Thursday 26th June 2025
Blog Page 1790

Letting go: The Antlers start anew

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When we went in to record we just asked ourselves what we could imagine playing a lot.’ Peter Silberman, The Antlers’ frontman, muses on the beginnings of their latest record, ‘Well, it’s going to be something fun.’ Sat in the band’s snug tour bus along with drummer Mike Lerner and ‘multi-instrumentalist’ Darby Cicci, we discussed the fresh approach they had taken to making Burst Apart, the much anticipated follow up to 2009’s towering Hospice. Silberman continued, ‘We wanted to make something that had a sombre tone to it, like Hospice, but we wanted to enjoy doing it.’

This focus on enjoyment was clear throughout The Antlers’ performance later that evening, where they played a set consisting almost uniformly of cuts from Burst Apart, all of which translated seamlessly to the live setting. ‘They’re all working really well live,’ Mike told me, ‘obviously we’re evolving the tracks but we’ve always done that.’ One of the main reasons for this is that Burst Apart is the first album that The Antlers has made from start to finish as a bona fide band. Previously the solo project of Silberman, the band evolved into a three piece following the release of Hospice. Cicci described to me the importance of jamming in the writing stage of Burst Apart, although he was quick and emphatic in making the distinction between ‘jamming as a band’ and being a ‘jam band’.

The process of releasing creative control over the project he had nurtured since its inception in 2006 must have been a difficult one for Silberman, but he seemed overtly positive about The Antlers’ current incarnation.

‘With Hospice I was trying to very carefully write something,’ he told me. ‘I don’t think it would have been healthy to go through it all again. What I needed was to let go.’ Silberman certainly seemed comfortable within the band dynamic, sitting back to allow his collaborators to field my questions, perhaps relieved to have surrendered some responsibility. He explained, ‘That’s why it was so great when we went into recording. There was the pressure of following up Hospice but we felt we had freedom to do whatever we wanted and that helped it be a better record.’

Our conversation returned to the pivotal Hospice and the long shadow that it still casts over The Antlers. The band made no attempt to downplay the album’s importance, describing it as ‘the record that gave us our career.’ I asked them about their feelings when making Burst Apart – did it seem like they had everything to lose? ‘That’s exactly how it felt,’ Silberman replied. The band agreed that a lack of preconceived ideas about the end product made the process of recording Burst Apart a much smoother one. ‘Otherwise, I think it would’ve felt more like a commitment that we had to power through,’ Silberman concluded.

Despite this fairly open ended approach to recording Burst Apart, the album couldn’t feel more cohesive as a singular work, continuing in the tradition of Hospice. ‘There’s an arc that’s very important,’ Cicci explained, placing significant value on the album as a format, ‘We think of it as a whole piece of music rather than a bunch of songs.’ A sadly unfashionable view to hold in today’s musical climate, The Antlers’ disillusionment with the music industry in fact runs far deeper than the demise of the album.

‘I despair more for people who make records because they feel they have to,’ Cicci continued as Silberman interjected, ‘I wish bands had more time to make records as well, not just two weeks in the studio.’

As our conversation drew to a close, Cicci summed up The Antlers’ philosophy succinctly, ‘I wish more people would come up with ideas of what they actually wanted to make and just make it. However weird or unusual it might be.’ Thus far, this is exactly what The Antlers have done. They represent that all too rare breed of musicians making music for no one else but themselves and, after our brief meeting, I am in no doubt that they will continue for long into the future.

On this day and through the ages

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Well now it’s 4th week. There is literally nothing special about 4th week, so  there’s no way of segwaying into episodes from Cherwell’s past. So, here they are:  Do you ever feel like your JCR is distinctly lacking in fictional members? “Yes!” I hear you cry. Well it turns out Teddy Hall felt exactly that way in 1996 when they invited Homer Simpson to join their JCR. The 31st October issue reported that a motion was ‘convincingly passed’ and a personal invitation had been sent by the JCR President to the fictional character, with the college ‘waiting on tenterhooks for the reply’. Unfortunately Cherwell’s prediction that he might mount a ‘strong challenge for President’ in the future never came true; which is sad because it would have made for a great episode of The Simpsons.

Well now it’s 4th week. There is literally nothing special about 4th week, so  there’s no way of segwaying into episodes from Cherwell’s past. So, here they are: 
 Do you ever feel like your JCR is distinctly lacking in fictional members? “Yes!” I hear you cry. Well it turns out Teddy Hall felt exactly that way in 1996 when they invited Homer Simpson to join their JCR. The 31st October issue reported that a motion was ‘convincingly passed’ and a personal invitation had been sent by the JCR President to the fictional character, with the college ‘waiting on tenterhooks for the reply’. Unfortunately Cherwell’s prediction that he might mount a ‘strong challenge for President’ in the future never came true; which is sad because it would have made for a great episode of The Simpsons.
The 3rd November 1978 issue of Cherwell provides much cause for worry about the quality of Oxford’s Law degrees. It reported that a Keble Law student was jailed for smuggling £23,000 worth of cannabis into Oxford as well as ‘possessing, supplying and cultivating the drug’. The fact that he decided to break the law in the first place is not actually the major cause of concern for the quality of Oxford’s legal education, but rather the defence he gave after sacking his council and representing himself towards the end of the trial. He ‘gave an impassioned character reference’, arguing that he should not be jailed as “I have been presented to the Queen and Prince Philip when they visited Oxford and I am a Queen’s Scout and hold the Duke of Edinburgh’s award”. If doing the D of E award provided legal immunity, I’m sure I would have tried harder to actually get my certificate. However, I think it really was shocking that they convicted him despite the fact he’d ‘had tea with Princess Margaret’. If that isn’t a defence for drug dealing I don’t know what is.
It seems college rivalries have become far less serious since 2003, as the 7th November issue of Cherwell reported that Magdalen was building up ‘a private militia’ for use in its conflict with Oriel. The JCR even voted to commit funds ‘to purchasing an armoured tank’. This came after threats by Oriel to seize control of Ahmed’s kebab van. Due to the continued existence of Oriel one must assume their attempts to buy arms were thwarted by those pesky weapon control laws.

