Monday, 8 October, 2007
- 8 Oct 07, 06:09 PM
From tonight鈥檚 presenter :
What next?
It's been a busy day for the Prime Minister. Michael Crick will be assessing Gordon Brown's performance at his press conference, and in the Commons. Now the decision by the Prime Minister not to call an election has been made we can concentrate on the substance of what his premiership will bring. On Iraq today and on the economy tomorrow, we'll be assessing Mr Brown's "vision" - what he says he would like the electorate to judge him on.
Japan
We may not be exercising our democratic right in the next few weeks, but we have looking at those who will be around the world. Tonight we have a fascinating report about the story of a Japanese councillor seeking election. Watch it and you'll get an extraordinary insight into Japanese life and culture.
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So Brown Boomerang eventually comes home.
The last week has encapsulated Brown .. .caught out to be 鈥. dithering, inconsistent & rather insincere.
The blundering nature of Browns indecision is only more remarkable by the nature of Browns reliance on such poor advice.
Gordon Brown, the only PM who spat himself into his own mess, rather than spun himself out of trouble of his own making.
vikingar
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BROWN JUST DOESN鈥橳 ADD UP.
(1) He declares he is working to bring HIS vision for Britain into fulfilment.
(2) He declares his determination to meet the rising aspirations of BRITISH PEOPLE.
(3) He says he is LISTENING and SENSES the people鈥檚 wishes.
(4) He makes it clear he is not like that TERRIBLE TONY BLAIR.
Yet we get no referendum 鈥 because Gordon doesn鈥檛 want one.
We don鈥檛 get a proper enquiry into the war because Gordon doesn鈥檛 want one.
We get all the Machiavellian Blair stuff 鈥 but not done so 鈥渨ell鈥.
And Spin was never so spun.
Weep Britain.
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BOTTLER BROWN!
So we were all wrong! I, at least, added the caveat that it would ultimately depend on the opinion polls; and that is exactly what happened.
But, despite the views of the pundits, the change was not due to a storming performance by Cameron, he was good but not prime-ministerial, or to Osborne鈥檚 鈥榤illionaires鈥 inheritance tax鈥. In fact the latter was potentially an own goal - in terms of the vague funding for it but especially in terms of a return to being the party of the rich, and image which has long bedeviled the Tories 鈥 as Brown鈥檚 considered answers now show.
What I had not expected was that Gordon Brown would get his strategy so wrong, going for political overkill when he already had the election in his grasp. As I hinted, in my earlier entry to this blog, Brown鈥檚 new found popularity had resulted from him hiding his true nature. The new, reformed, Brown was a 鈥榞ood guy鈥. The electorate liked what they saw; and forgot the old Brown who had spent so many months destabilizing his predecessor鈥檚 government. In that earlier blog I wondered just how long, after winning the election, it would be before the old Brown rose from the grave.
Of course the answer was that the zombie just couldn鈥檛 wait. He rose from the dead, far too early, after the very successful Labour conference; where Brown had acted out his new persona perfectly 鈥 no knockabout at all, just seriously running the country.
Then, far too early, came his trickery. He just couldn鈥檛 resist putting the knife into the Tories, but it rebounded with a vengeance:
1. Election Rumours: Using his old techniques, so effective in destabilizing Blair, his carefully distanced henchmen 鈥 seemingly led as always by Ed Ball 鈥 started the rumours about the snap election. Designed, no doubt, to unnerve Cameron they failed and he held his nerve in a bravura (if hollow) performance. More important they forced the Tories to band together, to fight the upcoming election. All the back-stabbing which was due to happen was overtaken by self-preservation; and a a result the Tories were able to claim a good conference (where any lack of backstabbing is now seen as a success).
2. Visitation in Iraq: It must have been seen, by Brown and his advisers, that this visit 鈥 and the accompanying announcement 鈥 would derail coverage of the Tories鈥 conference. Of course it did, but for all the wrong reasons. It was correctly seen as the worst sort of spin, not helped by dressing up existing troop withdrawals as new ones. It was an unnecessary failure of judgment; for he had no need to go there, and his announcement should have been made 鈥 as he had promised 鈥 to parliament. Worse still he was seen as guilty of using our brave lads out there for political purposes.
3. Taking His Eye Off The Ball: A less obvious consequence was that, so busy spinning their Iraq story, his strategists failed to see 鈥 let alone answer 鈥 George Osborne鈥檚 inheritance tax goal. Tony Blair set up his war-room to handle such 鈥榚mergencies鈥, but where has that gone under Brown? In fact this goal needn鈥檛 have been a game winner. There were obvious problems, open to a well thought out answer, not least with the very vague funding of this obvious give-away. Above all, though, it should have been presented by Labour as the Tories returning to be the party of the rich. Blair would have had them pinned to the ropes within a matter of hours. But Brown鈥檚 Labour 鈥 almost mesmerized by their own cleverness - carried on with its spin of the Iraq trip; and allowed the Tories to win the argument by default.
4. Digging An Ever Deeper Hole: Not recognizing even then what was happening, the Labour spin doctors clearly put its projected election victory above the national good 鈥 by bringing forward a whole range of what it thought would be election winning events. And, behind the scenes but in front of the media, it boasted about how clever it was. Of course Brown was always out of sight; but, by then, we all knew (not least from the way Blair was stabbed in the back) that he always used his henchmen to do his dirty work. The scene was set for everyone to recognize who the real Brown still was: the devious, scheming, self-centred 鈥榥asty鈥 鈥 who was totally untrustworthy.
