Six reasons why CCHQ wants to control Tweets


by Sunny H    
February 8, 2010 at 10:30 am

Conservative party HQ wants to control Tweets and blog posts by their candidates, we reported over the weekend.

Why could that be? Here are five six reasons why.

“I’ve been reading up on the impact of previous economic downturns on our health. Interestingly, on many counts, recession can be good for us. People tend to smoke less, drink less alcohol, eat less rich food and spend more time at home with their families.”
Andrew Lansley, The Blue Blog

“This is going to be the most unpopular blog I’ve ever written, but here goes. MPs should set their own salaries. They should be free – encouraged, even – to take on additional jobs. And the fuss about how much they can spend on their kitchens is silly and demeaning.”
Daniel Hannan MEP, Daily Telegraph blog

“People and governments have spent too much and borrowed to do so. Now the world’s markets are saying enough is enough. Living standards in both the public and private sector have to be brought down. The private sector has to sell more abroad and consume less at home. The government sector has to get closer to just spending what it can collect in taxes.”
John Redwood MP

“Why is it that some groups in society, notably homosexuals, seem to regard almost any reference to themselves as automatically pejorative? It suggests a terminal lack of self-respect and self-confidence, an over-developed sense of victim-hood, a mighty chip on the shoulder.”
Roger Helmer MEP

“Global warming is a politicians’ scam designed to centralise power and increase taxes”
Roger Helmer MEP

“I personally favour a system of social insurance with levels of care defined by government as used in whole or in part by many of our European neighbours.”
George Hollingbery (PPC for Meon Valley)

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· About the author: Sunny Hundal is editor of Liberal Conspiracy. He works full time as a journalist, commentator, blogger, activist and general layabout. He was voted Guardian blogger of the year in 2006. Also at: Pickled Politics, on Twitter and Comment is free.

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Reader comments

That’s six.

Also, the John Redwood quote seems reasonable enough.

That’s six. Arguably even more, as some comments give multiple reasons why CCHQ would want them to stop blogging.

@1

It’s not reasonable for elective purposes to tell people in pain that they need to decrease their living standards, especially when the person saying it is quite well off.

CCHQ is not in the business of speaking the truth. They’re in the business of fighting an election, which includes not telling people what they don’t want to hear.

In developed countries (like the UK) the statistical association between recessions and improvements in health is about as robust as robust gets. here is one of many papers that find this relationship.

Only a fool would argue this means that people don’t suffer in recessions or anything like that (note fact about suicides going up, in link above, for one).

Presumably Sunny your point partially is that CCHQ need to control tweets because politics being what it is, factually correct statements that will play badly in our stupid political climate need to be censored for political reasons. The same probably goes for Redwood – what he’s saying there does not differ terrible from what left wingers like, say, Larry Elliot, has been saying was wrong with the economy – he’s been banging on about excessive consumption and debt for years.

I’m sorry? Not Tweets by not Westminster candidates show that they want to control Tweets by Westminster candidates?

Eh?

Tim, is there such a big difference between Westminster and non-Westminster candidates?

That would explain Roger “homophobia is a lie” Helmer and Daniel “NHS was a 60-year mistake” Hannan.

Before we get into partisan attitudes here, are you telling me that Labour, the Liberal Democrats, Greens, Respect, UKIP, BNP and Monster Raving Loonies are all happy for their Westminster candidates to say what they want then (OK, the last example probably are…)? Once you show me the evidence, I’ll accept CCHQ are indeed control freaks rather than slightly desperately trying to lead hundreds of diverse people in the same direction.

Otherwise, artificial distinction with real purpose. And only Roger Helmer’s comments are difficult to agree with – or do you believe the following not to be true:

That it is healthier to drink less alchohol, smoke less and eat less rich food.
That democratically-elected MPs should not have an authority set above them.
That we need to tackle the defecit, and that this may be painful.
That it is acceptable to consider alternative ways of running the NHS (with free at the point of delivery care still available).

