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If Scots take independence we'll miss Jerusalem, but not Noel Edmonds | Shelagh McKinlay

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We're being scolded like naughty schoolkids for having this vote, but there's far more at stake than just currency and the Beeb

Scots have been misbehaving again, caught red-handed behind the bike sheds, fumbling around with self-determination, filthy little blighters.

Consequently, we have lately been on the receiving end of a variety of threats if we don't tow the constitutional line. "No pound for you, for your cheek!" according to Osborne et al. "Go! Walk out the door! But we'll be keeping the BBC," says culture secretary Maria Miller. Now the insurance giant Standard Life is warning that it could quit Scotland in the event of a yes vote.

Whether any of this transpires is, of course, anybody's guess. But what might Scots really miss if we left the Union, and what might we be glad to see the back of?

*Good riddance
*

*Noel Edmonds *Middle England in stacked heels. Hamster-cheeked and coiffured like a land girl, but with the cold dead eyes of a hedge fund manager. Compulsory fun. The salmonella at a barbecue. Noel's HQ alone should have meant deportation.

*Last Night of the Proms* Braying, swaying, flag-waving embarrassment of maudlin sentiment cloaking post-imperialist impotence. Also, too much Per Una from Marks & Spencer in the audience. No ta.

*Henley Regatta* A nail-biting battle of sitting down and grunting while a little man shouts at you. The competitors are alright, I guess, but any sporting event that involves looking like an ice-cream seller in Disneyland can do one.

*Nadine Dorries *Particularly as cheerleader for a plasticised, virulently mean-spirited celebrity Toryism that debases our democracy. Narcissism posing as public service. Scotland would have mocked her brand of political snake oil into oblivion before we'd even heard of it.

*London *Voracious, monster city of rotting billionaires' mansions, malevolent corporations and political carpetbaggers. Sucking money and talent from all corners of the UK like a heart working in reverse. Also, north London types colonising decent pubs during the Edinburgh festival. It is SO annoying.

*What will we do without you?
*

*Wayne Hemingway* Archetypal northern maverick. Sexy vowels. Hot specs. Arousing social conscience. Environmentally sustainable. More please.

*Jerusalem, the hymn *My GOD, but it's a CHOON, innit?

*Posh experts *The Antiques Roadshow crew. Decent poshos with great facial hair who know the price and the value of things. We just don't make people called Bunny Campione who can elegantly fondle a chairleg.

*Feeling hard done by *To paraphrase Michael Jackson in Ben, we used to say, "us" and "we"; now it's "I", now it's "me". But how will we define ourselves without someone to blame? Who will we shake by the lapels as our mascara runs down our cheeks and down another drink, trembling from the thrill of being used? Germany? Perhaps we can develop an inferiority complex about not being Scandanavian. Yes, let's do that.

*London *Oh, London, you crazy, mixed-up, teeming mess of humanity. You gloriously multicultural hive of industry and talent. Always teetering on the brink, but somehow holding it together. Alive with possibility. Oh, London, I would always regret you. Reported by guardian.co.uk 6 hours ago.

MP Dorries says compo-claiming triple murderer Thakrar ‘shouldn’t get anything’

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MP Dorries says compo-claiming triple murderer Thakrar ‘shouldn’t get anything’ Nadine Dorries MP has waded into the row over Stevenage triple murderer Kevan Thakrar receiving £815 in compensation because his nose hair clippers were broken by a prison guard. saying he “should Reported by The Advertiser Stevenage 4 days ago.

EPHRAIM HARDCASTLE: David Davis hosts a 'welcome back' reception for Nigel Evans

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EPHRAIM HARDCASTLE: David Davis hosts a 'welcome back' reception for Nigel Evans Davis likes welcoming exiled colleagues back to the fold. He held a similar do last year for Nadine Dorries following her unsanctioned appearance in the I’m A Celebrity jungle. Reported by MailOnline 4 days ago.

Nadine Dorries MP: The tools to fight cyberstalking

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Nadine Dorries explains why she will use her debate today to call for measures to increase awareness of the tools available to combat cyberstalking Reported by ePolitix.com 13 hours ago.

