Malcolm Case

6.7K posts

Malcolm Case

Malcolm Case

@casejm

Retired exiled Geordie interested in politics, economics, sport, gardening, jazz and blues. Cleared of cancer of the UT but distracted with blood cancer.

West Midland, England Katılım Ekim 2011
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Malcolm Case
Malcolm Case@casejm·
@PaulEmbery @joerichlaw The problem for the Labour Party is that these voters are culturally right wing and economically left wing. The current Labour Party doesn't understand that and definitely can't deal with it.
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Albert
Albert@GrandadAlbert·
@DannyShawNews Spain has 3 police forces. Local Police Guardia Civil Police National Police
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Danny Shaw
Danny Shaw@DannyShawNews·
NEW Police mergers are on the way. There'll be "fewer, larger" forces in England & Wales - under legislation announced in King's Speech. Govt says in every force there will be "Local Policing Areas" headed by a senior officer. Also confirms creation of National Police Service.
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Owen Jones
Owen Jones@owenjonesjourno·
We don’t know what happened exactly. But he has the look of someone who has just been told to fuck off.
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Malcolm Case
Malcolm Case@casejm·
@confidencenac In our constituency Reform only made one policy point - resist development on Green Belt. Which was exactly the same as the Tories.
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Nadia
Nadia@confidencenac·
My post today comes from replying to so many messages about last week’s elections and the daily updates on new Reform councillors. Local government is tough and demands real experience to hit the ground running. Some voters clearly chose fresh faces and the Reform label over proven local track records - that’s democracy, and every voter’s right. But the choice must be owned! There was no detailed manifesto in my area to judge them by beforehand, but judge them we must - on what they actually deliver for local services and our communities in the months and years ahead. I will be looking out for my residents that I served. Good councillors from all parties, including some excellent ones who lost their seats, worked hard on the ground. Experience matters in this job. I’ll keep focusing on the work that needs doing. I’ll keep sharing what needs to be shared.
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The Sales Bull 🎯 Follow if you sell B2C or B2B
Rachel Reeves raised employer NI to fund the NHS Two venues close every day 100,000 hospitality jobs gone since October 2024 Young people losing their first jobs so NHS diversity managers can piss more money up the wall
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Jonathan Hinder MP
Jonathan Hinder MP@Jonathan_Hinder·
The Brexit Derangement Syndrome is off the scale at the moment. Reform (formerly known as the BREXIT PARTY) just swept to victory across working class areas. Response? Oh, it’s obviously time to rejoin the EU… Do these people even believe in democracy?
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Malcolm Case
Malcolm Case@casejm·
@vicderbyshire No mention of the Grooming Gang inquiry and what's happened to it. But then Phillips was never interested in having an inquiry.
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Victoria Derbyshire
Victoria Derbyshire@vicderbyshire·
And she goes on: ‘Over a year ago I presented solutions, long worked on by brilliant civil servants that would end the ability for children in the UK to take naked images of themselves. 91% of online child sex abuse is self-generated by children groomed, tricked and exploited in to abuse. The technology exists to stop children being able to take naked images of themselves. We could make this possible on every phone and device in the country. We could stop this abuse. It has taken me a year to get you to agree to even threaten to legislate in this space. Not legislate, just threaten. This is the definition of incremental change. Nothing bold about it. The announcement was meant to be in March, I'm still on a promise this will happen in June, I've given up believing it. How many children were left without a safety net in the time we dilly dallied and worried about tech bosses?’
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Victoria Derbyshire
Victoria Derbyshire@vicderbyshire·
Brutal resignation letter from Jess Phillips accusing the PM of action on violence against women & girls *only* as a reponse to ‘catastrophic mistakes’ & after ‘threats’ by JP when Safeguarding Minister ‘…real change and direction in this area usually came from threats made by me in light of catastrophic mistakes. The Mandelson saga whenever it bubbled up made No. 10 kick into gear on the subject in order to prove our credentials. I will never waste a crisis to make advancements for women and girls and so demands were made and some were met’
Victoria Derbyshire tweet media
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Paul Johnson
Paul Johnson@PJTheEconomist·
All Labour MPs should be looking at this very carefully. Potential leadership contenders who reckon that more borrowing and/or (even more) growth unfriendly policies on tax, spend and regulation are the way forward should reflect on it even more carefully.
Fraser Nelson@FraserNelson

Regicide is a dangerous game to play if you're on the fiscal brink - and UK is more exposed now than under Liz Truss. comment.press/brown

