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Archives for May 2009

Stormont as Hogwarts

Mark Devenport | 13:46 UK time, Sunday, 31 May 2009

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I'm just off air from Inside Politics which this week featured the DUP's Diane Dodds. Listeners might have noticed that having told unionists not to waste their vote on a unionist who can't win, she declined my invitation to specify who exactly that unionist is. On Talkback on Friday she did name Jim Allister eventually, but the DUP has shown general reluctance to speak the TUV leader's name (presumably through fear of giving him extra profile), prefering instead to refer to him as "a lone maverick" or some similar expression.

I was scratching my head about what this reminded me of, then reading a "Harry Potter" book to my son, it came to me. "He who must not be named" is J.K. Rowling's villain, Lord Voldemort. Obviously, seen through the DUP's eyes, the V in TUV must stand for Voldemort.

All other suggestions about which Hogwarts characters match Stormont characters gratefully received (and they don'y necessarily have to be as seen through the DUP's eyes).

One story I discussed with my guests Fionuala O'Connor and Sidney Elliot was an interview in the Irish Mail on Sunday with Fine Gael's Elections Director Frank Flannery suggesting his party would consider going into coalition with Sinn Fein in the future. The paper bills this as a "stunning U turn" two years after Enda Kenny ruled out a deal with Gerry Adams.

We also discussed the European debate televised on the Politics Show. For those who missed it at noon there's a chance to catch it again on ´óÏó´«Ã½1 at twenty minutes past ten tonight.

Two newspaper stories that got squeezed out for time but which caught my eye for different reasons. First, in the Observer, Henry McDonald has an interview with the South East Antrim faction of the UDA predicting they will decommission some guns before August.

Second, Gerry Adams has told a Dublin radio station about how, when he was behind bars in the Maze/Long Kesh, he took comfort from humming along to the Monty Python song The only problem is that it wasn't written until two years after he was released. As any future Truth Commission might discover, memory can play tricks on us all.

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Orange rumblings and a lot of Euros

Mark Devenport | 16:09 UK time, Friday, 29 May 2009

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The Orange Order issued a statement today urging its members to vote for Orange = unionist = no news, you may well think.

But I gather there were some rumblings behind the scenes from brethren sympathetic to the UCUNF's Jim Nicholson, who objected to the section in the in which Jeffrey Donaldson appears in front of an Orange Lodge banner. The critics reckoned the broadcast, and a photo in Jim Allister's election handout of the TUV leader taken together with the Orange Grand Secretary Drew Nelson, breached the Order's policy of not lining up with one party. However when the statement emerged it did not include any expression of concern about "election communications".

On the topic of rumblings, I gather that not everything went entirely smoothly behind the scenes at Stormont Castle in the run up to by the First and Deputy First Minister alongside the Chief Constable on the topic of Kevin McDaid's murder. In some ways it mirrored the historic appearance by the three men back in March, although the choreography of yesterday's statement appeared more haphazard.

However the barbaric killing of Mr McDaid is far too serious for anyone to play politics with, and it was therefore heartening to see that the First and Deputy First visited the McDaid and Fleming families in Coleraine this morning to express their solidarity.

My guest for Saturday's Inside Politics is the DUP's Diane Dodds. I shall also be joined by Fionnuala O'Connor and Queen's Sidney Elliot, who, I hope, will be in a position to pass comment on the Politics Show. Sunday's Politics Show is a one hour special covering a recent election debate between all seven candidates which was filmed at Queen's University earlier in the month.

Inside Politics, as usual, is on Radio Ulster just after the one o'clock news. A word of apology, by the way, to those of you who had wanted to contribute questions for my Inside Politics interviewees. I just didn't get my act together in time for this election, and was slightly concerned it might step on the toes of "Talkback" which, as you may have heard, does just that. However when I get advance warning of interviews in the future I shall try to remember to solicit your views.

And I know you have all been waiting patiently to learn the answer to the extra bonus question which I left out at the Errigle pub quiz. I had asked you "Between 2000 and 2013 how much money is Northern Ireland due to get from Europe? a) 963 million Euros b) 2.63 billion Euros or c) 26.9 billion Euros?"

The answer, according to the local EU Information Office, is b) 2.63 billion Euros.

