Monday 25 November 2019

Tory Spoiler Alert

I understand Nick Hardwick, the former Chair of the Parole Board, addressed Friday's London Napo Branch meeting and in his talk warned that there are a number of high profile SFO cases about to hit the headlines in the coming weeks. Given the typically underhand Tory tactics of manipulating the media, it's highly likely that they will seek to 'weaponise' these cases to their advantage. In an article on Saturday the Buzzfeed website noted:-
The mother of ‘Baby P’, Tracey Connelly, is said to be up for parole during the election campaign — and the Tories can be expected to use the case to make the argument for a tougher justice system, and accuse Corbyn of being soft on crime
The article goes on:- 

Boris Johnson's Campaign Plans An Immigration And Crime Blitz As They Fear Corbyn Will Close The Gap
 
Boris Johnson launches the Conservative Party manifesto on Sunday with his campaign strategists preparing a media blitz on immigration and crime, amid fears that Jeremy Corbyn’s Labour could be set for a bounce in the polls next week.

After what looked like it could be an extremely tricky week for the Conservative campaign, with the Labour and Liberal Democrat manifesto launches coming off the back of bad news stories on hospitals, flooding, and a shocking fire in Bolton, Johnson’s aides are quietly pleased with how the last few days have played out.

The Prince Andrew scandal and a row about Tory online dirty tricks overshadowed much of the substance of the week, feeding into what Johnson’s team believes is key to his route to victory: keeping Labour’s domestic agenda out of the news by avoiding fights on Corbyn’s turf and starting other rows on ground more favourable to the Tories.

The reasoning behind this somewhat cautious strategy is partly obvious: Johnson’s party is ahead in the polls and needs to hold steady to win. But there are also mounting concerns on the Tory campaign that Corbyn will close the gap in the next few days as Remain-backing voters switch from the Lib Dems to Labour.

The squeeze on the Lib Dem vote, plus Jo Swinson’s admission this week that she is not a realistic candidate for prime minister and could prop up a Tory or Labour government after the election, is seen in Conservative HQ as a huge potential gamechanger. Tory aides believe that pro-EU Lib Dem voters who previously indicated support for the party will migrate to Labour as a consequence of Swinson’s dwindling campaign.

They are braced for a narrowing in the polls next week, which they say will be exaggerated by last week’s polls painting a generous picture of the Tory lead following Nigel Farage’s decision to stand down Brexit Party candidates in Tory-held seats.

Weaponising one of Britain’s most infamous child deaths for political ends at the height of an election campaign would be highly controversial, but it would focus attention on a policy area where the Tories believe they are strong and Labour is weak. Meanwhile, the Tories are responding to Labour’s attempts to make the election about the NHS and public services by seeking to link these issues to immigration, a source said.

Last week, when it was revealed that A&E waiting times in England had reached their worst level on record, the Conservatives spent the day attacking Labour for being soft on immigration. Voters in focus groups organised by the Tories have consistently blamed pressures on the NHS and other public services on immigration from the EU.

Senior Tories believe they have had some success with their attacks on Corbyn, pointing to the Labour leader’s interview with Andrew Marr last weekend and Laura Kuenssberg on Thursday being dominated by the topic.

Everything about Johnson’s campaign has become about eating up days where things can go wrong, taking attention away from Labour’s attempts to shift the conversation towards its own much more detailed and radical domestic agenda, and trying to keep the polls steady. That’s why Tory strategists were relaxed about the 24-hour furore over their Twitter account following the ITV debate on Tuesday night.

The campaign’s two young social media strategists, Sean Topham, 28, and Ben Guerin, 24, who were brought in from New Zealand to punch up the Tories’ digital output for the election, had changed the name of the party’s official press office Twitter account from “CCHQ Press” to “factcheckUK”, replacing the Tory logo with an impartial-looking tick.

The attempt to mislead voters into thinking a Tory account was an independent fact-checker was widely condemned — including by Conservative commentators — and became the most-viewed story on the BBC News website the next day. But Tory aides were amused at the response. Dominic Cummings sat watching Johnson’s potentially perilous showdown with Corbyn — widely seen as the most risky moment of the Tory campaign so far — the picture of zen in a tracksuit as he sought respite from a bad back.

