25 percent hardly his fault
Come one Cameron, give the man a job as minister for civil liberties or some such, surely it's a good idea to let him raise the profile of all the stupidity coming out of uk.gov?
David Davis trebled his majority in his Haltemprice and Howden constituency in yesterday’s by-election, though the 35 per cent turnout will continue to raise questions over how much of a debate on civil liberties he has achieved. The former Tory shadow home secretary pulled in 17,113 votes in the election, giving him a 15,355 …
I was quite annoyed with the BBC interview on BBC breakfast this morning. I don't live in his area and I don't much care about what he did or why but the BBC spent the whole interview twisting facts to make his success look like a failure. I know the BBC long ago lost its ability to be impartial but this was above and beyond.
Nothing unusual then.......
Paris because I doubt she could suck as much as the interview did this morning.
As someone who abhors the ID database project and the undermining of habeas corpus in our desperate War on Terror, I should be in the cheering section for Davis, but instead I see him as a hypocrite and a phoney.
He knew he would be back in the Commons - he couldn't lose this election. He tried to tell voters in his constituency to vote on a single issue, despite that fact that they were electing an MP, not choosing an option in a referendum. He halved the turnout and - despite having no credible opposition - reduced his own vote by 25%. And he now has the audacity to claim that he has achieved a "spectacular" and "stunning" win as he shuffles into political oblivion.
We need champions to stand up against this ID database madness - but please, let they be credible ones, rather than opportunists and hypocrites. Civil liberties lectures from a man who opposed gay equality at every step of the way? Don't make me laugh.
The thing that struck me about this by-election is the deafening silence from the media. They have almost totally ignored the candidates and the issues. Even today when the results were declared, the news item (BBC News channel) was int second place behind a foreign news story - the austrian woman held in a cellar for year was going to be questioned.
The biggest side-effect of this election for me, has been to consider how democracy works in this country. It appears that giving people the opportunity to vote is one thing. However, to make the process free and transparent so that democracy actually takes place, the media (state, independent and foreign-owned) needs to have the ability to freely report it's operation and also the will to do so. So long as it fulfills it's responsibility and performs both of these functions, we can rest assured. Sadly, in this case - where there wasn't any drama, slanging matches or other components of "good" TV, they failed dismally in this duty.
It's no good candidates running on a freedom and liberty stance if the mechanisms to enforce those freedoms and liberties ignore them.
"The former Tory shadow home secretary pulled in 17,113 votes in the election, giving him a 15,355 majority, compared to the 5,116 he had at the last election. But the turnout was 25 per cent, compared to 70 per cent at the 2005 general election. "
What it tells you, is that people will vote against 42 days, but they won't vote FOR 42 days. The people who think, 'we'll maybe 42 is ok' didn't get off their ass and vote, but the people who think it's an abuse DID.
I tell you that everyone whose ever been falsely stopped and searched by a rozzer will vote against Labour. Because it's a humiliation to be stopped.
So they did polls, find 60% are in favour of 42 detention without charge ergo we must do it because it will help them get reelected... but the reality is that 40% will vote against them, and the other 60% will ignore the issue at election time.
Good fooking riddence to them. Would they set up Guantanmo camps if a poll said it was popular? What about death camps for blacks and jews? The man's not fit to lead, reading polls is not showing good judgement.
If the turnout in any election is below 50% then I think that clearly shows that there is no consent to be governed by any of the candidates. Without a turnout of at least 51% then I do not think the winning candidate can really claim a popular mandate. Some have claimed that low turnouts in elections show that the electorate are disillusioned with the electorar process, I think they show that the majority of the electorate do not wish to be governed by any of the candidates. This is the one lesson all parties should take away from low turnouts.
Labour will claim that they would have won had they fielded a candidate. After all a few years back after a kicking in local elections Blair more or less blaimed labour supporters for not voting.
Labour do not seem to believe the polls, they think that the only reason they ever lose an election is that labour voters don't turn out. They really seem to think that evrybody who doesn't vote would vote labour if they actually bothered to turn out. The upshot of this is that they think that by increasing election turnout they will suddenly start winning elections again.
Censorship? Most authors would publish comments about corrections and acknowledge corrections in the article.
You are still stating 25% on the first line, and the turnout at 34% is not actually that bad, considering the die-hard labour and lib-dem supporters would have stayed at home. The fact that so many came out under the circumstances is great for civil liberties.
It really is a sad comment that politicians have so enthralled the general public that the tremendous outbreak of apathy is virtually pandemic.
They have only themselves to blame, and as they've surrendered their duties to some unelected committee in Brussels, they only thing they have left to occupy their tiny minds is to perpetuate the trough in which their porcine snouts are generally to be found.
Bring back tumbrils!
Sigh. I'm a moderator, not a censor. But if the latter definition better satisfies your need for drama in this age of shrinking personal liberties, hey, fill your boots. I usually reject comments on sight that have the word 'censorship' in relation to comments, if for no other reason than that the irony fills me with glee. Because that's just the kind of guy I am.
We've now fixed the percentage issue - thanks to everyone who pointed it out. We generally don't publish comments about snafus because we prefer to just fix them and then send big kisses to the pointer-outers by email. Feel free to mail me direct if you spot anything. I mean, you can have a strop about it via the comments form if you prefer, it's just not that likely that anyone else will see it but me or my moderaminion.
sbee@theregister.co.uk
Spot on. There is a debate to be had about civil liberties, but this wasn't it. It was a sad piece of attention-seeking from a someone who knows he has been sidelined after losing the leadership.
For the record, I'm ok with 42, as long as it's subject to judicial oversight. As long as it's a Judge who decides whether to grant the extension (and not the Police themselves, or the Home Secretary etc) then I think that's a fair balance between civil liberties and common sense. As always, the devil's in the detail, and it's something that seems to get missed in all the excitement.