says he wants those who earn "stonking quantities of dosh" in London to give more to poorer communities around them." - BBC

Livingstone_ken_2 If Ken Livingstone wins it will pose big strategic questions for Labour

"A Ken victory will embolden Labour in its conflict with the Conservatives, to be sure, but it will also have a profound effect on the continuing struggle within the party. For if Livingstone manages to defy a national trend, winning when Labour was losing everywhere else, it will tip the scales in what has, until now, been an evenly matched argument. Ranged on one side, broadly identified with the Progress group, is the uber-Blairite view that victory lies in ever-tighter targeting of the handful of swing voters in southern marginal seats that shifted to Labour in 1997. In the other corner, associated with the Compass thinktank, is a strategy that says Labour needs to win back the 4.5 million voters it has lost since 1997 - a coalition that, according to Jon Cruddas MP, includes "urban intellectuals", ethnic minorities, public sector workers and the traditional working class." - Jonathan Freedland in The Guardian

Brown to offer activists a say after poll results (Guardian) and a barrage of new policies (Independent).

Evening Standard responds to Polly Toynbee's criticism of its Mayoral coverage - Letter to The Guardian

Government accused of "pimping" - Western Mail | Yesterday's ToryDiary

YouGov: Support for independence slumps in Scotland

"A poll conducted for The Daily Telegraph by YouGov – the most in-depth analysis yet of attitudes to constitutional change – shows that only 19 per cent of Scots would support independence in a three-option referendum. Nearly three quarters backed keeping a devolved Parliament, either with its present powers or with more responsibilities." - Telegraph

UK house prices now falling year-on-year for first time since 1996 - Telegraph

WPP may join business exodus from high tax Britain - Telegraph

Secret tax adds £200 to cost of running family cars - Times

EU ready to censure Britain for fiscal ill-discipline - FT

It's opinion polls, not local elections, that count - Danny Finkelstein in The Times

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29 Apr 2008 08:58:30

Tuesday 29th April 2008

10.15pm PlayPolitical: Barack Obama disowns pastor's remarks

5.15pm ToryDiary: ConservativeHome in GQ

4.15pm ToryDiary: Should Job Centres advertise work in the sex industry?

3.45pm ToryDiary: Labour's failed the working class on university admissions

3.15pm LondonMayor: Can you help get out the vote over the next 48 hours?

Haveyoursay 3pm: Click here to take part in ConservativeHome.com's monthly survey: In additions to the regular questions we are asking for your views on the health of the Conservative Right, the criteria you use to select parliamentary candidates and membership levels in your Association.

12.30pm Parliament: John Redwood urges UK to follow Irish model of lower corporate taxation

Important 11am update on our Kate Hoey story here.

Electionsnightblogging10.45am Local government: ConservativeHome will be in CCHQ on elections night

10am CentreRight: Peter Whittle observes the BBC and ITV retreat again in the face of Muslim supremacists

Katehoey_2BREAKING NEWS: LABOUR MP KATE HOEY WILL ADVISE BORIS ON SPORT IF HE WINS

ToryDiary: Cameron admits that he hasn't been able to end Punch and Judy politics

Platform: Jonathan Caine reviews David Trimble: the Price of Peace' by Frank Millar

PlayPolitical videos: Sky News profiles Boris Johnson and David Cameron talks about the causes of poverty

Some key facts about Labour's Britain:

Help us add to this new directory.

Cameron doubles poll lead as election looms - Independent | ToryDiary

This latest poll has the Tories in majority territory but yesterday Nick Clegg set out his terms should his party hold the balance of power: "Nick Clegg said that he would expect a high price for his party's support in the event of a hung parliament after the next general election, demanding a "complete reinvention" of the political system.  That would mean reforms to campaign finance laws, electoral reform and the devolution of power away from Whitehall." (Quoted in The Telegraph).

Clegg supports compulsory English language in schools - BBC

Osbornegeorgesmiling George Osborne promises to deal with trade union power... but qualification follows

"George Osborne provoked a confrontation with the unions last night by suggesting that a Tory administration could introduce new measures to curb their power.  The Conservatives were considering reforms to employment legislation as a matter of “urgency” because of the threat of widespread unrest in the public sector over pay, the Shadow Chancellor said yesterday.  “I think the public service unions have grown too powerful. We would also look at any changes that need to be made in employment legislation. We are still in the process of looking at what the changes might be,” he told reporters on a visit to a business conference in Liverpool." - Times

"The Tories were on Monday night forced to row back from a suggestion by George Osborne, shadow chancellor, that they will look at changes to employment legislation to curb the growing number of strikes." - FT

