Well done to Pink News for winkling an excuse out of Tory HQ for Sayeeda Warsi’s homophobic campaign leaflets at the last general election:

Mrs Warsi’s campaign leaflet attacked the government’s gay rights agenda.

“Labour has scrapped section 28 which was introduced by the Conservatives to stop schools promoting alternative sexual lifestyles such as homosexuality to children as young as seven years old,” it said.

“Schools are allowed and do promote homosexuality and other alternative sexual lifestyles to your children.

“Labour reduced the age of consent for homosexuality from 18 to 16 allowing school children to be propositioned for homosexual relationships.”

Mrs Warsi pledged to campaign strongly for an end to sex education at seven years and the “promotion” of homosexuality, which she said “undermines family life.”

A Conservative party spokesman told PinkNews.co.uk:

“The leaflet that you are referring to does not properly represent her views - she has not got a problem with gay adoption, for example.

“Sayeeda does have a problem with sex education, of any orientation, being compulsory in schools.

“She thinks it is up to the parents to decide if and what their children are taught and when.”

So let’s be clear what we’re saying here…

1. Warsi objects to the ‘promotion’ of homosexuality on the grounds that it ‘undermines family life’, which clearly implies that her view of the nature of family runs down strict heterosexual + marriage lines, and yet she’s fine with gay couples adopting kids, even though she sees gay relationships (with or without kids) as undermining the family…

2. Warsi’s problem with sex education in schools is that it takes place at all, even though her election leaflet refers only to schools promoting ‘homosexuality and other alternative sexual lifestyles to your children’ and not to all sex education.

More to the point, exactly what does she mean by homosexuality and other alternative sexual lifestyles - what are these other sexual life styles that she thinks schools are teaching? BDSM? Polygamy? Swinging?

If she meant that she objected to all sex education in schools, why didn’t she say so at the time? Why pick specifically on homosexuality and these other , unspecified, alternative sexual lifestyles if that’s not really what she meant?

I do love the smell of bullshit in the morning, it’s the smell of blind panic at Tory HQ…

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Well its nice to see the Tories new strategy for community cohesion starting to unfold on last night’s Question Time, even if all it amounts to is not letting Sayeeda Warsi out in public without a Neocon minder, a role covered on this occasion by the utterly charmless author, Douglas Murray, a man whose fondness for the sound of his own voice appears to know no bounds.

And yet, despite Dougie’s hogging the limelight throughout much of the inevitiable opening question on terrorism and Iraq, Warsi still managed to drop a bollock with the very words to come out of her mouth:

‘ I think that there can never be any justification for the use of violence against civilians…’

Now that is, of course, the stock political opening gambit in any debate on terrorism and, by and large, a line that goes unquestioned…

…unless, of course, you’ve said something like this on a previous edition of Question Time.

We have a community in Britain, a Pakistani and Kashmiri community, who holds a very, very strong view about Kashmir and the scope of freedom-fighting in Kashmir. It would concern me if… the definition of terrorism was to cover maybe (the) legitimate freedom-fight in Kashmir.

‘[L]egitimate freedom-fight in Kashmir’, eh?

You mean the one described in this assessment by the South Asian Terrorism Portal, which, amongst other things, cites the following as examples of major terrorist - of should that be ‘freedom-fighting’ - incidents in 2006:

May 21: Two terrorists in police uniform attack a rally of the Youth Congress at Sher-e-Kashmir Park in the capital Srinagar, killing three political activists and two police personnel, minutes before the scheduled arrival of Chief Minister Ghulam Nabi Azad. Inspector General of Police (Kashmir), K. Rajendra Kumar, is among 25 persons injured in the attack that is claimed by the Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) and Al-Mansoorian. The two terrorists are subsequently killed in an encounter.

May 1: Suspected LeT terrorists kill 22 Hindus in the mountain hamlets of Kulhand and Tharva in Doda district and 13 at Lalon Galla, a high-altitude meadow above the town of Basantgarh in the Udhampur district.

April 14: Terrorists trigger out seven grenade blasts in the capital city of Srinagar, killing five civilians and injuring 44 persons, including 14 SF personnel. A local news agency, Current News Service, reported that four terrorist groups – Jamiat-ul-Mujahideen (JuM), Al-Mansooran, Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) and J&K Islamic Front - claimed responsibility for these blasts.