The more eagle eyed of you (thanks David Gordon of the Belfast Telegraph) noticed that I told the Errigle regulars that a UK MEP was paid £63,291, whereas since April the salary has gone up to £64, 766. Apologies. According to today's Times the successful candidates have another pay rise to look forward to next month, taking them up to

A Yellow Card and the Split in the DUP

Mark Devenport | 16:54 UK time, Thursday, 28 May 2009

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During yesterday's manifesto launch the SDLP tried to work in a Champions League metaphor by talking about showing a "Yellow card" to Sinn Fein and the DUP (why not a red one?) The DUP launched their manifesto in an activity centre on the Belvoir estate in South Belfast today and footballing metaphors were in short supply, perhaps because this would only have pointed up the very obvious split in the party between Chelsea fan Peter Robinson and Everton fan Nigel Dodds.

Diane Dodds has asked her husband if she can count on him to canvass on Saturday afternoon, but he is sounding distinctly non-committal. Where can you canvass whilst keeping one eye on the TV?

Predictably the DUP launch was dominated by talk of "topping the poll", even though each MEP we elect will have an equal vote. Still, Diane Dodds insists it will be a "disaster" if Sinn Fein comes first and two nationalists are elected.

Julie Kirkbride and a cow in South Armagh

Mark Devenport | 16:33 UK time, Thursday, 28 May 2009

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The Conservative MP Julie Kirkbride has now followed her husband Andrew MacKay in announcing she won't stand at the next election after the Daily Telegraph's expenses revelations. Over on there's a contribution from the former NI minister Richard Needham defenidng the Bromsgrove MP. Mr Needham compares her press treatment with that accorded to him when it was revealed that he had called Margaret Thatcher "a cow". His Ietter is well down the page, so I've copied it into the extended entry.

Read the rest of this entry

Podcast Politics

Mark Devenport | 17:35 UK time, Tuesday, 26 May 2009

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Assembly business began this morning on a suitably sombre and unified note, with representatives of all the parties the weekend murder of Kevin McDaid and calling for an end to sectarianism.

However differences of opinion abound about quite how to do this. MLAs were also debating the extent to which race relations law in Northern Ireland lags behind the rest of the UK. According to Dawn Purvis, who we interviewed on Stormont Live, that's a knock on effect of the failure of the Stormont parties to agree a Singe Equality Act. The delay over this proposed piece of legislation is more to do with the contrasting attitudes of the parties to issues of equality, discrimination and sectarianism than it is to do with race.

Then during Assembly question time we had another reminder that whilst the politicians may wish to march towards a bright new future they remain at loggerheads over the past. The Tourism Minister Arlene Foster is refusing to sign off on a proposed pod cast designed for tourists to listen to as they walk around areas of Belfast because she thinks it is biased.

During Assembly question time, Mrs Foster quoted a line from the West Belfast commentary script which talked about firing from loyalists in the Shankill before the peace walls were built. She reckoned this commentary gave tourists the impression that, during the troubles, "everything was coming from one side".

Sinn Fein's Paul Maskey expressed his anger and disappointment, claiming the proposed commentary had been approved by a panel of experts and historians, and the minister was risking wasting £100,000 in tax payers' money.

Transparency League Table

Mark Devenport | 12:10 UK time, Tuesday, 26 May 2009

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The think tank has ranked the 785 outgoing MEPs in terms of their voting on issues related to transparency, waste and attendance. The league table is good news for Jim Allister who is ranked 5th out of the UK's MEPs, whilst Jim Nicholson comes in 44th and Bairbre De Brun 56th.

A random act of canvassing kindness

Mark Devenport | 21:21 UK time, Sunday, 24 May 2009

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Mark Durkan was canvassing in Eglinton, Co Derry on Saturday. At one door he knocked, no one was home, but on his way out the SDLP leader noticed a tenner on the footpath. As he looked more closely he found a few more. In all £50 lay on the garden path. It had been raining, so the notes were sodden and stuck to the ground.

Some of his campaign team were concerned that putting the cash back through the letter box might look like an attempt to bribe a potential voter. But the SDLP MP scribbled a note and did just that.

Better not tell the Westminster fees office, as the Foyle MP must have broken some unwritten parliamentary rule by giving money to his constituents rather than taking it away.