Nadine Dorries MP leads parliamentary debate on cyberstalking

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Nadine Dorries MP leads parliamentary debate on cyberstalking MP for Mid-Bedfordshire Nadine Dorries led a debate in Parliament this week calling for Government to ensure police officers are trained in powers to stop cyberstalking. Reported by The Advertiser Stevenage 4 hours ago.

Calls to end cyberstalking

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Mid Bedfordshire MP, Nadine Dorries, calls for a greater awareness over the "serious, modern-day offence" of cyberstalking. Reported by BBC News 1 hour ago.

Homeless spikes row: Nadine Dorries brands Liverpool council anti-homeless for 'using arm rests on benches'

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Political mudslinging surrounding the use of spikes to deter the homeless has taken another turn after a Conservative MP reproached Labour-controlled Liverpool for having benches with arm rests. Reported by Independent 1 week ago.

Commons Confidential: Tories got no soles

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Plus: the PM’s early bedtime.

Cameron getting his Zzzzzs. Montage: Dan Murrell/NS

*Jeremy Paxman*, the retired rottie, has time on his hands after bidding goodnight to Newsnight, yet it was still a surprise to bump into him at the Durham Miners’ Gala. Paxo’s the type of chap who’d be more at home at a Countryside Alliance fete and his expression was bemused as the procession of brass bands and pit banners went past his hotel. At the city’s old racecourse, fiery speeches from union leaders and Dennis Skinner left the masses wanting to march on London to overthrow the political establishment. Intriguingly, I’d earwigged a discussion between Conservative MPs a few days earlier about whom they want to succeed Boris Johnson as Mayor of London in 2016. Top of the list is a broadcaster who describes himself as a “One Nation” Tory. Paxo laughed when I informed him, a response that a veteran interrogator for a certain late-evening BBC2 current affairs programme would recognise wasn’t a complete denial. I can see the Newsnight report now: Paxo at the front of a tandem, cycling to City Hall as Johnson sits behind.

*We knew the chillaxing* Cameron’s no Stakhanovite, but I hear from a very reliable Downing Street snout that in the summer the Prime Minister goes to bed when it’s still light. He likes to be tucked up by 9pm on Tuesdays before Prime Minister’s Questions. One unkind Tory wondered aloud why Cameron felt the need to turn in so early. “After all,” he mused, “he’s only facing Ed Miliband.”

*There’s no love lost* between the two wings of the ConDem coalition. Cons eagerly anticipate the demise of Lib Dems. Holier-than-thou Simon Hughes’s difficulties in Bermondsey, where Labour is putting up its stiffest challenge since he won the seat 31 years ago, are bolstering Tory spirits. Hearing the justice minister could be ousted, Alec Shelbrooke, a blunt Yorkshire Tory, was overheard offering to make a donation to the anti-Hughes cause.

*Ahead of the reshuffle*, a southern Tory muttered that I should watch clips of ambitious Esther “Posh Scouse” McVey when she was a humble reporter for GMTV. “She didn’t have a bloody accent then,” grumbled her resentful male colleague. Buller Boy Cameron may believe most people oop north keep coal in the bath but I suspect the Old Etonian is aware that Posh Scouse was privately educated at a minor public school. These things matter more inside a snooty Tory hierarchy than out.

*Nadine Dorries* boasts she didn’t always wear red-soled Louboutins. The celebrity MP told the Ampthill Literary Festival in Bedfordshire that when she was a child, her family was so poor, she often couldn’t go to school because she’d no shoes. I always knew the Tory party had no sole.

Kevin Maguire is the associate editor (politics) of the Daily Mirror Reported by New Statesman 2 days ago.

Labour’s Charlynne Pullen vows to fight a tough campaign taking on Nadine Dorries for the Mid-Bedfordshire seat

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Labour’s Charlynne Pullen vows to fight a tough campaign taking on Nadine Dorries for the Mid-Bedfordshire seat The Labour Party has chosen the woman who will go head to head with MP Nadine Dorries to fight for the Mid-Bedfordshire at the next election. Reported by The Advertiser Stevenage 3 days ago.

