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    Talking Politics

    David’s intervention makes Ed Miliband look good

    Reading David Miliband's Statesman article is a dreary, depressing way to start your day. Like the perfume of an old girlfriend you never liked very much, it takes you straight back to the New Labour years, with potential leadership rivals firing off vague missives and the press dutifully trying to decode them.

    On the face of it, David's article is a response to a Roy Hattersley piece which, near as I can tell, was published five months ago. Quite why it would be published now is anyone's guess. He does the current Labour leader the service of mentioning him, unlike his Gordon Brown intervention, where the only real criticism of government policy was the calculated absence of the prime minister's name.

    Politically, it is monumentally uninteresting, parroting the Blairite formula of "notions of merit, reward and responsibility" and a politics which "mobilises people, whether as patients or parents or employees or citizens, to make choices". Its tedium is in direct contrast to the frantic self-examination it triggers among the political classes, who are desperate to paint David as a messiah in the wings, primed to cut through the Tory ranks once his younger brother falls on his sword.

    David is not, and has never been, the hero he is described as. His current status is a product of the need for a media narrative. As the more charismatic and centrist of the two brothers, he was preferred by the press. His victory — were it not for those pesky unions — cemented the idea that he should be leader. But David would have received as hard a drubbing from the media as Ed did, for the simple reason they had mostly thrown in their lot with the government. It would be at least one parliament before they felt able to switch allegiances back to Labour.

    Remember that photo of David with the banana? Or clumsily ducking a confetti storm? That was how the media would be treating him now. Instead, we are offer ministerial, statesmanlike photos, shot from below, to cement the narrative of a fratricidal political rivalry.

    If anything, David's sneaky intervention demonstrates why Labour picked the wrong leader — and got the right one. Whatever you make of his politics Ed must be credited with speaking clearly on big issues. His phrase 'squeezed-middle' entered the political lexicon in way these agendas rarely do (remember Nick Clegg's 'alarm clock Britain'?). His boldness in taking on Murdoch in plain terms paid off. His criticism of capitalism, which relied on a distinction between productive and predator companies, was criticised at the time, but the public has a better idea of what it refers to than David's vague scribbles about the role of the state.

    As far as it's even decipherable, there's nothing bold or eye-catching in David's intervention. Rhetorically, it is tedious in the extreme. It shows he has not moved on from his default political tactic of sending baffling, vacuous political messages at carefully calculated moments in order to keep eyes on him. He is as hesitant, uninspiring and slippery as he ever was.

    Ed is no saviour, and despite his success this week, he is dangerously close to being written off by the public. But his brother's intervention reminds us that at least he is using clear language to express big ideas - something we would not have got with the elder brother.

