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Alan Watkins: For Labour MPs, tomorrow never comes

Even if the Government fails to hold the safe seat of Glasgow East, it's hard to see the Prime Minister paying the price of defeat

Sunday, 6 July 2008

When I was growing up, in what was then the coal-mining part of Carmarthenshire, there was a favoured promise: I'll do it tomorrow. What he (for the speaker was usually a man, not a woman) meant was: I'll do it when I feel like it, or next week, or, perhaps, never. Meanwhile, the shed remains unpainted and the shelf is not put up.

It is rather the same with the Labour Party and Mr Gordon Brown. His colleagues, if they do it at all – if they get rid of the Prime Minister – will do it tomorrow. But tomorrow never comes. A hurdle is erected for Mr Brown to jump, or, at least, to scramble over somehow. He either falls down or, more ingeniously, manages to avoid the obstacle, as he has tried to do with various fiscal measures introduced by Mr Alistair Darling or by himself. Mr Brown is still in his place.

It is the same with various set encounters. There were the local elections, where, admittedly, Labour was not expected to do well. But the party performed even more disastrously than anyone had expected.

Then there was the contest for London mayor. Even a few months before that election (it is now forgotten), people in and around the Government regarded it as a "banker", as they used to say when they did the football pools. As Mr Boris Johnson advanced, Mr Brown, we were told, could not survive another humiliation. He was duly humbled (for "humiliation" is much too strong a word), but Mr Brown is still there.

There was the even more humbling result in Crewe and Nantwich. By this stage, Labour should have learned its lesson about supposedly "toff" candidates, when Ms Harriet Harman is the niece of a countess. We can leave aside the result in Henley. Coming fifth at a by-election behind the British National Party and losing a deposit is hardly a glowing advertisement for Labour. But then, the party chose to treat the contest with what the late George Brown once chose to call a "complete ignoral".

Who, by the way, now remembers George Brown? He was once foreign secretary, kept resigning, was often drunk and once asked for the pleasure of the next dance with a gorgeously attired figure who turned out to be the Cardinal Archbishop of Lima in Peru. But I digress.

An event which the Government will not be able to treat with insouciance is the forthcoming Glasgow East by-election, where the member, Mr David Marshall, is retiring on account of ill health. The Labour majority is 13,507, with Labour taking 61 per cent of the vote at the last election. The SNP was second. It is the home of Celtic Football Club. It is the latest hurdle to be set up for Mr Brown to negotiate.

It is presumably the intention of the party managers to hold the by-election just after the recess begins. Government whips traditionally repose a touching faith in the therapeutic value of the parliamentary recess. Sultry weather tends to descend on London in July. So far, it has not happened this year.

It may be also that, owing to various changes introduced by the late Robin Cook and others, our legislators are less cooped up than they used to be. They do not irritate one another as they did in former times. That is the theory, at any rate. So, the backbenchers are less troublesome than they used to be.

In 2006, the movement against Mr Tony Blair reached its peak in September, during the recess, not long before the party conference met. The malcontents communicated chiefly by email. The principal cause of the revolt was Mr Blair's support for the war in Lebanon. By the time of that year's conference, Mr Blair had promised to go away.

How much Mr Brown himself had to do with these stirring scenes remains mysterious. When the great event finally occurred, just over a year ago, the supporters of Mr Blair in the newspapers, particularly those owned by Mr Rupert Murdoch, made a point of emphasising that the then prime minister was leaving at a "moment of his own choosing". Well, yes and no.

Winston Churchill was forced out of office in 1955 after his Cabinet colleagues had devoted several years to the task. In 1957, the same thing happened to Anthony Eden, over months rather than years. In 1963, Harold Macmillan went voluntarily, having used his medical condition as a reason – or an excuse – for making his departure. In 1990, Margaret Thatcher went in the bloodiest act of political assassination of modern times.

In 1995, John Major submitted himself to re-election by his own party, said "back me or sack me" and was duly backed, though only up to a point. The Prime Minister's placemen mounted a rescue operation, saying that he had won a famous victory where it had not been anything of the kind. His party's heart was not in it, but he continued in office and he was defeated overwhelmingly by Mr Blair.

Whether Mr Blair was pushed, shoved or went of his own accord – and in what proportions – Harold Wilson departed voluntarily in 1976. There is a wealth of evidence that he had plotted this course over several years, while delays had occurred, or obstacles had been placed in his path, by several accidents along the way. The great mystery of Wilson's resignation is why it was ever considered mysterious at all.

The nearest comparison is with John Major in 1995. It is not, I grant you, a specially original analogy, but there it is. My guess is not that Mr Brown will say "back me or sack me", or not in such clear terms. People might take him at his word. In any case, there is no plausible mechanism in place to dislodge the Prime Minister.

In Sir John's time, the election of party leader and hence of Prime Minister was in the hands of Conservative MPs. So it was in 1990, when Mrs Thatcher was succeeded by Sir John, who went on to win a general election, as Mr Brown does not look like doing in comparable circumstances.

In 1976, likewise, James Callaghan succeeded Wilson without fuss. The electorate was composed solely of Labour MPs. The contest was over in weeks. Today, there would be a longer contest, but both a shorter and a less glittering array of candidates. And the competition would last for months, as the election for deputy leader did last year.

