Daily Express

Koo always coped well

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PRESENT at the ceremony of commemorat­ion for the bombings were people from Coventry, which suffered similar devastatio­n though at vastly less cost of life. Their dignified, quiet presence said it all.

If ever there was a just war it was the Second World War and no sensible person expects to fight an all- out war without civilian casualties but even Churchill was upset by the sheer scale of Dresden. That is because he recognised what that screaming headline did not: that not all the Germans who died were strutting, Jew- hating, blood- crazed Nazis.

There is a memorable vignette in Jonathan Dimbleby’s book Destiny In The Desert in which a British soldier surrenders to a German sergeant at the end of a long day’s fighting, maiming and killing. As he climbs into the sergeant’s vehicle the two men look at each other, then simultaneo­usly and spontaneou­sly raise their eyes to heaven. United by the horror of it all they felt no hatred.

That is how many citizens of Coventry and of Dresden feel towards each other today and the world is a better place for it. THE politician’s nightmare is the myth which is repeated so often that it becomes widely believed. In my case it was that I defended shackling women in labour or childbirth whereas my statement to Parliament, faithfully recorded in Hansard, made it clear from the very outset that this had never been policy.

What I defended was securing female prisoners between hospital and prison and removing the restraints as soon as labour was confirmed.

With Cameron, however, the myth is much more dangerous. Millions of people seem to believe that he has a history of promising a referendum on Europe and then ratting.

That is important because it colours the way electors view his promise of an in- out referendum by 2017.

I challenge anyone to produce a single occasion when the PM has promised an in- out referendum because he never has.

What he promised in the Parliament before this one was very straightfo­rward: if the Lisbon Treaty ( which gave the EU yet more powers) were not to be ratified by the time he was elected then Britain would be offered a referendum on whether to ratify it or not.

In short a Conservati­ve government would not sign Britain up to the Lisbon Treaty without the KOO STARK has mounted a moving defence of Prince Andrew but what is interestin­g about her recollecti­ons is how effortless­ly she appears to have coped with royal protocol while she was his girlfriend. Perhaps they should have married.

The royals have an unfortunat­e history of rejecting potential spouses on the grounds of propriety.

Peter Townsend was divorced so Princess Margaret was forced to renounce him and the subsequent marriage ended in her own divorce. Koo Stark was deemed unsuitable because she over- exposed herself in a film and Andrew’s subsequent marriage ended in divorce.

Prince Charles had a long string of girlfriend­s but too many had “histories” so he married a pure young lass of 19 and that too ended in divorce.

They generally appear to have been more relaxed about Prince William, who was allowed to fall in love rather than tick boxes and the happy result is there for all to see.

DAVID CAMERON FALLS PREY TO EVERY POLITICIAN’S WORST NIGHTMARE

say- so of the British people. Gordon Brown therefore made darn sure that the ghastly treaty was ratified before the 2010 election because he knew that if it were ever to be the subject of a plebiscite Britain would say no.

Thus, to state the blooming obvious, Britain was already signed up by the time Cameron arrived in Downing Street. He broke no promise and those who say he did slander him.

 ?? Pictures: AFP, ALAMY ??
Pictures: AFP, ALAMY

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