First Quote Added
aprile 10, 2026
Latest Quote Added
"Yet the case against [[w:Andy Coulson|[Andy] Coulson]] today is considerably graver than the case against Campbell. As deputy editor and then editor of the News of the World, he was presiding over what can only be described as a flourishing criminal concern. Cameron has privately remarked of Coulson that everyone deserves a second chance. Yet it is surely unwise to treat high political office as a version of a community rehabilitation scheme. Cameron may well win next month's election. He will be making an extremely worrying statement about the type of government he plans to lead if he allows Coulson anywhere near Downing Street."
"The phone hacking affair has displayed the Prime Minister [David Cameron] at his worst – a shallow, amoral, conniving careerist, determined to secure high office at any cost."
"Oscar Wilde once wrote that to lose one parent may be regarded as a misfortune, but to lose two looked like carelessness. For the Tories to lose two prime ministers in the space of three months shows, more than carelessness, that they are out of control. The government is already on its fourth finance minister this year; one of them, Kwasi Kwarteng, crashed the pound and ruined the party’s reputation for good financial management. Like the Republicans in the United States, the Conservatives are detached from reality. In a generation, they have become a party of monomaniacs, incompetents and ideologues. Like a thoroughbred that has run one race too many, it needs putting out to grass. After a decade or two in the wilderness, perhaps the party can recover — though let’s not rule out the possibility it is finished once and for all. That’s still a way off. In the wake of Ms. Truss’s resignation, the party announced plans to hold another leadership election, its second in three months. As with the contests that anointed Boris Johnson and Ms. Truss as prime minister, the choice will be made jointly by Tory lawmakers and party members. Even if, by some fluke, a half decent candidate won, it would not help their fortunes. The party is so riven by internal feuds, personal hatred and ideological disagreements that it has become ungovernable."
"[[Tony Blair|[Tony] Blair]] dedicated himself to cultivating the right wing press. I was really shocked. [...] I would be invited quite often into Downing Street just to speak to the prime minister. Why was he not governing the country, rather than talking to a pipsqueak like me? I just didn’t get it."
"My impression is that [[Keir Starmer|[Keir] Starmer]] does not have this slavish fascination, and this desire to groom the press generally, whereas it was a core feature of Blair."