Patrick Stewart Targets 'Bullsh*t' Coalition And Ed Miliband

Patrick Stewart

First Posted: 15/02/2012 17:09 Updated: 15/02/2012 17:19

Red alert! Star Trek's Captain Picard, aka Patrick Stewart, has turned his phaser on David Cameron, Nick Clegg and Ed Miliband.

"I have nothing but contempt for the expression 'we’re all in this together'. That’s bullshit – we’re not all in this together," he said of one of the coalition's favoured catchphrases.

"The members of the cabinet are not in the same position as the people who live near me in Bermondsey. What we have seen is not so much a response to a global crisis but Tory policies as usual, masquerading under the claim of necessity."

In an interview with the New Statesman, published on Thursday, the 71-year-old actor added: "I find the very fact of the coalition to be a cynical piece of manipulation."

Stewart, who has long supported the Labour Party but lent his backing to David Miliband in the Labour leadership campaign, also said Ed Miliband was doing well enough.

"I would like to see the [Labour] Party be more aggressive in its policies with regard to the recession and getting the economy stabilised," he said.

In a video produced during the leadership campaign Stewart said of the elder Miliband: "This was not a young, high flying politician whose ambition was to climb his way political ladder, this was a man who cared for his constituents, he felt his responsibility towards them."

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Red alert! Star Trek's Captain Picard, aka Patrick Stewart, has turned his phaser on David Cameron, Nick Clegg and Ed Miliband. "I have nothing but contempt for the expression 'we’re all in this ...
Red alert! Star Trek's Captain Picard, aka Patrick Stewart, has turned his phaser on David Cameron, Nick Clegg and Ed Miliband. "I have nothing but contempt for the expression 'we’re all in this ...
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04:18 AM on 02/19/2012
Make it so
11:15 AM on 02/18/2012
Sean Penn should take notice, this is how a movie star speaks out and still remains dignified.
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Totto
"Not 'Noise' One Round: *Music*
03:27 PM on 02/19/2012
Not only Sean, but most of Hollywood. They've never been to an acting class, or appeared onstage.
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KickstandCat
Christian, therefore Liberal
04:37 PM on 02/21/2012
Have you ever seen Patrick Stewart do Shakespaere? Truly awesome.
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KickstandCat
Christian, therefore Liberal
04:31 PM on 02/21/2012
Don't blame Sean, too much. Dignity isn't really a strong point around "here" lately.

They've been civilized over there for a while longer than We have. We'll evolve too, eventually. I've seen it before. Back in the 20th Century.

