Alan Sugar's take on Gordon Brown
Fraser Nelson 2:13pm
So what did Alan Sugar think of Gordon Brown before he was offered a (for a tsar, utterly unnecessary) peerage? My former colleague at The Scotsman, Gerri Peev, has unearthed something that CoffeeHousers may appreciate:
This letter appeared in the FT on 19 March 1992, after Brown appeared to accuse City bosses of feeding off the recession:Sir, I have noted with disgust the comments of a certain Mr Gordon Brown who has accused me of doing well out of the recession after reading the letter published in The Times from 40 top industrialists.
I do not know who Mr Gordon Brown is. Excuse my ignorance, but I don't. Whoever he is (shadow trade and industry secretary), he has not done his homework properly. The man doesn't know what he's talking about. How he has the audacity to say that Amstrad, or Alan Sugar, has flourished in recession is a complete mystery to me.
Amstrad made its first loss ever this year. It is not a secret that our share price has tumbled to about one-seventh of what it was. The value of my shares has collapsed from Pounds 500m to Pounds 100m more or less overnight. The salary I have been taking in the company is pretty meagre - about Pounds 170,000. It's nowhere near the million-pound bracket. So this talk that I have prospered in the midst of recession is total nonsense.I personally have made a lot of money in my time, despite coming from a working class background in the East End. The money hasn't been handed down from family to family or by the old boys' act. I was able to start from scratch.
When taxation was 98p in the pound under the last Labour government I would have been spending my time doing what I am doing now - creating wealth and producing employment. I would have been better off going to Bermuda, the Virgin Islands or Timbuktu.
But I don't want to go to Bermuda to avoid tax and lie on the beach. I don't like paying tax, but I agree that the 40 per cent I pay at the moment is reasonable and fair when you balance the fact that the country has got to run itself somehow, and I like living in England.So that's why I'm here. That's why I'm still spearheading my company and that's why I'm still employing people, innovating and surviving in a very difficult market.
Our letter to The Times talked of the importance of the enterprise culture for the future prosperity of Britain. The thing that frightens me the most about a Labour government is that it suppresses enterprise.
For instance, Labour's talk about investment is a bit of a joke. The capital allowances for machinery, plant and equipment it urges are not going to encourage people to rush out tomorrow and start equipping a factory or making products.If you've got good design and innovative products you don't need any help, thank you very much indeed. You get on and make it. Amstrad is a classic example. We built our own factories in Shoeburyness in Essex without a penny grant on an 11-acre site. From there, in 1980, we fought off the Japanese to turn ourselves into the market leader in audio equipment. I didn't need help from anybody at that stage because we had invented good merchandise and good products.
The same goes for satellite dishes today. We rule the satellite dish market in this country and half of Europe and the dishes are made in Birmingham. I didn't need any investment or any help to do it. All I needed was the government to keep out of the way. More than 1m dishes have been sold to date in this country alone. When we placed the orders in the factory the satellite hadn't even been launched. It's that sort of entrepreneurial spirit the Conservatives believe in and Labour doesn't understand.
The reason Labour flourished many years ago was the 'them and us' situation that prevailed in England. There were the rich and there were the poor. At that stage maybe I would have sympathised with the need for a Labour government.
But that's all been changed now. Look around. Yes, there are the very poor and more should be done for them. But almost everybody's got a microwave oven, a car and a colour television - maybe more than one colour television in their homes. Let's be honest with each other. 'Them and us' doesn't exist any more, as I have demonstrated.
I have been able to come from the working class, achieve what I set out to achieve and not be suppressed by anybody. Likewise, in the stock market today there are bright young men with a Cockney accent doing deals and buying and selling shares. It's not just the Heskett-Smythes mob that are doing it. Anybody can do it.The government has made mistakes; nobody's perfect. To be sure, somebody took his eye off the ball. Now the belt has been tightened and there have been casualties. But it is not just the poor unemployed factory worker from the Midlands who is being thrown out of work. So are the merchant bankers, the stockbrokers and the estate agents.
Labour offers no sort of route out of recession. It's out of date and - as Brown's remark shows - it hasn't done its homework.
Alan Sugar,
Chairman,
Amstrad,
Brentwood House,
165 King's Road,
Brentwood,
Essex



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Raffles
June 5th, 2009 2:25pm Report this commentPriceless. You're fired!
richard fowler
June 5th, 2009 2:28pm Report this commentp.s. as true as the above is, if you offer me a gong then.......
Sir Graphus
June 5th, 2009 2:31pm Report this commentWhat's wrong with doing well in a recession, anyway? If enough people can do well, it's no longer a recession. But that's not how socialism works, and it's why socialism doesn't work. Socialists concentrate on ensuring no-one gets too far ahead, because it's easier than stopping people being left behind.
Silent Hunter
June 5th, 2009 2:45pm Report this commentAt the moment Gordon Brown would give the re-animated corpse of Adolf Hitler a job if he thought it would keep him in Downing Street for a few days more.
I'm sure that a bigot and a bully like Sugar will fit right in with the other sub rock dwellers that make up the government of "all the talentless".
Liz Elliot-Pyle
June 5th, 2009 2:51pm Report this commentPriceless!!! I couldnt have put it better myself.
Mr Green
June 5th, 2009 2:53pm Report this commentIt just goes to show how fickle Sir Alan is. By the way, which government was in power when Sir Alan received his knighthood?
Hmmmm
And which government is making him a Lord?
Hmmmm
Strange isn't it that Brown is suddenly the best thing since sliced bread.
Sir Alan....You're fired.
David Ossitt
June 5th, 2009 3:19pm Report this commentThis will backfire on the both of them.
Gordon wants some of Sugar's chutzpah; Sugar wants the peerage.
Both are looking like hasbeens.
Captn P
June 5th, 2009 3:35pm Report this commentThe stuff about colour TV's is priceless.
Do you think Sir Alan has a knack for picking loosers? Or is his timing a bit off?
Wight Tory
June 5th, 2009 3:37pm Report this commentCan't see the BBC mentioning this....
All being well Sir Alan "two lumps" Sugar will be firing one of the cabinet each week, bet Bruin, doesn't make it to week three, Cooper and Hoon going before him.
Newsflash*** Buff has been told that he's a light weight, a complete shambles and that he's no place in the selection process.
Aless Bieri
June 5th, 2009 3:38pm Report this commentAnyone who does well in a recession should be praised as it shows that their business has built careful defences, has properly judged risk and is going to help to lead the country back to growth.
hadrian
June 5th, 2009 5:03pm Report this commentSocialists and self magnifying celebrities-beyond parody too pathetic for words, really!
C. Sinclair
June 6th, 2009 6:21pm Report this commentThis plan of Gory's will come unstuck, when he finds that you just can't make someone a Peer because he says so.
There is a long process involving matriculating a coat of arms and the drawing up of letters patent & etc.
You ain't a Peer until you have done all that and sworn the oath and doffed the cap and planted your backside on the benches.
This can take several weeks, and by that time Gordy could be toast. Then we will be stuck with another couple of gruesome unelected aristocrats parading around Westminster, with swan and caviar dripping from their chops.
Absolutely Ghastly.
hadrian
June 6th, 2009 10:34pm Report this commentIf this adulteration of our Noble House for such grubby ends is symtomatic of Broon's intentions and plans for 'Constitutional Change', then we can only conclude we're finished. The only Constitutional Change we need, Mr Broon, is a General Election and you out!
sandy winder
June 7th, 2009 11:36am Report this commentSugar says he hates schmoozers, lightweights and people who p*ss other people's money up the wall.
That's most of the cabinet he has has joined. Should be fun.
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