A report that, in addition, give the number of civilian deaths in ‘freedom-fighting’ incidents in the first five months as 147 - oh, and that’s on top of the 3,600 or so civilian deaths in the preceding five years and, according to the data given on this page, something of the order of 11,500 civilian casualties since 1988.

In fact there’s reams of background information and data to be foundon SATP’s site.

This all comes from an organisation called the Institute for Conflict Management, which is based in New Delhi but which appears well enough regarded in academic circles outside India to be considered a credible source, and it cites a kill ratio of something approaching three civilians to one member of the Indian security forces, together with a extensive list of major incidents over the entire period which contains the usual mix attacks; some solely on security forces, some exclusively targeting civilians and some of the usual, and rather more indiscriminate, kind in which both military personnel and civilians wind up dead.

All of which, as is typically the case in such matters, makes it rather difficult to draw clear distinctions between illegitimate terrorism and legitimate freedom-fighting, if you’re inclined to attempt to draw such distinctions - and however you want to slice it, what’s been going in Kashmir over the last 18-19 years or so it not the kind of conflict in which one can easily make such narrow distinctions and credibly advance the view that any/all use of violence against civilians cannot be justified - not without being extremely hypocritical in the process.

So that then poses the question as to whether Sayeeda, who in the past has stated both that:

“I don’t believe that I have to justify everything I write, line by line and word by word.’

And

“It may offend people sometimes but I will speak from the heart and speak the truth. And if speaking the truth is upsetting community relations, then I hold my hands up to that.”

…was merely following in the time-honoured Question Time tradition of spouting the official party line, chapter and verse, or whether he comments should be taken as an indication that she’s now repudiating her previous views on the Kashmiri conflict, a matter that seems to me to be of great public interest not just to Labour party members but to a considerable number of people on her own side.

It’s rather a shame that no one thought to ask last night, nor, indeed does she appear to have indicated, as yet, that she’ll be taking up Tory Home’s offer of a right of reply to this article by two members of staff from the Margaret Thatcher Centre for Freedom, from which it would appear that her performance last night has done little to reassure Tory ranks…

I’m no neocon, but Warsi’s performance on Question Time was not reassuring.

Posted by: Simon Newman | July 06, 2007 at 00:29

“I’m no neocon, but Warsi’s performance on Question Time was not reassuring.”

I agree. Her constant attacks on the author Douglas Murray for using ‘inflammatory language’ were pathetic. His position on Hamas and Islamic terrorism was morally clear and defensible, and is similar to Michael Gove’s.

It’s a sad state of affairs when a so called conservative ends up agreeing with a vacuous idiot like Davina McCall.

Posted by: N John | July 06, 2007 at 02:42

N John:
“It’s a sad state of affairs when a so called conservative ends up agreeing with a vacuous idiot like Davina McCall.

I look forward to Davina’s appointment to the shadow cabinet. On the strength of that performance a post as Shadow minister for Education beckons…

More seriously, Warsi appeared to be sympathetic to Hamas, an Islamist terrorist organisation dedicated to killing all Jews. This may be the position of Ken Livingstone and the BBC, but it’s a new development for the Conservative party to embrace it.

Posted by: Simon Newman | July 06, 2007 at 12:04

Deeply unimpressive/worrying performance on Question Time from Warsi.

Posted by: ChrisC | July 06, 2007 at 12:24

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Ellee Seymour, the Alice Tinker of Tory blogging, is back with yet another masterclass in the art of unintentionally humorous blog post:

Guardian pays £75 compensation for bearded insults on blog

How much compensation should be paid to a journalist who is insulted by comment is free readers over his beard? The Guardian decided on the princely sum of £75.

Jeebus, the Groan have started paying people by the insult???

Well’s that’s Theo Hobson and AC Grayling in next year’s ‘Rich List’ for certain and I guess that Julie Bindel is never, ever, going to run short of a few bob for a fresh dental dam, never what two articles a week by Polly Toynbee must be doing for the paper’s margins.

Just what the hell did the CiF lot have to say to Markville that was worth 75 notes in compo?

