Iain Dale’s question

In response to Iain Dale’s question – can men use their sexuality to influence elections? – I bring you… “Congressman Studly

AaronSchock

I know next to nothing about this man – I’m a little vague on the name – but I’d vote for that.

Two interesting things happened about sex and nudity yesterday. First there were the German politicians getting their cleavage out in the name of electioneering.

Secondly one of the participants in the plinth extravaganza in Trafalgar Square got up there and took all of his clothes off. He was promptly ordered by police to cover up – at very least putting some underwear back on.

As the Lib Dem Glee Club song puts it so pithily:

You can end up in the dock
If you whip out your cock
In an English Country Garden

Tweets on 2009-08-13

  • @adambird I eventually found # at <Alt-Gr>-3, which sort of makes sense if you think the USians call it "pound" #
  • OMG I don't believe it, they've published my PIN! Everybody's PIN Number: Revealed! http://bit.ly/18re06 (h/t @adambird) #
  • RT @qikipedia: Don't forget the Perseids meteor shower reaching a peak tonight http://tinyurl.com/56cuhw #Meteorwatch #
  • Phew, got me parcels to Post Office in time. #
  • @ramptops Yay! hope you enjoy it, I thought it was great. #
  • Just found "After London" on Librivox. Now they've done everything on my private list of things I wanted to do one day. #
  • @CoriS ah, loving that old LV relentless positivism 🙂 #
  • Ah, fireflies. The flaming plates of the insect world. #
  • Hmmm. It wasn't me that edited the line about flaming plates from Better off Ted into the Wikipedia page on Fireflies. #
  • @artesea still haven't figured out what you meant about helicopters the other day? #
  • Struggling a little with the point of Mad Men. "Weren't the 60s horrid?" or "Ad men aren't nice people" or "Jon Hamm looks good in vintage" #
  • @charlottegore take the spaces out – welovethenhs and google that 🙂 #
  • No meteors tonight either. Just enough cloud to let the moon through, but too much for clouds. #

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Clegg impresses MoneySavingExpert.com

MoneySavingExpert is reporting that Nick Clegg answered an open letter to David Cameron before the Tories managed to get their boots on:

It came about in an unusual way. Clegg (pictured, right) is one of the 3.5 million recipients of the MoneySavingExpert.com (MSE) weekly money tips email. In it, three weeks ago, he spotted an open letter to David Cameron where MSE asked the Tory leader to back the campaign for automatic refunds.

While Cameron has not replied, Clegg, and his Shadow Chancellor Vince Cable, in a letter to MSE this week (see full text below), have promised to table a Parliamentary motion after the summer recess.

Nick also uses his letter to the financial expert blogger to plug the forthcoming consumer protection policy paper at Bournemouth conference next month.

(With thanks to MSE subscriber Hywel Morgan for the link)

Here at LDV, #welovetheNHS

One of Obama’s key pledges in the US Presidential elections was major healthcare reforms.  The US is a deeply divided nation on health as in many other policy areas – it is simultaneously home to some of the planet’s best hospitals, the best research in medical advances and the best healthcare practioners – and also home to some of the worst poverty and barriers to healthcare, the worst developed-world child mortality rates.

Without being facetious, almost all of my knowledge of the American healthcare system comes from my knowledge of US TV.  And whilst House has access to an amazing battery of diagnostic tests, and Grey’s Anatomy shows how competitive training programmes for surgery are, Chicago’s ER is full of hobos having their toes cut off with nail clippers after losing them to frostbite in the snow.

46 million Americans are without healthcare insurance, and so have no access to the top-notch hospitals and treatment, resorting instead to the nailclippers at ER.  By no stretch of the imagination are they all tramps.

By trying to address these problems, Obama is picking battles with some very resistant establishments, including highly profitable insurance companies with an essentially closed market. And in doing so, he has stirred up some hornets nests of misinformation claims.

Among these are a number of claims about just how awful the NHS is – as a model of “socialised healthcare” that some Americans want to avoid.  They include the bizarre claim that Stephen Hawking would be dead if he had to suffer with NHS level care – all the more bizarre to anyone who knows that Dr Hawking is not, in fact, American and is very happy with the life saving treatment he receives on the NHS.

The strange claims for UK healthcare have prompted an online campaign on Twitter of people talking about the excellent care they have received and marking their words with the tag #welovetheNHS.

It’s one of the great shibboleths of UK politics. Everyone knows there are still improvements to be made in the NHS, but when some upstart colony starts critising it on the basis of misunderstood facts, we should all leap to its defence.

A few other posts on blogs I have read in the last few days make interesting reading:  on the ObamaLondon blog, LDV’s friend Karin Robinson is doing her bit to debunk some myths.  And Jonathan Calder’s Liberal England provides an historical perspective of the UK’s own battles to introduce “socialised healthcare” in the 1910s:

“If the Insurance Bill becomes law it will be advisable for us to leave England.”

Meanwhile the Evening News is warning that “we shall never boast of freedom again if we let this measure past,” and writing feelingly of “these days of highly paid servants”.