The 3rd November 1978 issue of Cherwell provides much cause for worry about the quality of Oxford’s Law degrees. It reported that a Keble Law student was jailed for smuggling £23,000 worth of cannabis into Oxford as well as ‘possessing, supplying and cultivating the drug’. The fact that he decided to break the law in the first place is not actually the major cause of concern for the quality of Oxford’s legal education, but rather the defence he gave after sacking his council and representing himself towards the end of the trial. He ‘gave an impassioned character reference’, arguing that he should not be jailed as “I have been presented to the Queen and Prince Philip when they visited Oxford and I am a Queen’s Scout and hold the Duke of Edinburgh’s award”. If doing the D of E award provided legal immunity, I’m sure I would have tried harder to actually get my certificate. However, I think it really was shocking that they convicted him despite the fact he’d ‘had tea with Princess Margaret’. If that isn’t a defence for drug dealing I don’t know what is.

It seems college rivalries have become far less serious since 2003, as the 7th November issue of Cherwell reported that Magdalen was building up ‘a private militia’ for use in its conflict with Oriel. The JCR even voted to commit funds ‘to purchasing an armoured tank’. This came after threats by Oriel to seize control of Ahmed’s kebab van. Due to the continued existence of Oriel one must assume their attempts to buy arms were thwarted by those pesky weapon control laws.

Justice or barbarism?

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It was getting smelly”. With these words, used to explain the removal of the body of the recently deceased Muammar Gaddafi from the refrigerator where it was being stored, Abdul-Mohammed Elshami, a Libyan fighter, encapsulated the complete loss of status undergone by the once revered dictator of 42 years.

The death of Gaddafi, who was killed after being discovered hiding in a drainage pipe in his home town of Sirte, is still shrouded in mystery. Whether he was executed or died of his wounds, that he didn’t live to be trialled and brought to justice could prove to be either a blessing or a curse for the fledgling Libyan democracy. Gaddafi’s death is not something that too many will mourn. But the question remains whether what may turn out to have been the summary execution of the Colonel will haunt Libya as it tries to establish itself as a democratic nation based on principles of justice.

t was getting smelly”. With these words, used to explain the removal of the body of the recently deceased Muammar Gaddafi from the refrigerator where it was being stored, Abdul-Mohammed Elshami, a Libyan fighter, encapsulated the complete loss of status undergone by the once revered dictator of 42 years. The death of Gaddafi, who was killed after being discovered hiding in a drainage pipe in his home town of Sirte, is still shrouded in mystery. Whether he was executed or died of his wounds, that he didn’t live to be trialled and brought to justice could prove to be either a blessing or a curse for the fledgling Libyan democracy. Gaddafi’s death is not something that too many will mourn. But the question remains whether what may turn out to have been the summary execution of the Colonel will haunt Libya as it tries to establish itself as a democratic nation based on principles of justice.
The first thing to say is that no-one is sure yet whether the rebels did murder Gaddafi. The National Transitional Council (NTC) has reluctantly agreed to hold an inquest into the death, but the official line is that the ex-Libyan leader was wounded by gunfire in an exchange that followed the bombing of his fleeing convoy, and died later in an ambulance. However, video footage that portrays the rebels jostling Gaddafi after his capture has been accompanied by the suggestion that he was murdered by those same captors. Libya’s leading pathologist confirmed in the post-mortem that the death was due to a gunshot wound to the head.
Whether or not Gaddafi was executed, there is now no chance of justice being seen to be done. But while reconciliation has often proved integral for the recovery process in stricken states, one feels that if the NTC can say the right things, and begin the building of Libyan democracy in the spirit of the principles which condemn the murder of anyone, maniacal dictator or no, then the gory beginning to that process may prove unimportant. What’s more, even though a new Libyan government’s legitimacy might be knocked by this incident, it could be worth it. There is a fear that if Gaddafi had hung around in the Courts, resolute and defiant, the pockets of subdued loyalists that surely still exist would have been gradually emboldened, and Libya’s healing process impeded. The revolutionaries feared this power of Gaddafi’s to unite, even in death. Initially hoping to draw a line under the Colonel’s bloody regime by exhibiting his corpse for all to see, they have changed tack amid concerns over his martyrdom. Under pressure from the NTC, and alarmed by the crowds turning up to observe the former dictator’s lifeless body, he was given over to his family to be buried in a furtive service away from a cemetery. Whether Libya as a whole will be able to bury the memory of Gaddafi quite so easily remains to be seen.

The first thing to say is that no-one is sure yet whether the rebels did murder Gaddafi. The National Transitional Council (NTC) has reluctantly agreed to hold an inquest into the death, but the official line is that the ex-Libyan leader was wounded by gunfire in an exchange that followed the bombing of his fleeing convoy, and died later in an ambulance. However, video footage that portrays the rebels jostling Gaddafi after his capture has been accompanied by the suggestion that he was murdered by those same captors. Libya’s leading pathologist confirmed in the post-mortem that the death was due to a gunshot wound to the head.

