Is Balls Re-Launching Himself?


Tags: Balls

Tags: Alistair Darling, Brownies, shaggable

"But then, as they stepped into No 10 yesterday, here was as decent and clever a team of ministers as ever graced the cabinet table. Two Milibands, Ed Balls, Jackie Smith, Harriet Harman, Alan Johnson, Douglas Alexander, Peter Hain and Hilary Benn - with the likes of John Denham and Yvette Cooper in attendance - present a good front. It's certainly the most genuinely united government in living memory."St Polly of the Towering Intellect, 6 September 2008:
"The smell of death around this government is so overpowering it seems to have anaesthetised them all. One bungle follows another and yet those about to die sit silently by... The ineptitude of Brown's Downing Street worsens by the week. The shrinking band of those he trusts are now his old rottweilers, who shred what's left of their leader's reputation. This week when they mauled Alistair Darling for telling an obvious truth (his actual words much exaggerated in the reporting), they attacked one of Brown's few truly loyal friends and a decent man. This is the sign of an inner cabal out of control... A cabinet of minnows and spineless backbenchers include many - perhaps most - who want Brown gone, but lack the nerve to act."For those who want to savour Littlejohn bitch-slapping Polly again, watch it again here.
Tags: CCHQ
Jim Naughtie has been accused of being partial before - in May 2005 the Today programme presenter caused a row when he asked Labour's Ed Balls: "If we win the election, does Gordon Brown want to remain Chancellor?" He is perceived by many listeners to be ferociously anti-Bush over Iraq.Tags: US Politics
Tags: Gordon Brown, Labour party
Gordon is simply not in touch with reality. He has just told a business crowd that this is the "first financial crisis of the new global age".Tags: Anyone But Gordon, Twat Watch
So he has written a few bonkers articles recently, lost the TV job and missed out on the editorship of the New Statesman. Still think the headline this morning was a little unjustified.
Falling worse than most in Britain...
Tags: Boom to Bust
Tags: Downing Street
As various commentators consider Labour's prospects, the term "Blairite" is being deployed to characterise the policies and personalities of some who question the party's current direction and urge Labour to face the future. Like "Thatcherite", the word is not used kindly. "Blairite" (even "über-Blairite") is a lazy and inaccurate shorthand. It is intended not to illuminate but to diminish, marginalise and insult. It was, for example, the stock phrase used by the Brown political briefing team to traduce David Miliband's Guardian article in early August.
Moreover, this misleading language damages the vital need for Labour to move on to new, post-Blair ground. Those journalists and politicians who use it are fighting the last political struggle, the War of the Tony Blair Succession, in a way that owes rather more to Just William and the Hubert Laneites than to the challenges of modern British politics.
In the newspapers this summer, I have read about "eye-wateringly 'Blairite' gospels"; about "Blairites" "thumbing their noses" at progressive politics; about "Blair privatisers" and how "Blairites" are the "business wing" who "play the markets against the 'progressive wing' of the party". Some argue David Cameron is now more progressive than new Labour and that Labour under Blair became a party of the centre-right.
This deceitful nonsense has to end. Everyone in Labour needs to stop obsessing about the past and to start obsessing about the future.... Similarly, there is no Blairite plot, despite rumours and persistent newspaper reports. There is, however, a deep and widely shared concern – which does not derive from ideology – that Labour is destined to disaster if we go on as we are, combined with a determination that we will not permit that to happen.
So why no plot? If you are "destined for disaster" with Gordon you really need to plot a new course. This is really not the time to be losing the plot...Tags: Ferrets-in-a-Sack
Mrs Fawkes Do you really need to go?Guido Well you know, important to keep in touch with the base, gain intelligence, schmooze contacts, gossip doesn't just write itself...
Mrs Fawkes For 4 days and nights?
Guido Well, have been invited to speak at a few events on issues that are important, seems rude not to give back something.
Mrs Fawkes Try not to get arrested this time.
Bizarrely tickets are going well...
Tags: freedom to party
Lamont told Sky News last night "Far be it from me to criticise myself, but I do not think that the Stamp duty holiday we introduced made any difference at all". Quite, why would anyone hurry to save 1% on Stamp Duty when they can wait and save even more.
The left-of-centre Chris Dillow has a surprisingly laissez faire conclusion - let prices fall. The market will find equilibrium."I will not allow house prices to get out of control and put at risk the sustainability of the recovery."Gordon Brown, 1997 Budget Statement.
The economic cycle is back, the benevolent economic circumstances not of his making have gone and we are, according to the OECD, the worst positioned Western industrialised nation to weather the tough times. Inflation is rising and unemployment is hitting Thatcherite levels, your economic plans have crashed, Gordon.Tags: Anyone But Gordon, Boom to Bust
Newsnight's Paul Mason managed, as some noted last night, to analyse previous economic downturns by going from Barber (Tory) to Howe (Tory) but skipping Callaghan (Labour) when Britain had to get an emergency bailout from the IMF.Tags: newsnight
Guido has never met a tax cut he hasn't liked, so the stamp duty holiday is welcome, but why not make it permanent? The £175,000 limit means it is not going to apply to anyone in the South East or for that matter anyone wanting a family home up north. So not really going to help many hard working families is it? Why not raise the threshold up to £250,000 or even £500,000 for a year?Tags: blogging on blogging
Tags: blogging on blogging
Tags: Dead Tree Press, US Politics
Guido is quite excited. Have had a few Guinnesses. Newsnight are going to do some analysis of the foreign exchange market (they read about it on Guido). These are the same people who called it upsy daisy Friday. (Analysis of Ms Fawkes aged 3, more accurate.)Tags: newsnight
If Britain, as a result of Gordon's financial genius, is so well placed to weather the international financial storm, why is the pound at an all time low versus the euro? Why is it falling against a broad basket of currencies? Sterling was even down against the Pakistani Rupee last week..."It does not mean that the pound here in Britain, in your pocket or purse or in your bank, has been devalued."
Harold Wilson came out with that famous statement after the pound was devalued 14% against the dollar. The pound is down some 28% against the euro since the launch of that currency. unemployment is heading towards two million. The seventies are back under Brown. After a run on a bank, we now have a run on the currency. Could we see the return of flared trousers and exchange controls?Tags: Boom to Bust
Can you imagine Ed Balls as Chancellor? He certainly can and if the papers are to be believed it is he who Darling reckons is briefing against him. Ed is possibly the only minister who the public, if they know him, detest even more than the Gordon Brown.Tags: Balls, Labour party