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Paul Mason
Paul Mason@paulmasonnews·
3/ The sheer absence of imagination from MPs demanding Starmer's departure now is staggering. Without a clear cut and professionally audited fiscal policy alternative, this graph forms the baseline for what you will trigger
Paul Mason tweet media
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Malcolm Case
Malcolm Case@casejm·
@MatthewStadlen No. Dale Vance of Ecotricity , a major Labour donor (£4Mn last year alone) has been given billions in subsidies, for his renewable business.
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Matthew Stadlen
Matthew Stadlen@MatthewStadlen·
Anyone else been given five million quid recently? Or is it just Nigel Farage?
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LoubyLou 🇬🇧🌹
LoubyLou 🇬🇧🌹@Duddiesmum·
Listening to @Keir_Starmer giving his speech and I can't imagine any other party leader & in particular Nigel fucking Farage be as compassionate & compelling as our PM is. He is the right man to lead this Country, not a grifter who takes bungs, deals in crypto & hates migrants!👏
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Malcolm Case
Malcolm Case@casejm·
@hiltonholloway The example of Finland is misleading. The reason 88% of Finns would fight for their country is that all 19 to 30 year old have to do National Service and act as reservists for the next 20 years. Can't see Lewis accepting that approach.
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Hilton Holloway
Hilton Holloway@hiltonholloway·
Obvs, a PPE merchant sent this to Clive 'Trigger' Lewis, but just to touch on social housing, what happened last time Labour decided to build homes for votes? Concrete hellholes. And, hardly a decade ago, the state tried upgrade the concrete blocks by wrapping them in foamed oil.
Clive Lewis MP@labourlewis

Westminster may finally be about to have the argument it has spent 40 years avoiding. If Andy Burnham returns to Parliament, the political class will know how to cover it. A leadership drama. Who is up, who is down, whether Keir Starmer can survive, whether Labour is once again turning inward. The familiar machinery of Westminster psychodrama will whirr into life. That framing misses the larger point. Burnham’s possible return matters not because of what it says about Labour’s leadership, but because of what it reveals about the British state: what it can still do, what it has forgotten how to do, and what kind of country it must become if it is serious about resilience. Britain is finally having a more serious conversation about national security. The Strategic Defence Review, the pivot back towards Europe, the recognition that hybrid warfare turns citizens, infrastructure and civic institutions into part of the front line: all of it marks a real shift in how the state thinks about its own survival. But at the centre of that conversation lies a question that the defence establishment, and most of Westminster, still does not want to answer. What kind of society do you need to be before resilience is possible? Finland is now the model everyone cites. Comprehensive security. Whole-of-society defence. Civilian preparedness woven into military planning. British strategists admire the Finnish system and ask how it might be copied. But the admiration stops short of the uncomfortable question: why does it work there? The answer is not geography or history or some mysterious quality of Finnish national character. It is structural. Nearly 80% of Finns say they would defend their country if attacked. In Britain, the figure is closer to 33%. That gap is not an accident. It exists because Finland has spent decades building a society in which people have a genuine stake in what they are being asked to defend. Energy is affordable. Housing is available. Public services function. Institutions command trust. The Nordic welfare state is not a sentimental add-on to Finnish security policy. It is the foundation of it. You cannot ask people to defend a country that does not work for them. Britain has spent 40 years building the opposite. The privatisation of essentials – energy, water, transport, housing – transferred wealth upwards from households to shareholders while making the basics of everyday life more expensive. The state, stripped of the tools to control costs at source, has been reduced to compensating after the fact. Out of every pound the Government spends on housing, 88p goes to subsidising private rents. Just 12p goes to building homes. When energy prices spiked in 2022, the Government spent £40bn in a single winter cushioning the blow, not because it had a resilient energy system but because it lacked one. Debt interest now consumes more than £100bn a year. Britain has the highest debt servicing costs in the G7: the compounding price of financing failure rather than eliminating it at source. This is what bond market dependency actually looks like. It is not an abstract fiscal condition. It is the consequence of a state that has been stripped of the supply-side tools that would let it cure the problems it now pays, indefinitely, to manage. And here is the paradox the Treasury refuses to confront. The countries that borrow most cheaply are often those that have retained the public investment model Britain abandoned. The spread between UK and Dutch borrowing costs has widened sharply not because markets fear public investment, but because they have lost confidence in a model that borrows to subsidise private failure while never addressing its causes. This is the connection Britain’s defence debate is missing. The familiar framing, that social spending is what must be sacrificed to meet the NATO target, is not merely politically toxic. It is strategically illiterate. Cutting the foundations of social cohesion to fund the hardware of national defence is self-defeating. You end up with planes and no pilots, submarines and no crew, an army that cannot recruit because the society it is meant to protect has stopped believing in itself. I think Burnham understands this. That is why his programme is more interesting than the leadership gossip suggests. What he has been building in Greater Manchester – public control of transport, expanded social housing, investment in the productive foundations of the city economy – is not a nostalgic rerun of postwar nationalisation. It is a proof of concept for a different kind of state. The Bee Network is the most visible example, but the argument behind it travels. A state that can shape markets is not condemned to subsidise their failures. A state that produces affordable energy through public generation does not need to spend tens of billions cushioning every price shock. A state with a serious public housebuilding programme does not need housing benefit to rise endlessly in line with private rents. A state that builds institutions people can see, use and trust begins to restore the civic confidence on which resilience depends. The real constraint on Britain is not money. It is capacity: the workers, institutions, supply chains and public purpose needed to turn national will into national renewal. Britain’s tragedy is not that it has run out of money. It is that after 40 years of hollowing out the state, it has made itself less able to act. Burnham’s critics will reach for the familiar warning. Borrow more, spend more, spook the gilt markets, repeat the Truss disaster. But this misunderstands both the problem and the opportunity. Bond markets do not have ideological preferences. They have functional ones. They prefer clarity, credible revenue streams, productive investment, and a state with a plan. What they punish is not public ambition but incoherence. A properly designed productive state programme would not be a leap into fiscal fantasy. It would be an attempt to end the much costlier fantasy that Britain can keep borrowing to compensate for broken markets while refusing to repair them. The defence conversation and the economic conversation need to become the same conversation. Finland did not build national resilience by choosing between welfare and security. It built resilience by understanding that they are inseparable: that a country in which the basics work, where people trust one another and the institutions around them, is one that can face danger with something more than anxiety. That is the deeper argument Burnham represents. Westminster will be tempted to treat him as a leadership story. It should resist the temptation. The question is not whether Burnham can return to parliament. It is whether Britain can return to the idea that the state should make life work. Because a country that cannot command the confidence of its people cannot truly defend itself.

