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THE JUDGES' FINAL CABINET

Prime Minister
Deputy PM
Chancellor
Foreign
Lord Chancellor
Home
Education/Employm
Environment
Leader of Commons
Culture
Cabinet Office
International Develop
Social Security
Agriculture
Leader of the Lords
Trade/Industry
Health
Regions
Defence
Transport
Treasury Chief Sec

Yvette Cooper
Harriet Harman
Kenneth Clarke
Tony Benn
Sven Eriksson
Martin Johnson
Gordon Brown
Stella McCartney
Prince William
Harry Potter
Ali G
Tony Blair
David Blunkett
Rhodri Morgan
Michael Heseltine
Peter Hain
David Trimble
Menzies Campbell
Henry McLeish
Alan Milburn
Ken Livingstone


292
228
224
190
176
168
159
152
136
130
130
127
118
116
98
98
94
89
88
87
72
2,972

THE JUDGES' EIGHTH CABINET

Prime Minister
Deputy PM
Chancellor
Foreign
Lord Chancellor
Home
Education/Employm
Environment
Leader of Commons
Culture
Cabinet Office
International Develop
Social Security
Agriculture
Leader of the Lords
Trade/Industry
Health
Regions
Defence
Transport
Treasury Chief Sec

Charles Kennedy
Tony Blair
Martin Bell
Henry McLeish
Britney Spears
David Trimble
Gerry Adams
Alistair Darling
David Blunkett
Gordon Brown
Sven Eriksson
Tracey Emin
Michael Portillo
Harriet Harman
Martin Johnson
Rhodri Morgan
Stella McCartney
Menzies Campbell
Harry Potter
Stephen Byers
Alan Milburn


43
41
30
28
26
24
24
23
21
20
18
18
17
16
16
16
14
14
13
13
11
446

The political parties may stand charged with a shameful neglect of women during the election campaign, but no such accusation can be levelled at the judges (three men, two women) of our Fantasy Politics game. Their final cabinet, based on the cumulative scores acquired by candidates over the full eight rounds of the game, has Yvette Cooper and Harriet Harman in pole position.

The overall scores show how poorly politicians of all shades, particularly frontbenchers, have done in the campaign. The rules allow a maximum of six celebrities in the cabinet; had it not been for this restriction, 12 celebrities in all would have made it into the final team. Labour luminaries such as Peter Hain and Alan Milburn, and even Ken Livingstone, make it into the cabinet by default. The only Tories to be included are Kenneth Clarke and Michael Heseltine, neither of them frontbenchers.

In the eighth and final round, Tony Blair at last scored highly, despite his horrendous make-up. But he was beaten into second place by Charles Kennedy, who made a good impression in the last two weeks. Clare Short and Peter Mandelson both lost marks for their creepy adulation of Blair ("the person who comes closest to political perfection... among anyone I have ever met," said Mandelson). Robin Cook was marked down for an abysmal Newsnight interview in which he sounded like a parody of Rory Bremner parodying Robin Cook. Even Cooper lost marks for a bad Radio 4 interview, but they weren't enough to supplant her from the ultimate cabinet premiership that had seemed hers for several weeks. The judges could find little merit in the Tories, hard though they tried. Michael Portillo won points for being consistently talked about as William Hague's successor. The Tory leader himself would have got a bigger minus had not one kind-hearted judge awarded him points for pluck. Andrew Lansley got an even bigger minus than his leader, because the judges held him responsible for the disastrous Tory election broadcasts. As for Liam Fox, one judge admitted she had forgotten who he was (Tory health spokesman, in case you've forgotten, too). Martin Bell, reported to be gathering support in his Essex campaign to supplant another Tory, made a late run. Britney Spears is appointed Lord Chancellor in the judges' cabinet after reports that she, with other musicians, will record a CD of the Pope's prayers. Stella McCartney continued to prove her talent for grabbing the headlines by condemning the use of leather and fur on the catwalks.

Though many politicians did badly in the overall game, none performed so poorly as Richard Branson, whose Virgin Trains continued to attract negative publicity, and Richard Desmond, owner of the Express newspapers. Other turkeys included Chris Evans, whose wife, said one judge, looks a mess after just a month of marriage.

The heavy minus scores of the two spin-doctors - Alastair Campbell and Amanda Platell - reflect the almost universal verdict that the campaign was dull and uninspiring. Yet both players had their supporters: one judge praised Platell for wearing pearls, while another rated Campbell as funny and sexy, and argued that he surely deserved some credit for getting almost every national newspaper (including the Times) to endorse another Labour government.

Three Lib Dems were sent off for persistent invisibility (a serious offence in Fantasy Politics); like all red-carded players, their final scores do not count and are published only for historical interest. The same applies to three front-bench Tories, two bonus players and four celebrities.

