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Iain Dale is worried he is being seen as a racist - it is up to him to clear his name

Dale screenshot golliwog

By Derek Draper

This morning, after his shameful appearance on the Today programme, and equally shameful blogpost, LabourList removed Iain Dale's Diary from our blogroll. We said:

"10.00 am Ashcroft sock puppet Iain Dale has defended Carol Thatcher and the use of the word "Golliwog". See, even the nice seeming ones are nasty underneath. On the Today programme he said Adrian Chiles must hear much worse every week. No, Iain, he doesn't. Because he doesn't make a habit of hanging out with racist Tories. Until Dale thinks again we are suspending his listing on our blogroll. Come on Iain, do the decent thing and admit you got this wrong. Listen to Dale here."

Iain has now responded, and below is his e-mail, along with our reply. We think the exchange speaks for itself, and we hope he reconsiders his position:

From: Iain Dale
To: Derek Draper
Sent: Wednesday, 4 February, 2009 10:45:44
Subject: RE: fyi


Sorry, but that is pathetic. I have never said that golliwog is an acceptable term. Throwing around accusations of racism like this ought to be beneath you


From: Derek Draper
To: Iain Dale

Sent: Wednesday, 4 February, 2009 10:55:24

 

I replied:

 

Subject: RE: fyi

Iain,

I have not accused you of racism.

I have accused you of getting this wrong.

You know you have deep down, so get out and make that clear.

You said:

"The logic of the BBC's argument is that the very mention of the word 'golliwog' is considered racist. Utterly preposterous."

In what way does that not mean golliwog is an acceptable term?

Iain, i have no reason whatsoever to think you are a racist but you are in danger of defending people and terms that clearly are.

Yhe web and blogging are a fast moving business, when we make a mistake we should accept that.

Take this chance to show you really are the nice guy you seem.

With all personal best wishes,

Derek

UPDATE:

Iain Dale has posted this explanation on his post. I am afraid I had to tell him it was specious:

"Apparently it is this sentence which Draper has latched onto, which I wrote last night...

The logic of the BBC's argument is that the very mention of the word 'golliwog' is considered racist. Utterly preposterous.


The key words here are "the very mention of the word". So context doesn't matter. It should be a non word, should it? I studied linguistics at university and one thing I did learn is that you cannot "uninvent" words. You can try to ban them, but it never works. You can make them socially unacceptable and that is what has happened with this word. It's a word I don't use either. But the point of my article was that Carol is not racist, something my co-interviewee accepted on Today, and we are told it was a jocular remark. So I completely stand by that sentence. It doesn't mean that I regard the word is acceptable, it just means that I don't agree that every time it is mentioned it implies the person saying it is racist. Otherwise there were an awful lot of racists on the 5 Live Phone In this morning."

Posted on Feb 04, 2009 at 11:01am

59 Comments · Show / Hide
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Isn't that what is going on now? More and more private conversations are being used by 'thought police' to blacken a person's character. Emails will be spied on and any "divergent" thoughts noted. It will be a short step to microphones strategically place (like the profusion of CCTV cameras) to record every thought.
John White @ 42 weeks and 5 days ago
What a completely nonsensical comment particularly about the "royals" If you are a republican, that is ok but stupid to bring them into these comments.
John White @ 42 weeks and 5 days ago
Quote "On the Today programme he said Adrian Chiles must hear much worse every week.No, Iain, he doesn't".

How do you know? are you in the green room every day?


Quote "Because he doesn't make a habit of hanging out with racist Tories."

So it's just some Tories and no other political parties that have people that (may) make racist comments?
lee Matthews @ 52 weeks and 4 days ago
Quote "On the Today programme he said Adrian Chiles must hear much worse every week.No, Iain, he doesn't".

How do you know? are you in the green room every day?


Quote "Because he doesn't make a habit of hanging out with racist Tories."

So it's just some tories and no other political parties that have people that (may) make racist comments?
lee Matthews @ 52 weeks and 4 days ago
If you see a photo of the gentleman in question then Carol was right, however it was only used to describe how someone looks, i do not believe any part of her comment was intended to be racist.
She could have used the same word in a different context "i hate him he's a f***ing G***y", totally different. Just because someone has percieved a phrase to be racist does not mean it was actually intended as such
lee Matthews @ 52 weeks and 4 days ago
Isn't it the fact that she wasn't prepared to apologise which is the problem. She appears to think its OK to say this as a joke?
Mike Homfray @ 52 weeks and 5 days ago
She was right to be punished, but why the double standards? Jonathan Ross, whose mouth is at least as offensive is allowed to return, and was only suspended when enough people made a fuss.