"No woman need apply"

Mark Devenport | 13:39 UK time, Sunday, 24 May 2009

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I've just come off air from Inside Politics, where my guests were Sinn Fein's Bairbre De Brun and the Greens' Steven Agnew. Ms De Brun is in the comfortable position of being the bookies' favourite to top the poll, but she's trying not to sound complacent. I asked her whether she felt Northern Ireland would be better represented if the DUP recaptured their seat from Jim Allister. Although she reflected on the strong possibility of two women being elected, she didn't exactly endorse the DUP's candidacy (which would be the last kind of endorsement they want).

The Greens' Steven Agnew was happy to celebrate the forthcoming DUP reshuffle if its spells the end for climate change sceptic Environment Minister Sammy Wilson, although he admitted that the minister has been a worthy opponent for the party.

Over on the TV, the Politics Show was hosting a debate involving the four biggest parties and the outgoing TUV MEP Jim Allister. Early in the campaign on Hearts and Minds and on this blog I wondered whether the DUP would field Diane Dodds against the TUV leader because of his well honed debating skills. They have met in various hustings, but not, until today, live in one of our studios. Although this wasn't a tight intra-unionist debate, my eyes did not deceive me - there they were, with only Alban Maginness between them.

Predictably Mr Allister directed his fire at the DUP's sharing power with Sinn Fein, with double jobbing and political dynasty building thrown in for good measure. However Mrs Dodds hit back, pointing out that the TUV leader employs his own wife and daughter but only in back room roles. She argued that this meant his policy was that "no woman need apply" for high profile elected positions (a line borrowed to some extent from Arlene Foster's clashes with the former UU minister Sam Foster at the time of the Fermanagh by-election).

If you didn't catch the debate it will be on again at 10.10pm tonight on ´óÏó´«Ã½ 1 or on the I player.

Voting for Change (and a Tub of Lard)

Mark Devenport | 13:51 UK time, Friday, 22 May 2009

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I spent yesterday following David Cameron around on his one day visit. As we pulled in to Ulster carpets in Portadown I felt a strange sense of nostalgia. I used to spend so much of my summer on the Garvaghy Road, but haven't been back there for a few years.

Enroute to Portadown on the M1 I noticed that eager Conservative and Unionist supporters had parked large mobile billboards with their "Vote for Change" message on a couple of bridges over the motorway. Presumably they hoped the leader would spot them on his way to the factory. It made me think fleetingly of the supposedly erected in Rusia to impress the empress as she swept by.

Has the UCUNF got that "Vote For Change" slogan under copyright? If so I think they should sue Sinn Fein, who are using exactly the same headline on their latest North Belfast bulletin.

After Portadown it was on to Ballymena and Cameron's town hall meeting. Although there were a couple of pointed questions about the untrustworthiness of past Conservative governments, the potential Pm performed smoothly fielding enquiries about academic selection, victims, the Presbyterian Mutual Society (he thinks Gordon Brown should consider again whether to help their troubled savers) and flouridation.

One exchange which struck me came when a lady in the audience took the Tory leader to task over on "Have I Got News For You" about murdering Miss California.

David Cameron said the episode illustrated the dangers of politicians trying to make jokes, and he urged his colleagues to be cautious about accepting invitations from "Have I Got News For You" even if they risked the fate of Roy Hattersley, who was infamously replaced on the show by a tub of lard. He noted that the only politician to make a success of the satirical series had been Boris Johnson "and Boris is not quite like the rest of us."

Heath Ledger's role in the European Election

Mark Devenport | 21:32 UK time, Wednesday, 20 May 2009

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Viewers of ´óÏó´«Ã½ Newsline will already know that earlier this week I spent an evening at the Errigle Inn in South Belfast. Journalist goes to pub - not much of a story there. But on this occasion I had to trade places with the quizmaster to ask the regulars a series of European related questions. The quiz is over on the ´óÏó´«Ã½ Newsline site.

We had 22 teams. 14 got the date of the election right, and the same number correctly identified the two cities where European parliamentarians meet. 15 teams knew how many countries are members of the EU, and 12 knew how many MEPs represent Northern Ireland.

But to my mind the best answers came in the picture round. I only managed to collect 21 completed picture rounds (this being a pub quiz someone probably stole the other one to mop up a spilt drink).

Of this totally unscientific sample, everyone recognised Ian Paisley, John Hume and Bairbre De Brun. 16 teams knew Alban Maginess, 14 knew Diane Dodds, 12 knew Ian Parsley and 10 knew Jim Nicholson, Jim Allister and Stephen Agnew.