Whether or not Gaddafi was executed, there is now no chance of justice being seen to be done. But while reconciliation has often proved integral for the recovery process in stricken states, one feels that if the NTC can say the right things, and begin the building of Libyan democracy in the spirit of the principles which condemn the murder of anyone, maniacal dictator or no, then the gory beginning to that process may prove unimportant. What’s more, even though a new Libyan government’s legitimacy might be knocked by this incident, it could be worth it. There is a fear that if Gaddafi had hung around in the Courts, resolute and defiant, the pockets of subdued loyalists that surely still exist would have been gradually emboldened, and Libya’s healing process impeded. The revolutionaries feared this power of Gaddafi’s to unite, even in death. Initially hoping to draw a line under the Colonel’s bloody regime by exhibiting his corpse for all to see, they have changed tack amid concerns over his martyrdom. Under pressure from the NTC, and alarmed by the crowds turning up to observe the former dictator’s lifeless body, he was given over to his family to be buried in a furtive service away from a cemetery. Whether Libya as a whole will be able to bury the memory of Gaddafi quite so easily remains to be seen.

Lord Adonis: I’m a political animal

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The Institute for Government is housed in an original Nash Grade I listed building overlooking St James’ Park. It isn’t hard to imagine that these calm and elegant surroundings would be a welcome break for any politician who had worked tirelessly up and down Whitehall throughout Labour’s time in government. Andrew Adonis, however, is no ordinary politician. 

he Institute for Government is housed in an original Nash Grade I listed building overlooking St James’ Park. It isn’t hard to imagine that these calm and elegant surroundings would be a welcome break for any politician who had worked tirelessly up and down Whitehall throughout Labour’s time in government. Andrew Adonis, however, is no ordinary politician. 
Adonis is eager to discuss all the work his think tank is producing, and, of course, the next general election. When asked about his new role, his relentless enthusiasm for all things policy takes over – though it becomes clear quite quickly that his move into the world of the think tank is unlikely to be a permanent one. “Did I enjoy government and being there making decisions? Yes, but my party’s out of government and there’s no point in crying over spilt milk. In four years’ time there’ll be another election and I shall be fighting jolly hard to get Labour back into power. While were in opposition, being able to play this charitable role is wholly worthwhile. We are the big society at the heart of Whitehall,” he jokes, in a rather shrewd reference to David Cameron’s flagship policy. 
Having completed something of a political odyssey, from the Social Democrats to the Liberal Democrats to the Labour party, Lord Adonis was hauled into the policy unit of Number 10 back in 1998 as an education advisor. After being handed a peerage in 2005 to become a junior education minister without any experience, there were suspicions he might just become another of ‘Tony’s Cronies’. But, to the surprise of many, he outlived Blair into Brown’s cabinet as Secretary of State for Transport and was said to be one of Labour’s key negotiators during the five days of coalition talks and media flurry.
Despite his new non-partisan role, Adonis doesn’t hesitate to criticise the present government, calling it a ‘pact of the unprincipled’. In his book, ex-Lib Dem minister David Laws claims that the current coalition as it stands was actually prompted by a divide in the Labour camp over what it wanted. Andrew sees things rather differently. “My own view is that if the Lib Dems had wanted to go in with the Labour party we could have negotiated a perfectly credible programme. What they can’t do, as David tries to do in his book, is somehow blame it on the Labour part. He can’t blame Labour for the fact that they chose to go in with the Tories.’ I can’t be sure whether his assertion that Labour was united in their readiness to form a coalition was a careful way of avoiding the question. However, what seems obvious is that many feel the future will work to Labour’s advantage. Adonis explains that it will mean Labour can now ‘sweep up’ alienated Liberal Democrat voters. He quickly corrects himself for using such a pejorative term, replacing it with ‘appeal to’, but it seems he can hardly contain his optimism at such a prospect for his party. 
Debating the future of the House of Lords is where he really gets going, however. Condemning the current system for its lack of accountability, he despairs how, as a minister in the House of Lords, he was never once called to give evidence before a House of Lords Committee. Though Labour removed all the hereditary peers from the Lords, many felt that they should have gone further. I remind him of a suggestion he made in The Guardian some years ago to relocate the House of Lords to Manchester. Expecting to be met with reluctance, or a cunning political side step, the former journalist grins and outlines his proposal in some detail. “It’s perfectly doable and it should happen. It would have a transformational effect on the whole of our political culture”. The idea of shipping peers off to Salford Quays and selling the old office space in Westminster to pay for it might leave Lords and Ladies spluttering into their afternoon tea, but one has to admire his determination. “Idealism, that’s how you make change happen,” he says. “You know a hundred years ago giving votes for women was thought to be a ridiculous and impossible proposition…well it didn’t take long for that to become the law of the land.” This is the kind of audacious move that seems to characterise his career. Looking back at his policy record with Labour, he is clearly capable of using his influence to push through significant pieces of legislation; civil servants at the Department of Education referred to him as ‘muscles’. 
He takes his idealism from his hero Roy Jenkins, one of the ‘gang of four’ who founded the Social Democratic Party in 1981 when Labour moved to what Adonis calls the ‘loony undemocratic left’. Adonis himself was a member of the SDP when Labour was in the pockets of big trade union leaders. Interestingly, he has faced some of the same criticisms that Jenkins did in his career; with a liberal approach to market involvement in certain areas of public policy, some have struggled to differentiate Adonis’ beliefs from those of the Conservative party. Indeed, his two flagship policy successes, high speed rail and academies are both being continued under the coalition government. What’s more, few people today realise that Adonis was one the key players in the introduction of tuition fees back in 2000. A supporter of a student contribution to the cost of university education, he sees the new coalition policy as a fundamental distortion, not a fulfilment, of the one he helped forge six years ago. Such a ‘distortion’ might cause him to rethink the introduction of the policy in the first place, but Adonis is not one for such regrets. “You should never not do the right thing because somebody might do the wrong thing in future,” he explains. “Look at the health service reforms, they’re turning the NHS upside down at the moment from a standing start, you know, a government that wants to engage in radical policies can do so, it doesn’t need to have precedent to justify it.” He may have a point, but the current Tory mantra seems to be ‘anything we do, Labour started it’ (privatisation of parts of the NHS, academies, tuition fees). Surely Labour has to take some responsibility for what can sometimes seem to be logical extensions of the arguments they provided for their initial policy proposals? This issue is particularly pertinent to Lord Adonis, who was even offered a place in Conservative government under Cameron. 
Perhaps the reason for Adonis’ remarkable cross-party appeal, though, is his highly pragmatic approach to policy making. During his time at the Department for Education he visited more schools than any education minister ever, as Secretary of State for Transport he conducted a nationwide rail tour and in his new role he undertook a nationwide tour of cities due for referendums on having an elected mayor. His approach is telling of his journalistic background, placing great weight on first hand knowledge of a problem from people on the ground. In fact, he tells me that he doesn’t believe policy should be “unnecessarily ideological”, and herein lies the crux of the puzzle; is he just a policy nerd, an opportunist or a pragmatist informed by ideology? “Part of my style of politics has been to constantly engage with those who make government work on the front line and who deliver services on the front line so that policy is practical and not theoretical or unnecessarily ideological.” 
There seems no doubt that Adonis will continue well into the future – at just 48 he is certainly at the younger end of the House of Lords. One question asked time and time again is whether he would ever stand for election as a Member of Parliament. I imagine it’s a challenge he would find difficult to resist. Indeed, few political pundits would put their money on where Andrew Adonis might be in ten years time. In his own words: “I’m a political animal – and I doubt that you’ve heard the last of me.”