The cost of employer insurance for domestic staff is uppermost in many minds.

Some things never change.

Tweets on 2009-08-12

  • @meryl_f you could phone their tech support or… Erm… Get a new email address? #
  • http://twitpic.com/dhymw – The new (and very expensive) city centre street signs. #
  • Hmmm. Local charity shop is selling Ikea plates for more than they cost in Ikea. #
  • @miketd there's a map on the website of city centre zones. It's the transport planners' admission they've over confused the roads. #
  • @artesea hopefully! #
  • @artesea @miketd google Nottingham Park Smart for full info. #
  • I keep mistyping park smart as park snarl, which is an interesting idea. No spaces! Grr! #
  • Irritated that the cat seems better at figuring out Mac keyboard shortcuts than I am. How did he just manage to close that tab?! #
  • Getting so many evils off the cat. "Why is that kitten still in my house? Get off your computer and feed me!" #
  • @chrishughes have you tried Better off Ted? #
  • Good people on twitter say there are meteors tonight, so I'm going outside to look for them. #
  • No meteors for me. Too many clouds. #
  • @darrenram Up! Look for the ones that move and aren't satellites. #

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Conference starts here on Lib Dem Voice

The party’s Federal Conference in Bournemouth is now just a few weeks away – and the key policy papers including the Agenda are now available from the party website.

Conference is such a huge topic, and will be covered so extensively here on the Voice that it’s hard to know where to begin.

Here are just a few interesting things to highlight:

  • The timings are a little different this year. Conference kicks off on Saturday morning with consultative sessions, and is formally opened Saturday afternoon. It continues through until Wednesday afternoon when the Leader’s Speech will be after lunch. Conference ends around 4pm
  • There will be an official Party Conference twitter feed at www.twitter.com/LibDemConf – with official news from the auditorium including the speakers being called.
  • There are five major policy papers, including A Fresh Start – which could well be the last  pre-manifesto paper before the general election; Are we being Served? a policy paper on consumers; Our Natural Heritage, Real Women – covered here already a little – and Thriving in a Globalised World. All five papers are available in a variety of electronic formats.
  • The consultative sessions – informal policy discussions that set the direction of major policy papers at future conferences – will be Disability, Quality of Life, and Localism

Lib Dem Voice at Conference

As ever the LDV team will be providing as full coverage as we can from the conference, including reportage, podcasts and as much as possible to make conference accessible and participatory for those not able to join us in Bournemouth.

We will also be hosting four fringe events, all of which will be recorded and podcast as mini-radio shows here on LDV.  The rooms are booked and topics selected, but some of the details and speakers are still to be finalised.  The basic details are as follows:

  • Campaigning after Rennard
    Saturday 19th September, 8pm Premier Inn, Bournemouth, Connect 2
    Our panel looks at the ramifications for the party of Lord Rennard’s departure.  How will we campaign in the future?
  • Blog of the Year Awards, 2009
    Sunday 20th September, 10pm Marriott Highcliffe, Old Harry’s Bar
    Lib Dem Voice Editor at Large Stephen Tall is your compère for this bejewelled event now well established in the party calendar.  Nominations and judging for the event take place in August – see the website for more information.
  • Liberal Drinks
    We will once again be having an informal night drinking beer at a pub one night of Federal Conference. We will be returning to the Goat and Tricycle – and this year, we’ve even warned the bar staff to expect us! It’ll be the Monday evening of conference from 7.30pm
  • Beyond Twitter – e-engagement in local and national politics
    Wednesday 23rd September, 1pm Marriott Highcliffe, Shaftesbury Suite
    How can people in politics at both a local and national level engage meaningfully with the people they represent?

If you’d like a taster of LDV fringes, the recording of our excellent meeting “Learning the Lessons from the Obama Campaign” is still available.

On LDV before Conference begins

We hope to use the blog to bring you news and debate long before the conference begins.  If you’re proposing a motion or an amendment, feel free to submit an op-ed piece on why delegates should support your views.  If you’re hosting a killer fringe – tell us about it!  And if you’re a non-party organisation bringing a stall to conference, you can write an opinion piece in our Independent View section – remember our blog reaches many thousands more Lib Dems than conference does. Our ad service at Message Space is also available if you’d like to explore paid-for advertising with us

Tweets on 2009-08-11

  • Buying a wood-burning pizza oven this year? Don't get conned! http://bit.ly/YLvgy #
  • I love phoning National Rail Enquiries about journeys via Machynlleth. "You have to change at… mashy.. mackylin…" #
  • RT @owenblacker Wow. More stunning photojournalism from the Boston Globe: Hiroshima, 64 years on: http://is.gd/2aAzs #
  • Amazing hot air balloon photos: Balloon Launch « Flickr Blog http://bit.ly/TxKZ8 #
  • Today's weird Renault fault – dashboard instruments and lights not working. How do I hand-signal left?! #
  • @jamesgraham *groan* #
  • Nottingham Council House is hosting an exhibition about local people have been awarded the Victoria Cross. #
  • @willhowells hope that's actors at home not on stage, where they should probably leave it up to the lighting guys. #

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Revamp for Prater Raines sites

An email arrives from web guru and Lib Dem county councillor Tim Prater, who is the public-facing half of Prater Raines, the hugely successful company that now supply local websites to a large proportion of the nation’s Liberal Democrat local parties, council groups and MPs. (The full, awesome list, from Aberconwy to Yorkshire and the Humber is here). It’s no small boast that they probably run more political websites than anyone else in the country.

