It looks like Labour have hired an Australian adviser as well. I think that the legendary Lynton has probably got them worried and that the 'cut the green crap' message has severely shaken them to the core.
He is called Bruce Hawker.
www.theguardian.com/politics/shortcuts/2013/nov/25/bruce-hawker-australian-spin-doctor-labour-julia-gillard-lynton-crosby-miliband
There have been some reports that this is what may have happened when Bruce first met top Labour strategists.
The room was full of teenage scribblers, young progressives, sixth-form students, trainee think-tank team members, sustainability supervisors,
charity change agents, progressive PPEs from Oxford parachuted into Labour safe seats to displace good working class candidates, members of the metropolitan elite, climate change coordinators, green crap czars, Uncle Tom Cobley and his dog. This was the real deal, this was the creme de menthe of champagne socialism.
Bruce walked in and stood in front of the audience in front of a large banner saying "For a Progressive Future and a Biometric Britain".
There was hushed silence, pens were poised, teenage scribblers were already scribbling.
"Good morning everyone," said Bruce, "I watched Osborne's Autumn Statement on TV the other day, and I have just one word to say to you all. Balls!"
Some of the audience gasped and held their hands over their mouths, shocked at the use of such coarse language. They had heard that Bruce was a plain speaker, but they never imagined it would be like this.
"Ed Balls!" he continued. "What the hell was his performance all about and why was he redder than Rudolph the reindeer's nose? Flat-lining? If only it
was flat-lining. Instead he was going down faster than a lead balloon, and it was lucky he was drowned out by the barracking from the Tory benches because what little I did hear him say, made no sense."
Uncle Tom Cobley's dog nodded and the teenage scribblers followed his example while jotting down and underlining the words "made no sense".
"This is serious, there is an election coming," said Bruce, "time is short, so CUT THE CRAP!"
There was stunned silence, then furious nodding. They had heard this phrase before. In fact, they had heard little else at the door step in Labour heartlands over the past three years.
"Has anyone got any questions?" asked Bruce.
A climate change coordinator put his hand up and said "How can we react to Cameron's alleged call to 'cut the green crap'?"
"Very good question," said Bruce, "we can't. Cameron is absolutely right. All we can do is pursue a policy of damage limitation and denial that we had anything to do with the green crap."
"But, Bruce, how can we do that, when Ed himself was practically responsible for writing the Climate Change Act single-handedly?" asked a sustainability supervisor.
"Oh my God! He didn't did he? What did he do that for?" said Bruce.
There were blank expressions around the room. No one had the faintest idea why. They all knew the public were against it, but more importantly senior progressives were aware that the elite were all for it.
"Oh my God! We're sunk!" wailed Bruce.
"Precisely!" said the audience in unison, and Uncle Tom Cobley's dog barked "woof" in agreement.