Only one team recognised the EU Parliament President Hans Gert Pottering (one team thought he was Gandalf, another Jim Wells), whilst only 3 knew the EU Commission head Jose Manuel Barrosso (one team mistook him for David Trimble).

One team thought Jim Allister was Neil Kinnock, whilst Stephen Agnew was mistaken for celebrity chef Paul Rankin and "Ronan Keating in ten years time". Three teams thought Diane Dodds was the Irish President Mary McAleese. She was also mistaken for Sylvia Hermon and Home Secretary Jacqui Smith.

But my personal favourite remains the Alliance's Ian Parsley who may take some comfort from being mistaken for the heart throb Australian actor, the sadly departed

Thanks again to the management and quiz master at the Errigle. Here's a question which didn't make it into the quiz. Between 2000 and 2013 how much money is Northern Ireland due to get from Europe? a) 963 million Euros b) 2.63 billion Euros or c) 26.9 billion Euros? Post your answers below and I shall let you know the right answer next week.

Direct Rule meets Rome Rule

Mark Devenport | 21:21 UK time, Wednesday, 20 May 2009

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When Ian Paisley Senior was an MEP, he famously berated Pope John Paul II as the "anti-christ". No such drama today when Shaun Woodward met The Secretary of State and the Pope discussed the dissident murders in March, and Mr Woodward echoed Gordon Brown's recent invitation to Pope Benedict to visit the UK, expressing the hope that he would be able to come to Northern Ireland as part of the visit.

A Cypriot Boycott

Mark Devenport | 21:09 UK time, Wednesday, 20 May 2009

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Anyone listening to Caitriona Ruane's icy response to Seamus McKee's questions about taking her daughter to Cyprus during term time can have been left in no doubt about the Education Minister's anger that her child had become the focus of media attention.

There was more evidence of how personally she took the story when Education correspondents travelled to Middletown to report on the North South ministerial council's discussions about the proposed autism centre there. She gave interviews to some, but one reporter was left sadly out in the cold - Simon Doyle from the Irish News who broke the Cyprus story.

Simon could compare notes with the Belfast Telegraph's David Gordon who was once made to sit in the waiting area at Stormont Castle watching every other reporter getting a farewell interview with Ian Paisley Senior, who wouldn't forgive him for some of his stories. I imagine both scribes will reckon that sometimes it's better to be out than in.

Down the Greasy Pole

Mark Devenport | 16:15 UK time, Monday, 18 May 2009

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The Sunday Times reported yesterday that a DUP councillor in Craigavon had to get stitches after being struck by one of Diane Dodds' posters falling from a great height. This may be considered an example of "the biter bit" by all the anti-poster people out there.

News reached me today of another hazard for the "poster putter uppers". When an SDLP team arrived to put up Alban Maginness's visage on the Garvaghy Road in Portadown they found that the lampposts had been smeared with axle grease. Wearing overalls, they managed to slide up the greasy poles and down again.

There has been a lot of slip sliding around for the Conservatives and Unionists these days with today's resignation of the UUP North Down Constituency chairman, Mark Brooks, following Lady Sylvia Hermon's explosive comments.

At the weekend Jim Nicholson didn't try to hide his annoyance at the turn of events when he spoke to me for Inside Politics. Jim Allister once again spelled out his opposition to power sharing and talked about the impact of the expenses row on the campaign.

At Stormont there were some entertaining moments. Peter Robinson and the UUP's Ken Robinson picked out Martina Anderson's "day-glo" orange outfit for comment. Shortly afterwards the Foyle MLA was joined by the Agriculture Minister Michelle Gildernew in green and white, with the tow Sinn Fein politicians combining to create their very own tricolour.

Maybe distracted by this the Deputy Speaker Francie Molloy introduced the DUP's youngest MLA as "Jonathan Ross". There were chuckles as Alastair Ross corrected Mr Molloy. Maybe the Deputy Speaker had listened in to the sharp exchanges between Gregory Campbell and Stephen Nolan earlier in the day and got his DUPs and ´óÏó´«Ã½s mixed up. (During that show, by the way, Gregory said MPs shouldn't keep any profit they make from their second homes which built on comments made by Peter Robinson to me on Friday where he talked about them giving up the portion of the profit linked to taxpayer funded interest payments).