I just hope I get to see it again before I die.
02:57 PM on 02/17/2012
There's a very clever long term trade union strategy at work here to bring down the coalition and wrestle power from the Tories: Ed Milliband is only there until just before the next election. Then in an 11th hour move his brother David will take over and lead the Labour Party to victory as the public will be so disenchanted with the coalition ref. Lansley's wreckage of the NHS and Cameron's cushioning of the bankers.
07:29 PM on 02/17/2012
They have a strategy? i hope you are right on that one cos they are proposing to force terminally ill people to work until they have just 6 months left to live!
05:40 PM on 02/16/2012
As I have said elsewhere schadenfreude is the policy that runs this country. The unions were silly admittedly shoving Ed Milligan in power so now they should try and get him to be a responsible opposition.
This comment has been removed.
03:42 PM on 02/16/2012
I agree with Patrick Stewart the Tory despots have announced a war on the poor and the needy of this country-they are absolutely obsessed with making life harder for ordinary people-workers,pensioners, students,the sick etc and the motive is to save money to fund their elaborate lifestyle for lining their own pockets, wars,banker mates,and big privatisation 'contracts for the boys'
new Tory despot slogan-'ROB FROM THE POOR TO GIVE TO THE RICH!'
03:15 PM on 02/16/2012
At last a man who speaks the truth and see`s through this ball*** we already know but unable to express.
03:08 PM on 02/16/2012
"we’re not all in this together,"
"The members of the cabinet are not in the same position".
"not a response to a global crisis but Tory policies masquerading under the claim of necessity."
"coalition to be a cynical piece of manipulation."
Could not agree more.
03:08 PM on 02/16/2012
Well said patrick , but are they listening.
02:04 PM on 02/16/2012
tory policy has always been mass unemployment making people fight for jobs and those that have them think they are priviledged but this govenment have taken it even further by forcing the price of everyday essentials to go sky high because they will not reduce fuel tax , they are squeasing every penny from the hard hit public of the uk . so next time he says we are all in it together you will know he is a liar and therefore not be running the country .
02:59 PM on 02/16/2012
& Brown never taxed everything that moved? During his term as chancellor more taxes were bought in than in any previous government.
03:15 PM on 02/16/2012
in 2007 there was more tax collected than any other year previous yet brown thought he would borrow a few more billion just to keep the expenses going, not thinking of saving any it was spend spend spend.
07:21 PM on 02/16/2012
i take it you like paying the highest prices in the world for fuel
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Totto
"Not 'Noise' One Round: *Music*
02:32 PM on 02/20/2012
It seems to work over here with the TEA Publicans.
01:58 PM on 02/16/2012
I personally can find many faults with the Coalition government and the majority is because Cameron plays lip service to that buffon Clegg. But no way is Labour, now nor will they ever be, an acceptable alternative. All three, in my mind, have shown a glaring incapability to run an ailing economy in recession, they do not contact joe public whatsoever and have no idea on hardships that are endured thro the UK. I hope that at the next election, the electorate will identify that and vote accordingly, cos we need changes.
01:36 PM on 02/16/2012
The depressing characteristic of the dyslectic Coalition is that Cameron permits the Lib Dem tail to wag the Tory dog and the guts of the dog do not like it. Cameron's MPs will eventually tell him to either lead the Conservative Party in a different way or make way for someone who can. Under Dave's leadership we have a mish mash of polices, no better illustrated than Michael Gove (Tory) introducing reforms to improve stanadrds in our schools and colleges and this being undermined by Vince Cable (LIb Dem) determined to appoint Les Ebdon to use universities as tools of social engineering and purveyors of 'Mickey Mouse' degrees.
Southern law girl
Researching my viewpoint....
03:28 PM on 02/16/2012
Education needs improving, on leaving school they cannot read and write, as found by those in business. Education needs an uplift, if teachers are not able to improve that basic skill, then something is clearly wrong. Sadly, the last Government were not able to do it, so let us see if this lot can? Gove is trying to do something, although for me personally, I think there is an argument for a return of old style grammar schools, (a great many politicians are grammar educated) because I don't think comprehensives can achieve the standard, well certainly not to compete with emerging countries such as China and India. I have witnessed what happens at some of the top schools in India, and unlike the schools in this Country, there is much more discipline and order, and they are much more advanced on leaving school. I am not a political animal, I am willing and quite able to criticise any party, I am loyal to none, all I want to see is excellence in our schools and it isn't there. I know because top public schools can do it, so why can't State schools. I wasn't educated in the State system and I don't mind admitting it, I am proud of my school, and neither were my family. I know my child/children would not be where they are today had I opted for State education, but I wouldn't have been able to do that had it not been for my father.
04:37 PM on 02/16/2012
Michael Gove's reforms do include a return to grammar school standards and although at present new grammar schools are not proposed, existing grammar schools are enabled to expand. This could mean that enterprising and successful grammars could expand not only on existing sites but also at a distance, even in another town.
There is always discontent within any political party about its leader but Cameron is widely unpopular not only with his own MPs but the grassroots who provide the election machinery of canvassing, sending out literature etc. He may yet reap the consequences of his lack of rapport with his natural supporters by a leadership challenge much as Margaret Thatcher did.
05:24 PM on 02/16/2012
Well said southern law girl.
Complacency has much to do with the position
we are in now, and not just in education.
The golden years have gone, as we called it.
Rule Britannia has long lost her shine.
We must get back to basics, learn the
kids to read, write,spell, count.
Once these are mastered, the rest will fall into place.
Its quite embarrassing, the last time i went to Turkey
a group of kids who were only eight years old
started speaking too me in English, they were being
taught at school.
At that i said too myself, where have we gone wrong.
wes
Southern law girl
Researching my viewpoint....
03:30 PM on 02/16/2012
What is going on in Westminster at the moment is nothing new, I just hear about it, and oh well here they go again! It has to be like water on a ducks back! Maybe I shall go off into the tower and start weaving my golden locks.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Norman Mitchison
01:17 PM on 02/16/2012
Patrick Stewart is right about one thing though, Cleggie and Red Ed are`nt on the same planet as the rest of us.
12:42 PM on 02/16/2012
Well done Patrick, first class way to retire. You and Sean Penn should travel the world righting all our wrongs. And there I was thinking you were just acting the part of a know it all hero.
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Kehlan Sutai Inigan
02:00 PM on 02/16/2012
At least as a Brit, Patrick Stewart has a right to comment on British Politics - its as much his business as it is ours.... unlike Sean Penn who is definitely not British and should stick to the political mess his own country has caused.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
David Daisy May Boldock
Yorkshire..Gods Own Country
02:35 PM on 02/16/2012
And continue to cause!
04:19 AM on 02/19/2012
Sean has a right to comment, and everyone has a right to disagree with his assement.
katertaif
My wife thinks I have one fault. Everything I do!
12:19 PM on 02/16/2012
I enjoy watching the new generation far more than the original. Having said that.patrick Stewart is an actor. A past his sell by date actor at that. What makes his opinion more valid than anyone else's? I agree with some of what he says, but who does HP think he is to say it? I wonder how long it is since he has last been to Bermondsey let alone lived there. Even the editorial is studded with 'star trek' cliches. Not at all well done HP, not at all.