This was apparently the amount paid to Paul Markillie, special features editor of The Economist after his report Blue sky thinking was posted on their site last month.

As well as the content of his text, some readers took exception to Paul’s beard saying:

My first instict was to trust you. But I was wrong. You are a marketeer in an environmentalist’s clothing. The beard is piratical rather not ecological.

and

This bloke works for the Economist? I thought he wanted tenpence for a cuppa tea!

and

The bearded one is perhaps pissing into the wind.

Is that it? So having your beard referred to as ‘piratical’ plus a homelessness gag and a descriptive reference to his beard in place of using his name is worth £75?

What’s the deal here? Are we talking a flat £25 per insult or does the severity of the insult get taken into consideration?

And if so, have they taken the expedient precaution of banning DK from posting comments in CiF for life - just think what the combination of DK and Polly Pot special advocating greater EU regulation of emissions to counter climate change would do the Groan - they’d be well on the road to bankruptcy within the first couple of paragraphs…

Shurely this can’t be right?

I heard about this today from Paul’s daughter Rebecca who I met a Cambridgeshire Chamber of Commerce networking breakfast in Newmarket. We had a really good giggle about it, she described the payment as “compensation” and told me her father was still very easy going, so I can’t imagine he made a fuss about it. As a professional journalist, I imagine Paul’s concern would be on the accuracy and quality of his work, not his appearance. Why should bearded men be discriminated against this way? It sounds very juvenile.

Ah, I see… Mmm, on reflection I think I’ll defer to the wisdom of Mr Worstall, the Grand Master of Blogging Pendantry (and that’s not a typo, BTW):

Well, there are two meanings (at least) to the word “compensation”. One is the payment you get for a piece of work. Another is, as you say here, compensation for being insulted….

The thing is, the standard payment, or compensation, to a writer of a piece at comment is free is £75.

So I think there might be just a tad of confusion here about which meaning of the word “compensation” was meant.

And with that, all that’s left to do is roll the credits and get to the bit where the funny vicar tells a joke…

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If the last couple of days have convinced me of anything, its that I am deeply grateful that Iain Dale failed in his efforts to become a member of parliament at the last general election because, quite frankly and on his strength of hysterical efforts to smear Tom Watson on a trumped up charge of breaching electoral law, Dale’s presence in the House would have only visited further degradation on the already declining intellectual standard of the legislature.

Let’s start at the beginning with the post of Tom Watson’s that triggered off Dale’s latest hissy fit.

Who is Tony Lit?

This by-election is getting very surreal. So much so, that I’m beginning to think that the Tories are running a fictional candidate. Yesterday, Andrew Gilligan, in a two page Evening Standard spread on the Conservative candidate wrote “[Tony] Lit does not live in Southall…preferring the leafier environs of the Chiswick-Isleworth border for himself and his young family”. There’s one small political problem with this. There is no Tony Lit registered to vote in Chiswick. I know he only joined the Conservatives last week but running a candidate who isn’t registered to vote strikes me as just peculiar.

Its a simple enough scenario.

1. The hastily parachuted-in Tory candidate in Ealing Southall gives his name as ‘Tony Lit’ on his election paperwork.

2. Andrew Gilligan notes in the Evening Standard that Lit doesn’t live in the constituency but resides, instead somehow on the Chiswick-Isleworth border.

3. Tom. or someone working for the party in Ealing Southall checks the electoral roll for the area and finds no sign of a ‘Tony Lit’ - and one would presume also no ‘Anthony Lit’ either.

4. There is, therefore, no one by the name of ‘Tony Lit’ registered to vote in area given as the place of residence of Tony Lit, the Tory Party candidate in the Ealing Southall by-election.

And this is precisely the information related by Tom is his first post.

By way of response, Iain Dale ran with one of his usual overheated ‘exclusives’:

EXCLUSIVE: Labour Breach Electoral Law in Ealing Southall

Tom Watson, Labour blogger and MP, is running the Ealing Southall By-Election campaign for the Labour Party. Later on this evening, he’ll be forced to make a very humiliating apology for this blog entry. He wrote…

There is no Tony Lit [the Conservative candidate] registered to vote in Chiswick. I know he only joined the Conservatives last week but running a candidate who isn’t registered to vote strikes me as just peculiar.