Cameron short on policy detail - An FT analysis

Tory plan for free money adviser will be financed by levy on financial sector

"The Tories believe that the service is "urgently required", given the deterioriating economy and the increasing difficulties many people are facing.  While acknowledging that the idea has been around for several years, they said ministers had been "dithering" and had failed to implement it." - Telegraph

Brian Paddick remembers being wooed by the Conservatives

"Mr Paddick, a former senior Metropolitan Police officer, sent David Cameron an email asking if speculation that the Tories wanted him to be their man was true. The Tory leader quickly dispatched Francis Maude, a Shadow Cabinet member, for talks."They promised me the Earth, all the money I could spend and professional back-up," said Mr Paddick. He turned the Tories down after discussing their offer with his mother, who said her own mother would have been appalled." - Independent

Ken Livingstone launches women's manifesto - MayorWatch

Sky photo gallery of all the mayoral candidates.

Steve Richards: Cameron hasn't taken the tough decisions

"When Mr Cameron was asked to name a tough decision he had taken in relation to public spending the Tory leader responded comically by saying he had proposed the reduction of MPs' expenses. Mr Cameron would not get away with such casual trivialisation of the biggest theme of the lot, tax and spending, if the Government was not in such trouble: "I have taken the tough decisions on public spending. I plan to cut MPs' expenses. Thank you and good night"." - Steve Richards in The Independent

Parish council levies hide true council tax rises

"The true level of council tax rises is being disguised because parish councils are imposing levy increases above inflation, the Conservatives claim in a report to be released today. English families now pay up to £174 a year to their parish councils. The total amount raised by the levies has increased by 124 per cent over the past decade to £323 million." - Telegraph

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28 Apr 2008 08:56:57

Monday 28th April 2008

7.45pm ToryDiary: Tory lead doubles to 14% according to ComRes

6.30pm ToryDiary: Voices of the right

5.30pm LondonMayor: Dirty tricks Ken starts throwing the mud

3pm: Latest Boris PEB online, includes new scene on small businesses

2.45pm Peter Franklin on CentreRight: "Brown's colleagues must surely realise that the idea of presenting the country with a second unelected Prime Minister in the space of year is unconscionable."

11.45am Local government: Our placards are bigger than yours!

11am Harry Phibbs on CentreRight:

Boris lead up to 11%

Samuelcoatesdiary 9.30am ToryDiary: A day in the life of David Cameron

ToryDiary: Can anyone sum up in one memorable sentence what the Cameron-led Tories stand for?

Mixedageclasses Platform: Ryan Shorthouse advocates mixed-age classrooms

Parliament: Highlights of Ed Vaizey's speech about obesity

PlayPolitical video: Gordon Brown tries to impress Condi Rice but is outclassed by Nicolas Sarkozy in the latest Headcases comedy sketch

Polling_station Mayoral and local election news

Boris Johnson answers questions from The Independent

Labour MPs don't want Brown on the campaign trail with them - Daily Mail

Tories must make 200 gains - Professor Colin Rallings in The Telegraph

"The councils to watch are Reading, where Labour could easily lose overall control, and councils now with no overall control that the Tories could capture on a small shift of seats, such as Cheltenham, Vale of Glamorgan, Bury and North Tyneside." - Peter Riddell in The Times

Electoral fraud

Joseph Rowntree report says UK elections fall short of international standards on integrity - BBC

"Rowntree is not the first organisation to point out the shortcomings of the British democratic process. The Council of Europe, the Electoral Commission and the Electoral Reform Society have all highlighted serious defects" - Times leader

A Tory councillor has been found guilty of using bogus postal votes to ensure he was voted into office - BBC

Only 22% of businesses believe that they'd be a Conservative priority

"Fewer than one in four companies have faith in David Cameron to deliver for them, according to a survey by the British Chambers of Commerce. The Populus poll found only 22 per cent of businesses believed the Conservatives would make the needs of business a priority.  Labour’s rating was even worse, at only 14 per cent, in a survey revealing a deep-seated corporate cynicism about politicians’ ability to grasp business needs." - FT

> Richard Spring MP recently wrote for ConservativeHome about how "Strong business relations have been integrated into the Party"

Daleyjanetblackbackgroun Janet Daley: The Conservatives must do more to enthuse

"If the electorate is forced to choose between a party it has come to hate, and another that it regards as vacuous, it is more likely to stay at home. And what is going to be critical for a Tory victory both this week, and in the eventual general election, will be a high turnout." - Janet Daley in The Telegraph

Bruce Anderson: Public services for all will be David Cameron's priority

"Shortly before Nicolas Sarkozy became President of France, he visited London and told David Cameron how much he admired the economic reforms which Margaret Thatcher had pushed through in the 1980s. Mr Cameron was struck by this. Afterwards, he said that he hoped that the day would come, perhaps in the 2030s, when a French presidential candidate would tell a Tory leader how much he admired the public service reforms of the 2010s." - Bruce Anderson in The Independent

Brownite Smith Institute and IDS' Centre for Social Justice to co-operate on early intervention - Independent

LibDems ought to be doing better says Vince Cable - ePolitix.com

"I did not come into politics to be an annexe to the Labour party or an annexe to the Conservative party." - Nick Clegg on Today, PoliticsHome.com

Ministry of Defence overwhelmed by combination of commitments and budgetary restrictions - FT

Weekendhighlights ToryDiary: Who deserves the credit for the Tory comeback?