One Tory campaign official told BuzzFeed News that the row about the account, which they argued would not change a single voter’s mind, had blown up attempts by the Liberal Democrats to secure news coverage ahead of their manifesto launch on Wednesday. They found it particularly funny that “60 seconds’ work” had managed to dominate a day of coverage on Twitter, broadcast and news websites, whether by accident or design. A second campaign official said they expected the furore to have had greater consequences: they were surprised the CCHQ Press account was not banned by Twitter.

The following day, during Labour’s manifesto launch, the Tories launched a website — Labourmanifesto.co.uk — parodying Corbyn’s blueprint for the country, and bought online adverts so the site appeared on pro-Labour websites. When the existence of the parody website was written up by the Guardian, Tory aides WhatsApped each other the link with glee.

While some found the stunts an immature attempt to troll opponents and others said they were dangerous new low in an age of online disinformation, Topham and Guerin have been praised internally for their work. Those running the Tory campaign are relaxed at what they see as something that will have no bearing on the election result drawing media attention away from their opponents’ domestic policy offers. “It’s good to get inside their heads,” a source said.

The strategy of looking for anything and everything that distracts from the opposition parties’ domestic offers is why Tory aides have welcomed Prince Andrew’s two very public interventions over the last week. Each time there is a development in the story about the Duke of York, news coverage is wiped out for 24 hours and it becomes impossible for opposition parties to seize the day, or for the Tories to lose it.

Last Saturday night, the Duke of York’s interview with Emily Maitlis received blanket coverage on news channels, pushing Corbyn’s Marr interview the following morning down the running order. Andrew’s decision on Wednesday to step down from his royal duties — announced minutes after the Lib Dem manifesto launch — took another evening’s coverage away from the opposition. “He’s clearly one of us,” joked a Tory official.

10 comments:

  1. Apart from baby Ps mother, the decision last week to release Ian Simms represents another Worboys moment for the MoJ.
    Incidently, the MoJ are currently being sued by Mitie for being sold a botched contract for court maintenance services.
    The Home Office too are under investigation over immigration and outsourcing.

    The Home Office is facing an investigation by the complaints watchdog after it breached the law by failing to respond to complaints about its “incompetent” outsourced visa service, The Independent has learnt.

    With Virgin having sued the NHS over botched outsourcing contracts, compensation having been paid to train companies over botched outsourcing for Brexit planning, Serco and G4s fraud on their outsourced contracts, Carillion collapse, and having to bring probation back into public ownership early at significant cost to the tax payer, it's simply the case that the Tories cannot be trusted with any of our public services.
    Apart too from the lies and deciet (and propaganda) in this election, I find it troubling that everything the Tories are pledging in their Manifesto are for the future. 60 new hospitals? 20,000 more police? Nurses and doctors? Not I'm afraid in the next 5 years! Given that the fixed term Parliament Act calls for an election after 5 years, it's pretty disingenuous and frankly misleading to promise things that's 10 years away, and you may not even be in government to see those pledges through.
    If the Tories can't fight an election fairly, with truth and integrity, then how can anyone expect them to run the country with integrity, honesty and fairness?

    'Getafix

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  2. Control The Narrative

    Narrative paradigm is a concept in communication theory and was developed by Walter Fisher. The concept is adopted from the oldest form of communication – story telling. He stated that all meaningful communication is in the form of storytelling. Peoples past experiences influence our need for communication and also base our behaviour. Thus narrative paradigm is very helpful in analysing the nature of human communication.

    Narrative is any verbal and nonverbal interpretation which is arranged logically to generate a meaning. This communication process is influenced by the experiences and other factors from the past. The concept upholds the idea that communication happens between a narrator and the listener in the form of a story. The story includes the events that the narrator wants to communicate with the listener and does not fit in a single category.

    https://www.communicationtheory.org/the-narrative-paradigm/
    __________________________________________________

    Wolff: The importance of 'controlling the narrative'
    Michael Wolff USA TODAY
    Published 7:00 PM EST Dec 29, 2013

    Among the most prevalent and up-to-date phrases in business, politics and savvy American life is "controlling the narrative."

