It’s that time of week again, folks: when Young Dave and Mil
The Younger face off across the Dispatch Box, backbench Tory MPs engage in
their customary softball grovelfest, Labour try and trip Cameron up, and Dennis
Skinner practices his stand-ups. We’ve got refugees, economic growth, flooding,
and maybe food banks, bankers and Scots in today’s prospective topics. So eyes down and look in.
The volume is back up! It’s getting rowdy! The Speaker
called for Mr Robertson to “calm yourself”!
Well, thank goodness for that. I thought they’d all come down with some kind of
courteousness virus.
Yes, there was flooding, with Lib Dems Jeremy Browne and
David Heath getting Prime Ministerial agreement on action, and commitment that
Something Must Be Done, not just to clear the water that has been there all
month, but for the future. That much was
agreeable stuff.
So was the response to Sheila Gilmore on the case of
Mohammad Ashgar, the unfortunate man who has been sentenced to death in
Pakistan for blasphemy, even though he has mental health issues. Dave has got
Sayeeda Warsi on the case. This was
another safe area.
Even the National Minimum Wage and its enforcement were
successfully negotiated, with Cameron telling Labour MPs Andy Sawford and
Debbie Abrahams that he wanted to see more prosecutions for non-compliance.
But where he had to deflect and rabbit, and showed himself
getting testy, was on that nasty top Income Tax rate. And Miiliband delivered
his six off the reel today, persistently challenging Dave to confirm whether he
would rule out a cut to 40p – or not. Cameron didn’t like this at all. It was
all Labour’s fault. Jobs were up. Tax coming in was up. So nothing was up. Except the game was up.
So far this year, Mil The Younger has not found the range
with his probing of the PM. This time, despite taunts of “anti-growth” and “anti-business”,
he stuck doggedly to that one point: his side had committed to a 50p rate, it
was genuinely popular, and what was Dave going to do? The answer never came.
But Miliband knows it won’t come. Worse for Cameron, he knows he can’t possibly
give it.
Despite the softball – particularly grovelling moments came
this week from Chloe Smith, James Paice, Laura Sandys, and a stonking brown
noser from Gerald Howarth – the leader of the opposition edged that one.
Batting away Ian Murray, Steve Rotheram and Lisa Nandy may
have cheered Dave up a bit. Getting a topical reference to Penny Mordaunt
appearing on Splash! may have cheered
him a little more. But he looked peevish
when pressed.
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