Mid Beds Labour candidate attacks ‘I’m a Celebrity’ MP Nadine Dorries

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Mid Beds Labour candidate attacks ‘I’m a Celebrity’ MP Nadine Dorries THE Labour Party has chosen the woman who will go head to head with MP Nadine Dorries to fight for the Mid-Bedfordshire at the next election. Reported by Luton on Sunday 1 day ago.

MPs’ thousands earnt on the side

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MPs’ thousands earnt on the side MP Nadine Dorries has raked in almost £170,000 in the last two years - and that’s without adding the £66,000 a year she earns as an MP. Reported by Beds on Sunday 12 hours ago.

'House of Cards' scheming means Boris Johnson's supporters afraid to go public, MP claims

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Supporters of the Mayor of London's leadership ambitions will not come forward because the goings on in Parliament are just like the scheming political drama House of Cards, Nadine Dorries says Reported by Telegraph.co.uk 5 days ago.

Forget the leadership, George, it's Boris Johnson who's the key to Conservative Party success, says Tory MP Nadine Dorries

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Forget the leadership, George, it's Boris Johnson who's the key to Conservative Party success, says Tory MP Nadine Dorries With Boris Johnson batting for the team, we have a much stronger chance of winning the next General Election, writes MP Nadine Dorries. Reported by MailOnline 3 days ago.

Nadine Dorries lands six-figure book deal to write two more novels

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Despite critics lambasting Nadine Dorries' story of life in poverty-stricken Fifties Liverpool, her first book has so far sold more than 100,000 e-book copies Reported by Telegraph.co.uk 5 days ago.

Guido Fawkes: whipping politicians into shape?

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David Cameron, Michael Gove and Nigel Farage among those lining up to hail anti-establishment blog on its 10th birthday

He might have began his career as an acid house promoter, but *Guido Fawkes* founder Paul Staines seems to have become a fully paid-up member of the establishment. At the political blogs 10th birthday bash, held on Tuesday night at the Institute of Directors banqueting hall in Pall Mall, the guest list featured ministers Liz Truss and Francis Maude, Tory strategist Lynton Crosby, plus MPs including Conor Burns, Nadine Dorries and Simon Danczuk. Gatwick airport sponsored the event, doubtless hoping to win backing for its second runway plan from the political heavyweights present. A besuited Staines and co-conspirator Harry Cole opened the event with a double-hander hailing those who had played a role in the blog, including a nod to Sophie Wittam (Alex Wickhams alter ego in the Brooks Newmark sting). Cole looked back on a decade featuring 23,000 blogposts, 5m words, 300m page views, 130 national newspaper columns, countless scoops, superinjunctions that were dangerously broken, ministers resigning and MPs in the nick, thanking the countless bent politicians, the lazy hacks, the shagging ministers, the pervy peers, the incompetent civil servants, the secret sources, the smearing sinners, the disgruntled employees, the raging Spad and the extremely bored bag carrier who have kept us in pixels for 10 years now. He also boasted of the the blogs role in having prematurely ejected from parliament Tim Yeo, David Ruffley and Brooks Newmark. But that didnt discourage a string of tributes to Guido from top-tier Tories. David Cameron congratulated the blog, saying what better way to celebrate a decade of rejecting the cosy political establishment than by hosting a cocktail reception and and a dinner in the heart of Westminster with with half the cabinet and lobby invited? Michael Gove hammed it up in a House of Cards-style video, saying: Here in the whips office the black book is no longer where the real stuffs kept. It is perhaps on the Guido Fawkes website instead. You might think that I couldnt possibly comment. There was also a video message from Nigel Farage introduced by Cole as the leader of the opposition, while Boris Johnson turned up in person. Wednesday wouldve been a good day for politicians to bury bad news or have a scandal break, as it appears the Guido bloggers were too busy publishing back-slapping posts from the previous nights birthday bash to bother with any actual, you know ... news.

Continue reading... Reported by guardian.co.uk 1 week ago.

Which Tory MPs haven't campaigned in Rochester yet, and what does this tell us?

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The chief whip, Michael Gove, names and shames the Tory MPs who haven't yet visited Rochester and Strood to campaign against a Ukip win.