On Stormont Live today we talked to Sir Reg Empey about all the latest North Down developments and Sinn Fein's Martin McGuinness declared his opposition to any changes to the departmental structure at Stormont which might alter the unionist nationalist balance. He also told us he didn't believe the landlord charging Sinn Fein MPs those high rents in London is a donor to the party.

On air we didn' get time to cover it, but off air Martin McGuinness was interesting on the topic of the recent bloody end to the civil war in Sri Lanka. The Deputy First Minister travelled to the island to try to persuade the goverenment and the Tamil Tigers to follow the Northern Ireland model of conflict resolution. Instead they chose to fight to the end.

The government in Colombo is celebrating an historic victory but the Deputy First Minister believes the failure to seek a negotiated resolution means the conflict in Sri Lanka will only re-emerge in some other form in the future.

Sylvia Breaks Her Silence

Mark Devenport | 17:18 UK time, Wednesday, 13 May 2009

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It's no secret that the North Down MP, Lady Sylvia Hermon, hates giving TV and radio interviews. Unlike other politicians who are always vying for airtime, Lady Sylvia regularly declines invitations to grace our airwaves, calculating that as long as she works hard on the ground for her constituents and enjoys a good relationship with her local newspaper that is all the coverage she needs.

In addition to this general reticence, the Ulster Unionist Tory courtship coincided with the death of her husband, the former Chief Constable Sir Jack Hermon. This is why Lady Sylvia's antipathy towards the Conservatives, an open secret around Westminster, has been hinted at rather than written in bold letters.

Until today. Who would have thought that the expenses row would finally lead to Lady Sylvia breaking her silence (over what appears the largely technical matter of over paid rent)? Then, in an interview with my colleague Gareth Gordon, she railed against the Tories charging for cleaning out their moats and finally declaried that she can't see herself standing as a Conservative and Unionist.

The timing of this intervention couldn't be worse for the Conservative and Unionist Euro election campaign. And it raises big questions about what will happen to the Ulster Unionists in the next Westminster election. Will their only MP Lady Sylvia take the Jim Kilfedder route and stand as an independent unionist?

On the topic of the Conservative Ulster Unionist courtship, Jeffrey Peel is claiming that the row about their joint logo, which led to his removal as a Conservative party officer, was all because the Tory tree was

No longer a gas guzzler

Mark Devenport | 17:01 UK time, Tuesday, 12 May 2009

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In March Sammy Wilson hit back at his global warming critics by accusing them of driving gas guzzling 4x4s. Someone in the firing line then was the Environment Committee Chair Patsy McGlone who owned up to driving a 2.4 litre Volvo. Now the Mid Ulster MLA is proudly showing off his Volkswagen Passat Blue Motion to everyone as proof that he is green in more than just a traditional nationalist way. At 126g CO2/km it 's rather better than the ministerial car pool which aims to keep to a limit of 170g CO2/km. Although the car pool has purchased two Toyato Prius hybrids in an attempt to keep up with the times.

Almost a "Kinnock" moment

Mark Devenport | 18:49 UK time, Monday, 11 May 2009

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I'm just back from the Europa hotel where our seven Euro candidates debated economic matters at the invitation of a group of local business groups. There were differences over red tape and regulation, with some calling for a "regulation holiday" whilst others pointed out that businesses needed to act in an ethical and sustainable manner. I didn't think anyone dealt any knock out blows, nor did anyone particularly embarrass themselves.

Earlier we had a couple of breakfast events, with the DUP using their one to launch a document proposing various efficiency measures including the "streamlining" of the OFMDFM, the merger of the Equality, Human Rights and Children's Commissions, fewer departments and MLAs and a phasing out of "double jobbing".

But under our system it takes two to tango and Martin McGuinness has already branded the DUP paper "shallow electioneering".

Whilst there was a promise that some MPs would step down from the Assembly at the next election we didn't get any names. However one insider I spoke to speculated about Ian Paisley Senior (expected to retire altogether), William McCrea, David Simpson, Iris Robinson and Sammy Wilson. That wasn't a leak - just a bit of inside gossip. We shall have to wait to see what transpires.

And on the topic of "shallow electioneering", as ´óÏó´«Ã½ Newsline viewers will have seen, Martin McGuinness was saved from a near "Kinnock" moment during an election photocall. The DFM lost his balance whilst posing on rocks in the waterfall in North Belfast's Waterworks. Gerry Adams saved him, but only at the expense of a distinctly soggy right foot.

