Campaign Corner: What campaigning books are worth reading?
Today’s Campaign Corner question: I prefer learning by reading rather than by hearing people speak at training sessions. What campaigning books would you recommend? … Read the full post »
Read my posts featuring the work the pollster and former adviser to Gordon Brown, Deborah Mattinson. She is author of the excellent Talking to a brick wall.
Today’s Campaign Corner question: I prefer learning by reading rather than by hearing people speak at training sessions. What campaigning books would you recommend? … Read the full post »
Explaining Cameron’s Coalition is the latest in the series of general election analysis by MORI’s Robert Worcester and Roger Mortimore, this time joined by two other authors. … Read the full post »
Over the last few months, I’ve read (and mostly reviewed on this site) all the books I’ve found published so far about the 2010 general election… … Read the full post »
Peter Snowdon’s history of the Conservative Party in opposition has four white men on its cover striding towards the reader – Cameron, Osborne, Hague and Clegg. It tells you immediately the sort of book that it is. … Read the full post »
At the book’s title suggests, Peter Mandelson’s memoirs The Third Man do not hold back from placing himself not only at the heart of New Labour but also at its top, variously using the phrases the three musketeers or the triumvirate to describe himself and the two Prime Ministers, Tony Blair and Gordon Brown. … Read the full post »
I am usually sceptical about instant history book as they come out before there has been time for reflection or analysis and yet whilst events are still fresh in your mind. Too often therefore the instant history account simply tells you what you can still remember, and no more. However… … Read the full post »
Deborah Mattinson charts the rise and fall of New Labour through the eyes of ordinary voters, reported on in numerous focus groups. … Read the full post »