    That is, telling it your way, before someone else gets to tell it — and possibly tell it better — their way. And getting the public to relate to you on a more intimate level: In a social-media world, being impersonal is being out of it.

    A good part of the White House budget and resources is spent on controlling the narrative — arguably, to poor effect. The problem with the Affordable Care Act, many Democrats feel, is not its procedures but the White House's failure to tell a positive and compelling story about it. (Even the website breakdown might have been an opportunity, properly handled, to connect with many technophobic Americans.)

    In every significant corporation in the nation, controlling the narrative has become one of those feely-feely things that unemotive CEOs and CFOs, with a growing amount of anxiety, understand they really don't comprehend and about which they need outside consultants to hold their hands.
    ____________________

    Think about this; when you witness something for the first time without any predetermined opinion, you create the narrative for what you saw. For example, let’s say that you are taking a morning jog along the ocean by yourself. As you are running you see a small child struggling to swim out in the water. A man swims out to try and save the young buy but unfortunately is unsuccessful, and he swims back to shore. You are the only witness to the series of events. As people now swarm to the scene, the narrative of this man’s life and this event are in your words. What if you say that they were swimming together and it looked like the man deliberately tried to drown the boy? Or what if you say he tried to save the boy in a heroic effort but came up short. You are literally in control of whether this man will be in court for a murder trial, or in the local news for being a hero. The power that you have by witnessing that for the first time is unreal! Now this is a terrible and extreme example but it gets the point across. Perception is reality and narratives are reality in the world today.

    http://www.thelogicalcontrarian.com/control-the-narrative-control-the-world

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  3. https://www.tophamguerin.com/about

    Sean Topham - Founding Partner - As a co-founder of TG, Sean has worked with leading brands and organisations around the world to blend creative storytelling and digital tools to make an impact. Sean has a passion for bringing ideas to life through compelling video and powerful content. He has experience managing online advertising campaigns and the delivery of major video projects across a range of industries.


    Ben Guerin - Founding Partner - Ben is a creative and digital strategist with an extensive background in campaign management, creative content production, product development and innovation. In his role as a founding partner at Topham Guerin, Ben combines his creative energies and technical expertise with a deep understanding of politics, technology and education to help clients take advantage of the opportunities presented by digital transformation.

    Maurice Lewis - Creative Strategist

    Maurice is a digital strategist and creative professional with 8 years of experience in conservative politics.

    He served as top digital staffer for the House Republican Conference where he advised members of Congress and led their digital campaigns for major legislation. In his previous role, Maurice led the in-house creative efforts of the Republican Governors Association, producing video ads boosting Republican governors across the country.

    "Topham Guerin can help you turn a Crisis Response into an opportunity"

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    Replies
    1. As usual the Tories have employed people with impeccable credentials:

      "In recent years a key presence in the [CTF Partners] office has been two young digital strategists from New Zealand called Sean Topham and Ben Guerin, who were employed on retainers of over £10,000 a month to run digital campaigns on behalf of CTF in 2017... Topham gained a reputation for misogyny within the company, according to three former staff members, who said at one point he celebrated the fact a woman had been forced out of the office as a “confirmed kill”, a military term supposedly referencing a person shot by a sniper..."


      https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/aug/01/claims-of-misogynistic-culture-at-offices-of-lynton-crosby-firm

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    2. The lobbying firm run by Boris Johnson’s close ally Sir Lynton Crosby has secretly built a network of unbranded “news” pages on Facebook for dozens of clients ranging from the Saudi government to major polluters, a Guardian investigation has found.

      In the most complete account yet of CTF Partners’ outlook and strategy, current and former employees of the campaign consultancy have painted a picture of a business that appears to have professionalised online disinformation, taken on a series of controversial clients and faced incidents of misogynistic bullying in its headquarters.