Sinn Fein and the Sunday Telegraph

Mark Devenport | 13:39 UK time, Sunday, 10 May 2009

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Interesting that the Sunday Telegraph should go for and their expenses. Presumably it was because the Daily Telegraph wanted to keep the next most obvious story - the Shadow Cabinet - for their Monday edition. Although Sinn Fein reckons it's a deliberate tactic by what it calls the "tory led media" in the run up to an election.

Martina Purdy and I didn't have a lot of time to discuss the story off the back of the two Inside Politics election interviews today. But it seems to be that the Sinn Fein MPs are in a different boat when it comes to whether this is or isn't politically damaging.

It's fair to assume that the average Sinn Fein voter doesn't have a lot of time for the Westminster system, given that they are voting for openly abstentionist MPs. So the imperative for Sinn Fein is not so much to counter the general claim of abusing the system, but to demonstrate that as individuals they are not benefitting.

On that score Pat Doherty has pointed out that Sinn Fein MPs take an average industrial wage (around £300 a week, if I remember a recent Martin McGuinness interview correctly). and that, having not bought the properties in question they don't stand to gain personally from their future sale.

That said, it would still be interesting to know more about the precise relationship between the landlord and the party.

Another unanswered question at this stage is who is the Northern Ireland MP who claimed more than £2000 for 2 TVs (they sound like smarter models than the ones bought for the Sinn Fein flats)? The claim featured in yesterday's Telegraph.

In my rush to plug the Politics Show interview with Shaun Woodward I forgot about today's Grand Prix which meant the programme went out earlier than usual. If you missed it you can catch it again at 10.20 pm on ´óÏó´«Ã½1 tonight. He comes out fighting, pointing out that the license fee payer pays for ´óÏó´«Ã½ biscuits just as much as the taxpayer pays for the biscuits in an MP's constituency office. And he should know, given that he's been both a ´óÏó´«Ã½ producer and a politician.

Hillsborough's "J.R. Hartley"

Mark Devenport | 22:27 UK time, Friday, 8 May 2009

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When I lived in New York a couple of friends, on finding out I had written two books, nicknamed me "J.R. Hartley". They reasoned that, apart from the author himself, no one could possibly be interested in my obscure tomes (with friends like these, you may well think...) The nickname, for those not familiar, was a reference to the in which the ageing author of "Fly Fishing" rings around second hand bookshops to track down his own work.

With such a famous co-author as Esther Rantzen, I wouldn't dream of putting Shaun Woodward's book on Ben Hardwick in the same category as my publications. Nevertheless there is something distinctly JR Hartleyesque about the revelation that the Secretary of State bought a second hand copy of his own book and then charged it to his Westminster expenses.

No doubt Mr Woodward will explain all - I believe he's due to appear on the Politics Show on ´óÏó´«Ã½ 1 on Sunday at 12.30pm. Once the TV show is over feel free to flick on Radio Ulster. We are starting a series of special European election programmes, featuring the seven candidates. We kick off this weekend with the SDLP's Alban Maginness and Alliance's Ian Parsley. I shall be joined in the studio by Martina Purdy for the programme which starts straight after the One O'Clock news.

P.S. Martin McGuinness may not have been keen to attend this week's Hillsborough reception for the Irish rugby team hosted by the Queen, but where can you see the two of them together?

Answer - on the mantle piece at the home of Newry and Armagh MLA Mickey Brady's mother. She turned 100 earlier this year and has on display cards from both the Deputy First Minister and the Queen. Apparently, though, her favourite is another card which, when opened, triggers a rendition of "Happy Birthday" by Daniel O'Donnell.

Journalists and their sources

Mark Devenport | 16:44 UK time, Friday, 8 May 2009

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"If journalists were made to name their sources, very little information would succeed in reaching the public domain. It is written in the National Union of Journalist's code of conduct that under no circumstances can sources be divulged, and, on the whole, the courts have accepted that. The code forbids journalists from divulging information that has been passed to them. It says that a journalist:

"At all times upholds and defends the principle of media freedom, the right of freedom of expression and the right of the public to be informed".

It states that a journalist should differentiate between fact and opinion. The code of conduct also says that a journalist:

"Protects the identity of sources who supply information in confidence and material gathered in the course of her/his work".