And so to the prizes. Alex Gemmell of London SW20 won the final-round prize, but the grand prize - litre bottles of Absolut Vodka, Bulleit Bourbon, Chivas Regal 12-year-old, Reserve de Martell and Plymouth Gin - goes to Lesley Brownlee of Clayton-le-Woods, Lancashire.

Thanks to all readers who took part; to the judges (Peter Wilby, NS editor; Jackie Ashley, NS political editor; Charlie Whelan and Lauren Booth, NS columnists; and Steve Richards, the political editor of the Independent on Sunday); and to Charles Leadbeater and Ian Hargreaves, who designed the game in 1997.

One last point. The final judging round took place last Tuesday, and these pages of the New Statesman went to press on Wednesday. No account is therefore taken of subsequent events - such as an England football defeat in Greece, or a Tory general election victory.

To see the first judges' cabinet click here. To see the second judges' cabinet click here. To see the third judges' cabinet click here. To see the fourth judges' cabinet click here. To see the judges fifth cabinet click here. The judges sixth cabinet is here. And the judges seventh cabinet is here.



 

 

.

Candidates' scores

Labour
1 Tony Blair
2 John Prescott
3 Gordon Brown
4 Robin Cook
5 Jack Straw
6 David Blunkett
7 Mo Mowlam
8 John Reid
9 Helen Liddell
10 Clare Short
11 Stephen Byers
12 Chris Smith
13 Alistair Darling
14 Alan Milburn
15 Geoff Hoon
16 Ann Taylor
17 Baroness Jay

Conservative
18 William Hague
19 Ann Widdecombe
20 Michael Portillo
21 Liam Fox
22 Francis Maude
23 David Willetts
24 Iain Duncan Smith
25 Theresa May
26 Oliver Letwin
27 Michael Ancram
28 Andrew Lansley
29 Angela Browning
30 Archie Norman

Liberal Democrats
31 Charles Kennedy
32 Alan Beith
33 Menzies Campbell
34 Simon Hughes
35 Jenny Tonge
36 Don Foster

Bonus Players
(score double)
37 Ken Livingstone
38 Tommy Sheridan
39 Jonathon Porritt
40 Martin Bell
41 Kenneth Clarke
42 Tony Benn
43 Margaret Thatcher
44 David Trimble
45 Gerry Adams
46 Henry McLeish
47 Rhodri Morgan
48 John Swinney
49 John Major
50 Peter Kilfoyle
51 John Redwood
52 Michael Heseltine
53 Harriet Harman
54 Lord Levy
55 Lord Macdonald
56 Alastair Campbell
57 Amanda Platell
58 Michael Meacher
59 Peter Hain
60 Yvette Cooper
91 Peter Mandelson

Celebrity Players
(choose at least four, but not more than six)
61 Greg Dyke
62 Tracey Emin
63 Guy Ritchie
64 George Carey
65 Chris Evans
66 Richard Branson
67 Prince William
68 Robert Winston
69 Ali G
70 Posh and Becks**
71 Chris Woodhead
72 Nigella Lawson
73 Tara Palmer-
Tomkinson
74 Stella McCartney
75 Camilla Parker Bowles
76 Richard Desmond
77 Harry Potter
78 Anne Robinson
79 P D James
80 Martin Johnson
81 Carol Vorderman
82 The Tweenies**
83 Kate Winslet
84 Sven Eriksson
85 Britney Spears
86 Eminem
87 Vanessa Feltz
88 Catherine Zeta-
Jones
89 John Humphrys
90 Anna Kournikova

Minister without Portfolio
(choose any public figure, living or dead)

**counts as one entry
05/6


41
1
20
-13
-9
21
-28
1
10
-11
13
-29
23
11
-1
0
-22


-30
1
17
-14
-18
-23
-7
-12
0
-16
-34
0
0


43
0
14
7
0
0



-6
-8
0
30
-38
-12
-22
24
24
28
16
-28
-44
0
-30
8
16
0
0
-26
-26
-24
0
-34
-78




2
18
2
0
-45
-34
-6
0
-3
-10
-6
12

0
14
-3
-41
13
11
2
16
-2
0
0
18
26
-14
4

4
0
-12
Total


127
-65
159
-21
14
118
-33
71
56
46
20
-117
67
87
23
-22
-54


-181
-25
12
-29
-45
-23
54
-67
0
62
7
-16
-60


55
0
89
60
1
0



72
-4
-12
-14
224
190
32
94
38
88
116
-2
30
66
58
98
228
-64
-104
-202
-156
34
98
292
-63




-74
103
73
-12
-115
-235
136
8
130
-11
-65
90

0
152
80
-200
130
44
54
168
44
-2
73
176
76
10
32

42
-35
67