Tory party chair Grant Shapps campaigning in Rochester. Photo: Getty

The Conservative party is becoming increasingly strict about its campaigning in Rochester and Strood, ahead of the by-election on 20 November. Unnerved by the polls giving Ukip – whose candidate Mark Reckless used to be one of their own – the lead, the Prime Minister has instructed his MPs to visit the constituency "at least three times" before the polls close, with cabinet members and whips visiting at least five times.

The Telegraph reported this morning on the chief whip Michael Gove's tactic of sending out regular "Roll of Honour" emails to the parliamentary party, listing the number of times each MP has visited the seat, and naming and shaming those who have yet to travel to Medway to take on their former colleague.

I got hold of one of these emails, and the 108 MPs who are listed under "0 visits" sent around late yesterday morning (some of whom may well have been embarrassed into scampering to Kent today) makes interesting reading.

I won't publish all the names, but the list includes:
 

*Cabinet members*

Eleven ministers haven't yet made the trip, including cabinet members such as the Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond and the Transport Secretary Patrick McLoughlin. High-profile ministers on the list include business minister Matt Hancock, Treasury minister Andrea Leadsom and defence minister Anna Soubry, and almost all the health team. The new education minister Sam Gyimah is also on there, and he used to be David Cameron's PPS...
 

*Those who *have been identified* as having a better chance running under the Ukip banner*

Nigel Mills

Martin Vickers

David Nuttall

Chris Kelly

 

*Those who have been rumoured as potential defectors*

Peter Bone

Philip Hollobone – the most rebellious MP

George Eustice

Bill Cash

John Baron

Henry Smith

 

*Rogues and eurosceptics*

Nadine Dorries – has referred to Cameron and George Osborne as "two arrogant posh boys" and floated the notion of candidates running on joint Ukip-Conservative tickets

John Redwood – one of the most media-happy eurosceptic backbenchers

Adam Afriyie – once rumoured as a stalking horse for the Tory party leadership, and tabled a rebel amendment calling for the EU referendum to be brought forward to 2014

 

Although the absence of a number of ministers is probably more down to their time pressures than any political statement, 11 is a surprisingly high number considering the by-election is only a fortnight away.

More significant is the number of MPs either linked to eurosceptic views or more directly to having some alignment with Ukip's overall agenda who haven't been to campaign. This list is a telling insight into the general party's attitude to this by-election. The Tory line is that Reckless is not as popular a figure among constituents as their first defector, Douglas Carswell, is in Clacton. One cabinet minister told me at the party's conference that Reckless is a "complete dick". But it seems many of the party's MPs would prefer not to battle against him in his constituency – or rather, to battle against Ukip.

Reckless himself – although it is admittedly in his interest to do so – suggested to me that, if he wins, there could be more Tory defections ahead:



There are one or two Conservative MPs who I've had conversations with, and I spoke to a number of colleagues who are keeping matters under review; some will be looking very closely at me during the by-election, but whether anyone else will move, I don't know.

Reported by New Statesman 16 hours ago.

Why Lorraine Kelly wouldnt compliment Robert Downey Jnr on his bum

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Men dont have to fend off unwanted sexual comments in the way women do. Its about putting women back in their place

In case you were wondering what Robert Downey Jr thinks of TV host Lorraine Kellys knockers, heres the definitive answer: he thinks theyre pretty nice. I said hello and he looked at me and said, nice tits, she told Jonathan Ross in an interview that airs tomorrow night, adding that such a comment is difficult to respond to in a professional context. In Now magazine, condensed into lad banter, this story has become Lorraine Kelly: Robert Downey Jr loved my boobs, followed by the chummy, lets-all-have-a-bloody-great-laugh admonishment: Cmon Lorraine, theres no harm in looking! To which I might add: yeah, Lorraine, why cant you just learn to chill out once in a while?

Kelly has probably been taking a leaf out of some female parliamentarians books, who are notorious for being totally unrelaxed about men touching and commenting on their bodies. Edwina Currie, that well-known prude, spoke last year about how shed avoid getting in the lift with certain parliamentary colleagues because: You didnt want to find that when you got to your floor, you were pushing their hand from under your skirt. Labour peer Oona King clearly no fun on a Saturday night complained that men would shout Melons! Melons! and make hand gestures whenever a woman stood up in the chamber, as if that isnt all part of the fun of working in government. And lets not forget how Angela Eagle got her knickers in a twist over being told to Calm down, dear, by the PM, never mind when Nadine Dorries had the gall to complain about sexual innuendos surrounding her perceived frustration.