As usual Dale is off on his favourite ‘there must be an apology’ hobby horse - even if he never did quite get around to apologising to three of the journalists who challenged him over a completely unsubstantiated claim that the press had been leant on by Gordon Brown’s PR team - and even further enraged by Joan Ryan’s temerity in putting the question of Lit’s seeming non-appearance on the electoral roll straight to Gideon George Osborne:

Sadly for Ms Ryan and Tom Watson they haven’t done their homework. In fact Tony Lit is on the register under his full family name (Labour recently changed the rules so that you can stand under your common name). He has voted in every election since he was 18. Tory by-election supremo Grant Shapps has now written a stinging resposte [sic] to Joan Ryan (who was axed from her Home Office job last week) pointing out that it is in fact illegal to publish false statements about candidates under electoral law.

Dale’s referring to section 106 of the Representation of the People Act which does, indeed make it unlawful to make false statements about the personal character of an election candidate, and which states:

“A person who, or any director of any body or association corporate which–

(a) before or during an election,

(b) for the purpose of affecting the return of any candidate at the election,

makes or publishes any false statement of fact in relation to the candidate’s personal character or conduct shall be guilty of an illegal practice, unless he can show that he had reasonable grounds for believing, and did believe, the statement to be true.”

For an offence to have been committed. should a case be brought against Tom, the prosecution would have to show not only that this information given was false but that:

a) That Tom has deliberately lied about Lit,

b) That Tom could have no reasonable belief that the information given was true, and

c) That Tom intended to affect the outcome of the election with his statement.

I showed Iain’s comments, and the letter written by the Tories campaign manager, Grant Shapps, to a friend, who also happens to be a barrister, and his response was:

You have got to be kidding… A prosecution based on that? What a complete waste of time.

Still, the whole episode, thus far, did yield up one useful piece of information, ‘Tony’ Lit’s actual name, as it appears on the electoral register is, in fact, Surinderpal Singh Lit, which obviously shortens to ‘Tony Lit’ doesn’t it?

Still, armed with this new piece of information, Tom appears to have done a bit more digging into Mr Lit’s background, which I guess means that both Dale and Shapps can whistle for their apology:

Who is Tony Lit?

It remains the case, that there is no Tony Lit registered to vote in either Chiswick or Richmond (and certainly not in Ealing or Southall). It is true that a Surinderpal Singh Lit is registered to vote in Chiswick, just as he was previously in Richmond. Though not in Ealing or Southall. I do not think it unreasonable to have assumed that the man the Conservatives are telling the voters of Ealing Southall is Tony Lit is, in fact, called Tony Lit.

The fact that “Tony Lit”’s six company directorships are not only held at three different addresses but in three different names does not add clarity to the questions I raised yesterday.

It appears that almost the only time that the Conservative candidate is Tony Lit is when he is campaigning in Ealing and Southall.

In Chiswick, where he claims to live, as in Richmond, where he used to live, it appears that he is Surinderpal Singh Lit. In his business directorships, he is sometimes Tony Surinderpal Lit, usually Surinderpal Singh Lit, and only occasionally (when working with Himalaya Shows, Events and Exhibitions Ltd) is he Tony Lit.

“Tony Lit” is the first by-election candidate I have encountered whose claims about not living in the constituency seem to lack verisimilitude.

The Conservatives will not be surprised that voters all over Ealing and Southall are asking “Who is Tony Lit?”. One of the few things we know about Tony Lit, as I said yesterday, is that no such person is listed as registered to vote in Chiswick, where he claims to live. Another is that of the different addresses associated with “Tony Lit”, under his various guises, spread out all over West London though they are, none seems to be in Ealing or Southall.

For the rest, we remain as baffled as are the people of Ealing about what is becoming the question of this campaign; perhaps you would care to shed some light on it: who is Tony Lit?

Quite.

And this bring Dale back into the fray with yet another demonstration of his own stellar ignorance:

Tom Watson Sinks to the Depths (Again)

Am I alone in thinking that Tom Watson’s* latest post on the Conservative Candidate in Ealing Southall is, well, borderline racist?