At the BBC, wrong behaviour is permitted, so long as it is the right kind of wrong behaviour. The BBC should get off their high horses - we all do stupid things from time to time. A 'don't do that again' would have sufficed.

The sly sneaky way in which Thatcher was snitched reveals more about the BBC than Thatcher herself.
Andrew Webb @ 52 weeks and 5 days ago
So how do we refer to those "items" that used to appear on Robertsons jam or the litle badges that many of a certain age will have collected? Have they been deleted from the record? Onwards and upwards for the thought police.
Michael Massey @ 52 weeks and 5 days ago
Yes Sandy. Note that the end of my post said "in this context".

There is nothing about this context that makes it ok.
Emma Burnell @ 52 weeks and 5 days ago
Almost unintelligible. What an odd phrase! I almost couldn't understand you, but in fact I do!

I was wondering why people believe that acting unprofessionally at work is ok. Is that an intelligible enough question for you?

I would be fired for such a thing, and I am glad that rule applies to Carol Thatcher too.
Emma Burnell @ 52 weeks and 5 days ago
Exactly.
Ben @ 52 weeks and 5 days ago
So you do not think racism is important enough for society to debate then Wycombe?

This issue is not about political correctness it’s about challenging those who encourage persecution, discrimination, harassment and intimidation all in the name of'

"Its OK they did not mean to say it that way"

Well this issue is very current and important and if you can’t understand why then perhaps you also share raciest views or tendencies.

Frankly I'm fed up to the back teeth the way some in society are so flippant when it comes to outdated views which damages peoples lives.

If you’re bored, well get over it as many in society are not.
Gary Hills @ 52 weeks and 5 days ago
Funnilly enough Mr Field says things (with his mate Nicholas Soames) that many people COULD regard as racist - and he doesn't say it, in private, in a green room either. I don't see mr Draper getting his knickers in a twist over what Field says, though. Funny that.
Alan Giles @ 52 weeks and 5 days ago
Ms Burnell, If you take your remark to it's logical conclusion it would mean that anyone who works in a public building couldn't say anything anyweher withiout looking over their shoulder. You seem to be advocating a situation like Orwell's 1984 where anything you say, however innocuous could be "reported". If you work in a Town hall be very careful what you say in the washroom to a colelague. Somebody might object.

What a damned silly argument is going on here: it just shows how much the New Labourites are that to deflect attention to the really dire situation we are in in Britain that Mr Draper manufactures a ridiculous argument like this. As he is so busy as a "writer" psycotherapist cheerleader etc I am really surprised he wants to even start a puerile debate like this.
Alan Giles @ 52 weeks and 5 days ago
well josh ive just joined this blog today and quite frankly theres not many labour voters among you. frank field is the only labour man i listen to the rest are idiots and if broon doesnt takr to the hills soon there will be a revolution not interested in what miss thatcher said more interested in the british workers or is that rasist facist xenophobic nazi right wing god help us
jean stem @ 52 weeks and 5 days ago
And in this case the context was nothing of those sorts. It was pure unadulterated bigotry or ignorance or both.
Alex Smith @ 52 weeks and 5 days ago
Well, it is and it isn't. It's certainly not about pulling people onto the site today. It's about showing epople that everything Iain says isn't 'safe', and that he sails close to the wind. If this results in decline, maybe he should be more careful.

Anyway, you could say the same thing about everything Iain writes...

Does anyone in the political blogosphere actually write things for them not to be read?
Tom Miller @ 52 weeks and 5 days ago
What on earth is an 'editorial hit rating?'.

This post is off topic.
Tom Miller @ 52 weeks and 5 days ago
In some cases, Emma, yes...it is okay to use offensive language at work.

Again, context is everything.

A script-writers' meeting where they are deciding whether to use the f-word or c-word in a new TV drama?

A police officer reading out - verbatim - the statement taken by a suspect or witness?

Again, it's all context.

