Steady as she goes: Labour and the spooks

Lobster Issue 35 (Summer 1998) £££

Patriots not sneaks After a year of New Labour I feel beholden to write something on this subject, but what is there worth saying that isn’t blindingly and depressingly obvious and predictable? Jack Straw, who took over as Home Secretary, and thus formally as the boss of MI5, is determined to sedate any sleeping […]

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It’s all Jacques to me

Lobster Issue 57 (Summer 2009) £££

[…] belief in the market rather then the state, the individual rather than the social – exercised a hegemonic influence over British politics, with the creation of New Labour signalling an abject surrender to the new orthodoxy.’ (1) As if he had nothing to do with it!’ Two of the recipients, Tim Pendry and William […]

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Hugh Gaitskell

Book cover
Lobster Issue 32 (December 1996) £££

[…] the siting of a new generation of nuclear weapons in Britain, a rising trade union official was invited to the west London home of a former US labour attaché. On the recommendation of a colleague who was active in the Labour Committee for Transatlantic Understanding, he had been proposed for a trip to Washington […]

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My enemy’s enemy…: Museum Street

Lobster Issue 22 (1991) £££

[…] time to be a social democratic ally of the United States. In Britain we had “the Wilson plots’; in Australia Gough Whitlam, Jim Cairns and the Australian Labour Party got Governor Kerr and the CIA; in Germany Willi Brandt resigned after a “security scandal’; in New Zealand a series of domestic scandals blighted the […]

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Spinning the European Union: pro-European propaganda campaigns in the British media

Lobster Issue 44 (Winter 2002/3) £££

[…] was augmented by several others. Foreign Office official Gladwyn Jebb was instrumental in forming the Common Market Campaign, with Roy Jenkins as deputy, which aimed to recruit Labour intellectuals and trade unionists to its cause. Other campaigns were launched by the Conservative and Liberal parties, Federal Union (assisted by a number of former civil […]

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Fifth Column

Lobster Issue 53 (Summer 2007) £££

[…] police state. The evidence for true tyranny in either country is weak. However, since it came to power in 1997, it might be reasonably argued(1) that New Labour has brought the United Kingdom one third of the way towards a ‘tyranny’ if we look closely at what the Blair Government has actually done since […]

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Where’s Ware?

Lobster Issue 39 (Summer 2000) £££

[…] to their reputation(s).(6) In the early Thatcher years Tory Party central office set up a section to trawl for, collate and occasionally invent, local government (i.e. anti- Labour) ‘stories’ that were then fed to the media, giving birth to the ‘loony left’.(7) Through the ’80s and ’90s, as TV programmes such as Beadle’s About […]

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Tittle-tattle

Lobster Issue 56 (Winter 2008/9) £££

[…] Lord Thomson, who shared his son-in-law’s strong interest in defence and Europe, became a European commissioner in 1972, one of the many Atlanticist Gaitskellites to find the Labour Party an increasingly inhospitable home as the Vietnam War, the Chile coup, and other US foreign policies failed to chime with younger party members as they […]

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Confessions of a Crawler

Lobster Issue 42 (Winter 2001/2) £££

[…] Margaret Thatcher, and later with John Major. This material is extremely interesting, providing, among other things, an insider’s account of Murdoch’s embrace of Tony Blair and New Labour. In a country with a more robust democratic tradition what Wyatt reveals would be a scandal, in Britain we have become so used to governments courting […]

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The view from the Bridge

Lobster Issue 47 (Summer 2004) £££

[…] the spook Since the last issue I have skimmed Paddy Ashdown’s two volumes of diaries. While dominated by his attempt to do a deal with the Blair-led Labour Party, there are some other interesting snippets; and, through Ashdown’s eyes, there is a detailed portrait of Tony Blair which suggests that Rory Bremner’s impersonation of […]

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