David Ward

9.5K posts

David Ward

David Ward

@davidwardsays

Mancunian in exile...Cricketer...United and Lancs fan...politics...construction...arts/culture

London, England Entrou em Şubat 2010
2.9K Seguindo627 Seguidores
David Ward
David Ward@davidwardsays·
@Richard00655575 @JohnWil45304495 @FraserNelson Spads came in under Callaghan. Bernard Ingham used to call officials useless and once slammed a door so hard it came off its hinges after a meeting. Your timeline of alleged politicisation just doesn’t wash
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Richard
Richard@Richard00655575·
@davidwardsays @JohnWil45304495 @FraserNelson I pointed out the the CS has been politicalised especially with the introduction of SPADS (Civil servants) who behave like Government enforcers. I gave the very recent example of McSweeney telling the FO to "just F**king approve". Alastair Campbell was the most prominent SPAD.
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Fraser Nelson
Fraser Nelson@FraserNelson·
“Starmer has left the civil service defenceless against its many opponents. That is why I worry that this affair may not just be the end for him.” Danny Finkelstein on the wider implications of the Olly Robins debacle:- thetimes.com/article/bcaef8…
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David Ward
David Ward@davidwardsays·
@Richard00655575 @JohnWil45304495 @FraserNelson That’s not what he’s saying. The CS has always had 4 types of role: admin, expert, delivery, policy. There had historically been too much focus on policy ppl. He’s saying 1999 paper was a good start in addressing that but more to do.
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Liam Halligan
Liam Halligan@LiamHalligan·
UK 10-year gilt yields today surged no less than 0.4 percentage points - or 40 basis points - due to fears that Britain is almost uniquely vulnerable among the world's big economies to spiralling fuel food and fuel prices. The UK is the most inflation-prone economy in the G7. That weakness hasn't been caused, but has been more starkly exposed, by this US/Iran conflict. So the huge global investors that lend governments money are charging Britain far more than any other G7 nations - more than Spain, Greece and Morocco (!) - to borrow, as compensation for higher expected UK inflation. A 40bps point move in a single day, on a large-nation sovereign bond market, is a huge and deeply alarming shift. The UK government's 10-year borrowing cost is now 5.15pc - its highest level since June 2008, just ahead of the global financial crisis. This is a situation that warrants immediate and determined attention and yet our entire political and media class remains fixated with the ultimate Westminster-centric story – a deeply indulgent row about who knew what, when with regards to the appointment of Peter Mandelson as US Ambassador. History will not be kind to us ... My latest @Telegraph "Economic Agenda" column 🧵1/6 telegraph.co.uk/business/2026/…
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Smolt
Smolt@JohnWil45304495·
@Richard00655575 @davidwardsays @FraserNelson The MODERNISING GOVERNMENT WHITE PAPER (1999) (q v) was a good start and built on and with the Thatcher-conceived Executive Agencies. However there is scarcely a mention of science and scientific staff, despite the fact that there are thousands of them.
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David Ward
David Ward@davidwardsays·
@lukemcgee No good to us though - the blockade continues
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David Ward
David Ward@davidwardsays·
@afneil Modern sculpture has been distinctly unimpressive for decades. It’s genuinely hard to understand why. We have a strong creative sector after all.
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Andrew Neil
Andrew Neil@afneil·
I appreciate the Cabinet Office has a lot on its plate at the moment. But I do think you should be able to spell Commonwealth correctly. You’re meant to be the civil service elite. PS The memorial to our late Queen is distinctly underwhelming.
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Yasir Ai
Yasir Ai@AiwithYasir·
🚨 Just IN: This paper from Stanford and Harvard explains why most “agentic AI” systems feel impressive in demos and then completely fall apart in real use. The core argument is simple and uncomfortable: agents don’t fail because they lack intelligence. They fail because they don’t adapt. The research shows that most agents are built to execute plans, not revise them. They assume the world stays stable. Tools work as expected. Goals remain valid. Once any of that changes, the agent keeps going anyway, confidently making the wrong move over and over. The authors draw a clear line between execution and adaptation. Execution is following a plan. Adaptation is noticing the plan is wrong and changing behavior mid-flight. Most agents today only do the first. A few key insights stood out. Adaptation is not fine-tuning. These agents are not retrained. They adapt by monitoring outcomes, recognizing failure patterns, and updating strategies while the task is still running. Rigid tool use is a hidden failure mode. Agents that treat tools as fixed options get stuck. Agents that can re-rank, abandon, or switch tools based on feedback perform far better. Memory beats raw reasoning. Agents that store short, structured lessons from past successes and failures outperform agents that rely on longer chains of reasoning. Remembering what worked matters more than thinking harder. The takeaway is blunt. Scaling agentic AI is not about larger models or more complex prompts. It’s about systems that can detect when reality diverges from their assumptions and respond intelligently instead of pushing forward blindly. Most “autonomous agents” today don’t adapt. They execute. And execution without adaptation is just automation with better marketing.
Yasir Ai tweet media
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Paul Vick
Paul Vick@PaulVick138203·
Which one of the last 4 prime ministers do you think has done the best job as prime minister?🤔 Repost after voting please.
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Tameside Correspondent
Tameside Correspondent@TamesideCorr·
Fifty years ago, Tameside Conservatives seized power at the local elections. What happened next changed UK case law forever. The 1976 elections saw a shift in power from Labour to the Conservatives in Tameside. At the heart of their campaign was opposition to an unpopular new education policy from the then-council. Read more: tamesidecorrespondent.co.uk/2026/04/19/the…
Tameside Correspondent tweet media
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(((Dan Hodges)))
(((Dan Hodges)))@DPJHodges·
As we report today, he chose to appoint as his Ambassador to Washington a man who was being targeted by Russian intelligence from as far back as the 1980's. A man who was specifically warned about his relationships with Putin's allies. A man Red Flagged by the security services.
Lizzy Buchan@LizzyBuchan