Continue reading... Reported by guardian.co.uk 16 hours ago.

Commons Confidential: Ed’s accusing finger

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John Woodcock, MP for Barrow and Furness who chairs the Blairite faction, was accused by the wobbly one’s praetorian guard of stirring the pot.

Point of view: Ed delivers a speech at the Science Museum in June. Photo: Getty

*Milibandites point* an accusing finger at Labour’s Progress tendency for destabilising tales of plots and supposed letters demanding the head of Ed. John Woodcock, the MP for Barrow and Furness and a former frontbencher who chairs the Blairite faction, was accused by the wobbly one’s praetorian guard of stirring the pot. The intended beneficiary, according to a well-placed snout, is the business-friendly Chuka Umunna, under the spell of Peter Mandelson. Big money is apparently lined up behind an Umunna leadership bid, whenever it comes, with the Progress sugar daddy Lord Sainsbury ready to open a fat chequebook that has been kept shut to Labour since Ed Milibrother beat David. Just because Mil the Younger is now paranoid, that doesn’t mean he isn’t aware of who is out to get him.

*Buller Boy Cameron* will be desperate to avoid another of his Dave the Sexist blunders at the G20 in Brisbane. TUC general secretary Frances O’Grady is also attending the summit of international leaders. During a session at the World Economic Forum in Davos, the Prime Minister peered into the audience for questions and picked “the lady in the red dress”. The lady in red was O’Grady.

*Dave the Sexist’s* spinners claimed that the bright lights had blinded their man. This excuse is feasible but couldn’t be deployed after he suggested, with schoolboy innuendo, that Nadine Dorries, the Con MP, was “extremely frustrated” or after he instructed Labour’s Angela Eagle, “Calm down, dear.”

*Labour’s deputy leader* is unfairly stereotyped as dour. I bring you two further examples of Harriet Harman’s humour. The row over feminist T-shirts that were allegedly made in a Mauritian sweatshop isn’t funny but Harperson raises a laugh at events by quipping that she owns tights older than members of Young Labour. She also claims to have been mistaken several times for the cross-dressing potter Grayson Perry. Only the tribal Harman could be relieved to be confused with a Labour-supporting male artist rather than with Claire Perry, the Tory minister.

*I’ve heard a new name* mentioned for speaker when John Bercow hangs up his cape. It is that of Stephen Pound, the tattooed Ealing wit. Popular Pound, a former merchant navy seaman and bus conductor, is follically challenged, so the wig that goes with the job may prove a greater inducement than the apartment.

*Alan Johnson* isn’t interested in a new job, but the former home secretary’s one-time special adviser Mario Dunn has popped up in a new role. Un-Super Mario is spinning for Maximus, the US firm now doing Atos’s old work of assessing the “fitness” of disabled benefit claimants. Nasty work if you can get it. 

Kevin Maguire is the associate editor (politics) of the Daily Mirror Reported by New Statesman 2 days ago.

Former Conservative minister Edwina Currie set for I'm a...

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Former Conservative minister Edwina Currie set for I'm a... Former Conservative minister Edwina Currie is set for a move to the jungle as one of the contestants of I'm A Celebrity ... Get Me Out Of Here! The 68-year-old, who has previously appeared on Strictly Come Dancing and Wife Swap, will join X Factor's Jake Quickenden, the Sun reported. The new series of the show that sends celebrities into the wilds of Australia to take part in challenges including the Bushtucker Trials begins tomorrow. Speaking previously about Conservative MP Nadine Dorries... Reported by Western Daily Press 1 day ago.

Nadine Dorries: 'Why I'm supporting hypocritical Edwina Currie in the Celeb jungle'

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As Edwina Currie enters the celebrity jungle, Sophy Ridge speaks to former contestant MP Nadine Dorries about why we need more women politicians on television - and what the experience did for her body confidence Reported by Telegraph.co.uk 1 day ago.
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