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The prime minister used to be deemed an electoral asset, and he continues to outperform the administration as a whole to an extent. But over the last few months he has veered from positive to deeply negative territory. As recently as last December he had a positive rating of +5, but this has now turned into a net negative of –11. Crucially, that leaves him in a statistical dead heat with Miliband, whose strongly negative rating of –17 in December has now eased to –12. If the economic blame game is still preventing an outright Tory collapse, the question of leadership is no longer doing so.
The chancellor has slid further and faster than the government as a whole, Osborne's +17 net rating in June 2010 had fallen to –2 by December, and has now dived right down to –25 points. The same is true of Nick Clegg whose already poor ratings are sinking to new depths. The deputy prime minister's net +19 rating in August 2010 had already flipped into a negative –19 by December of last year, and has now sunk further to –27.
Incumbent administrations are increasingly unpopular across the EU, and Britain is not immune. The Conservatives' rapidly shrinking advantage on the economy is only one sign of disillusion. Only 31% of respondents think the coalition is doing a good job overall, as against 52% who say the reverse. The difference between these two figures gives the government its negative net approval rating of –21 points. That is down from –8 in December last year, and from a positive approval of a net +23 during the coalition's first flush in power in June 2010.
The news for the Liberal Democrats is unremittingly bleak. Up until now ICM's methodology has suggested a less precipitous collapse in Lib Dem support than has been seen in other surveys since the coalition was formed. But third party's standing now shrivelled to its lowest level in 15 years, since the time when Tony Blair's all-conquering new government briefly attracted support of 60%. The last time the Lib Dems did so badly in a more ordinary political environment was over 20 years ago, during the party's miserable early days at the very start of the 1990s.
Peter Mandelson told the Leveson inquiry on Monday how Rebekah Brooks would "come on to me and complain" that Watson and his colleagues were "hounding" them, and demand: "Couldn't they be pulled away, pulled off?" Brooks, editor of the Sun at the time of the libel, had taken over as chief executive of NI at the beginning of September, in control of both Murdoch tabloids.
On the evening of 29 September, while Derek Webb was still shadowing Watson at his conference hotel, the Sun revealed it was switching political sides, and published a dramatic anti-Brown front page. From then on, it embarked on a ferocious campaign against Gordon Brown and his supporters.
Watson is due to give evidence to Leveson on Tuesday.
It's almost as if a séance is being conducted in order to communicate with a deceased loved one, which in their case would be Capitalism, except that we know its evil heart continues to beat away on life support.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/news/datablog/2009/oct/21/icm-poll-data-labour...
;;
Labour - 41%, polling the highest they have polled in 9 years
Cons - 36%, up 3%
Lib Dem - 11%, down 4%, polling the lowest they have polled in 15 years
http://www.guardian.co.uk/news/datablog/2009/oct/21/icm-poll-data-labour...
The prime minister used to be deemed an electoral asset, and he continues to outperform the administration as a whole to an extent. But over the last few months he has veered from positive to deeply negative territory. As recently as last December he had a positive rating of +5, but this has now turned into a net negative of –11. Crucially, that leaves him in a statistical dead heat with Miliband, whose strongly negative rating of –17 in December has now eased to –12. If the economic blame game is still preventing an outright Tory collapse, the question of leadership is no longer doing so.
The chancellor has slid further and faster than the government as a whole, Osborne's +17 net rating in June 2010 had fallen to –2 by December, and has now dived right down to –25 points. The same is true of Nick Clegg whose already poor ratings are sinking to new depths. The deputy prime minister's net +19 rating in August 2010 had already flipped into a negative –19 by December of last year, and has now sunk further to –27.
Incumbent administrations are increasingly unpopular across the EU, and Britain is not immune. The Conservatives' rapidly shrinking advantage on the economy is only one sign of disillusion. Only 31% of respondents think the coalition is doing a good job overall, as against 52% who say the reverse. The difference between these two figures gives the government its negative net approval rating of –21 points. That is down from –8 in December last year, and from a positive approval of a net +23 during the coalition's first flush in power in June 2010.
The news for the Liberal Democrats is unremittingly bleak. Up until now ICM's methodology has suggested a less precipitous collapse in Lib Dem support than has been seen in other surveys since the coalition was formed. But third party's standing now shrivelled to its lowest level in 15 years, since the time when Tony Blair's all-conquering new government briefly attracted support of 60%. The last time the Lib Dems did so badly in a more ordinary political environment was over 20 years ago, during the party's miserable early days at the very start of the 1990s.

"A Friend in Need" by Cassius Marcellus CoolidgeCanada, Europe, it's all the same thing. Just the rich and the poor fighting it out, time, after time, after time.
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/22/world/europe/hollande-to-press-germany...
Trendlines
the slow return of rage
In successive polls since Christmas, the Tories economic lead of 21 points has fallen in sequence to 18, 17 and 13 before now shrinking to nine.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2012/may/21/guardian-icm-poll-to...
Hollande Says NATO Missile Shield No Threat to Other Nations
Mazher Mahmood, who now works for Sunday Times, appears to have commissioned surveillance of phone-hacking critic
http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2012/may/22/news-of-world-tom-watson
Peter Mandelson told the Leveson inquiry on Monday how Rebekah Brooks would "come on to me and complain" that Watson and his colleagues were "hounding" them, and demand: "Couldn't they be pulled away, pulled off?" Brooks, editor of the Sun at the time of the libel, had taken over as chief executive of NI at the beginning of September, in control of both Murdoch tabloids.
On the evening of 29 September, while Derek Webb was still shadowing Watson at his conference hotel, the Sun revealed it was switching political sides, and published a dramatic anti-Brown front page. From then on, it embarked on a ferocious campaign against Gordon Brown and his supporters.
Watson is due to give evidence to Leveson on Tuesday.
Leader of Syriza insists Greece is not seeking to blackmail Germany during his charm offensive in Berlin
http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2012/may/22/greek-leftist-leader-alex...
Italy steps up tax enforcement. Results so far? Deep discount used Ferraris.
It's almost as if a séance is being conducted in order to communicate with a deceased loved one, which in their case would be Capitalism, except that we know its evil heart continues to beat away on life support.
Refreshing indeed.
France's Hollande makes bold debut on EU summit stage
http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/05/24/us-eurozone-hollande-idUSBRE84...
The Guardian seems to have a two-fold mission here. One is to enact revenge on Murdoch, and the other is to bring Cameron down. Good for the Guardian.
Finally this inquiry is getting somewhere.
Jeremy Hunt: minister for Murdoch
If this module of the Leveson inquiry has a smoking gun, it is the memo Jeremy Hunt wrote to the prime minister on 19 November 2010
http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2012/may/24/jeremy-hunt-minister-murdoch...
Sweet!
Cracks in Sarkozy's UMP party as leaders wrestle for controlUMP ministers call for unity, warning 'war of clans' could lead to catastrophic collapse in support just before general election
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/may/25/sarkozy-ump-split-leaders-wr...