So, simply posing the question as to why a Tory candidate is using two aliases, one of which happens to be the name under which he’s standing for election, in addition to his legally registered name is racist, is it?

Why?

It seems a reasonable question to ask of anyone standing for election irrespective of their ethnic origins. Its not as if Tom’s quibbling over a matter of transliteration from Panjabi to English or a literal Anglicisation of a Panjabi name.

So far as I can tell, the name ‘Surinderpal’ is some kind of reference to ‘god’ (’Sur’) although quite what exactly is unclear, while the name Anthony, of which Tony is a diminutive form, comes from the Latin family name ‘Antonius’ - as in Mark Anthony - the exact origins and meaning of which are unknown but thought to be Estruscan.

It seems to me that if anyone is sinking into the depths here its Iain for trying to deploy such an obvious, transparent and ill-conceived smear and giving the appearance of having resorted to playing the race card when he doesn’t get his own way.

It’s also complete rubbish. He’s no raising a canard about Tony Lit’s directorships being registered at different addresses. Big ****ing deal. Mine probably are/were too. Ooooh. Big conspiracy.

Well, if Iain does suspect that he may have any current directorships in which the registration details are incorrect, then he really ought to look into it a little more thoroughly, as if he has and any change in registration details occurred more than 14 days ago then he’s committing an offence under section 288 of the Companies Act 1985:

288. Register of directors and secretaries.

(1) Every company shall keep at its registered office a register of its directors and secretaries; and the register shall, with respect to the particulars to be contained in it of those persons, comply with sections 289 and 290 below.

(2) The company shall, within the period of 14 days from the occurrence of:

(a) any change among its directors or in its secretary, or

(b) any change in the particulars contained in the register,

send to the registrar of companies a notification in the prescribed form of the change and of the date on which it occurred; and a notification of a person having become a director or secretary, or one of joint secretaries, of the company shall contain a consent, signed by that person, to act in the relevant capacity.

(3) The register shall be open to the inspection of any member of the company without charge and of any other person on payment of such fee as may be prescribed.

(4) If an inspection required under this section is refused, or if default is made in complying with subsection (1) or (2), the company and every officer of it who is in default is liable to a fine and, for continued contravention, to a daily default fine.

(5) In the case of a refusal of inspection of the register, the court may by order compel an immediate inspection of if.

(5A) Where a confidentiality order made under section 723B is in force in respect of a director or secretary of a company, subsections (3) and (5) shall not apply in relation to that part of the register of the company as contains particulars of the usual residential address of that individual.

(6) For purposes of this and the next section, a shadow director of a company is deemed a director and officer of it.

And Dale goes on to say…

And maybe I may have registered one in the name of Iain Dale and one in the name of Iain Campbell** Dale. Obviously I am a criminal.

I’d check that if I were you, Iain… just to be on the safe side. You know what they say about being careful what you wish for…

Actually, to be clear here, there may well be nothing wrong if Iain has registered companies with and without using his middle name, although that does depend rather on how Companies House view such things and whether they would consider that to be a change of name or not. In strict legal terms, if they did see that as a change of name, then Iain would have been required to register both ‘Iain Dale’ and ‘Iain Campbell Dale’ provided that both had been in use within the last 20 years.

That’s covered by section 289 of, yes, the Companies Act 1985.

Now, admittedly, Companies House has much better things to do that run around chasing people for minor screw-ups in their paperwork and tend not to enforce the whole fines business on these sections provided that the important documentation, the annual return and annual accounts, are filed correctly and on time, but that’s something of incidental matter because, as some Tories are very fond of saying, the law is the law and must be obeyed, and that doesn’t really leave much wriggle room for a response like ‘Big ***ing deal’.

So, getting back to ‘Tony’ Lit for a second, the name thing may or may not be a big deal, depending on whether or not he correctly disclosed past variations and aliases when registering his companies, but the address thing is a bit more of an issue as what the law requires is that he registers his usual place of residence with Companies House and that he notifies them of any change of address within 14 days of the change - and the same goes for a change of name, nationality, business occupation and any other directorships held by the director.

Mr Watson’s lawyers may have some extra communication tomorrow I suspect. What a prize arse he is making of himself.