EXCLUSIVE: Keir Starmer warns the UK must not take its eyes off Putin from top-secret Vanguard sub visit I joined the PM on a rare trip aboard a nuclear-armed submarine returning from lengthy patrol at sea mirror.co.uk/news/politics/…

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David Ward
David Ward@davidwardsays·
@edzitron Open AI pulling out of building these pointless warehouses is probably the best news the UK economy has had in years
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Ed Zitron
Ed Zitron@edzitron·
Based on multiple discussions with sources I am not confident that even *building 2* of Stargate Abilene has actually been fully finished.
Hedgie@HedgieMarkets

🦔Satellite imagery from geospatial analytics firm SynMax shows nearly 40% of US data center projects may fail to complete this year as scheduled. The Financial Times cross-referenced satellite data with permit documents and found major projects from Microsoft, Oracle, and OpenAI are likely to miss completion dates by more than three months. Industry executives cited chronic shortages of labor, power, and equipment. OpenAI projects specifically lack enough electricians and pipe fitters. Tariffs on Chinese transformers are compounding existing equipment shortages. Maine legislators passed an 18-month moratorium on new data center approvals, the first such statewide action in the US, pending the governor's signature. My Take The satellite imagery puts a number on what was already visible in the supply chain data for months. Nearly 40% failing to complete on schedule is a fundamental challenge to the timeline that hundreds of billions in AI infrastructure investment was underwritten against, and the trajectory isn't improving. The AI buildout requires physical tradespeople, electricians, pipe fitters, civil engineers, none of whom can be replaced by the technology being built. The same companies announcing plans to cut 20% of their knowledge workers cannot train or conjure skilled tradespeople on demand. Community opposition is hardening simultaneously, Maine's moratorium is the first statewide action of its kind, and Virginia's shift in public opinion signals that even the most data-center-friendly states are reaching a limit. What has been announced and what is actually being built are increasingly different things, and that distance sits underneath the valuations of every company whose growth story depends on this infrastructure arriving on schedule. Hedgie🤗

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David Ward
David Ward@davidwardsays·
This was obvious to anyone from the moment the story broke. Why did it take so long for people to get here?
Sam Coates Sky@SamCoatesSky

