The Labour form book: Harriet Harman
Peter Hoskin 7:52pmCoffee House is running a series of posts on the contenders to succeed Gordon Brown as Labour party leader. The latest is below. Click here for our profile of David Miliband, here for Jon Cruddas, here for Alan Johnson, and here for Jack Straw.
Harriet Harman, 58, Deputy Leader of the Labour Party among other roles
Pros
A complete change: On the surface of things, what greater change could there be from Gordon Brown than a female Prime Minister - and an ebullient one, at that? Even this superficial difference can make a "renewal" agenda sound that much more convincing to the electorate, and it could also steal the thunder from Conservative efforts to attract the female vote and to increase the number of women MPs. There's also the idea that the Tories would have to dilute their attacks if faced by a female PM. On that front, it is perhaps telling that the scores are pretty much all-tied after Harman's two PMQs bouts with William Hague.
Has already won a contest: It may have been a close-run thing - and she may not have come out on top in the early rounds of voting - but Harman's success in the deputy leadership contest suggests she already has a fairly broad coalition of support within the party. Crucially, she was the second preference of many of Jon Cruddas's supporters - so she might be a popular choice with the increasingly-powerful left of the party, which will need to be courted by any successful leadership candidate.
U-turn on the Iraq War: Harman originally voted in favour of the Iraq War. But in a Newsnight debate during the deputy leadership campaign, she admitted "If I’d have known there weren’t weapons of mass destruction I wouldn’t have voted for the war. Clearly it was a mistake but I think with a new leadership we have to acknowledge the bitterness and anger that there has been over Iraq and that we were wrong". Other leadership candidates may now be peddling the "we need a rethink about Iraq" line - but she got there first and more unequivocally. There are significant drawbacks to this, but it could play well with the not insignificant number of people - both in the Labour Party and across the country - who opposed the war. She could be seen, by them, as the "honesty" candidate.
Cons
Non-job: Being Deputy Leader of the Labour Party may sound grand enough on paper, but there's a strong case that it's something of a non-job. As Sam Coates explains here, Brown has limited the role - most significantly by not making Harman Deputy Prime Minister. Sure, Harman's got other roles too, but it's still hard to pinpoint a job in which she has really shone. With the current economic climate being as it is, the argument is that someone who's (successfully) filled heftier Cabinet positions would be better suited to being Prime Minister.
Her equality agenda: Harman's work on equality has certainly ruffled a few feathers. It's seen by many as encouraging unfair positive discrimination, and has even been described as "marriage hating". Harman herself has (jokingly) acknowledged the difficulty this presents her, commenting recently that "there aren't enough airports in the country for all the men who would want to flee the country" if she became Prime Minister.
Recent gaffes and controversies: From the stab-vest she wore whilst touring her constituency of Peckham, to her involvement in the 'Donorgate' scandal, Harman has a longer string of recent gaffes and controversies to her name than perhaps any other potential leadership candidate. Whether or not this means the public regard her as "damaged goods", it certainly fuels the popular idea that she doesn't have the gravitas required of a Prime Minister.
MP for Camberwell and Peckham since 1982
Leader of the House of Commons & Lord Privy Seal
2007-present
Minister for Women and Equality
2007-present
Deputy Leader of the Labour Party
2007-present
Labour Party Chair
2007-present
Solicitor General
2001-2005
Secretary of State for Social Security
1997-1998
Swing required to unseat
23.25% from Labour to Lib Dem, or 27.75% from Labour to Conservative
Major rebellions
None



Previous






mac
September 22nd, 2008 9:14pm Report this commentA smug, condescending middle-class imitation-socialist with Gordon Brown-sized chips on her shoulders. She owes her advancement to calculated positive discrimination; that of being a female Labour MP when there few in the sisterhood 20 years ago. Now she is the great equalizer, bulldozing her contrived notion of equality with ill-judged, discriminatory legislation. She’s a practised dissembler. Somehow she wriggled free last year from murky dealings over donations to her deputy leadership campaign. Oh, dear.
Tiberius
September 22nd, 2008 9:25pm Report this commentWhy does she insist on wearing those reptilian outfits?
molesworth 1
September 22nd, 2008 9:26pm Report this commentHarman is on a par with Straw in terms of a "safe pair of hands" pre-election leadership challenge. As I see it, it's like this: if Brown goes before the next election there is one set of credible contenders, but if Brown straps-in, fights the next election & loses then another, probably younger, set of contenders will appear.
A wild-card, so to speak, might try to plough the furrow of heroic saviour who, after bitter defeat, reconstructs a 'post-electoral' Labour Party to face the challenges that now face us... blah, blah. I do not think that they would succeed, but they may try.
mitch
September 22nd, 2008 9:31pm Report this commentOh come on this is just silly she couldn't run a bath.I thought you were piss taking with that millivolt freak .
Ben Elford
September 22nd, 2008 10:46pm Report this commentI can imagine the prospect of this causing Cameron to say, 'Oh, please don't throw me into that briar patch, Brer Fox'.
TGF UKIP
September 22nd, 2008 10:58pm Report this commentWhile there is probably no Labour politician more obnoxious or inimical to Coffee Housers than this specimen, she has to be taken extremely seriously for three reasons.
Firstly she is widely popular in the constituency parties particularly among the male and female feminists for whom her embrace of political correctness gives her star status. Secondly both the parliamentary and constuencey sisterhood are likely to vote for her en bloc and thirdly, given that from his posts on this site Cruddas has no intention of standing, Woodley-Simpson & Co have nowhere else to go with their votes or money.
On the bright side, though, if it comes to pass, she will add greatly to the gaiety of the nation and particulary this blogsite.
idle
September 22nd, 2008 11:00pm Report this commentThe dice is loaded against women to get to the top, so they need to be very intelligent.
Hattie is thicker than a docker's sandwich.
Fergus Pickering
September 23rd, 2008 7:07am Report this commentIn what way is Harriet Harmon less able than the Milliband? I agree she's a bit second rate but aren't they all? And she can actually crack a joke. The only crack Milliband knows about is the one in his arse he speaks out of.
Liz Brown
September 23rd, 2008 8:19am Report this commentAll that your list (so far) of the potential chosen one has shwon is that they are all a buch of self serving losers - God help us if any of the zanulab lot become the next Leader of Zanulab - they certainly wo't
Aidan
September 23rd, 2008 9:25am Report this commentLet's hope so. She'll be a British version of Kim Campbell
John
September 23rd, 2008 10:13am Report this comment"it's still hard to pinpoint a job in which she has really shone"
It's even harded to find a job in which she showed elementary competence and any semblance of integrity. Or brains.
She can crack a joke? Oh, dear ... The woman is a cross between a bot and an android.
Max Kaye
September 23rd, 2008 10:19am Report this commentA bit like Rosa Klebb but without the sense of humour.
Tiberius
September 23rd, 2008 1:12pm Report this commentLOL - nice one, Max.
Elf
September 23rd, 2008 6:12pm Report this commentShe is seriously seriously thick! No way.
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