Sandy Booth @ 52 weeks and 5 days ago
Wow, this is the most hopelessly petty way of shutting down debate around race I've actually ever seen... stop people referencing racist comments that other people are allowed to make in the first instance!
Tom Miller @ 52 weeks and 5 days ago
I can't help thinking that Carol and the Royals live in some kind of 1950s world where seeing a black person is worthy of comment in itself - and where a black friend is named according to their skin colour. So, Carol, get out more, and just live in the real world a little bit more - it's an afro (I'm guessing) - a 'fro - Andy Murray used to have a bit of one and it's okay to comment on it.

Other than that, if Barack Obama can stand up and say, "I can no more reject (his pastor buddy) than I can reject my grandma who made racist comments," then Carol should be forgiven - provided she admits she's totally wrong and an idiot. I'm sure she will. I'm sure she won't want to be a PC martyr.... will she?
Mark Sullivan @ 52 weeks and 5 days ago
Emma, your question is almost unintelligible.

Do you mean that because Carol was "at work", does it alter your consideration of whether it is morally unacceptable or not? Or are you asking whether it's ok for you to use that term at your place of work?
Ben @ 52 weeks and 5 days ago
I heard Today this morning and it was suggested that Carol Thatcher was referring to a white player's hair. In that context, her remarks were foolish but not that serious.
However, the Telegraph are now reporting that she was referring to the black French player Jo-Wilfried Tsonga.
Clearly, referring to a black person as a golliwog is totally and utterly unacceptable and is real racism. Golliwog is about as strong a term as you can imagine - stereotyping black people as stupid, humorous and ridiculous. It's not like calling a gay person a poof, it's like calling a gay person a mincing queer pansy. I think Iain Dale would understand that as hugely derogatory and worthy of disciplinary action in anyone who said it.
Iain - you really can't defend someone referring to a black person as a golliwog, can you?
James Harris @ 52 weeks and 6 days ago
Stop repeating the word then.
Ben @ 52 weeks and 6 days ago
So you agree with Iain then.

I'll quote you back: "not acceptable in any public (or private) arena".

Yet you found it acceptable to use it several sentences earlier.

Granted, you did not use it referencing someone. You used it nonetheless, and then decried the use of it in any venue.

You are now pleading that you used it in a "safe" context. Why use it even then? There wasn't any need.

The term has fallen out of common useage. Since you find it offensive, leave it that way.
Ben @ 52 weeks and 6 days ago
Can I ask all those people banging on about context just what they think about using offensive language in your place off work is ok in this context?
Emma Burnell @ 52 weeks and 6 days ago
How does in her place of work - a public and publically funded building - count as private?
Emma Burnell @ 52 weeks and 6 days ago
Draper's argument is totally bizarre.

An obvious example of the g-word being used in a non-racist way would be: "The golliwog was, for many years, the emblemn printed on jars of Robinson's jam"

Numerous other examples can be easily imagined.

The same goes for the n-word.

Context is everything.

Sandy Booth @ 52 weeks and 6 days ago
But I, unlike Carol Thatcher, whom Dale was talking about, would never apply it to an individual. I would never call anyone 'hideously white' either, as Dale did. Because of a history of abuse, race and racism are sensitive issues. People should be aware of the conqequences of banding incendiary language about on air or in BBC green rooms or on influencial websites. Just look at the 'furore' today.
Alex Smith @ 52 weeks and 6 days ago
If you think that the term is in itself grotesque, don't use it. If the very pronouncement of the word offends you, don't repeat it.

However, as you have used it, I assume you find it contextually offensive rather than offensive in itself. I know you have 'quoted' it, but you have still used it.

You could have easily not used the word given the sentence structure in which you have used it and the fact that it would be contextually apparent which word we were referring to. Instead, you have used it.

Given that, surely you agree with Iain's point that the very mention of the word is not racist in itself?
Ben @ 52 weeks and 6 days ago
Is this some kind of satirical comic website?
Britain is on the verge of collapse with a dangerously unstable lunatic as prime minister and you lot are discussing some PC crap that the real world got bored with twenty years ago.
You are so far out of touch you can no longer be taken seriously
wycombe wanderer @ 52 weeks and 6 days ago
But it was OK for the right wing Daily Mail readers who wanted the head of Jonathan Ross for having a bit of a laugh?

'Thatcher' along with many other Tories are inherently racist. No matter how much old slap head 'Cameron' paints the Tories as been all fluffy and nice. Some of us can see beyond this and know that the dirty deep cancer of the real Tory party still exists. And if they get elected, then people will be in for a huge shock as the real Tories come out to play.

