Martin Bright reviews the week in politics
It is now established in that nether world somewhere between the media myth-making machine and the public imagination that Gordon Brown is a brooding paranoid who cannot control his temper. John Major tucked his shirt into his underpants; Gordon Brown pushes secretaries out of chairs. Some stories stick to politicians not because people know they are true but because people want them to be true.
It no longer matters what the Downing Street spinners say in response to the claims of rough-housing in the Prime Minister’s bunker. Enough people from the inside have talked to journalists about Brown’s fits of anger for the Westminster village to know that Andrew Rawnsley’s book paints a picture of life around the Prime Minister that’s not a million miles from reality.
Is he a bully? Not exactly. As one former minister told me this week, ‘Yes, he is susceptible to rages. He is petulant and childish. But a bully, no. To be a bully you need to recognise that someone else is in the room.’ Gordon Brown, he said, lacked the human empathy to be a bully.
A close political ally who worked in No. 10 for several months said he had never once seen the Prime Minister humiliate a junior member of staff and that he only flew off the handle when he was angry at himself or his most trusted aides. This seems to be the agreed line, promoted most vigorously by John Prescott and Peter Mandelson.
Ever since Brown entered No. 10 Downing Street, we have been told that we needed to get to know the real Gordon Brown. Now we are asked to accept his tantrums as evidence of passion rather than abuse.
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A. MacAulay
February 25th, 2010 8:01am Report this commentThe devil will fulfill his part of the bargain but only in a way that exposes the vanity of the contractee. Brown's Faustian tragedy is his naive belief that one such as Blair would ever tell anybody, and least of all a rival, the truth.
The beleagured egocentric attracts poisonous, self serving courtiers. Minions will be trampled on to extract the last drop of the elixier of power. Truly amazing is the Tory capacity of making itself look fluffy in the face of this.
Boudicca
March 7th, 2010 9:10pm Report this commentSo we have a petulant, childish, liar in No. 10. One who cannot control his temper, likes to lob equipment and furnishings around the room and shove staff to one side if he is in a hurry and a bad mood. He is paranoid, has no social skills or empathy for people, he employs a raft of nasty attack dogs who do his dirty work for him ..... yet we are supposed to excuse him all this because he is so 'passionate' about the job.
Come off it. There has never been a man less suited to the office of Prime Minister. Every Labour MP should hang his/her head in shame that they allowed such a dreadful specimen to enter No.10 unopposed.
Yam Yam
March 8th, 2010 1:45pm Report this commentBrown really is a British Nixon. And for Colson, Haldeman and Ehrlichman read MacBride, Whelan and Balls.
Ronnie
March 9th, 2010 1:58pm Report this commentI suggest we all re-read Koestler's 'Darkness at Noon'.
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