This is the first paragraph of a message from David Cameron posted on the Conservative Party website. Apparently it was also emailed to members:

In nine days time, representatives from 192 countries will meet in Copenhagen for the UN Conference on climate change. This summit is of historic importance. It is an opportunity for the world to take bold action to deal with the real danger of climate change.

http://blog.conservatives.com/index.php/2009/11/27/the-copenhagen-summit-is-of-historic-importance/

The rest is fairly predictable, but it is worth reading in full.

When I first looked at this page on Sunday evening there were just over two hundred comments, most presumably from the Conservative faithful - otherwise known as their core vote. As I ran my eye over them, I searched in vain for any that might support the leaders take on climate change. I did eventually find a few.

Most seemed to be written more in sorrow than in anger, explaining that the authors simply did not buy into their leader’s climate change alarmism. Some were from lifetime Tory voters who warned that they would be voting UKIP at the coming election because of the global warming issue. Most tried to explain that there was a perfectly rational alternative to that of the party leadership’s views on climate change, and that the debate is certainly is not over. The recently leaked emails from the Climatic Research Unit at the University of East Anglia, which seem to indicate a most unhealthy groupthink at the heart of the climate science establishment, are mentioned everywhere.

Presumably there will be people at the Conservative Party’s head office who monitor such comments for useful feedback on what voters really think. I certainly hope so.

In a recent interview on Newsnight, Al Gore smugly told an unusually restrained Jeremy Paxman that the UK was lucky because all the main political parties agreed about climate change. He was wrong. Democracy only succeeds when government policies are vigorously questioned and opposed by those who may replace them at the next election.

Britain is not lucky to have political unanimity on climate change because this only further indicates, if more evidence was needed after the MP’s expenses scandal, that our parliamentarians have lost touch with the electorate. In other word, once again they just don’t get it.

This is from an opinion piece by Anne McElvoy in the Evening Standard:

“Don’t you think it’s scary,” a minister said to me yesterday, “that 55 per cent of people don’t believe global warming is man-made?”

http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/standard/article-23774747-the-climate-change-apostles-must-be-open-to-challenge.do

Well no I don’t, I think it is a thoroughly benign and very healthy situation, except that it means that the main political parties are out-of-step with more than half the electorate. Only UKIP and the BNP represent their views on this subject, and that is certainly scary when there’s an election just round the corner.

I actually drafted this post on Monday morning and then forgot about it until a few minutes ago when I saw the headlines in tomorrow’s Independent.

Have a look!