They have a good track record of innovating and keeping content going online. But things have changed in the seven years since they first started to provide their content management system to the party, and they are now proposing a major upgrade to the service they offer.

On the cards is new, better control over layout and appearance, a greater ability to change the front page, and more contemporary “reveal” and top-down menus. Web 2.0 aspects and integration with a vast array of social networks will work better; on the management side, the user interface will also improve so that managing these websites gets better, easier and faster.

Crucially, they’ve promised to make sure that any changes they make don’t clash with the general election, as and when it comes. The initial plan is to launch “Foci2″ around Christmas.

But before they do that, in true Liberal Democrat style, they are launching a consultation to ask users what it is they would want from a new, improved system:

We want your ideas. What would you do to improve your site? And would you be prepared to do some “beta testing” of the new site as we develop it before release so that you can tell us what you like, and what needs improving?

To send us your views and ideas, please email us at <!–
sto_dom='praterraines.co.uk'
sto_user='foci2'
document.write('‘ + sto_user + ‘@’ +sto_dom + ‘‘)
//–>foci2 – foci2.hat.praterraines.co.uk.spam.com (this is spam bot hidden email address, replace .hat. with @ and remove .spam.com for the real one) – we’ll take them all on board, but will prioritise. Some will be ideas to include for a site relaunch, some to be added later, and some we may want to talk about – and we’ll do so. If you have views on what currently works well for you, what doesn’t, and what you wish it could do, please tell us!

And if you could help with user testing – either from home or by meeting us in person and working through the beta site – then we’d also like to hear from you. We’ll be at Federal Conference and hope to see you then, but will also set up meetings across the country in the next few months to fully test the new site with real people before we go live.

Do remember some of the problems with some Prater Raines sites are “horse-to-water” problems. One of the key strengths – and weaknesses – of the system they sell is that beyond providing a platform, it’s up to the client local party what they put on their website. So if your criticisms relate to updating, or to content, of a specific site, then those things are probably not something that Prater Raines can help with.

Oldham’s violent bars on Panorama

Tonight’s Panorama – at 8.30pm on BBC1 – features reports on a huge increase in violent attacks in bars in Oldham – and what the Lib Dem council there is doing about it.

Yorkshire Street is the main drinking area in Oldham which had a 200% increase in serious violent incidents in the first four months of this year.

That’s a stabbing or an assault with intention to kill on average every Friday and Saturday night.

But the Greater Manchester town has come up with a unique way of fighting back the recent spike in alcohol-related disorder.

The council believes promotions such as 2-4-1s, drink as much as you can for £5.99, and free shots, have fuelled an atmosphere of violence.

So it decided to review the licences of each of the 22 bars and clubs that sell cut-price drinks.

They have been told that if they want to sell alcohol at less than 75p a unit – about £1.88 for a strong pint of lager – they will have to change the way they operate.

The specific plans make interesting reading:

Oldham council has come up with a model of how its bars could be forced to work if the minimum price is not adopted.

Under the new conditions, drinkers will not be allowed to approach the bar and must wait in a post office style queuing system instead.

Customers would also only be allowed to buy just two drinks at a time and outlets could be made to provide extra door staff as well as paying for police officers to watch over the bar.

Any bars or clubs that refuse to follow the council’s new blueprint, could lose their licences.

I’m a little surprised that the Licencing Act is flexible enough to lawfully let one council make changes like that in how pubs and bars operate. All my own limited experience of sitting as a sub on licencing panels suggests that councils don’t have a great amount of discretion when it comes to what and what isn’t allowed.

But what do you think? Are the measures from the Council a sensible and pragmatic response to a real problem, or an over-zealous bureaucrat’s approach to a statistical blip? And will Panorama make a balanced argument or a one-sided polemic? Tune in to find out – and post your thoughts to our comments thread.

(hat-tip to Costigan Quist for tweeting about this this afternoon.)

CommentIsLinked@LDV: Vince Cable doesn’t know when the economy will recover

Our Vince penned a piece for the Daily Mail yesterday with the  delicious title “The economy is now sitting up and showing signs of recovery

In it, Vince made the startling admission that he is not, in fact, an all-seeing mage with black powers over the future of the economy:

I am often asked to play the part of Nostradamus. Since I had been a reasonably successful prophet of doom, I am now assumed to know when the economy will turn round. I don’t. No one knows.

It does seem likely, however, that a major disaster has been averted. We are no longer in a downward spiral of falling production, falling wages, falling prices and Thirties-style dole queues. Armageddon didn’t happen.