On the radio this Sunday, 10pm

Appearing on Radio 4's The Westminster Hour with Carolyn QuinnThis Sunday I’ll be appearing again on The Westminster Hour: Radio 4, 10pm.

If you miss the show you’ll be able to listen again on their website.

If you want to get advanced notice of my media appearances like this one, you can use the media events service at Flock Together. You’ve got three choices:

  1. Using this feed: http://feeds.feedburner.com/LiberalDemocratsMediaAppearances, or
  2. By email: register at FlockTogether and pick “Media appearances” as one of the categories of events you want to be emailed about. (If you are an existing Flock Together user you can also change your preferences – login and then click “Edit your preferences” in the left-hand menu; you need to tick “Media Appearances” under “Email options”), or
  3. On the web: take a look at the dedicated Flock Together page.

Ten most popular blog postings (4th quarter, 2007)

Well – happy new year everyone, and without further ado – here’s what keeping you reading on this blog over the last three months.

10. Low Copy Number DNA – a recap of my concerns about Labour’s plans for our DNA records, back in the news after this controversial new technique was criticised by the judge in the Omagh bomb case. I suspect I got a lot of traffic to this post as lots of people went searching for information on the topic after the news of the judge’s comments broke.

9. Crimestoppers caught advertising on illegal radio station – still going strong much to my surprise as the story is quite old now (see also the update if you’re new to the story).

8. Ian Blair should go – London’s top cop keeps making mistakes, and the time’s come for him to take direct personal responsibility for this record. As it turned out, only one Blair went in ’07.

7. Shadow Cabinet reshuffle – not really a blog posting because – as the news came out on my birthday – I just bunged up the news release – but nice to know so many people wanted to know quickly what post I’d got!

4. Wikipedia and its limitations – a slightly different posting from me this time; lesson noted that you dear reader like this sort of stuff!

3. Britain turns its back on more than half our Iraqi interpreters – the ongoing scandal of Labour’s refusal to protect those who worked for our armed forces in Iraq.

And of course the Lib Dem leadership contest featured – coming in at six, five, two and first in the list – no surprises there!

(Click to see the previous top tens).

A word conundrum for Christmas

Christmas treeWell – so far so good. I just love this moment, when I’ve got through all the preparation. I have done my shopping, bought my presents and the Christmas fare.

(Digression: can never understand why food is called ‘fare’ at Christmas. A bit like on the radio some host was saying why do we say ‘merry’? We don’t say Merry Birthday or Merry New Year.)

I’ve been watching all my Christmas movies (if anyone has a real feel-good, tear jerker of a Christmas movie that I might not know about – let me know). I have: both Miracle on 34th Streets, It’s a Wonderful Life, Scrooge (Alistair Sim), Scrooged, The Muppets Christmas, Nightmare Before Christmas, Love Actually and Prancer. So – new suggestions welcome. (I have seen the Elf and Santa Clause movies – but not so keen).

My favourite Christmas song is Fairytale of New York. My favourite Christmas movie is Love Actually. I absolutely love it all. I stay home with my two daughters and close the door on the outside world. My sister and her family come round for a drink on Christmas Day – but that’s it for socialising. It is a very precious time.

Even blog postings will inevitably diminish now until the New Year. So enjoy the rest. Be happy. Peace on earth and goodwill to all – still works for me! Merry Christmas.

Low Copy Number DNA

Picture of DNAIt’s a while since I’ve written about Low Copy Number (LCN) DNA testing, but the news today that – as a result of the Omagh bomb trial – the use of this technique is to be reviewed (see BBC story for details) is welcome.

As I wrote previously, “LCN DNA should only be used cautiously – and only with corroborating evidence”, and as I put it in an article on the dangers of DNA databases and the like, it is highly risky to place your faith in technology always working flawlessly: “As investment goes in, a commercial imperative is involved and as DNA increases its aura of infallibility – will the police (or the public, when the information is ‘conveniently’ leaked?) believe those who say they weren’t at the crime scene even though their DNA was? And how long before corroborative evidence becomes less necessary?” (read the rest of the article here).

The Christmas Fairy Tale returns

SnowmanI do a monthly column for the Ham & High newspaper through the year. After all the serious pieces, the Christmas one is my little bit of fun: my annual Christmas Fairy Tale.

Of course some people think this is terribly out of order and MPs should be terribly dour and serious all the time (hello diary columnists!), to which I say – as every year – bah humbug!

Featured on Liberal Democrat Voice

Shadow Cabinet reshuffle

I’m enjoying my birthday today! So – in place of a proper blog entry, here’s the news release about my new Shadow Cabinet job:

Hornsey & Wood Green MP, Lynne Featherstone, has today been appointed as Lib Dem Youth and Equalities Spokesperson in Nick Clegg’s Shadow Cabinet.

The newly upgraded Shadow Cabinet post is part of the new leader’s drive to move away from the ‘broken politics of Westminster’ and to reconnect the party with issues of genuine concern to ordinary people.

