Miliband’s performance
James Forsyth 4:21pm
David Miliband’s speech was neither a triumph nor a disaster. It was, as a fellow scribbler put it to me afterwards, a seven out of ten speech. I doubt that many people who weren’t for Miliband before it thought he was the man Labour needs after it. But equally Miliband’s supporters will have been relieved that he didn’t bomb liked he did last year.
Miliband confidently walked the leadership speculation tightrope. Early in the speech, he turned to Brown and praised him for his role in increasing international development funding. Praise for the leader but on an issue that everyone knows won’t decide the election. Then, at the end Miliband set out his personal credo—which was fairly bog-standard left-wing verbiage—under the cover of saying that Labour knows what it stands for:
“That everyone should have a fair chance and those who succeed should help others. That unless government is on your side you end up on your own. That the fair society is a necessity not a strapline. And that an age of massive change needs leadership from the party of change.”I arrived just as Miliband started to speak, so I was sitting in amongst the delegates. Their reaction to the speech was warm but not ecstatic. They gave him a standing ovation but to my ears it sounded less rousing than the one that Jacqui Smith received on Sunday.
No discussion of a Miliband speech is complete without a reference to the hand gestures: they still need working on. They tend to emphasise his slightly patronising manner—when he was talking about sharing sovereignty in the EU he looked and sounded like a primary school teacher explaining something to a rather slow class of kids.
One other thing worth noting was Miliband’s use of the word ‘diss.’ It’s an odd word for a politician to use and, as someone pointed out to me afterwards, the last time one did was in that infamous leaked Blair memo. One wonders if someone played a role in drafting both the memo and Miliband’s speech.



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simon s
September 22nd, 2008 6:12pm Report this commentI don't want to be 'changed' or 'transformed' out of existence. His ideas are just his dad's repackaged for the 21st century.
TGF UKIP
September 22nd, 2008 6:43pm Report this commentBalls, Austin, Watson etc must be losing their touch and their venom. I thought they would have been able to organize some booing.
TrevorsDen
September 22nd, 2008 7:04pm Report this commentGod preserve the Nation from the likes of Miliband.
Nicholas
September 22nd, 2008 8:29pm Report this commentChange, fairness, equality, progress, etc., etc.
Change for whom? Fairness to whom? Equality for whom? Progress for whom?
The Gurkhas with V.C.'s?
No, the right on brothers and sisters with the chips on their shoulders and the desire to orchestrate what everyone says or thinks and are still daydreaming about the October Revolution.
Thought so.
Edward McLaughlin
September 22nd, 2008 9:16pm Report this commentPhone...
Home...
Hysteria
September 22nd, 2008 9:34pm Report this commentYawn......
Hereford
September 23rd, 2008 3:56pm Report this commentNo discussion of a Miliband speech is complete without a reference to the hand gestures: they still need working on.
Please, please stop talking about this idiot as if a few changes of mannerisms and perhaps some training in communication skills is going to round him out to be a great politician.
He is an arrogant, snot nosed, patronising, concdecending p@#ck and should be treated with nothing but derision.
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