Remember it wasn't so long ago that a Tory MP was sent to Coventry for saying that it was fine to call black soldiers in the army Niggers.
Josh Eades @ 52 weeks and 6 days ago
This is what I find so unedifying about the whole affair between you and Iain..

Considering how Labour have used the term 'racist' to stop debate specifically about immigration by accusing those seeking some scrutiny as 'racists'.

Yet, as we can see here on this very website, Dan McCurry can happily accuse the residents around Heathrow Airport as being potential BNP supporters (and therefore are currently latent racists) if the Airport inexplicably was to close very tenuously on the grounds of not expanding it further.

Still, no harm done, these people are not going to be voting for Labour now or any time soon are they?

As to the word Golliwog or Gollywog, the insinuation has always come from the political left, it was the GLC that banned Robertson's Jams and Marmalade after all.

As for Iain's point, if you look at the history of these dolls and their depicion in children's stories, they were portrayed as kindly and heroic. Only later once a racist association had been made, they were sinister as the League of Gentlemen's Papa Lazarou ably demonstrates.

So I would agree with Iain, it is a political mind-set that makes this association, like many words it is the cultural 'now' that defines the word, not its history.

However, Derek to then make the accusation of Iain which is certainly inferred is a prop to a rather pathetic strawman of Derek's fabrication.

Moyles can say a lot worse in front of a celebrated black female actress and get away with it.

How so? That is a very valid point and you would add some credibility to your ad hominem attack Derek if you tried to square your accusation with that?

So we are left questioning your intention, the most cynical and sadly, typical modus operandi would be to drum up trade.

The other intention is to stick a very nasty insinuation on Iain.

Which let's face it, would be New Labour all over.

As for the furore here, the mock outrage is amusingly synthetic. Only people on the political right can be racists.

How preposterous.
Mike Thomas @ 52 weeks and 6 days ago
I thought Iain acquitted himself well on Today this morning, but he does have form when it comes to supporting those who are not racist but...
For example, he's previously supported the Anglosphere Institute. The Anglosphere is apparently led by two node countries (UK and USA) and includes five outliers (Australia, Canada, Ireland, New Zealand, and South Africa) and the 'educated English-speaking populations of the Caribbean, Oceania, Africa and India' (but these are very third class).
This scheme isn't racist, say Anglospherists, even though an uneducated Briton will always be in the first division while a well educated Indian will always be third rate.
Stephen Newton @ 52 weeks and 6 days ago
You're getting all mixed up Alex - Iain didn't defend the use of the word, neither on his blog nor in the radio interview. If you disagree provide the quote / source and I'll stand corrected. The fact that a curious silence has emerged on the 'very mention' quote suggests a realisation that you got that one wrong so if he defended the use of the word somewhere else let’s see it.

What he did do (on both radio & online) is question the BBC’s reaction and introduce the concept of context. Nobody on this entire thread or anywhere else on Labourlist has engaged with those issues for some reason – I can only assume it’s because they don’t feel sure of their position.

Instead we have repeated references to Iain ‘defending’ the use of the word, suggesting it’s ‘acceptable’ etc. all without a single source or quote of substance to back them up – it’s laughable really.
Liam Murray @ 52 weeks and 6 days ago
"then I really, really do despair for this site. "

I'm sure the interests of LabourList are exactly what you have in mind, Liam.
Tom Miller @ 52 weeks and 6 days ago
"the need to challenge the internet hegemony of people like ID"

That's a tact acknowledgement of my point Tom - this ain't about language or race but traffic.
Liam Murray @ 52 weeks and 6 days ago
I'm not saying that to defend a piece of language is to promote its usage. But I am saying that these words are wrong and that they are not, as Iain Dale put it, 'jokey'. Ardian Chiles was offended and he was one of a small handful of people in the room to hear it. The only reason it has become an issue today is that Iain Dale, a prominent figure, went on national radio to defend it. It's not a matter of traffic bounces. IT's a matter of right and wrong.
Alex Smith @ 52 weeks and 6 days ago
Why does what the BBC does have anything to do with the point for which Derek has taken Iain to task, namely over whether the word is OK to use?

If it's not OK to use the term 'racism', then how do YOU describe a racist?
Tom Miller @ 52 weeks and 6 days ago
Erm.

I think it's more that Labour folks, DD included, feel the need to challenge the internet hegemony of people like ID. HE doesn't help himself when he claims that the term 'golliwog' isn't a racist on really, does he?

