PMQs sketch: Miliband spanked on the easy option

Wednesday, 9 November 2011 1:35 PM

Who can avoid an immigration blunder?

By Ian Dunt

Politics is mathematical. Like the Torah, each word has a numerical value. 'Immigration' gets at least ten points - usually more. 'Blunder' gets seven. 'Immigration blunder' is therefore 17 points. If you construct it appropriately, you can add the phrases 'foreign criminals' (15 points) and terror suspects (25 points), as so: "The immigration blunder saw biometric data left unchecked, meaning tens of thousands of illegal immigrants - as well as terror suspects - could have been permitted entry into the UK."

Note the way you can therefore get an immense 57 points from the row engulfing Theresa May this week. Ed Miliband duly made the choice of devoting all his questions to it.

I doubt he'd had time to read the Metro. On its front page today, it featured the story of army veteran and his wife driven to suicide by destitution. Sick of trying to live on £57.50 and the six-mile daily walk to the soup kitchen, their bodies were found at their home in Bedworth, Warwickshire, last week.

There's no maths for that but it's the sort of thing great opposition comes from - state of the nation stuff. Tony Blair did it with James Bulger. David Cameron did it with Fiona Pilkington, the woman who killed herself and her daughter after years of bullying and intimidation on their council estate.

Instead, we suffered a tiresome trawl through the immigration debacle, as Miliband asked question after question like a child putting together bric-a-bracs without any deftness and then expressing surprise when they all fall down. There was much mock outrage and stabbing hand gestures, all of it failing to land the slightest blow. By his last question Miliband had retreated to saying the prime minister was "out of touch" - his default attack.

"He's completely lost his way," Cameron said dismissively, entirely untroubled, happily defying the laws of political calculus. To his side, Theresa May was dressed in resplendent white, as she couldn't possibly do any harm to anything. George Osborne kept whispering cruelties into her ear about the benches in front of them and sneering wetly when confronted by views other than his own.

Politics as mathematics, but the sums came out all wrong. Ed should have gone for something he actually believed in.
 

Special event coverage

ESRC logo

Festival of Social Sciences: Celebrating the Social Sciences

Evidence-based policy should not be a radical concept. It needs to be celebrated.

ESRC logo

Festival of Social Sciences: 2 languages: 2 brains, 2 minds, 2 cultures?

As part of the ESRC Festival of Social Sciences, the Deafness Cognition And Language Research Centre (DCAL) hosted an event exploring the powerful benefits of bilingualism in spoken and sign languages, for hearing and deaf people alike - benefits that reach hearing and deaf people alike.

Opinion Former Events

Voice: Feeling stressed? Understand yourself? Now, move forward Conference

Application forms are now available for an exciting conference in Manchester. The fun-packed day will give you practical solutions and advice on managing stress and time to help you achieve a work/life balance.

BHA: The Marriage Debate - ‘This house would legalise same-sex marriage in England and Wales'

Two weeks before the Government’s consultation on same-sex marriage draws to a close, Andrew Copson, Chief Executive of the British Humanist Association is participating in a debate hosted by Catholic Voices on the motion, ‘This House Would Legalise Same-Sex Marriage’.

BSIA: Information Destruction Exhibition and Conference

This one-day event is targeted at professionals operating in the information destruction industry, and aims at keeping delegates updated on recent developments in their sector, providing an opportunity to network with fellow professionals, whilst offering access to an informative exhibition and a comprehensive conference programme.

ABI: The Future of Long-term Savings & Retirement Income - Automatic Enrolment and Beyond Conference

The Future of Long-term Savings & Retirement Income - Automatic Enrolment and Beyond Conference

Take the Gold Challenge for St Dunstan's

We provide lifelong support for blind and visually impaired ex-Service men and women. You can help give more blind heroes an independent future by taking the Gold Challenge

TACT: 2013 Virgin London Marathon

Join TACT at one of the greatest sporting events on the planet and help give a child in care a future to smile about.

Newsletter sign up

By signing-up you agree to the terms of use and privacy policy.

Unsubscribe