Those who have sought to legally challenge journalists to name their sources have made very little headway. It usually ends up with the reporter coming out a hero for standing his or her ground."

So was that an extract from the submission by the defence lawyer appearing on behalf of the Sunday Tribune's Northern Editor Suzanne Breen during her court case this afternoon? Ms Breen is refusing to hand over her notes, laptop and phone to detectives investigating the recent dissident violence.

No. It was an extract from Lord Morrow's speech last month to the Assembly during the debate in which MLAs supported Ian Paisley Junior over his refusal to identify his source to the Billy Wright inquiry. The text of the debate can be found

Nominations Close

Mark Devenport | 15:58 UK time, Thursday, 7 May 2009

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The deadline for nomination papers to be handed in for the European election has just passed and the Electoral Office has confirmed that there are just seven candidates in the race.

Having led everyone to understand he might run, the family of Colin Duffy confirmed last night that the man charged with murdering two soldiers at Antrim has ruled out a campaign. The family say that time and money are against them. Instead they are writing to candidates "seeking votes from within the nationalist and republican community" asking them to endorse their campaign.

I have just recorded a "two way" with Hearts and Minds recounting some of the events of the week. Truth be told, it wasn't desperately exciting. I myself went to an SDLP launch, in which Alban Maginnis said there should be no sectarian vanity contest, and the TUV event where Jim Allister displayed his poster featuring the First and Deputy First Ministers sm,iling at each other in one corner. Gareth Gordon went to the DUP bus launch where Peter Robinson talked of Diane Dodds "completing the jigsaw" so his party is represented at council, Assembly, Westminster and European level.

I wasn't there, but my spies report a DUP strategy meeting at Wards Cafe in Bangor with Messrs Morrow, Poots and McCrea talking tactics over tray bakes. Where would unionists be without tray bakes? Outside, a Jim Allister poster had swivelled around on a lamp-post as if he was craning to hear what his erstwhile colleagues were on about. All further election sightings gratefully accepted.

When it comes to posters, Jim Nicholson and Alban Mginniss appear to be vying for the most beaming smile award. Jim Nicholson asks people to "vote for change" but he better hope they don't take it to heart, as the slogan works better for David Cameron than for an MEP who has been in place for 20 years.

Radio Ulster listeners are getting exercised about the profusion of election posters, especially those close to the North West 200 circuit which might distract the motorcyclists. Although I think if I was tackling a corner with my knee just inches from the tarmac, I wouldn't spend too much time pondering to whom I might give my third preference.

Who have I left out? I haven't set eye on Bairbre De Brun this week but I gather Sinn Fein is holding a launch early next week and all the candidates are due to attend a business hustings on Monday. I hear there's some debate about whether Sinn Fein might launch its manifesto in Derry. Will that depend on whether the local postal workers deliver their literature?

Stephen Agnew and the Greens were at Harland and Wolff (these days a hub of wind and sea turbine technology) launching their Green New Deal (I remember them doing that at a previous election) and the Alliance's Ian Parsley has been promoting Fair Trade at Dundonald's "Cafe Nosh". This is the one, I must confess, which I was really cheesed off about missing. Over the Bank Holiday I had hatched a sneaky plan to get the kids to cycle all the way from Comber to Cafe Nosh along the Greenway. But their little legs gave up and we had to turn back without so much as a tray bake.

Finally, I'm aware that having last week made a reference to Chelsea's tactics against Barcelona in the first leg of their semi final I have to return to the topic even though this might seem painful for the First Minister. I said both he and Chelsea would choose whichever tactics it took to get the job done. As the world now knows, though, Gus Hiddink's strategy didn't quite pay off. I'm not going to engage in any more painful metaphors about who might turn out to be the Xavi, Iniesta or Messi of this election. Let's just hope that before the polls close this race gets a tenth as exciting as those last four minutes of injury time.

Debates and Complaints

Mark Devenport | 13:08 UK time, Friday, 1 May 2009

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You can't please all the people all the time, but in my experience, during election campaigns, it's entirely possible to please none of the candidates none of the time. Back in 2003 after the so called "fuss at the bus" I was asked on air who had won the encounter. Taking the opinion that viewers don't like bland "on the one hand, on the other hand" answers I expressed the view that the UUP had just shaded it. My logic was that, otherwise, the day would have been dominated by the launch of a separatist manifesto from Jeffrey Donaldson who was, at that stage, David Trimble's "enemy within".