Peter Franklin on CentreRight: Muslim supremacist is the expression we should use instead of Islamist etc

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27 Apr 2008 09:00:52

Sunday 27th April 2008

7.30pm PlayPolitical video: Watch Harriet Harman admit to Adam Boulton that her username for her hacked blog was "Harriet" and her password was "Harman"

7pm ToryDiary: Gold, silver and bronze: Who deserves the credit for the Tory comeback?

4.45pm ToryDiary: April questions

10am ToryDiary: I will never sanction a Budget that singles out the working poor for a tax rise says Cameron

LondonMayor: Two of the four final polls point to a victory for Ken Livingstone

Platform: Graeme Archer finds the best reason on Earth to vote for Boris Johnson

ToryDiary: Our new opinion poll graphic shows Tories 2 seats short of a majority according to the latest ICM poll but heading for a majority of 26 according to the ConservativeHome poll of polls

Widdecombe_ann_new PlayPolitical: Ann Widdecombe tells Sky News that prison officers shouldn't be able to strike

Matthew Sinclair on CentreRight: Obama's protectionist policies should make him unacceptable to British Conservatives

Blair doesn't believe Brown can beat Cameron, says Lord Levy

Tony Blair believes Gordon Brown "could never beat" Tory leader David Cameron in a General Election and is "disappointed" by Labour's slide under his successor.  The devastating verdict is revealed by Blair's controversial chief fund-raiser, Lord Levy, whose sensational memoirs are serialised in today's Mail on Sunday... Levy tells how Blair ended up believing that Brown was a "liar" who tried to use the scandal as a weapon to unseat him." - Mail on Sunday

Brown: 'Mandelson's telling people I'm gay... and I am NOT GAY' - Mail on Sunday

Watch The Mail on Sunday's Simon Walters interview Lord Levy.

"Tony Blair went "bright red" when confronted over the long massages he was said to be receiving from the former topless model Carole Caplin, Lord Levy claims." - Independent on Sunday

Johnson_boris_2006 Mayoral and local election stories

The Camerons and the Johnsons campaign together in London's East End - BBC

Livingstone offers to give Boris a job and train him up - Observer

Livingstone to offer 'LibDems for Ken' manifesto in battle for 2nd preferences - Independent on Sunday

How to assess the results of this week’s local elections - Colin Rallings and Michael Thrasher in The Sunday Times

Sunday comment

The work that David Cameron still needs to do: "Most voters know their limitations. They can’t work out whether one policy is better for the country than another. But when one is advanced they try to read between the lines. They want to know whether the Tories really care, is it part of a coherent, costed message and, above all, is it being proposed for the good of everyone. So far, Cameron’s spokesmen have come up with some interesting thoughts about welfare reform and extending school choice as well some offputting jargon about “the post-bureaucratic age”. The latter is scheduled to be a big idea, but nobody out there knows what the hell it means.' - Martin Ivens in The Sunday Times

Osbornegreentie These are Labour, not Tory times: "Osborne goes through the motions, but what stymies him is that he is a believer in the very policies and attitudes that have delivered the crisis. It seems a matter of personal incredulity that free markets, in which he has invested so much political capital, deliver irrational credit booms and busts. In his mind, regulation is always the problem not the solution. Public intervention and ownership are always wrong... Even if he were less wedded to the old-time religion, he would still have his party to contend with, along with a powerful right-wing commentariat who, some honourable exceptions aside, are unreconstructed Thatcherites." - Will Hutton in The Observer

Labour is losing the will to govern: Matthew d'Ancona in The Sunday Telegraph

Celebrities warm to the Conservatives

Matthew Vaughn, Kirstie Allsopp, Allison Pearson, Dylan Jones; The celebrities who are endorsing the Conservatives - James Delingpole in The Sunday Telegraph

Devolution stories

Plaid Cymru should hold their noses and embrace a minority Tory Government - Matt Withers in Wales on Sunday

Mark Field MP attacks Ken Clarke's answer to the West Lothian Question as "inadequate and unworkable" - Scotland on Sunday

Lord Laidlaw, major Tory donor, admits to orgies and sex addiction - Scotland on Sunday | News of the World

Compensation boost for severely injured soldiers - The Sunday Telegraph

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