Adonis is eager to discuss all the work his think tank is producing, and, of course, the next general election. When asked about his new role, his relentless enthusiasm for all things policy takes over – though it becomes clear quite quickly that his move into the world of the think tank is unlikely to be a permanent one. “Did I enjoy government and being there making decisions? Yes, but my party’s out of government and there’s no point in crying over spilt milk. In four years’ time there’ll be another election and I shall be fighting jolly hard to get Labour back into power. While were in opposition, being able to play this charitable role is wholly worthwhile. We are the big society at the heart of Whitehall,” he jokes, in a rather shrewd reference to David Cameron’s flagship policy. 

Having completed something of a political odyssey, from the Social Democrats to the Liberal Democrats to the Labour party, Lord Adonis was hauled into the policy unit of Number 10 back in 1998 as an education advisor. After being handed a peerage in 2005 to become a junior education minister without any experience, there were suspicions he might just become another of ‘Tony’s Cronies’. But, to the surprise of many, he outlived Blair into Brown’s cabinet as Secretary of State for Transport and was said to be one of Labour’s key negotiators during the five days of coalition talks and media flurry.

Despite his new non-partisan role, Adonis doesn’t hesitate to criticise the present government, calling it a ‘pact of the unprincipled’. In his book, ex-Lib Dem minister David Laws claims that the current coalition as it stands was actually prompted by a divide in the Labour camp over what it wanted. Andrew sees things rather differently. “My own view is that if the Lib Dems had wanted to go in with the Labour party we could have negotiated a perfectly credible programme. What they can’t do, as David tries to do in his book, is somehow blame it on the Labour part. He can’t blame Labour for the fact that they chose to go in with the Tories.’ I can’t be sure whether his assertion that Labour was united in their readiness to form a coalition was a careful way of avoiding the question. However, what seems obvious is that many feel the future will work to Labour’s advantage. Adonis explains that it will mean Labour can now ‘sweep up’ alienated Liberal Democrat voters. He quickly corrects himself for using such a pejorative term, replacing it with ‘appeal to’, but it seems he can hardly contain his optimism at such a prospect for his party. 

Debating the future of the House of Lords is where he really gets going, however. Condemning the current system for its lack of accountability, he despairs how, as a minister in the House of Lords, he was never once called to give evidence before a House of Lords Committee. Though Labour removed all the hereditary peers from the Lords, many felt that they should have gone further. I remind him of a suggestion he made in The Guardian some years ago to relocate the House of Lords to Manchester. Expecting to be met with reluctance, or a cunning political side step, the former journalist grins and outlines his proposal in some detail.

“It’s perfectly doable and it should happen. It would have a transformational effect on the whole of our political culture”. The idea of shipping peers off to Salford Quays and selling the old office space in Westminster to pay for it might leave Lords and Ladies spluttering into their afternoon tea, but one has to admire his determination. “Idealism, that’s how you make change happen,” he says. “You know a hundred years ago giving votes for women was thought to be a ridiculous and impossible proposition…well it didn’t take long for that to become the law of the land.” This is the kind of audacious move that seems to characterise his career. Looking back at his policy record with Labour, he is clearly capable of using his influence to push through significant pieces of legislation; civil servants at the Department of Education referred to him as ‘muscles’. 

