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Lies, damned lies and PMQs

Thu Jul 02 10:31AM
The stalking spectre of black-hearted deceit should have hung heavily over this week's prime minister's questions. Instead, Gordon Brown's fumble brought the House down.

By Alex Stevenson

All the ingredients were there. In the build-up we'd seen David Cameron claim there was a "thread of dishonesty" running through the government. Then Peter Mandelson came out fighting this morning, accusing George Osborne of a "deliberate untruth". This PMQs was always going to be about one thing - who can be believed on public spending.

That's where the statistics come in. Having slain the capital spending dragon last week, Brown-killer Cameron moved on to bigger, brighter things - total spending.
We were just getting started when the disaster struck. Brown, unthinking perhaps, boasted of a "zero per cent rise in 2013".

For the briefest of moments the entire Commons froze. In cartoon-mode Wile E. Coyote Brown looks at the camera, lips trembling and eyes bulging, as he realises he's just walked off a cliff. He pedals against thin air. He flaps his arms desperately. But then it's too late, the zero per cent rise has condemned his PMQs to ignominy, and he plunges away into the ether.

It didn't quite happen like that, of course. But the stunned, embarrassed faces of the Labour backbenchers as the Tories yelled and jeered said it all. "I think that answer gets zero per cent," Cameron observed, to predictable laughter.

It was all over before it had even started, but they pressed on nonetheless. Inevitably the issue became one of Brown's character. "Why can't he admit to the truth?" Cameron asked. Later he referred to the prime minister's "deceit". He wanted to know whether Brown could be "straight with the British public".

Nick Clegg added his own voice to proceedings, saying the "bogus debate" about public spending meant very little. How could he possibly trump the Brown-Cameron hate-fest? By hating them both himself! They were "both deliberately choosing to trade insults, so they can both deliberately avoid telling the truth", he said. If only someone would pay Clegg the courtesy of insulting him he might feel a little better.

Brown's response to all this was a muted disgust, a wobbling against "cheap jibes". He sought to stick to the politics. "I've already said, capital expenditure will riiiise," he quavered desperately. There were some decent points scored as he painted the Tories as the "party of unemployment". But the only real party being had in the Commons this lunchtime was on the benches behind Cameron.

It was "one of the most feeble performances" Brown had ever given, the Tory leader said. He was not in complete command - his claim that the Tory ten per cent cuts line was "not doing any damage to us" suggested he was a little rattled by that line of attack - but the vulnerabilities probingly sought by Brown were blown away by another classic prime ministerial gaffe.

Confronted with a serious, escalating row over dishonesty at the top of government, the prime minister turned this week's clash into yet another childish embarrassment. What was that puff of smoke, down there in the canyon of failed prime ministers? Ah yes, it was Coyote Brown, meeting reality with a bump.

 

Comments1 - 10 of 386

  1. How much more do we have to suffer at the hands of this basket case PM? He lost the plot years ago but everyone seems too scared to remove this bully.
    Gordon could probably pass every lie detector test now - he is so practiced at it!

    su.sunstone From su.sunstone on Thu Jul 02 10:43AM

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  2. heard this PMQ and it has been well reported in the above article. Brown seemed almost ready to throw his teddy out of the cot and walk out of Parliament. I dont agree that PMQ should be debased by childish accusations and insults but as long as it is allowed, Brown will not succeed in this slapstick free for all. Why doesnt he stick to politics and however difficult it may be try to talk up his policies rather than defend them against a more able and well prepared challenger.

    jameshome34 From jameshome34 on Thu Jul 02 10:43AM

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  3. WELL WHAT DO YOU EXPECT FROM A PERSON WHO SHOULD NEVER HAVE BEEN PM IN THE FIRST PLACE. EVERYBODY PUT YOUR HANDS UP IF YOU VOTED FOR GORDON BROWN AS PM. THERE NOT 1!

    v1969ronni From v1969ronni on Thu Jul 02 10:44AM

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  4. So the great debate between Brown and Cameron continues. Our UK Financial future.
    But they will not allow Scotlands people decide on whether they wish the Trident
    Missile system to be located in the Clyde. That buffoon Gray said last night that
    it would be dishonest of us to allow it to be located in Portsmouth. Surely thats
    for the English people to decide?

    jamestolan From jamestolan on Thu Jul 02 10:44AM

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  5. What a shame that the 'great' and the 'good' in national politics deem it more appropriate to trade insults than combine forces to put right the state of our economy!

    gpalmer5437 From gpalmer5437 on Thu Jul 02 10:50AM

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  6. the opposition opposes because its the opposition and not because the idea is a bad one until you have government that can work as one to solve problems you are not going to get anything done. this truly is about Jobs but not the general public's jobs, more, sadly their jobs.

    alexhephaestion From alexhephaestion on Thu Jul 02 10:50AM

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  7. Problem about PMQs it is for the PM and not the leader of the opposition to answer questions about his party's policies. The PM's current problem is that he is stuck in a groove trying to get out, but he can't get out because his arguments show what a mess, he and his cohort, Blair have gone us in. Of course, if the labour party had the guts to get rid of him, they could have escaped this situation. Cleared the decks, renewal of the government and sneaked the election as John Major did in 1992, but the Labour MPs blew it.

    p.ebbrell From p.ebbrell on Thu Jul 02 10:52AM

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  8. This goverment have no ideas left to try, they are stumbling along in the dark.

    c.a.lampitt From c.a.lampitt on Thu Jul 02 11:00AM

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  9. The Russians had the best idea for getting rid of their leaders in the revolution, stood against a brick wall and shot!

    tonymiller27 From tonymiller27 on Thu Jul 02 11:10AM

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  10. We are stumbling in the dark with the rest of the world. How easy it is to be sarcastic to pillary Brown be smart when you hold no resposibility.. this country is amazing how do we earn the money to afford good health care education loose immigration laws fat cat wages lame duck security?

    toneslapbase From toneslapbase on Thu Jul 02 11:11AM

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