In 1983, there was a proposal for a new leader. Mr Michael Foot was trying to do his best. But his MPs, or a good number of them, were discontented, Mrs Thatcher was menacing and Labour might well lose the forthcoming Darlington by-election. The plot was that Mr Foot would produce a "doctor's letter" – an old Labour phrase redolent of industrial lead-swinging – relieving him of his existing duties and handing them over to his deputy, Denis Healey, as was provided for in the party constitution. But Labour won Darlington and Mr Foot lived on.

Something tells me that Ms Harman, as deputy leader, would not become leader, still less Prime Minister (for Mr Brown has not appointed a deputy prime minister) if Labour lost Glasgow East. Labour is still, I fear, stuck with Mr Brown.

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If Brown goes there should be a General Election.
This country will not suffer endless 'Buggin's Turns,' without one.
Enough is enough.

Posted by mike rigby | 06.07.08, 23:01 GMT

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Your digression is about George Brown and the Archbishop is amusing but is it true. Wikipedia claims that Brown did not visit South America and that the story circulated about another minister. What is your evidence for the story?

Posted by David Gwilliam | 06.07.08, 21:10 GMT

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In any case there are only 22 monts to go. I can hardly wait!

Posted by Chris Kay | 06.07.08, 18:20 GMT

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Why would they quit ; another year or so on the old index linked pension is well worth waiting for.

Posted by R Newton | 06.07.08, 16:56 GMT

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I want them to carry on with Brown. Why? Simple.

At the next General Election, I want to see Labour lose...

No, that's not strong enough.

I want to see Labour suffer. I want to see them writhe in agony. I want to see them squeal with pain.

I want to see Cabinet ministers humiliated live on TV as they're knocked out of Parliament. The more Portillo moments, the better.

I want to see Labour self-destruct, implode, collapse, blow apart in an electoral explosion so big it takes as many of the over-borrowing, over-spending, politically correct, odiously smug, insensitive Labour MPs out as possible.

The Harriet Harmans, the David Milibands, the Caroline Flints, the Hazel Blearss and the Alastair Darlings - I want them all swept aside.

I want red faces, tears, tantrums, moments played on TV for years to come.

I want to feel Schadenfreude.

I want more than a re-run of 1997.

I want them gone. For good.

Posted by Joe | 06.07.08, 16:13 GMT

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The situation of today's Labour Party is so akin to the position of the Tories in their last year under John Major. Labour is now dead as a political force in this country and what happens in Glasgow or elsewhere is irrelevant. The big picture is that the Tories have the initiative and are heading for a 1997 Blair type parliamentary majority and the next General Election. God help us but the country does need a change from what is a very tired and uninspiring administration.

Posted by Paul | 06.07.08, 12:04 GMT

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I agree with John Appleby at 09:12 GMT about a caretaker leader. But looking at the two likely short term contenders would cause me to despair were I a labour supporter. Jack Straw can nimbly hop from side to side of any fence even if it is metaphorically ten foot high, and that is his only talent, and the public knows it. As for Harriet Harperson, her whole demeanour and utter contempt for anyone not wedded to the political correctness doctrine would ensure a monumental Tory victory certain to guarantee them three terms in power.

Posted by P Stroud | 06.07.08, 11:52 GMT

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I reckon there's a whole load of New Labour spin going on about Glasgow East. For Labour to lose that seat would be the equivalent of the Tories losing Henley. It's not going to happen in my view - but Labour will be able to present any victory however tiny as a massive triumph and compare Brown to Lazarus !

On the wider issue so well tackled by Alan Watkins, for Labour to ditch Brown and still cary on in Govt would be a disaster. There would absolute outrage in the Country. To get rid of him would also open up Labour to the terrible longrunning internecine wars in the Tory Party following the assasination of Maggie. I have long thought that the Tories would have been better to stick with Maggie even if that meant losing in 92 than to have done what they did. So with Labour and Brown. The Tories are resugent under Cameron and although its a very big ask for them to win next time because of the bias in the electoral system to Labour I still think they will win Bown or no Brown

Posted by Peter Buss | 06.07.08, 10:43 GMT

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J Appleby is correct - Labour as a party seem to have given up. MPs are planing their lives after politics.

The problem for Labour is that the rule book was rewritten under Kinnock to make the leader invulnerable to a challenge. If Gordon Brown doesn't agree to leave it will be very, very hard to get him out.

Posted by anon | 06.07.08, 09:21 GMT

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One point which does not appear to have been picked up by the professional commentators. With Labour facing certain defeat in the next General Election, a 'victory for the party would be to contain the Tory majority to less than 50 seats.
I cannot see a serious successor to Brown wanted to take on the roll of a leader taking his/her troops into the valley of death and being tainted with being labeled a loser.
Therefore, Milliband, Balls, Purcell and Burnham will shun the first succession leaving an interim leader to take on the Micheal Howard role. That is....steadying a sinking ship to allow a long term successor to take on the Cameron role.
My prediction would be Jack Straw or Harriet Harman will take over from Brown when the Labour Party finally wakes up from its slumbers and smells the coffee.
I would not expect Mr Bean..aka Milliband to take the ultimate crown. My money is on Burnham or Purcell.

Posted by John Appleby | 06.07.08, 09:12 GMT

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