He takes his idealism from his hero Roy Jenkins, one of the ‘gang of four’ who founded the Social Democratic Party in 1981 when Labour moved to what Adonis calls the ‘loony undemocratic left’. Adonis himself was a member of the SDP when Labour was in the pockets of big trade union leaders. Interestingly, he has faced some of the same criticisms that Jenkins did in his career; with a liberal approach to market involvement in certain areas of public policy, some have struggled to differentiate Adonis’ beliefs from those of the Conservative party. Indeed, his two flagship policy successes, high speed rail and academies are both being continued under the coalition government. What’s more, few people today realise that Adonis was one the key players in the introduction of tuition fees back in 2000. A supporter of a student contribution to the cost of university education, he sees the new coalition policy as a fundamental distortion, not a fulfilment, of the one he helped forge six years ago.

Such a ‘distortion’ might cause him to rethink the introduction of the policy in the first place, but Adonis is not one for such regrets. “You should never not do the right thing because somebody might do the wrong thing in future,” he explains. “Look at the health service reforms, they’re turning the NHS upside down at the moment from a standing start, you know, a government that wants to engage in radical policies can do so, it doesn’t need to have precedent to justify it.” He may have a point, but the current Tory mantra seems to be ‘anything we do, Labour started it’ (privatisation of parts of the NHS, academies, tuition fees). Surely Labour has to take some responsibility for what can sometimes seem to be logical extensions of the arguments they provided for their initial policy proposals? This issue is particularly pertinent to Lord Adonis, who was even offered a place in Conservative government under Cameron. 

Perhaps the reason for Adonis’ remarkable cross-party appeal, though, is his highly pragmatic approach to policy making. During his time at the Department for Education he visited more schools than any education minister ever, as Secretary of State for Transport he conducted a nationwide rail tour and in his new role he undertook a nationwide tour of cities due for referendums on having an elected mayor. His approach is telling of his journalistic background, placing great weight on first hand knowledge of a problem from people on the ground. In fact, he tells me that he doesn’t believe policy should be “unnecessarily ideological”, and herein lies the crux of the puzzle; is he just a policy nerd, an opportunist or a pragmatist informed by ideology? “Part of my style of politics has been to constantly engage with those who make government work on the front line and who deliver services on the front line so that policy is practical and not theoretical or unnecessarily ideological.” 

There seems no doubt that Adonis will continue well into the future – at just 48 he is certainly at the younger end of the House of Lords. One question asked time and time again is whether he would ever stand for election as a Member of Parliament. I imagine it’s a challenge he would find difficult to resist. Indeed, few political pundits would put their money on where Andrew Adonis might be in ten years time. In his own words: “I’m a political animal – and I doubt that you’ve heard the last of me.”

5 Minute Tute – Nick Clegg

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What can you tell us about Nick Clegg’s upbringing, and how it has influenced him?

His family is massive, and by that I mean his wider family, not just his wife and children, though they are also very important to him. His two grandmothers are of vital importance, even though they’re both long dead. His paternal grandmother lost everything in the Russian Revolution and became a British liberal, while his maternal grandmother was nearly starved to death in a Japanese prisoner of war camp in the Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia). It means Clegg has had all the access to horrendous suffering without having experienced it himself, thus leaving him without the chips on his shoulder that some victims of suffering carry for the rest of their lives.

His family is massive, and by that I mean his widest family, not just
his   wife   and   children, though they are    very important to   him. His two
grandmothers are of vital importance, even though they’re both long
dead. His paternal grandmother lost everything in the Russian
Revolution and became a British liberal, while his maternal
grandmother was nearly starved to death in a Japanese prisoner of war camp in the Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia). It means Clegg has had all the access to horrendous suffering without having experienced it himself, thus leaving him without the chips on his shoulder that some victims of suffering carry for the rest of their lives.His family is massive, and by that I mean his widest family, not justhis   wife   and   children, though they are    very important to   him. His twograndmothers are of vital importance, even though they’re both longdead. His paternal grandmother lost everything in the RussianRevolution and became a British liberal, while his maternalgrandmother was nearly starved to death in a Japanese prisoner of war camp in the Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia). It means Clegg has had all the access to horrendous suffering without having experienced it himself, thus leaving him without the chips on his shoulder that some victims of suffering carry for the rest of their lives.

How has Clegg performed in government – what have been his successes and his failures?

Generally pretty well, though he had a horrendous first three months, when he simply didn’t have the civil service back up to deal with the myriad tasks thrown at him. That was the time when the Bank of England put pressure on the coalition for immediate scathing cuts, the tuition fees compromise was worked out, and the NHS reforms dumped on him before he’d really got his feet under the desk. Since May’s defeat of the AV referendum, Clegg has played a largely low profile role, which is fine for the short term, but before too long he’s going to have to get noticed. He may well be doing a great job behind the scenes, but no one ever got credit politically for behind the scenes work if it wasn’t accompanied by some high-profile achievement. 

How do you think this has affected his morale over the course of his time in power?