5. Bottler: Then he bottled out, losing the last positive element of his image. He was no longer a strong, decisive decision-maker.
6. Spinning the Bottle: Compounding his mistakes, he then chose to 鈥榗ancel the election鈥 in the favourable environment of a hastily arranged interview with Andrew Marr. When that too backfired, he scrambled to arrange another press conference; at which, however he claimed that he had always wanted to continue and put forward his policies; the result of the opinion polls were not in any way decisive. He carefully distanced himself from the spinning of his henchmen.
As a historical precedent, Henry II eventually did attend Thomas Becket鈥檚 shrine in sackcloth and ashes to accept that his request to his own henchmen, 鈥渨ill nobody rid me of this turbulent priest鈥, made him equally guilty. Brown, however, genuinely seems to think that his similar communications with 鈥 mixing metaphors 鈥 his own opprichniki absolves him from any association with the seamier side of politics.
His tragedy is that, while two weeks ago Brown was heading for a famous victory, by letting his true self overtake his political judgment he is now a loser due to follow James Calaghan, who was at least a genuinely nice guy, into Labour鈥檚 hall of infamy. He has two or more years to recover, and David Cameron is an ideal light-weight opponent, but will anyone ever trust him; let alone like him!
Brown will no doubt hang on by his fingertips, lurching from one crisis of confidence to the next; much as those he subjected Blair to. Of course he won鈥檛 give up power. He has already spent a decade and a half selling his soul to be PM, and nobody in New Labour will dare challenge him. Come back Tony, all is forgiven!
Similarly Cameron, saved this time by the incompetence of Brown, will stagger from one crisis to the next, fending off the challenge of George Osborne; who is increasingly seen as the champion of Labour鈥檚 defeat. But, not knowing when the election will be due (Brown鈥檚 one remaining trump card), the Tories will not be able to shake off his boyish charm, but fatal lack of strategic decision-making.
The Liberals are possibly the ones with the best chance of a recovery. I have long admired Ming, having respected (and almost hero worshipped) his judgment on each of the occasions I have had any extended time with him, but he now needs to pass the baton on to the new youngsters who have emerged untainted by the party鈥檚 past. He has, very successfully, pulled the party together and, more important, given it a coherent set of potentially election-winning policies. Now he needs a young turk who can take forward the battle cry of destroying the cosy Labour/Conservative consensus. I, for one, hope he succeeds in this. We electors need a real choice, not spin, in the government we hope for.
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Could someone please explain why Stephanie Flanders didn't include council tax in her analysis of what she thought Brown would be announcing in his tax plans.
It's been in all the press that he will raise council tax. Or does she not consider council tax a tax but a worthy cause that the middle classes should pay for?
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Brown dithering? Well, of course. We all dither, other animals included, it is an important part of controlling ourselves. No dither and you are not in control and you are not alive.
What matters in control is how that dither resolves the situation.
Brown certainly shows control based on well exercised dither.
To exercise little dither means that you are not considering the situation from balanced perspectives and jump to conclusions in a very biased manner; what we otherwise call chauvinism.
Brown dithered on calling an election after certain members called for such consideration. He control dithered and then announced a conclusion after a considered time frame - pretty good philosophy.
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Why Democracy.
Organised from a 'house' in South Africa? I couldn't find who was funding it. So that's a failure in democratic transparency? Democracy only works when there is full information. Maybe newsnight can tell us who is funding it?
over what class of decisions is democracy valid? Over the colour of the wall paper in someone's house? Over what the weather is today? The class of decisions is very small and if one's aim was to be just smaller than some think.
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Ref John Walter Haworth #5
... nothing loyalty & like blind obedience :)
Q. are you a resident of Eldon House?
vikingar
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CSharp - 6
You can find out a lot more about the Why Democracy? Season at www.whydemocracy.net
It is funded by a group of broadcasters from around the world including the 大象传媒.
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i found something but not on their website or in the uk.
>鈥淲hy Democracy?鈥 was organized by Steps International, a not-for-profit organization and supported by the EBU's Eurovision TV, The Danish Film Institute, The Danish Ministry of Education, Danida, Ford Foundation, Goethe Institute, Independent Television Service (ITVS), The Finnish Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Jan Vrijman Fund, the VIKES Foundation, the Sundance Institute, and the Department of Education and Children鈥檚 Services (South Australia). In addition, MySpace.com is screening the films online, as well as providing the platform for an ongoing dialogue.<<
Some look like front organisations to me. And who owns Myspace? The public service libertarians of news international who also run Fox News?
They use a tag saying democracy is the 'last best hope' which could be a line lifted from the sci fi babylon 5. In B5 there is a shadowy psy corps whose job is to manipulate public outcomes through psychological weapons and means.
Most people have no problem with democracy as a system or tool of voting. Some do have a problem with western invasions and their cultural and economic imperialism. So to say democracy [a system of voting] is the last best hope for mankind is like saying 'only this spanner' is the last best hope for mankind. Apple pie anyone?
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Dear C Sharp,
I'm glad you investigated further. You'll be pleased to know that MySpace made no financial contribution to the season...
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