Entries from September 2009 ↓

Alan Watkins, Brief Lives (Auberon Waugh)

I think I may have mentioned Brief Lives by Alan Watkins before.

There’s an hilarious passage on Auberon Waugh that I must share with you.

“He did his national service as a subaltern in the Royal Horse Guards and was sent to Cyprus. One day he noticed and impediment in the elevation of the Browning machine gun in his armoured car, and resolved to investigate it. He moved to the front of the gun, seized it and wiggled it up and down, whereupon it started to fire bullets into him. He survived, but lost a lung, his spleen, several ribs and a finger. As he was lying on the ground, waiting for the ambulance, he said to his platoon sergeant, a parachutist from Bristol called Chudleigh: ‘kiss me, Chudleigh.’ Chudleigh, however, did not spot the reference, and afterwards treated Waugh with suspicion and reserve…..It was believed by some that he had been fired on by his own troops – similar stories were told about his father – and also that he had lost a testicle, but both these tails were convincingly denied by Waugh”

I’m still laughing, days after reading that passage.

Electoral imprints in the digital age

I mentioned that the government had decided not to take powers that might oblige political parties to use electoral imprints in the online space. Well Mark Pack has excelled himself in coming up with a draft set of principles for digital electoral imprints. You can find the draft proposals over at the Wardman Wire. I’m going to mention this to the General Secretary of the Labour Party next time I see him. It strikes me that if Labour, the Tories and the Lib Dems sign up to a common set of principles it will have a positive effect on the type of online campaigns that are considered acceptable by voters and members of political parties.

Lord Ashcroft buys commanding stake in ConservativeHome

How totally unsurprising.