As a person, it’s very difficult to dent his morale. He’s an eternal optimist who surrounds himself with friends from outside politics and seeks refuge in his family. His three boys of 9, 7 and 2 aren’t going to view the deputy Prime Minister as a very important person but just as Dad.  His staff speak about how he comes into the office on a day when there’s been some bad news, and while he takes the news seriously, he doesn’t get too worried about it while many of his staff do. Politically his morale will be a bit fragile, but in the early days of the coalition there were many who didn’t give it six months, so to have established it as a form of government with some permanence – at least until 2015 – must feel like a real achievement to an upbeat personality such as his.

If Nick Clegg leaves parliament, what do you imagine his next step will be? How much ground is there in speculation he might join the EU?

He’ll do something with people. I don’t buy this idea that he’ll take a job with the EU – he’s done that and he left Brussels because he felttoo detached from the people he represented. If he’s to take on a big international job, it’s more likely to be as the UN High Commissioner for Refugees than anything bureaucratically EU-like. But don’t lookfor his post parliamentary career just yet – he has something about him that makes me believe he will bounce back at some stage, and if that bounce back comes during the TV debates in the run-up to the 2015 election, he may well be in parliament for a while yet.

The need for free elections in DRC

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In 2006 the world asked whether the first democratic elections in the Democratic Republic of Congo for 40 years could prevent the country from returning to violence. Following four decades of dictatorship, the bloodiest regional conflict since WW2 and having earned the ignominious title of ‘rape capital of the world’, it was deemed essential that the DRC elect a President who could build a broad coalition in an attempt to consolidate peace and create infrastructure throughout the country. Relations with neighbouring Rwanda and Uganda, which were instrumental in previous rounds of violence, would also need to be carefully managed.

In 2006 the world asked whether the first democratic elections in the Democratic Republic of Congo for 40 years could prevent the country from returning to violence. Following four decades of dictatorship, the bloodiest regional conflict since WW2 and having earned the ignominious title of ‘rape capital of the world’, it was deemed essential that the DRC elect a President who could build a broad coalition in an attempt to consolidate peace and create infrastructure throughout the country. Relations with neighbouring Rwanda and Uganda, which were instrumental in previous rounds of violence, would also need to be carefully managed.
    Whilst progress on the latter point has been made, internal development, implementation of the 2006 constitution and coalition building have been much harder. For the time being, the upcoming elections on November 28th represent the best chance for the Congolese people to retain a check on the excesses of their leaders and to pursue reform. Without domestic opposition to call for transparency, repression and abuse are likely to increase in Congo and any ensuing frustration may tip over into more violent forms of protest.
    The last election was deemed to be transparent. The challenges faced this time mean that the DRC risks sliding backwards. The international community will be contributing fewer observers and training too few police officers to oversee the elections. The second round ‘run-off’ phase used in 2006, essential to ensuring that the President has majority support, has been replaced by a single round competition – not only does this favour the incumbent, but according to some experts, the winner could govern with as little as 20% of the vote.
   There is an oft-repeated phrase heard in certain parts of Congo: “Si Kabila perd, c’est la guerre”. Whilst few expect the outcome of the Congolese poll to result in heightened and sustained violence, there is every reason to feel anxious, and therefore every reason to demand free and fair elections.   
  Discussions with Congolese political parties have taken place in neighbouring states in a bid to avoid clashes. Yet, like so many elections across Africa, the November ballot in the DRC is centred on the personalities of the contenders. This implies that these elections are about power, not policy. Indeed, President Kabila’s power resides in a series of ad hoc alliances with leaders at various levels throughout the country and policymaking is conducted through a small clique of advisors, rather than via the politicians in charge of the relevant ministries.
Despite having five years to prepare, the government is failing to coordinate enthusiasm for these elections effectively, risking insecurity. There is one legislative position which has attracted 1,500 candidates, meanwhile, six weeks from the proposed election and the polling cards were still to be printed. In a country the size of Western Europe, which has just a few thousand miles of paved roads and 62,000 polling stations, the logistical challenges alone are daunting. Yet the independent election commission, CENI, had failed to provide a detailed operational plan; the fact that the head of the commission, Daniel Ngoy Mulundu, is an old ally of Kabila’s entourage speaks for itself.
  Another critical consideration that affects elections across Africa is the role of the young  – the average age in the DRC is just 18. Whilst the government has done little to further voter education since 2006, young people care passionately about issues such as violence in the East, rape, child soldiers and unemployment, so their significance in these elections cannot be ignored. One needs only look to the role that young people have played recently across North Africa and the Middle East: a failure to engage with the youth of Congo will have a serious impact on the country’s future.
  Despite the Congolese elections being only a short time away, there are many uncertainties and the socio-political environment remains tense. These elections will have a defining impact on the future of the DRC and Central Africa, and represent an opportunity to overturn many years of neglect and dysfunction. The International Development Secretary, Andrew Mitchell, recently stated, “We will never have a stable Africa, unless there is a stable DRC”. Reflecting this sentiment, DfID is projected to increase its spending in the DRC to £198 million per year from now until 2015. In sending such a high volume of aid, the UK has a responsibility to the UK taxpayer as well as a moral obligation to the Congolese people to ensure this money is used effectively and does not end up in the pockets of corrupt elites. 
Free Fair DRC is a non-partisan organisation who have been working alongside NGOs, Congolese Diaspora and politicians around the world to coordinate attention on the elections in Congo. Accountable and responsive governance is needed in order to overcome the debilitating cycle of poverty and violence and unlock DRC’s potential. This election is a key step toward that goal.
   You can help by writing to your MP and MEP and asking them to support free and fair elections in the DRC; finding us on Facebook or Twitter, and by going to www.FreeFairDRC.com and signing our supporters’ pledge.