      They said that such was the culture of secrecy within the firm that staff working on online disinformation campaigns, which selectively promoted their clients’ viewpoints on anonymised Facebook pages that followed a common formula, used initials rather than full names on internal systems and often relied on personal email accounts to avoid their work being traced back to CTF and its clients.

      https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/aug/01/revealed-johnson-allys-firm-secretly-ran-facebook-propaganda-network

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    3. The network of Facebook campaigns overseen by staff of Sir Lynton Crosby’s CTF Partners span topics ranging from Brexit to Saudi Arabia. The firm has declined to comment on its methods or clients, but said employees always operate within the law and accused the Guardian of relying on “false or distorted facts”.

      Earlier this year the Guardian revealed that the page, along with many other pro-Brexit pages with names such as Britain’s Future and We Are the 52%, were being overseen by employees of CTF Partners through a single shared interface. Others had generic names and purported to be news sources such as Fintech Britain and UK Education.

      ***It has never been revealed who picked up the enormous bill for running pro-Brexit Facebook adverts on the pages, which echoed the messaging used by Boris Johnson in advance of his bid to become the Conservative party leader***. The information commissioner is continuing to investigate Mainstream Network for potential data misuse.

      [facebook and twitter] pages with names such as Inside Mauritania and FactCheck Sri Lanka dealt with contentious political issues in those countries, again without revealing who was ultimately running or funding them."

      https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2019/aug/01/brexit-cycle-lanes-and-saudi-arabia-ctfs-facebook-campaigns

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    4. "Isaac Levido, the former right-hand man of Lynton Crosby, has taken centre stage at Conservative headquarters (CCHQ) as head of the campaign, replacing his former boss in the election war-room as the party targets 50 key seats and defends another 50 marginals.

      Tory insiders said Levido – little known either inside or outside Westminster – has taken a desk in the middle of the office, known as the central “pod of power” occupied by Crosby in previous elections.

      Over at Matthew Parker Street, the Conservative party’s headquarters, Levido is sitting next to Michael Brooks, a pollster who worked with him on Scott Morrison’s unexpected victory for the Liberals in Australia earlier this year, and the two young New Zealanders, Sean Topham and Ben Guerin, who are running the campaign’s digital media strategy. The pair previously helped run a controversial Facebook propaganda network while working as contractors for Crosby’s CTF Partners."
      ___________________________________________________

      5th October 2015

      Political strategist Lynton Crosby is credited with winning the 2015 UK General Election for the Conservatives. He has built up an international reputation as an election winner, having helped Boris Johnson win the Mayoralty of London twice, and the Liberal Party of his native Australia win the national election four times. In this exclusive interview, Crosby reveals the goings-on behind the scenes during the recent election, explains why he feels Boris has the skills to lead, and gives a detailed assessment on why he thinks the Labour Party has now lost its way.

      https://www.mediamasters.fm/lynton-crosby/
      __________________________________________________

      And if you thought the rich didn't care about money...

      "Boris Johnson had a spectacular row with the political strategist who helped him win the keys to No 10 about whether he was responsible for spreading damaging rumours about Carrie Symonds, the prime minister’s girlfriend.

      Johnson had an explosive telephone call with Sir Lynton Crosby in which he questioned him about the origins of newspaper claims that Symonds quit her job at the Tory party HQ just months after being accused of abusing her expenses.

      Last night, friends of the Australian election guru denied that he had ever briefed against Symonds, 31, who moved into Downing Street with Johnson last week."

      Even the Daily Mail reported that the PM's new partner, who lives in 10 Downing St, was fiddling her expenses...

      https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-7230155/Boris-Johnsons-girlfriend-Carrie-Symonds-quit-job-Conservative-Party-expenses-claims.html

      Carrie Symonds, 31, was asked to leave her £80,000-a-year post as director of communications after party chiefs said her performance was poor. [she was]:
      - Costing the Tory party thousands of pounds in unauthorised expenses;
      - Secretly booking cabs in the names of junior staff to disguise the fact they were for her;
      - Using taxis for free travel home and to bars and restaurants to meet friends, even when off duty;
      - Failing to show up for work at key times or lead her team properly.