The key is in the last syllable.
Tom Miller @ 52 weeks and 6 days ago
Read my comment Jason and you may understand why you are wrong just as much as they were..
Gary Hills @ 52 weeks and 6 days ago
It is absolutely right for Labour List to focus on aspects that add to raciest views across the country. Too many people are quick to dismiss a comment or remark on the basis it’s just something people say?

When Ian Dale was trying to dumb down the remark By Carol Thatcher on the BBC it was not just a defence of the person. Due to the way he defended her and how he laid out his own view, he has implied that as long as the word was not meant then it’s perfectly OK.

Racism thrives on such flippant acceptance and you can be sure that those who are raciest or lean towards such views would feel quite happy having their standpoint defended. If Ian Dale wants to show he does not support such language then perhaps he should not be so quick to offer support to it.

Whenever raciest views or terms are used they should be exposed not protected. Carol Thatcher may well have not intended offence, but that is irrelevant as she still knowingly used the term.

If we are to ever become an equal society it is up to those in the public eye to think about what they say and how they say it. Hiding behind excuses will not prevent the harm they cause.

Carol Thatcher and Ian Dale in their lack of consideration have played into the hands of those that seek to pull Britain apart.



Gary Hills @ 52 weeks and 6 days ago
I hold no brief for any of the Thatcher's (God forbid!) but I am getting sick and tired how the right-wing New Labourites now through the "racist" insult around so liberally. To try to close debate down on the Total company and their recent troubles (of not allowing British workers apply for jobs) Mandelson branded the strikers "xenophobic". Now Mr Draper tries it on.

Let's get things in proportion: Ms Thatcher didn't use this admittedly risible term on air - she said it in the green room and somebody perhaps a bit too "PC" reported her for it, which is in itself is childish - it harks back to the school playground "please Miss, Carole said....". If they were that offended why didn't they challenge her about it at the time, privately?. That's what I would have done - and I guess most of the people on here. However, Thatcher gets sacked for a remark made off-air and in private. If the BBC are now so sensitive, why did they not sack Jonathan Ross for insulting a 78 year old man on radio, and about matters to which he wasn't responsible for anyway?. I suspect the reason was because they would have had to pay Ross off from a very expensive contract, I assume that the cheap TV show The One Show pays in TV terms minimum wage.

As a "psychotherapist" I am surprised Mr Draper doesn't have more pressing matters to cope with.
Alan Giles @ 52 weeks and 6 days ago
"effectively advocated its usage"?

Seriously Alex? Can you source that...? And if we're going to fall back on that tortured interpretation of the "the very mentionof the word" phrase then I really, really do despair for this site.
Liam Murray @ 52 weeks and 6 days ago
Jason, 'Golliwog' as a term is grotesque. The fuss is because an influencial high-profile person effectively advocated its usage and then defended himself because the person Carol Thatcher was referring to was white!? Not acceptable from 'Prince' Harry because it was his 'chum', not acceptable from Carol Thatcher because the person was white, not acceptable from Iain Dale because he advocated its occasional usage to his large following, not acceptable in any public (or private) arena.
Alex Smith @ 52 weeks and 6 days ago
Alex,

“His post that 'the very mention of the word 'golliwog' is considered racist [is] utterly preposterous' shows a lack of understanding on how offensive racial slurs can be.”

That’s simply wrong Alex and it’s hard to conclude other than people are being deliberately obtuse here. There is absolutely nothing in that phrase that speaks to Iain’s (or anyone else’s) understanding of how offensive the word is – it’s dealing with an entirely different point, namely that context is important.

In fact, by rejecting that reference to context and then using the word you’re then effectively deeming yourself racist which is clearly absurd.

Derek – can we get some sort of decent editorial control here and a decent grasp of language? You’ve made an allegation, Iain’s refuted it and you’ve went silent – Labourlist can surely do better than this…?
Liam Murray @ 52 weeks and 6 days ago
Blog wars get a bit boring, they don't matter to many of us. I'm not a fan of Dale and his reactionary blog but I'd like Labour List to be about debate for Party members and supporters rather than attacking others on the internet, keep it positive instead of negative.
Sarvinder Gupta @ 52 weeks and 6 days ago
What a big fuss about nothing. Golliwog is hardly the most offensive term in the world. Time some of you leftie PC types grew up.
Jason Kirk @ 52 weeks and 6 days ago
I think your response shows a degree of tribalism, Jeremy, or at least blind faith in Iain Dale's views. His post that 'the very mention of the word 'golliwog' is considered racist [is] utterly preposterous' shows a lack of understanding on how offensive racial slurs can be.
Alex Smith @ 52 weeks and 6 days ago
Good question from Mike O'Tool - why is there an article on the sacking of a minor journalist on the One Show, but as yet nothing on the Lindsey strikes?