     
    • Steve  •  3 months ago
      There are many comments that we need a new form of "social accord" (Eric's phrase a short while ago) and that someone in Labour needs to be stating clearly the way forward, and Ed Miliband is not the one to do it.
      These are based on two false assumptions.
      Firstly, who is there in Labour with the capability and vision to think this way? The frightening thing is that Ed Miliband may be the best on offer (or reassuring thing if you don't want Labour to regain any credibility).
      Secondly, Labour have only just lost power after having had 13 years with a big majority to do exactly as they pleased. If they didn't do it in that time, any protestations now of Damascene conversions to a new morality for the future ring very hollow indeed.
      • Timmytoo 3 months ago
        Damascene, Steve, I like that!. After 13 years of Tony Blair's" Education ,Education, Education" very few people know how to express themselves properly in English any more, and even fewer know what the Damscene reference means!.
    • DAVID NEWMAN  •  London, England  •  3 months ago
      Good on David Cameron's 'foul smell'. A famous lady, who was 'not for turning', exuded the same smell, and had one of the most successful terms of office ever!
      • Garry 3 months ago
        if you still cannot see that the problems in the UK today all stemmed from her policies then, you sir, are a fool.
      • Gargletrope 3 months ago
        That's the way, Garry. Don't take the blinkers off. They make you look intelligent.
      • Steve 3 months ago
        The problem is that a government that has the balls to do the right things for the country will inevitably be unpopular and the electorate will take their short-sighted revenge by voting in yet another Labour mob to wreck it all.
    • GEORGE  •  London, England  •  3 months ago
      I wish you would stop going on about Miliband. I would much rather talk about the bloody weather than read another piece of #$%$ from a Labour party apologist. This seems to be a Labour party talking shop. If you say it long enough people believe in it - might snow tomorrow. It will be a cold day in hell before I'll believe in the Labour party again. You are wasting your very hot and rotten to the core breath. Frankly I would not have either you or anyone connected with the last labour administration making tea.
      • kenny f 3 months ago
        georgie porgy pudding and pie,kissed the girls and made them cry
        but when the boys came out to play,he kissed them too as he swings both ways.
    • JOHN  •  Manchester, England  •  3 months ago
      Miliband (the Ugly) looks like he's escaped from a Wallace & Grommit Show. He WILL be the Face of FAILURE in 2012,-AND HELL MEND LABOUR.
      • Sean C 3 months ago
        How unoriginal. At least he can write in English, as can most posters on here, with your exception. Ugly, well Cameron has the head the same shape as a durex. Hell mend Labour? God your English is terrible.
      • J 3 months ago
        Don't be hard on him! With Care in the Community not working he has no one to help him.
      • Dave 3 months ago
        Aye up, the thought & spelling police are out in force. Nothing constructive to say, no instead they pick on people and their spelling. It's really quite pathetic.
    • Alan M  •  3 months ago
      Oh, how the Tories will be rubbing their hands - here comes another period in office, this time without that unfortunate cousin err, whats-his-name in tow, having to come everywhere we go. Labour are certainly no threat, with no leader to speak of and an internal battle to become that no leader to speak of!
      • Steve 3 months ago
        Great. The longer we can keep Labour out of No 10 the better off the country will be. And I say that as a lifelong Labour loyalist who has been betrayed, not a "Tory" at all.
      • Sarah the first 3 months ago
        Rubbish.
    • Anthony  •  London, England  •  3 months ago
      David is a snake.
    • Stephen  •  Reading, England  •  3 months ago
      The Elephant man couldn't make Ed Milliband look good
    • glesga boy  •  3 months ago
      dreary and depressing, better think about the loss of voters in scotland after the labour party behaviour in glasgow district council, six labour party councillors down, six labour votes less at council meetings, Mr Milliband will need to lean very heavily on certain individual(s) within the scottish labour party very quickly, the snp would love to control glasgow district council. ?
    • mark  •  3 months ago
      Please do not get rid of Ed with him in charge labour will never be able to wreck the country again. Mainly because with him they are unelectable and add Edd Balls to the mix and we have the perfect combination to keep labour out of power.
    • Anthony  •  London, England  •  3 months ago
      Well said.
    • Iverson  •  Manchester, England  •  3 months ago
      What a dreary article about a dreary article. Is UK in the rut?
    • A King  •  3 months ago
      Watch your back Ed. David's back has healed up now, and your knife is in his hand!!.
    • Death Wish  •  London, England  •  3 months ago
      Good article. David Milkbank was a little Tony toad waiting to get oily with public before he sprouted horns and ran off with the silver coins just as his mentor. Ideally there needs to be some long term vision with Eton and Millipede plus their little hand glove puppet where each takes their turn in putting their hand up his...... I see nothing and hear nothing.
    • kenny f  •  Leicester, England  •  3 months ago
      some of dunts attempts at "decoding" the intellectual content of labour party comments are quite laughable,somewhat reminiscent of a retarded chimp trying to understand einsteins theory of relativity.
    • abiam1  •  Canterbury, England  •  3 months ago
      It should not come as a surprise if Ed Miliband handed over to his brother David Miliband.The leadership of the Labour Party is still in their family.
    • Paul S  •  London, England  •  3 months ago
      Cameron's only who he is because he gets to make the decisions (Which he narrowly got to do, with help of the LibDem lackeys). So he looks good getting his own way. Millipede is just doing the usual in British politics in disagreeing with everything he says - any one of us can do all that, Ed. Did he do anything to oust Gordon Brown at the time? No, .he just wanted to take his wages and not rock the boat - they're all sorry and wise afterwards, much like a shoplifter
    • Wills  •  London, England  •  3 months ago
      God if you think the Miliband Bros are dreary, Dunt's copy is so much worse than anything they dream up!
    • AURELIO  •  Milton Keynes, England  •  3 months ago
      An opportunity to give us something off-topic to debate.
    • Phoenix  •  London, England  •  3 months ago
      PS. As has been pointed out previously, the phrase "Squeezed middle" is not Ed Milliband's. The fact that the Labour Party has only just woken up to the fact that the people that pick up the tab for everything sit on middle incomes and also get the least out of the system does not mean that he invented the phrase or the concept. Mentioning a demographic in a couple of party political speaches over the last 10 months or so does not make up for ignoring the negative impact of their policy decisions on the main productive tax paying element of the population for over a century.

      Literary examples of the phrase pre Miliband's epiphany...........
      Robert Heilbroner, "The uncomfortable paradise of full employment", Harper's Magazine, April 1947:

      "The squeezed middle class (aided by the management class) will encourage anti-labor (really anti-wage) legislation in an effort to preserve its real share of the national income."
      .
    • Shmucktyoldschmeister  •  Reading, England  •  3 months ago
      Dunt is right. David Miliband was a slippery little Blairite sycophant, groomed as the natural successor to his oily mentor and spouting more of the same populist rubbish. He is another middle-of-the-road vision-less nobody who now fancies he is something of venerated old statesman. Ed was always the best choice as leader from a poor selection but has not found the courage of his convictions.
      Appalled by Cameron's arrogance in PMQs yesterday as he scornfully mocked Labour for not being able to take tough decisions. That is the Tory narrative in modern politics - look how tough we are - and Labour bite like a bunch of silly children insisting we are just as tough as you, instead of slamming the idea of austerity which fell into the Tories laps beyond their wildest dreams.
      The austerity, contrived by capitalism under Tory and Labour rule gives the Tories a mandate that their pathetic election results could never justify. There is no austerity ahead for the rich but the ordinary voters, including the misguided Tory acolytes on these posts, have been stripped of opportunities, dignity and hope by capitalist chancers like David Miliband and his soulmates in the Tory party.

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