      It is also claimed she leaked stories to the media that were damaging to Theresa May.

      Miss Symonds reportedly demanded a six-month payoff – £40,000 – and was eventually given £20,000. Both sides signed a non-disclosure agreement to keep the circumstances secret.

      "A close friend of Miss Symonds said last night: 'This nonsense is a politically motivated smear by opponents of Brexit.'"

      Delete
  4. So it only costs £10,000 a month to create & distribute lies, generate division & hatred, to mislead, misdirect & generally undermine democracy.

    Still, those who helped expedite TR didn't do so bad either. Presumably they're all happily rolling around in jewel-encrusted rose-scented shit, holding new positions of influence while recruiting & bringing on the next generation of liars, cheats & bullies.

    Is there anyone left out there who is a mere probation practitioner who knocks their pan in for a fraction of the money, holding the line as best you can, taking the flak from all directions; from angry cases, from angry families, from exhausted & stressed colleagues, and from work-shy wankers masquerading as 'managers'?

    Well, be prepared for an even heavier burden when the SFO disclosures will unleash yet more vitriol directed at YOU... with action plans devised & implemented by the lying, cheating bullies who wouldn't know what professional standards were if they were...

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  5. Clearly the notion of buying an election has now been well established here & is being exploited by the Tories, even daring to use public funds as well as their own:

    "Boris Johnson’s government has been accused of going on a spending spree using taxpayers’ money to woo voters in swing seats in the run up to the general election.

    Ministers released details on Wednesday of plans to improve dilapidated town centres of key marginal seats mainly across the north of England and the Midlands. Public money is being spent to publicise the scheme using targeted Facebook advertisements sent to local people. The seats being targeted include Wakefield, Bolton, Northampton, Milton Keynes, Mansfield, Lincoln, and Newcastle-under-Lyme as well as some coastal towns such as Lowestoft."

    "The Conservative party has been funding ads on Facebook that present a BBC News article as endorsing the government’s inflated figure for school spending – when the article actually criticised the figure’s credibility."

    "The Conservatives spent more than £1m on negative Facebook campaign adverts attacking Jeremy Corbyn, reports suggest. A series of videos and graphics showing the Labour leader’s past comments on debt, anti-terror laws and the IRA were promoted by the official Tory account."

    "BORIS Johnson's Conservative Party has splurged £13,000 of Facebook adverts during his first week as Prime Minister - as they gear up for a possible election."

    "Cummings was formerly campaign director of the Vote Leave group – the Brexit campaign Johnson became a figurehead for – which was known for its sprawling and hyper-targeted social media campaign. The group spent more than £2.7m on Facebook ads, many of which contained the claim that £350m a week sent to the EU could be spent on the NHS instead."

    "The Conservative Party is hiring an army of paid tweeters to take on Jeremy Corbyn’s supporters on social media, the Telegraph can disclose..."

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  6. Just in case anyone wondered, there isn't a single reference to Probation in the Tory manifesto document.

    There is, however, an explicit promise to complete one of Thatcher's tasks:

    "We will tackle unauthorised traveller camps. We will give the police new powers to arrest and seize the property and vehicles of trespassers who set up unauthorised encampments, in order to protect our communities. We will make intentional trespass a criminal offence, and we will also give councils greater powers within the planning system."

    As well as: "We will add 10,000 more prison places, with £2.75 billion already committed to refurbishing and creating modern prisons... We will maintain the ban on prisoners voting from jail... We will conduct a root-and-branch review of the parole system to improve accountability and public safety, giving victims the right to attend hearings for the first time... We will toughen community sentences, for example by tightening curfews and making those convicted do more hours of community payback to clean up our parks and streets... We will strengthen the accountability of elected Police and Crime Commissioners and expand their role... We will create a prisoner education service focused on work-based training and skills. We will improve employment opportunities for ex-offenders, including a job coach in each prison."

    So there it is. Bye-Bye Probation.

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