Are we to believe that Labour minded people don't actually care about wildcat strikes being organised by Unite and GMB shop stewards in a bid to secure jobs for local workers?

If you wish to ape the success ConservativeHome you're going to have to learn to stop pulling your punches.
Ricardo's Ghost @ 52 weeks and 6 days ago
Because it speaks to a lack of maturity and poverty of debate on Labourlist. Because of who he is Iain attracts all manner of trolls hoping to prod, provoke or pester him because a response is sure to help their traffic – I’d imagine Labourlist has aspirations beyond that.

It also make Derek look a little silly because Iain’s explained himself in pretty straightforward terms and Derek’s just ignored it. Hard to conclude there’s any substance to this beyond a crude traffic exercise….
Liam Murray @ 52 weeks and 6 days ago
I'm sure this comment will be censored into the etrash like all my other critical yet innocuous comments. Anyhow here goes.
Is this really the best sort of thing that Labourlist has to offer? You're attempting to stir up a storm in a teacup over what seems to be very little especially when you read Dale's reply. It's a bit pathetic really. Where's the conversation on the BJ4BW gone? Where is the discussion on the policy changes needed by the party to try and win the next election? Where's the presentation of the need for the surveillance
society? There is increasingly nothing of substance on this site. And what little there is is not even of prurient interest. Your site is starting to die a slow death from over censorship, poor quality content and party tribalism. Moreover your technology stinks. The word wrap on comments fails. The pages stretch for vast expanses of blank when making a comment and the design is very stale. Consider these comments
from a concerned customer.
Jeremy Brown @ 52 weeks and 6 days ago
I don't understand why that matters at all, Liam...
Tom Miller @ 52 weeks and 6 days ago
Derek - this strikes me as an embarrassingly transparent effort to generate some controversy & comment around a very minor of issue. The sort of thing you might expect from a boy-blogger anxious to up the hit rate and score a few links.

The statement you refer to is quite clearly about whether or not the use of the word is always racist – it doesn’t contain the word ‘acceptable’ so your accusation doesn’t hold up. If this explanation is specious explain how.
Liam Murray @ 52 weeks and 6 days ago
A cynic may be forgiven that thinking that playing the race card is yet another diversionary ploy to draw attention away from matters of concern to working people and yet are conspicuous by their absence from LablourList. For example, the current spate of unofficial strikes by refinery worked goes unreported - why?
Surely one of LL's illustrious list of contributors could translate the syntactical contortions of Gordon Brown as he attempts to re-define what he meant by "British jobs for British people"? Or, is it because the strikers live outside of the M25, it is simpler to brand them as "xenopobic and racist" by Labour's nomenklatura, most of whom wouldn't recognise a working man he he offered them a bacon butty?
Mike O'Tool @ 52 weeks and 6 days ago
Wrong on Politics, wrong on stats, wrong on the economy, wrong on the EU, wrong on child poverty, wrong on fox hunting, wrong on Inheritance,wrong on apprenticeships, wrong on saving the banks, wrong on allowing non taxpayers to contribute to their funds.

What is wrong with 'Cameron's' Conservatives? Everything, they are just wrong!
Josh Eades @ 52 weeks and 6 days ago
no actually. wrong on politics, wrong on stats ;)
Derek Draper @ 52 weeks and 6 days ago
Iain Dale has no problem accusing others of homophobia, or warning Peter Hitchens not to walk down Old Compton Street.
Do you think if he was black he might feel different about this topic?
I'm not accusing him of being racist, but it's just typical of "I'm alright, Jack" tories to only fight for what's personal to them. You know, rich people wanting tax cuts for the rich, but not caring about support for the poor. It's just the tory mentality and we're seeing it here from him.
Paula Henderson @ 52 weeks and 6 days ago
Struggling, are we Dolly? I gather your average daily visit is some 150 readers. Never mind.
Barry Hunt @ 52 weeks and 6 days ago