Midhurst, England 🇬🇧 English
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Will Hutton
Will Hutton@williamnhutton·
Changing Prime Minister in mid-parliament only works if there is a decisive break with what went before and the bravery to pursue big ideas. Rejoining the EU always made economic and strategic sense. Now it makes political sense.
George Eaton@georgeeaton

How does Labour recover? Rather than chasing Reform and the Greens, the party must reclaim the radical centre – and a pledge to rejoin the EU is its best hope of building a winning coalition. My piece for @ArguablyMag on the lessons of the elections. arguably.uk/p/how-does-lab…

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Malcolm Case
Malcolm Case@casejm·
@Chris_Leigh_UK @williamnhutton Spending £18Bn on joining a political union when we can't afford the defence spend necessary for our security seems a tad irresponsible. Especially as any economic benefits would take up to 3 years to appear, whereas the £18Bn would disappear in year 1.
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Barrister's Horse
Barrister's Horse@BarristersHorse·
"He's good on the International Stage" No he isn't. He's good at giving away land and money, without warning or mandate, or good reason. He's a liability and a dangerous one at that because he's so gullible & self absorbed.
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Malcolm Case
Malcolm Case@casejm·
@LizWebsterSBF @frankmueller101 That'll just ensure rejection when voters realise it means joining the Euro and paying £18Bn membership fee immediately, with any economic benefits taking up to 3 years to materialise. Plus losing better trade deals with the US and Australia, among others.
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Liz Webster
Liz Webster@LizWebsterSBF·
🧵 Labour’s only path to victory is rejoining the EU 1/ Ben Judah in The Sunday Times: Labour is on course to lose the next election unless it goes bold on Europe. Starmer’s cautious reset with red lines intact will not revive the party. The one lever left? Commit to rejoining the EU. Labour has one path to election victory: rejoining the EU thetimes.com/article/a83104…
Liz Webster tweet media
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David Smith
David Smith@dsmitheconomics·
My Sunday Times piece: The gilt market is calmer, because despite huge Labour losses the PM is still there. But markets are on high alert for another lurch into political instability: The bond vigilantes are back, and a Starmer coup would cost us all thetimes.com/article/1bc40f…
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