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Will Labour get rid of Gordon?

Labour would get rid of Gordon — if the plotters had a real candidate

Wednesday, 5th December 2007

There is conspiring in the corridors once again in Westminster. Who could replace Gordon, they ask. Labour’s problem is that the young pretenders are too young and the idea of caretaker leader seems slightly ridiculous, it would look absurd for the government to change Prime Minister twice in the same Parliament. So, Brown will solider on while the battle of succession rages just beneath the surface. 

After ten tedious years of firm party discipline, life is finally returning to the corridors of the House of Commons. A lobby journalist on patrol can once again gather intelligence, whether it be from ministers colluding behind the Speaker’s chair or clusters of Labour MPs holding impromptu crisis meetings. Two themes dominate: one is the scale of the disaster (or ‘how bad is it, on a scale of ten?’ as one Cabinet member has taken to asking). The other is whether Gordon Brown will be around long enough to fight the next general election.

That such a question should be asked is, in itself, fatal for the Prime Minister’s authority. He might just have survived the avalanche of disasters which have befallen him in recent weeks — but not a new police investigation into Labour party funding. His defence — ignorance — hardly inspires confidence. Mr Brown’s aides talk optimistically about how Labour recovered quickly in the polls after the 2000 fuel protest. But even they know what the true odds are for this Prime Minister who sold himself as dull but competent, and is now seen merely as dull.

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Gerry James

December 6th, 2007 9:46am

Why don't they get a Pole - they have given them England so why not.

Madasafish

December 6th, 2007 12:02pm

Frankly they need a stand in for Brown.. who - unless he manages to turn himself 180 degrees around - is going to create evn more despondency, The man is an obvious dud. Balls and Miliband have no gravitas dfor what will clearly be a turn round job. Straw could do it: worthy but dull. A terrible speaker tho. But at least he's English. A party devoid of strong politicians.

TGF UKIP

December 6th, 2007 12:25pm

When Gordon does crack up, it would seem highly likely that the unions and constituency parties will use the opportunity to shift the Labour Party sharply leftwards. Should be interesting to see in the coming months who among the bigger names, starts to mark out that sort of ground. One backrunner from the party centre, though, who it would seem to me, might be a long odds punt is John Denham. Elevated to the Cabinet by Gordon, he's good on TV, popular, I believe in the Commons, fairly wide experience in government, but above all would have great credibility with the constituencies because of his resignation from the Blair Government over Iraq. Whether he's got the union friends and the bottle or bottom the coming months as a Cabinet Minister might tell.

Paul Linford

December 6th, 2007 12:42pm

John Denham, anyone?

Jeremy Poynton

December 6th, 2007 3:31pm

You say John Denham I say "who?"

Watervole

December 6th, 2007 4:25pm

I fear Ed Balls would need to change his name by deed poll should he ever aspire to the highest office. The potential for verbal calamity is simply too tempting... Neither does it 'roll' off the tongue!

Dave Bartlett

December 6th, 2007 4:28pm

Very much hope to see Douglas Carswell given more responsibility in any Tory frontbench reshuffle.

Sam

December 6th, 2007 9:48pm

What a brilliant piece written by Mr Nelson, the best article Ive read in ages. Perfectly sums up the troubles of the Labour party. Most of them must know by now that the absolute best Brown can deliver at the next election is a hung parliment but the omens on the economy, education, europe,immigration, crime, health are not good. It is impossible to imagine that if this state of affairs carries on that voters are going to think to themselves in the general election 'lets give Gordon Brown another five years'. Cameron it seems to me is lacking slightly in gravitas, if only Ken Clarke could be tempted into the shadow cabinet it would be a massive boost but his views on europe would be bad for the tory party and out of step with the majority of voters. Alex Salmond needs to take the fight to Brown as well, if he were to announce a referendum for Scotland on the EU treaty that would plunge Brown into chaos!

Stan

December 7th, 2007 3:10am

Re the caretaker option described, its fine for a party to do that whilst in opposition but definatley not in government. It would be an affront to democracy, its the voters that elect a PM not the Labour party.

john fazio

December 7th, 2007 6:04am

mr. nelson recent events have been favourable for the tories but to draw these conclusions is at best wishful thinking and rather more like someone on acid. wake up to yourself. it reminds me of previous overly optimistic articles on the detailed policy initiatives ready to be implemented on the assumption of power by ian duncan smith. by all means enjoy your schadenfreude at the travails of labour but please don't insult our intelligence by going completely overboard.

Alan

December 7th, 2007 8:40am

What goes around, comes around. I guess this is what you get for electing the biggest smiling liar of all time - 3 times!!!

Farhad

December 7th, 2007 9:12am

Anyone for John Prescott? Sorry, that's not very funny.

Rattymole

December 7th, 2007 11:37am

An excellent and well-argued article. Brown is a dead man walking and if the best that Labour can do for the future is put up that swivel-eyed duo, Miliband and Balls, they are in deep trouble long term. Meanwhile the Tories must find a way to abandon their commitment to matching Labour's spending levels. The public isn't completely daft and, in a depressed economic situation, will respond favourably to a party that puts the emphasis on value for money rather than simply throwing billions at a problem. The Tories' task now is to hammer home the lack of value for money we have had under Labour. Totting up the amount of waste there has been over the last 10 years will produce a sum that will make people sit up and take notice. To compare that with the cuts in defence spending and the failure to provide for the basic necessities of the armed forces, whilst expecting them to accept an ever increasing risk of getting themselves killed, shows a government with no sense of reality or proportion. All that we can be thankful for is that Brown did bottle it on the election front and that we don't now face the prospect of him being in power for another five years.

Madasafish

December 7th, 2007 11:39am

Electing? May I remind prior posters Brown was NOT elected as PM The Labour Party never voted for Brown as leader. The man has far less democratic credentials in that repect than Mugabe, Putin or some more obnoxious and long deceased WW2 leasers.

Stephen

December 7th, 2007 12:13pm

I am reminded of Roy Lord Jenkins remark that Tony Blair had a first class personality and a second class brain and Gordon Brown has a second class personality and a first class brain. It is difficult to see how someone as poor at communication as Gordon Brown can turn around the fortunes of the Labour Party.

Richard Walker

December 7th, 2007 2:10pm

Brilliant article. Whilst Brown is clearly unsuited to the prime ministerial role, Cameron needs to articulate an answer to the question what are the Conservatives for? Mrs. Thatcher knew the answer in 1979. Cameron needs to find the answer in 2007.

magpie

December 7th, 2007 2:22pm

I think he went on to say that for a politician, a first-class personality was more important

George Bashforth

December 7th, 2007 3:17pm

"He has raised taxes by an extra £250 billion every year — equivalent to £5,100 per British household"
I don't think so - 250 billion would be an inrease in taxes of 5,000 per person per year.
Govt. expenditure at present is just over GBP 1000 billion - so four years ago there was no govt spending?

Frank Leader

December 8th, 2007 7:04am

Mickey Mouse or Donald Duck could not do worse.

BlairSupporter

December 9th, 2007 6:16pm

It's obvious! Bring back Blair. Of course, THEY won't ask - and HE wouldn't accept. He has other fish to fry now. Even if Brown, Balls or the other Ed offered their constituency seat! So to Labour it's - 'so long, it's been good to know you'. It's clear as day. There is NO WAY for them to win a majority next time round with Brown in charge, for a multitude of reasons. And it ain't Blair's fault THIS time.

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