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Taking up the gauntlet

  • Nick
  • 12 May 08, 04:18 PM

The gauntlet had been thrown by Frank Field and Ed Balls clearly could not resist picking it up. In an extraordinary on the record (though off microphone) briefing - originally planned to be about the Tories' education policies - Mr Balls:

Ed Balls• Warned his party against "personal attacks or settling old scores"

• Attacked Frank Field's motives - saying pointedly that before last night's BBC interview, people could "believe his intentions were honourable" and could take what he said "at face value". It is now clear, Balls said, that nothing we do "will persuade Frank"

• Criticised last autumn's pre-Budget report for having focused insufficiently on family finances. If, Mr Balls said, the credit crunch's impact on family finances had been anticipated, "different decisions would have been taken" - remember that it was in the PBR that hundreds of millions of pounds were found to cut inheritance tax rather than to alleviate the impact of the 10p tax rate abolition

• Called for quick action on the 10p tax issue - "there is a real desire in the Parliamentary Labour Party and the country to set out what can be done quickly to show we're not just listening but acting"

• Appeared to concede the likelihood of Labour losing the Crewe by-election by saying that "the result would not be a decisive indicator of the general election result"

UPDATE, 04:50PM: For the record, Ed Balls told the Telegraph this morning that the fight for the Crewe and Nantwich by-election was not over and Labour could win.

Labour in-fighting

  • Nick
  • 12 May 08, 10:07 AM

Frankly speaking, it isn't news that Frank Field is not a member of the Gordon Brown fan club, although the phrases he used in his BBC World Service interview last night are extraordinary. He spoke of the tragedy for the Labour Party and the country of Gordon Brown, being trapped in a job in which he is clearly so unhappy. What is real news however, is his prediction that Mr Brown will not be prime minister at the time of the next election and his suggestion, far from friendly, that the PM asked the advice of people he loves and who most love him about what he should do next. A clear invitation to consider resignation.

Alan Johnson and Gordon BrownThe only thing that should cheer those in Labour's ranks, is the rambunctious performance of Alan Johnson, who's been almost silent in recent weeks. He could not disguise his fury on the Today programme this morning at what he described as another episode of True Confessions. It may be that the publication of the memoirs of Prescott, Levy and Cherie together with the comments of Frank Field get all the bad news out of the way at one time, unless of course there is more bad news to come.

If Johnson's anger is matched by that of other senior Labour politicians, if they realise that they are in a battle for their own survival and not merely for Gordon Brown's, it may just be possible that this period of in-fighting is followed by a renewal of what I have described as the glue that held New Labour together. That can be Gordon Brown's only hope at the beginning of this, the latest of a series of very difficult weeks.

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