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Call +44500004000 Look up postcode AB10 1YG Open www.invtrusts.co.uk click to zoom in Call +442079610250 Open www.spectator.co.uk Open www.spectator.co.uk Call +442079610200 Look up postcode SW1H 9HP click to zoom in
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Wise investment moves can help them look forward to a better future Aberdeen’s Investment Plan for Children

Everyone wants the best for their children. So why not get real investment expertise working on their behalf? Aberdeen’s Investment Plan for Children offers an easy and flexible way to use our extensive investment expertise to capture the growth potential of the stockmarket. It offers a choice of 13 professionally-managed investment trusts, ranging from ‘core’ UK trusts to those with more adventurous strategies investing across Asia, all using Aberdeen’s disciplined investment approach. Any adult may invest in the Plan – including parents, grandparents and family friends. You can choose how and when to invest – whether you want to invest a one-off lump sum or regular amounts each month. Proceeds from the Plan may be used for any purpose you wish. You could use it to help provide for childcare while a child is young – or school fees as they get older. You may prefer to invest over the very long term, building up a lump sum for when they reach 18 or 21 – perhaps to help pay for university, a deposit on a first home, or towards the cost of a wedding.

In short, whatever you are planning for a child’s future – Aberdeen’s Investment Plan for Children can help them look forward to a better future. Do remember that the value of shares and the income from them can go down as well as up. You may not get back the amount invested. No recommendation is made, positive or otherwise, regarding the Plan.

If you have any doubts about the suitability of any investment for your needs, please consult an independent financial adviser.

To find out more: Request a brochure: 0500 00 40 00 www.invtrusts.co.uk

Issued and approved by Aberdeen Asset Managers Limited, 10 Queen’s Terrace, Aberdeen AB10 1YG. Authorised and regulated by the Financial Services Authority in the UK. Telephone calls may be recorded.

Please quote CH S 05 The Spectator, 22 Old Queen Street, London SW1H 9HP Telephone 020 7961 0200; Fax 020 7961 0250; www.spectator.co.uk

Give Clegg credit

Nick Clegg’s triumphant performance in the first televised leaders’ debate has already faded in the public imagination. Back then, Lib dems spoke breathlessly about overtaking Labour as the nation’s second largest party. But a general election in which they lost more seats than they gained has dampened that optimism, and recent opinion polls have all but extinguished it. Were an election held tomorrow, it is suggested, they would stand to lose a further two thirds of their seats. No longer an insurgent force acting against the Conservatives, Mr Clegg is presiding over a party which fears disappearing altogether.

It’s easy to mock Nick Clegg — it was david Cameron’s favourite pastime in the days when they were in competition, not coalition. But as the Lib dem leader takes the reins of government (while Mr Cameron relaxes in Cornwall) we are reminded of just how much he has achieved. Asked this week whether he could have foreseen being in power only a few months ago, Mr Clegg gave a one-word response: ‘No.’ His candour is commendable. Though Clegg often argued, in opposition, that he could lead his party into government, it’s doubtful he ever believed it. That he is now deputy Prime Minister, and the first Liberal to hold the fort of state since david Lloyd George in 1922, is in itself remarkable.

The British public may have created the conditions for a coalition government, but Clegg can take much of the credit. Under his leadership, the Lib dems have jettisoned the old tendency towards tax-and-spend policies and placed a new emphasis on fiscal restraint, lower taxes and public service reform. By the time the Liberal democrats and the Conservatives began negotiations this May, there was far more uniting the two parties than dividing them.

One hundred days into the life of the coalition and the result of this unity has become apparent: a more radical government than most voters expected. While it is true that the most exciting policies are Tory ones, Nick Clegg has stoked the flames of this radicalism. In speeches and media appearances, he is one of the few ministers who is truly evangelical about reform. In the corridors of Whitehall, Clegg has battled fiercely in support of Iain duncan Smith’s plans for making work pay. Liberal democrat ideas, such as a proposal to lift low-income earners out of the tax system, help to spice up the mix.

Mr Clegg’s copybook is not unblemished. He is still given to the occasional silly outburst. He was rightly criticised for calling the Iraq war ‘illegal’ when deputising for Mr Cameron at Prime Minister’s Questions and it was perhaps foolish of him to use Cameron’s absence this week to challenge the wisdom of replacing Trident. But let’s not forget that the deputy Prime Minister is in an almost impossible position: if he supports Cameron too vociferously, he’s accused by his party of being a sellout. If he criticises him too much, he’s overstepping the mark and endangering the coalition. So far he has steered a reasonably decent course between the two. This week, we will see whether he can resist the temptation to pander to his own party and use high office as a soapbox.

Nick Clegg has one of the most important jobs in the government. If the coalition is to survive the next five years, then it is Clegg who will have to integrate the demands of the Prime Minister, the Cabinet and his own party. It will not be easy. But as Liberal democrat backbenchers stare glumly at the latest polling figures, they can be assured of one thing: for the first time in decades, their leader has real power.

Independent thinker

It was refreshing of Lord Pearson to admit, as he resigned as leader of the United Kingdom Independence Party on Tuesday, that he is ‘not much good at party politics’. If only other party heads were so candid. Most politicians are too scared of making a gaffe to say anything so interesting. They would rather prevaricate than commit the political sin of looking bad on television. Not so Lord Pearson, who, in the run-up to the general election earlier this year, admitted to the BBC that he had not read all of Ukip’s manifesto.

Lord Pearson’s unusually frank style means that he has been dismissed in the media as an old-fashioned eccentric with kooky rightwing opinions. Yet far from being a dotty old peer, he is in fact a successful businessman and philanthropist. Throughout his political career, he has exhibited a firm commitment to free thinking and democratic principles.

In the 1980s, he was a fierce cold warrior who funded dissident groups in the Soviet Union. He went on to become a forthright opponent of the European Union and Islamism. The irony is that in admitting to not being cut out for modern politics, he has shown us why he is just the sort of public figure that Ukip, and this country, needs.

www.spectator.co.uk

THE SPECTATOR 21 August 2010 5