Martin Bright reviews the week in politics
Where does Gordon Brown find solace in these darkest of times? In Downing Street, a rather desperate numbers game is being played. It starts with an assumption that the Labour vote has stabilised at around 28 per cent. This is rounded up to 30 per cent, and is forecast to sneak up to 32 at the turn of the year — because the race tends to narrow as polling day approaches. Then, with the coming of spring, the flimsiness of the Cameron project will finally become clear to the British people. The legendary Brown street-fighting election machine will swing into action. With one last push, and if the weather is good on election day, Labour hits 35 per cent of the vote and a hung parliament is in the bag.
There are several obvious problems with this as an election strategy. The most obvious is that it is not built on polling evidence, policy arguments or the government’s record — but on wishful thinking alone. Labour strategists will find comfort in the latest poll, which has the party at 29 per cent. But the party had been consistently stuck at 27, with one poll putting them at 25. The Conservatives may struggle to push beyond the 40 per cent mark, yet this is hardly, in itself, reason for celebration.
As a nation’s pity swirled around Gordon Brown like a seasonal storm last week, he must have felt like someone blown off his feet by a force far greater than himself. It is now beyond Shakespearean. A man with failing sight blamed for ‘scrawling his attempt’ to express his condolences to a grieving mother. This is so abject it could have come from a script by Samuel Beckett. In many ways, the ageing Brown and Mandelson bear comparison with Estragon and Vladimir in Waiting for Godot, a desperate pair railing at the world to ‘keep the terrible silence at bay’.
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John Bowman
November 19th, 2009 10:24am Report this commentIt is called "Bunkers Syndrome" first identified by Professor Adolph Shickelgruber a well known expert in the psychotic. The subject cuts him/herself off from reality, physically and figuratively. He/she believes those closest to him are telling him the exact opposite of what he wants to hear and he/she develops a deep sense of unjustified rejection by and loathing towards the general population, whom the sufferer believes, is no longer worthy of his/her great sacrifice for their benefit, for which a great punishment must be vested upon them.
Successful treatment involves fast acting, heavy sedation combined with lead pellet implanted in the brain, immediately followed by immolation.
Vulture
November 19th, 2009 11:27am Report this commentOf course its hopeless. Why would any person in possession of a full set of brain cells support the worst Government in British history that has systematically and intentionally trashed the entire nation - starting with their 'ain folk' - the so-called working class.
The only mysteries, to me, Marty, are why you continue to believe that the Labour party has any sort of future - municipal or otherwise ( you appear not to have noticed that Liebour were wiped out in local Govt last June); - and why old Fraser continues to employ a Liebour troll like you as a political commentator on a magazine that laughably is supposed to be 'Conservative'.
Your mob are history, mate.
Frank Leader
November 22nd, 2009 11:10am Report this commentA mentally retarded woodlouse would have a job to make a worse mess than GB.
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