Is
There Life
After Tony
Blair?
Even
by the standards we have come to expect from them, it was an
outrageous piece of New Labour spin to tell us that the leadership
handover between Tony Blair and Gordon Brown would be “smooth and
orderly”. For one thing Blair and his cronies must have known that
announcing his intention to resign on some unnamed, unpredictable
date in the future ensured that the handover would take place after a
long period of chaos as a succession of hopefuls – and no-hopers –
pushed themselves as potential leaders. We had already had the sly
briefing about Gordon Brown’s alleged “psychological flaws”
(which must apply to many politicians). The infighting could have
been prevented by settling on a firm date but whenever this was
raised with Blair he brushed it aside by saying that he would go when
he had done his job of clearing up a few trivial matters like crime,
the wars in the Middle East and Iraq, the NHS, education, poverty…The
very idea is laughable, that there will ever, can ever, be a day when
a political leader can pass into well earned retirement because they
have succeeded in making all the necessary adjustments and
improvements to society, so that from now on all will be smooth and
orderly. While there is no evidence that Blair is an avid student of
history it is clear that he has absorbed many of its essential
lessons in the sleazier arts of politics.
Morrison
What
can be said, on that score, about Gordon Brown? When he made that
deal, across the Granita table, with Blair, did he not have an
inkling of what he was committing himself to? Was he entirely
innocent of any doubts about politicians’ readiness to keep their
word? Did he not reflect on the examples of other nominated heirs to
a party leadership who had failed miserably to achieve it? When the
Attlee government was elected in 1945 the Deputy Leader of the party
was Herbert Morrison, a canny, cocky political operator with the
common touch. In contrast, Attlee was understated, not to say drab;
when he was made Leader in 1935 Hugh Dalton, who was later Chancellor
of the Exchequer, bemoaned “…a wretched and disheartening
result…And a little mouse shall lead them”. After Labour’s
emphatic win Morrison made it clear that he had no intention of
agreeing to Attlee as Prime Minister and that, before he accepted he
job, Attlee should submit himself to a vote of confidence by the
Parliamentary Labour Party.
This This was
the kind of situation which, in recent times, must have provoked an
incandescent row between Brown and Blair. Attlee, however, was in a
different mode. After his election triumph he went quietly with his
wife for tea at the Great Western Hotel in London and it was there,
among the delicate china and the scones, he was told that King George
VI was anxious to fill the vacancy for a new government for British
capitalism and would he please go to Buckingham Palace to set the
royal mind at rest. Attlee took the view that the monarch should not
be kept waiting while the Parliamentary Labour Party made up its mind
so he went at once to the Palace where “without quibbles” as he
put it, he accepted the top job. (He got his vote of confidence the
next day – as if an hysterically triumphant, desperately ambitious,
party would ever have dreamed of denying it to him).
Churchill
Attlee
later described the notion of Morrison being party leader as
“fantastic” – seriously out of touch with reality. He continued
as leader after his government were defeated in the 1951 election,
leaving Morrison to sulk and snipe, fretful in the knowledge that the
longer Attlee stayed on the weaker his chances of succeeding. It was
clear at that time that if the Labour Party was to have any hope of
clawing their way back into government they would need to undertake a
comprehensive overhaul of their policies and presentation but Attlee
was too weary after his years in government to do anything about it.
That was probably the time for him to retire but instead he kept
going, which had the effect of stifling Morrison’s leadership
chances (Morrison was, of course, convinced that this was the
motivation). After Labour was defeated again, in 1955, Attlee carried
on for a few months and then suddenly resigned, going to the House of
Lords. The delay in his going had had its effect; Hugh Gaitskell had
emerged as the likeliest leadership candidate and he won the ballot
over both Morrison and Aneurin Bevan, leaving Morrison to nurse his
bitter disappointment.
The
Tory government which followed had its own inheritance problems for
Winston Churchill had always made it clear that he would be succeeded
as leader by his Deputy Anthony Eden; for example in 1942 Churchill
told the King that if he failed to return from one of his trips
abroad Eden should be asked to take his place. In spite of the
Tories’ calamitous defeat in the 1945 election Churchill hung on as
leader (in any case he never made any secret of his reluctance to
take account of his party’s wishes). But he was bored in opposition
and he might have resigned then except that his “Iron Curtain”
speech seemed to revive his confidence in himself as an historic
figure so he stayed, while playing on Eden’s loyalty by throwing
out occasional hints that he would hand over in the near future –
rather like Tony Blair today. At the same time Churchill made it
clear that he would regard any suggestion that he should resign as
base treachery. Even when he had a succession of strokes, notably in
1949 and 1953, which progressively disabled him, he kept himself in
the job. It seemed as if he would never go.
Eden
The
grinding pressure of disappointment aggravated Eden’s emotional and
medical difficulties; at the time of Churchill’s 1953 stroke Eden
was convalescing abroad after an operation, which prevented him
taking over. In any case Churchill, in the words of his son Randolph,
“fought his way back to health with a Roman mastery of mind over
flesh” so that he was still Prime Minister when he turned 80 in
November 1954. He resigned in April 1955 and Eden came at last into
his inheritance, except that it was a procession of disasters. Under
scathing criticism from a normally loyal Tory press – the Daily
Telegraph ranted about “changes of mind by the Government; half
measures; and the postponement of decisions” – the breaking point
for him was his obsessive but doomed attempt to revive the standing
of British capitalism in the Middle East by the Suez invasion (his
wife later told how at times she had felt as if the Suez Canal was
running through their living room). By now a very sick man, virtually
living on prescribed drugs, Eden gave up and went to the West Indies
to recuperate. After all that waiting, he had been Prime Minister for
less than two years.
Spite
A
common factor in these episodes, as with the present clash between
Blair and Brown, is the absence of any differences in policy. The
disputes were not about whether to run capitalism but who should be
allowed to indulge their ambitions by doing so. From those roots a
tangled growth of spite and venom has flourished, in
which Brown
abruptly ceased to be the assumed, widely welcomed, successor to
Blair and instead became the target of vicious personal attacks, some
of which originated from people who were themselves far from
blameless. “Compulsive obsessive”, “autistic” and “childish
vanity” were among the kinder assessments of Brown.
Perhaps most audacious of all was
Charles Clarke’s charge that Brown is a
“control freak”, which overlooked the fact that when he was Home
Secretary Clarke was a relentless, determined advocate of Identity
Cards. The winner of this “smooth and orderly process” among
contestants who lay down laws which are designed to instruct us how
to behave will be whoever emerges with the least shredded clothing
and the fewest wounds.
IVAN
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