Nigel Lawson and Francis Maude are both interviewed in the Telegraph today, and the
results are very different in each case. For his part, Lawson is in bombastic form – waxing sceptical on everything from the coalition to the Big Society. Whereas Maude is predictably more
reserved and accepting.
It’s the Maude interview, though, that contains the most politically significant revelation. Namely, this:
Significant, because the coalition has been discussing union reform with Boris for some time now – and, judging by this recent“Boris Johnson, privately backed by several Cabinet ministers, is leading the charge for tougher union laws. But Maude, a key player in the Coalition’s dealings with the public sector, is reluctant. Tightening Thatcher’s labour laws is a ‘last resort’ he says. In the meantime, the Government should have faith in rank-and-file trade union members to embrace the Coalition agenda even as their leaders are roaring their opposition.”

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