What do I think really happened with Mandelson and vetting? In October, November and December 2024, No10 indicated it wanted to appoint Peter Mandelson as Ambassador to Washington. It was presented with an array of people telling them not to: Cabinet ministers, spooks, officials in a vetting report. All raised major red flags. Starmer and McSweeny made clear they weren’t interested in any objection, and this must go ahead at all costs. So Mandelson’s appointment was announced mid December 2024. The vetting we are focussed on today came later, in January 2025. Vetting of ambassadors is the responsibility of the FCDO and Olly Robbins. One bit of the system said no - the UKSV agency said don’t appoint Mandelson. We don’t know on what grounds, but probably the grounds No10 had seen and rejected as a reason to block. Olly Robbins cleared Mandelson. Very quietly, Mandelson didn’t get the very highest level of clearance when he got the job, but he got the overall OK because of Robbins. Robbins did No10 a favour. This is because Olly Robbbins knew that going to No10 post announcement, and saying the Mandelson appointment can’t happen, was politically impossible. And civil servants want to deliver for their political masters. So Olly fixed it for Keir: and is now paying a price. Olly Robbins has - incidentally - done No10 a second massive political favour. The really really toxic claim doing the rounds last night was that surely someone - anyone - in No10 DID know the UKSV agency turned down the vetting Olly Robbins is making clear he didn’t tell people the UKSV verdict because that would be inappropriate as part of the process he followed. It’s not even clear he saw it. No10 don’t seem to realise he’s done them a favour, and are releasing documents to challenge alternative versions of events. Let’s see how it plays out. The bottom line is No10 wanted Mandelson come what may. They rammed it through. One quango; post appointment announcement, was never realistically going to be allowed to stop Mandelson taking the job because the top of Government had publicly committed to it. They hadn’t wanted to heed the warnings earlier; and were in too deep That’s where I think we are

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Sam Coates Sky
Sam Coates Sky@SamCoatesSky·
What do I think really happened with Mandelson and vetting? In October, November and December 2024, No10 indicated it wanted to appoint Peter Mandelson as Ambassador to Washington. It was presented with an array of people telling them not to: Cabinet ministers, spooks, officials in a vetting report. All raised major red flags. Starmer and McSweeny made clear they weren’t interested in any objection, and this must go ahead at all costs. So Mandelson’s appointment was announced mid December 2024. The vetting we are focussed on today came later, in January 2025. Vetting of ambassadors is the responsibility of the FCDO and Olly Robbins. One bit of the system said no - the UKSV agency said don’t appoint Mandelson. We don’t know on what grounds, but probably the grounds No10 had seen and rejected as a reason to block. Olly Robbins cleared Mandelson. Very quietly, Mandelson didn’t get the very highest level of clearance when he got the job, but he got the overall OK because of Robbins. Robbins did No10 a favour. This is because Olly Robbbins knew that going to No10 post announcement, and saying the Mandelson appointment can’t happen, was politically impossible. And civil servants want to deliver for their political masters. So Olly fixed it for Keir: and is now paying a price. Olly Robbins has - incidentally - done No10 a second massive political favour. The really really toxic claim doing the rounds last night was that surely someone - anyone - in No10 DID know the UKSV agency turned down the vetting Olly Robbins is making clear he didn’t tell people the UKSV verdict because that would be inappropriate as part of the process he followed. It’s not even clear he saw it. No10 don’t seem to realise he’s done them a favour, and are releasing documents to challenge alternative versions of events. Let’s see how it plays out. The bottom line is No10 wanted Mandelson come what may. They rammed it through. One quango; post appointment announcement, was never realistically going to be allowed to stop Mandelson taking the job because the top of Government had publicly committed to it. They hadn’t wanted to heed the warnings earlier; and were in too deep That’s where I think we are
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David Ward
David Ward@davidwardsays·
@HCH_Hill Anyone who's ever been vetted or seen other people being vetted did, yes.
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Henry Hill
Henry Hill@HCH_Hill·
I can't believe nobody asked: "So, what is the purpose of security vetting if nothing about it can be communicated to the person making the appointment? And did anyone know the system worked this way before last week?"
John Rentoul@JohnRentoul

The Rest Is Politics podcast

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John Slinger MP
John Slinger MP@JohnSlinger·
Sport gets a bulletin every hour. Culture barely gets a mention. This week I introduced a Bill in the Commons to change that. A regular cultural news bulletins, alongside the sport. Add your name 👇 change.org/p/creative-art…
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Matthew Ford
Matthew Ford@warmatters·
Decisions taken a decade ago are all catching up with Britain’s strategists.
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