Whilst progress on the latter point has been made, internal development, implementation of the 2006 constitution and coalition building have been much harder. For the time being, the upcoming elections on November 28th represent the best chance for the Congolese people to retain a check on the excesses of their leaders and to pursue reform. Without domestic opposition to call for transparency, repression and abuse are likely to increase in Congo and any ensuing frustration may tip over into more violent forms of protest.   

The last election was deemed to be transparent. The challenges faced this time mean that the DRC risks sliding backwards. The international community will be contributing fewer observers and training too few police officers to oversee the elections. The second round ‘run-off’ phase used in 2006, essential to ensuring that the President has majority support, has been replaced by a single round competition – not only does this favour the incumbent, but according to some experts, the winner could govern with as little as 20% of the vote.   

There is an oft-repeated phrase heard in certain parts of Congo: “Si Kabila perd, c’est la guerre”, or ‘If Kabila loses, there will be war’. Whilst few expect the outcome of the Congolese poll to result in heightened and sustained violence, there is every reason to feel anxious, and therefore every reason to demand free and fair elections.    

Discussions with Congolese political parties have taken place in neighbouring states in a bid to avoid clashes. Yet, like so many elections across Africa, the November ballot in the DRC is centred on the personalities of the contenders. This implies that these elections are about power, not policy. Indeed, President Kabila’s power resides in a series of ad hoc alliances with leaders at various levels throughout the country and policymaking is conducted through a small clique of advisors, rather than via the politicians in charge of the relevant ministries.

Despite having five years to prepare, the government is failing to coordinate enthusiasm for these elections effectively, risking insecurity. There is one legislative position which has attracted 1,500 candidates, meanwhile, six weeks from the proposed election and the polling cards were still to be printed. In a country the size of Western Europe, which has just a few thousand miles of paved roads and 62,000 polling stations, the logistical challenges alone are daunting. Yet the independent election commission, CENI, had failed to provide a detailed operational plan; the fact that the head of the commission, Daniel Ngoy Mulundu, is an old ally of Kabila’s entourage speaks for itself. 

Another critical consideration that affects elections across Africa is the role of the young  – the average age in the DRC is just 18. Whilst the government has done little to further voter education since 2006, young people care passionately about issues such as violence in the East, rape, child soldiers and unemployment, so their significance in these elections cannot be ignored. One needs only look to the role that young people have played recently across North Africa and the Middle East: a failure to engage with the youth of Congo will have a serious impact on the country’s future. 

Despite the Congolese elections being only a short time away, there are many uncertainties and the socio-political environment remains tense. These elections will have a defining impact on the future of the DRC and Central Africa, and represent an opportunity to overturn many years of neglect and dysfunction. The International Development Secretary, Andrew Mitchell, recently stated, “We will never have a stable Africa, unless there is a stable DRC”. Reflecting this sentiment, DfID is projected to increase its spending in the DRC to £198 million per year from now until 2015. In sending such a high volume of aid, the UK has a responsibility to the UK taxpayer as well as a moral obligation to the Congolese people to ensure this money is used effectively and does not end up in the pockets of corrupt elites. 

Free Fair DRC is a non-partisan organisation who have been working alongside NGOs, Congolese Diaspora and politicians around the world to coordinate attention on the elections in Congo. Accountable and responsive governance is needed in order to overcome the debilitating cycle of poverty and violence and unlock DRC’s potential. This election is a key step toward that goal.   You can help by writing to your MP and MEP and asking them to support free and fair elections in the DRC; finding us on Facebook or Twitter, and by going to www.FreeFairDRC.com and signing our supporters’ pledge.

Adventures with Tintin

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If Tintin is God, which he is, Michael Farr is some sort of cartoony Jesus. This marvellous man has spent the last three decades researching our beloved. Absolutely everything you could ever want to know is summarised in Tintin: The Complete Companion, which I’ll happily plug the new edition of in the knowledge it’s gonna be good. This is quite interesting because Michael Farr is in fact English, extortionately so. Tintin by contrast is Bruxellois, so originally you had to go somewhere French in order to read him. ‘As a small child I lived in Paris, so it was the first thing I read when I was four. I moved to Britain in the same year it first was published in English.’ I’m one up on him already – I first read it in English aged three.

 Still, Farr does have one edge I’d never have. He’s met The Master: Hergé himself. This began when Farr was a reporter. Tintin, of course, was ‘an inspiration’. ‘And then to cap it all, in 1978 I asked for an interview with Hergé. He was very shy of publicity, but I was able to have lunch with him. He was so shy we had to have it in a corner behind a screen. But my academic interest was already there.’

 That was that. The great thing about Farr though is that he’s never lost any of his boyish enthusiasm for Tintin the adventurer. He acknowledges it as a fabulous passion. But we shouldn’t take it especially seriously. ‘Tintin and Hergé have been elevated onto this great pedestal. Hergé hated all this sort of flannel – all this philosophising and literary stuff. He created Tintin to entertain children. People were riveted by it, but this was produced for fun. But on the other hand, it’s still serious literature and good art. The point is we need to keep it in proportion. Hergé was a very significant artist. From a literary point of view that quality is much greater than you might think because he put a tremendous amount of research into it. The language, if you read it in French, is also excellent.’

