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Thursday, 8th May 2008

Has Brown broken the New Labour pact?

Matthew d'Ancona 3:49pm

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Frank Field’s piece in the magazine is one of the most interesting analyses of New Labour and its character I have read: Frank’s point is that the Blair Project was not primarily presentational but contractual. The architects of New Labour – Gordon Brown prime among them – agreed to hold true to certain core values in return for the party’s compliance over a radical programme of internal modernisation. The abolition of the 10p tax rate, he continues, violates this contract and marks out a gulf of “clear red water” between Government and PLP.

Frank is, of course, no spokesman of the Labour Left but his passionate concern for the poor is lifelong and universally respected at Westminster. The PM will find it much harder to be lectured over the 10p debacle by Peter Mandelson, who says that the measure “violated that key tenet of New Labour, which is that we look after the poor and needy in society.” This from a politician who once said that “we are intensely relaxed about people getting filthy rich” and has always been regarded by Brown and his gang as unspeakably greedy himself. But both Field and Mandelson are right, in this sense at least: a Labour leader anointed by his party as the man with the moral compass can ill afford to be seen as indifferent to the poor. To be fair, Brown would probably single out the alleviation of poverty as the reason that he went into politics. But the number of Labour MPs who believe he has remained true to that mission is dwindling. What sweet revenge for Mandelson to be able to rub salt in the wounds.

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Comments

Novus

May 8th, 2008 5:19pm

By suggesting there is some kind of dichotomy between "[looking] after the poor and needy in society" and being "intensely relaxed about people getting filthy rich", surely you merely perpetuate the socialist zero-sum myth that the rich must be dragged down to help the poor get up. As long as the "poor and needy" receive the assistance they need, it shouldn't make the least difference how "filthy rich" other people get, so there's nothing irreconcilable in the two remarks.

Jessica

May 8th, 2008 5:53pm

In the words of Jeremiah Wright, 'the chickens are coming home to roost'.

Pat

May 8th, 2008 6:42pm

I just cannot understand why one of my heroes,Frank Field, believed a word that Brown and Darling said on how they had listened and would act on the 10p fiasco. Shame on you Sir for being so gullible.

salieri

May 8th, 2008 9:19pm

Did anyone pick up that extraordinary answer on Brown's Sky interview with Adam Boulton (qv): "You accept that Frank Field is a man of integrity?" "I accept that he has a great deal of knowledge on the subject."

Truly repellent.

Terry Clark

May 9th, 2008 1:14am

Gordon Brown was elected by a small Scottish constituency on an almost wholly English-only manifesto.
Gordon Brown has no moral or democratic mandate to govern England, now that Scotland has a separate national parliament and even elected a wholly different national government.
Frank Field has more integrity in his little finger than Gordon Brown can ever lay claim to in his whole lifetime.
Time for Gordon to go, before his devolution chickens come home to roost and destroy the Labour Party in England forever.

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