Lynne Featherstone MP comments:

“Now more than ever do young people and those who face discrimination need a strong champion. I look forward to fighting for their corner on the national stage using the skills I have learnt in sticking up for the people of Hornsey & Wood Green.

“Young people are all too often forgotten in this government’s priorities and sadly we have seen the results locally with gang violence on the streets of Haringey and cuts in youth services.

“More alarmingly, in spite of decades of legislation on equalities, there are still areas of our society that are deeply unequal. Men still earn more than women, a black man is still more likely to go to prison than to university and there are still countless obstacles for many who just want to be treated like anyone else.

“I can’t wait to get stuck into these issues in the New Year.”

Nick Clegg, newly elected leader of the Liberal Democrats added:

“Lynne is a fantastic campaigner and I am pleased to have her on board my team to fight for these important issues where Labour has seriously failed to deliver for so long.

“I have no doubt she will use the formidable skills she has gained standing up for the people of Hornsey & Wood Green to be a real champion for young people and those who face discrimination in our society.”

(You can read about the rest of the Shadow Cabinet changes on the party website and on Liberal Democrat Voice.)

Rubbish and recycling collection times in Haringey (updated)

Lynne Featherstone and Ed Butcher recycling
(Note: the first version of this post was based on what Haringey Council said on the phone. Turns out they got it wrong, so here’s the correct information. Apologies to anyone bemused by the first version.)

Normal Collection Day / Holiday Collection Arrangements
Monday 24 December / Normal collection
Tuesday 25 December / Saturday 29 December 2007
Wednesday 26 December / No collection this week
Thursday 27 December / No collection this week
Friday 28 December / Normal collection
Monday 31 December /Normal collection
Tuesday 1 January / No collection this week
Wednesday 2 January / Normal collection
Thursday 3 January / Normal collection
Friday 4 January / Normal collection

Nick Clegg wins leadership contest

Not my week! First Leon, then Matt and now Nick! Seriously though – well done to Nick. Commiserations to my brave candidate Chris – who fought a phenomenal campaign. And before I turn to Nick, let me first give credit to Chris for his superb campaigning. When the going got tough – as it did – Chris did not lose his cool or hit out in the way so many do. The measure of this man is his hunger, his energy, his temperament and his determination. At the start I said Chris has the cojones. Not half he has!

However, he lost and Nick won – and the quality of Chris’s campaign means that Nick’s victory over that reflects well on Nick. I suspect that Nick found winning much harder than he expected at the start of the campaign – but if he has come out of the campaign a tougher and more seasoned campaigner (and I know I did each time I ran in party selections for rather less high profile posts) – then that is all to the good for the party and our future.

Nick’s direction, verve, energy and messages are what will now be key to driving the party forward to success. This contest has been about our future – and the point of wanting the crown is not just to wear it – but what Nick does with it. He has got to deliver on the promises he made – to be anti-establishment and to deliver principled radicalism and to challenge the cosy consensus of the stagnant, old-fashioned, two-party politics further and faster.

Those are shared aims across both leadership campaigns – so I have no doubt that the whole party will be wishing Nick luck, and working hard to help him deliver those aims.

Today begins a new era for Liberal Democracy. This is a break with the past and a mandate to change the way politics is done. We are at a critical point in our trajectory in British politics. We need more seats to deliver more Liberal Democrat policies with a bigger and louder voice!

Of course, the real problem is that in the next election we will be focused on by the media probably solely on who we will get into bed with if there is a hung Parliament. I say ignore all that crap and fight to win. If the maths delivers such a verdict – then we should respect that outcome and deal with it when it arise, always doing that which will see the maximum number of our policies and beliefs enacted.

But we should also remember (and remind the media!) that a hung Parliament would raise questions for both Brown and Cameron on how they would act: so each time a journalist asks about a hung Parliament, we should perhaps politely promise to give them an answer – after they have run their stories about Brown and Cameron’s answers first!

Meanwhile, we must raise our membership; make sure that we will have a more diverse representation in the elected positions at every level of office; champion the key issues of fairness and greenness; and stand up for and fight for freedom against an over-weaning, authoritarian centralist proposition of New Labour and expose the vacuous poverty of Cameron and his Conservatives.

All of this is underpinned by our belief in a liberal society: tolerant people living in peace freely; caring about those who cannot take care of themselves; looking after our planet and the future; being honourable in our international responsibilities and eschewing the corrosive seduction of the ‘it’s business – that’s how the world works’ school.

So – congratulations to Nick, commiserations to Chris – and now let’s work together to win more power for that which we all believe in!

Personalities or policies: what should politics be about?

It’s not really the done thing is it, saying “oh, politics should be about personalities”? Well – I’m certainly a fan of substance and policies in my politics (and that’s one reason why I’m not a fan of a certain Mr D Cameron!) but I think someone should speak up occasionally for the role of personality … which is what I do in my latest piece in Liberal Democrat News. You can read the full piece here.