 The problem with being a deathcore fan is that there is only so much core you can death over. If I was to read, say, Destination Moon again I would have difficulty deriving a good deal of enjoyment from it. I’ve already read it about fifty or sixty times. There’s no way I can conjure the same magic it gave the first two-dozen times I read it. Farr disputes this. ‘I don’t think it does wear off. It’s terribly rewarding to re-read books. It’s visual, and then you’ve got the story as well. But one is always discovering new slants. People often show me things I haven’t seen before. Look at the backgrounds for example – they are amazing.’

 What’s his favourite book? ‘An impossible question’, but King Ottokar’s Sceptre, Blue Lotus and Castafiore Emerald spring to mind. All nice, perhaps a smidge conservative choices. His least favourite, unbelievably, is ‘Flight 714: Hergé stuck his neck out rather further than he normally did in terms of the story.’ Disgraceful, it was always my favourite. Though he is right about the story I suppose.

 In the wake of the film, directed by Steven Spielberg and produced by Peter Jackson, Farr is rather optimistic about the future of Tintin – Hollywood and beyond. ‘It’s quite exciting, which you’d expect. It’s a great improvement on what’s been done before. Thing is it’s actually been in the works about thirty years. Three months before his death in 1983, Hergé received a note from Spielberg asking to make the films. He never replied, so they’ve had to wait till now to release it.They’ll have had to pad it out a bit. So you will have these new characters. And I wonder what Hergé would have had to say about that. Because’- a knowing pause – ‘he was rather fussy you know’.

Not-so-horrible histories

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You could be forgiven for assuming that historians read the most history books. Certainly, when it comes to cramming the bare minimum needed to write this week’s essay, we history students are experts. But based on a quick survey of my friends, we’re actually less likely than medics or PPE-ists to pick up a history book for pleasure. The reason is simple. Faced with dauntingly long reading lists which can only possibly be tackled by a quick scanning of introductions and conclusions, together with cunning use of Wikipedia and JSTOR reviews, we’ve lost the ability to read a book from beginning to end. We become brilliant at flicking through indexes and blagging our way through tutorials, but if asked what books we have actually finished, or even enjoyed, most of us are stuck. Occasionally we might come across something that catches our interest, but there’s no time to read it – not when two thousand words are due the next morning. 

Occasionally though, one forces its way through the crowd of books demanding to be read, and these are the books I’ve stumbled across in the course of my degree that I’ve come closest to actually reading, books that might help historians remember why they chose their subject in the first place, and which can be enjoyed by anyone – whatever their subject. 

History of Modern Britain Andrew Marr

Marr’s lovelife has come under scrutiny lately but that’s no reason to think any less of him as a writer. A chatty, clear and concise chronicle of Britain since WWII, covering everything from pop to politics. If you’ve been put off reading completely, try the TV series.

We Ain’t What We Ought to Be –Stephen Tuck

This is almost as gripping as a crime novel. Really. A history of the American civil rights movement that weaves the lives of ordinary people and grassroots campaigning  into the wider political picture, from the 19th century to Obama. 

A Bitter Revolution- Rana Mitter

If you want to expand your knowledge of history beyond the Western world but don’t know where to start, try this beautifully-written account of twentieth century China’s political awakening, which traces the fates and roles of its major players from 1919. 

Queueing for Beginners – Joe Moran

If you’ve forgotten what history has to do with your everyday life, read this little book and learn why we British are famous for our queues, why we eat toast for breakfast and why we drink so much beer. It sounds boring, but trust me: it isn’t.

An Intimate History of Humanity –Theodore Zeldin

This is the sort of history book your tutor might not call a history book: all the more reason to read it. It is a collection of 25 essays, including ‘Why there has been more progress in cooking than in sex’ and ‘How men and women have slowly learned to have interesting conversations’ Intriguing. 

 

Of course, these books may not revive your interest in history, or even your faith in humanity. Either way, at least you’ll have proved that you haven’t lost the ability to read something without being told to by a fusty academic. 

Furniture raid at Christ Church

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College authorities at Christ Church are conducting an investigation after various items of furniture were stolen from the JCR during the room’s recent refurbishment.
 
In an email to college members, JCR Vice-President Kevin Tan said, “I am saddened to report that some members of college have stolen some of the brand new furniture that was meant for all of us.
‘I find this absolutely disgusting. The JCR belongs to all of us, and to take from our common space to furnish your own room is repugnant. It is also theft, pure and simple.”
Four new leather beanbags were stolen, along with three rugs. Tan told the JCR that the college was aware of the identity of the culprits. He said, “The porters and college authorities have CCTV evidence of who took the items. If they are not back in their original place by this Sunday, your names will be reported and action will be taken.
‘You know who you are; and if you see anyone with these items in their rooms, I hope you will tell them to return the items too.”
Chris Johnson, a third year student at Christ Church, told Cherwell that the furniture has reappeared in the JCR since Tan’s original email.  He said that he was unaware of any punishment being imposed on any JCR members, saying that as far as he knew, ‘nothing much happened about it.’
When asked his reaction to the incident, Johnson took a lighthearted view on the matter, saying that the theft was “quite poor form, but still quite funny”.
However, not all JCR members adopted such a jocular stance. John Hintze, a first year PPE student at Christ Church, told Cherwell, “I think it’s completely out of order that anyone would steal from our JCR. It’s stealing from the college community.”
When approached by Cherwell this week, Kevin Tan declined to give any further information about the incident, saying, “The matter is still being dealt with by the relevant college authorities, and as such I cannot comment on the story.”