Says the man who making allegations of illegal electoral practices that don’t stand up to scrutiny, displaying an entirely cavalier attitude to company law and casually lobbing in the race card for good measure.

Is this really Iain Dale, or is Dale on holiday somewhere having left Praguetory to ghost-write his blog for a few days?

And so, after some maundering inquiry about Tom’s middle name, we come to this:
And here’s a response which a reader has emailed which hasn’t yet appeared on Tom Watson’s blog….

Tom,
I think you’re digging yourself a bigger hole here and need to back out fast. The content of your first post was that the Conservative candidate Tony Lit was not registered to vote. Now you seem to be backtracking by using the exact name “Tony Lit” where-as before you were intimating that the candidate was not registered.

No, that’s not what Tom’s doing so far as I can see.

Having received information as to Tony Lit’s actual name, he’s clarified his earlier remarks and placed them in their proper context, which is, of course, only right and proper when one receives notice that one has made an inadvertent, if entirely understandable, error as a result of Lit choosing not to stand for election under his given name

The different pseudonyms that Tony uses in his different business directorships is a red herring.

Not necessarily - it does depend on whether or not one complies with sections 288/9 of the Companies Act.

Many professional people use different names for different purposes. For example, my wife’s name is Gayle Ould but she publishes academic papers under the title Dr Gayle Ritchie. This is because she published before we got married and now after changing her surname she doesn’t want to confuse people. If someone was to challenge her and say, “Dr Gayle Ould” has never published an academic paper”, then you would be incorrect. This is exactly the same situation with Tony Lit.

No it isn’t the same situation at all, unless the woman in question is required by law to register her particulars with a regulatory body in much the same way that Lit, and his businesses, are required to maintain accurate records and make notifications of changes to Companies House.

The use of a different name is irrelevant - the candidate Tony Lit is registered to vote (in the same way that the candidate “Tony Blair” at the last election was registered as “Anthony Blair” - different name but same person) and you need to back down gracefully. Just admit you were wrong - we all make mistakes from time to time.

Oh well, if bullying and running off at the mouth about legal action that’s never going to materialise fails, you could always try and wheedle an apology out of Tom - it isn’t going to work, but its amusing to watch.

And you know what the funniest part in all this is?

All the faux outrage from Tory bloggers has achieved nothing… well not quite nothing as it’s very successfully pushed Tom’s post up in to the top ten search result on a Google search for ‘Tony Lit’ and not far short of overtaking the Tories own announcement that he was to stand in Ealing Southall - it’s about now that Tory bloggers should be picturing the scene in the Bug Bunny cartoon where Elmer Fudd morphs briefly into a braying jackass.

UPDATE:

Couple of matters to clear up…

1. To the anonymous individual who emailed querying the title of this post can I just point out that a ‘gasket‘ is ‘a rubber, metal, or rope ring, for packing a piston or placing around a joint to make it watertight‘ - I suspect you may be thinking of a Gascon, which is a completely different thing and really no one’s business but Iain’s.

I would strongly advise that you avoid any public speculation on the particulars of the question you posed as you to seem to have got completely the wrong end of the stick and would suggest that you invest in a dictionary.

There are some filthy-minded sods out there, I tell you…

2. There are numerous reasons why accurate registration of the personal details of company directors matters, for all that Companies House don’t tend spend too much time chasing people over it. To give but one example, one of Companies House’s many statutory duties is the maintenance of a public register of disqualified directors, individuals who are prohibited from serving as a company director or company secretary for a defined period as a consequence of having been found to have been involved form of serious wrongdoing or unlawful trading.

Clearly, a requirement in law that directors and company secretaries must provide accurate and timely information and maintain their registration information in good order is essential to the enforcement of disqualifications.

That not to suggest, in the slightest, that this has any material bearing on this particular issue or on that of the majority of other directors whose registration details may be in error or out of date at any given time - the vast majority of such errors stem from mere oversights or a lack of knowledge of the full requirements of the Companies Act and are easily corrected once noted. As mentioned, Companies House are not particular proactive in enforcement of such matters and tend to confine their interests to the correct submission of annual returns and, particularly, annual accounts unless specific concerns are raised about a particular registration that gives them cause to look more closely.

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