Even:

Some groups cry victim too easily.
and
Climate change has a political agenda behind it.
are hardly going to shock people, but are not likely to be popular hereabouts.

Seems you’ve gone to a lot of effort to prove very little, but at least it was done in a partisan way.

Whoops – number changed. Tim – the directive applies to Tweets as well as blogs…

Change the number in the body of text also… Or is it a bonus reason because there are so many to write about?

Sunny, while your choice selection of quotations from assorted Tory douche-bags made me smile, there is a danger in this kind of political discourse which I think is evident in the US left-blogosphere and on MSNBC. There, you get a lot of stories basically repeating things the right have said, often without even commenting on them; the (correct) assumption is that played to a difference audience, the quotations are shocking or repulsive. The narrative is, “the right are a bunch of hateful nutters, look what they said the other day, etc”.

The danger as I see it is that, with Cameron at the helm, this narrative only plays to a certain kind of left tribalism; it’s not really engaging, it’s just kind of sniping, and I suspect it doesn’t come across well to people who don’t already agree. Don’t get me wrong, *I* agree with you. They are a bunch of hateful nutters. But I don’t think reflexive tribalism is the way forward.

@ 10 – Josh.

Couldn’t agree more – but what are the alternatives. I am a hypocrite for saying I agree with your sentiment, as someone who constantly takes part in the type of tribalism you talk about. However, in the words of Jules from Pulp Fiction – “But I’m tryin’, Ringo. I’m tryin’ real hard…”

@George Allwell

I’m also guilty :) I suppose the alternative is to play the ball, not the man. The Tories right now are engaged in a massive campaign of hypocrisy and incoherence. Let me take this post as an example (Sunny, I’m not having a go, just that this is the nearest example to hand). What would make it resonate outside the left would be a reminder (in quotation form) of the mood music Tory HQ is pushing, the ‘modern conservative’ package that these off-message tweets and blogs undermine. To you and me, that’s kind of obvious, because we’ve been following the political narrative pretty closely … but there is a whole world of casual readers out there that won’t really get it, to whom the whole genre of “listen to what Rush Limbaugh / Danniel Hannan is saying now!” is kind of putting, I suspect.

Sorry that should have been “kind of off-putting”

In the spirit of one-sided-political-nonsense… “Hear here (above)”

You only have to see the comments on ConservativeHome to see why Ashcroft bought it up. If they gain power, the censorship of that website is inevitable. If Cameron, Hague and Osborne are petrified of him, what chance has Tim Montgommery.

http://redrag1.blogspot.com/

Conservative politicians say things that Sunny Hundal disapproves of. In other news, dog bites man.

@Watchman -
“Some groups cry victim too easily”, yes; the actual comments made by Helmer, in context, a big no. He’s referring to Jeremy Clarkson calling a car “a bit gay”:

“just to make it clear that he was using the term “gay” in its modern, corrupted sense, he added “a bit ginger beer”‘

i.e. The ‘corrupted’ sense of the word is when it refers to homosexuality, which is clearly derogatory of homosexuality. Clarkson, in using the term to criticise the car and clarify that he meant the term as associated with homosexuality, is also being derogatory of homosexuality.

Helmer is disappointed that in reprimanding Clarkson, the BBC is showing “craven submission to political correctness”. I’m disappointed that the BBC allows language that denigrates a natural sexual persuasion to be broadcast to begin with.

I’m being pedantic, but there is a gulf of difference between perpetuating victimhood, and challenging the use of language that perpetuates the idea that homosexuals are lesser people, or that they are ‘corrupted’ people as Helmer would have it.

As Helmer adds,
“‘Gay’ changes meaning again! At Christmas, I was given a copy of John Humphrys’s book ‘Beyond Words’. It tells us that on the street, the word ‘gay’ has changed again. It now means sad (bizarrely!), weak, inadequate, unattractive”

It means these things precisely because this is how homosexuals are commonly regarded and spoken about. Sad that Helmer can’t understand the connection.

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