Subsequently a senior DUP figure accused me of pandering to my "favourite unionist party". Suffice to say, the then Ulster Unionist leadership would not have recognised that description of their relationship with me.

Fast forward to 2009 and we are once again in an election minefield. My first broadcast about this campaign was at 7.15 am on Tuesday morning on Good Morning Ulster. At 7.57 am I got my first complaint from someone within Jim Allister's camp who didn't like my choice of language. I had talked about how his "intervention" in the campaign might cost the DUP the top spot they have occupied since 1979. The TUV view is that, as Mr Allister is the outgoing MEP, his candidature is not an "intervention".

Later that day Gareth Gordon broadcast a report on Evening Extra. Afterwards the Alliance party made it clear they didn't think they'd been given enough weight visa-vi the TUV.

Then last night I participated in a debate on "Hearts and Minds". The DUP didn't like my contribution one bit, and text fencing went on into the wee small hours.

Of course politicians have an absolute right to make complaints if they think reporters get things wrong or mis-state their position. My DUP sources were particularly unhappy about one answer in which I surmised that they might not be too keen on putting Diane Dodds into debate with Jim Allister, given his reputation as a tough legal cross examiner. I had based this on indications that both the DUP and Sinn Fein may be reluctant to participate in internal unionist and nationalist TV debates during this campaign. However, I pointed out that all the candidates are expected to debate at Queen's University later this month, with cameras present.

Reviewing Hearts and Minds, it would have been better if I had included the fact that both the the DUP and TUV candidates had appeared at hustings events organised by the NI Council for Voluntary Action and the Federation of Small Businesses. Mea culpa.

Last night I chaired a similar event for the Coalition of Aid and Development Agencies, which includes groups like Trocaire and Concern. The DUP weren't there. The organisers told me Diane Dodds had pulled out at short notice. All the other parties were present, although both Bairbre De Brun and Jim Nicholson sent along substitutes.

Highlights included lively exchanges on Israel/Palestine and Climate Change, with Jim Allister very much in the Sammy Wilson sceptic camp, lecturing us about the days when the Thames was frozen over and vines were growing on Hadrian's Wall. When a member of the audience highlighted the role of cattle emissions in contributing to global warming and suggested vegetarianism presented a more sustainable way forward, I boiled it down (probably unfairly) to whether any of the candidates would go veggy if that's what it took to become an MEP. Green Steven Agnew is already a veggy, the rest declined. The UCUNF representative who by his own admission is not the skinniest politician in Northern Ireland, replied with a question: "Do I look like a vegetarian?"

Amnesty International has a report and some images of last night's debate I am led to believe the will eventually have some video of the event.

Back to the TV debate question, Jim Allister recently put out a statement which inaccurately accused the ´óÏó´«Ã½ of conspiring to prevent a debate between unionists. Our programmes would be happy to host such a debate, but there's no law which says such an event must take place. Thinking back to 2003 the DUP took the view that Ian Paisley was best used on their battle bus, charming unionist voters on the streets. We wait to see if they've made the same calculation with Diane Dodds.

Peter Robinson is an ardent Chelsea fan and so I presume he watched their Champions League semi-final with Barcelona. Chelsea played defensively, obviously deciding there was no point trying to match Barcelona's attacking flair. The tactic got the job done, holding Barcelona to a nil-nil draw. Chelsea fans couldn't care less that the Spanish newspapers didn't like it. I suspect that, just like his team, the DUP leader will opt for whichever tactic he believes will get the job done.

Right Said Fred

Mark Devenport | 10:45 UK time, Friday, 1 May 2009

Comments

Earlier this week a couple of holes appeared near the Massey Avenue entrance at Stormont. They were dug by workmen installing a new security barrier. A source claims rather more holes were dug than necessary. After the first ones appeared the security guards reckoned something didn't look right. Apparently the diggers were reading the plans the wrong way up.

Peel out

Mark Devenport | 10:41 UK time, Friday, 1 May 2009

Comments

Jeff Peel tells me he has lost his appeal against his removal as an officer in the Conservative Party. His removal followed his very public criticism of the dynamics within the Ulster Unionist Conservative courtship. His thoughts can be found on his

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