Saturday, April 21, 2007

Miliband: "I'm a Brownite"

Environment Secretary David Miliband has announced that he will vote for Gordon Brown as Labour leader.
His declaration will be seen as giving a boost to the chancellor, the favourite to succeed Tony Blair.

When Mr Miliband told the BBC on Tuesday that he did not intend to run for the top job, critics said he had left himself room to change his mind.

But he tries to remove any uncertainty when he writes in The Observer: "I will vote for Gordon Brown".

After months of intense speculation, Mr Miliband told the BBC that he did not intend to run for the Labour leadership when Mr Blair announces his resignation after the 3 May elections.

In The Observer, Mr Miliband seeks to make it absolutely clear that Mr Brown is the best candidate to take forward Mr Blair's legacy.

He argues that success in the next general election will require the party not to go back on New Labour, but to offer "New Labour Plus".

"I will vote for Gordon Brown to lead Labour's drive," he writes.

"I have watched him and worked with him for nearly 20 years. He has in the last 10 years done great things for living standards; no-one is better qualified to lead across a wider canvas."

'Coronation'

He adds: "I said three years ago that I would not be a candidate for the leadership. I meant it and have not wavered from that view.

"I certainly am not in the business of waiting to pounce on local or Scottish and Welsh election results to change my mind."

Candidates need the support of 44 MPs to join the leadership contest.

Michael Meacher, the former environment minister, said he had the support of 25 Labour MPs and expected to inherit 15 more who were currently backing the other declared candidate, the chairman of the Socialist Campaign Group John McDonnell.

He said: "We should not have a coronation when there has been no debate on policy since Blair came in in 1994.

"It's crucial that Brown is made to answer as to what he's going to deliver to us. We are entitled to know."

New Labour Plus

Some commentators believe that there could also be challenges from Home Secretary John Reid and former home secretary Charles Clarke.

Mr Reid appeared to keep his options open in an interview with GMTV's Sunday Programme.

He says: "By saying that I won't discuss it, by definition you don't rule in or out.

"I'm sure the Prime Minister will make his views more specific, and when he does that, we will all have the chance to make sure that we express our views."

Mr Miliband says that New Labour Plus would be "broader and deeper" than New Labour.

It would bring together what he regards as the good things about New Labour and new policies such as creating institutions to bring citizens together, action to ease access to the housing market and the devolution of money-spending power to a local level.

Friday, April 6, 2007

Gordon & Douglas Alexander write for the Fabian Society: Stronger Together, Weaker Apart

Gordon Brown and Douglas Alexander argue that Scotland and England are Stronger Together in their new pamphlet for the Fabian Society.

Chancellor Gordon Brown and Transport Secretary Douglas Alexander spoke of their belief in the strength of the Union and its future at the launch of their Fabian pamphlet.
At an event in Edinburgh in April, both authors outlined why Scotland benefits both economically and politically from remaining part of the Union.
They argue that it would not make economic sense for Scotland to break away from the Union with England and Wales.
Trading links have helped create 200,000 more Scottish jobs since 1997 and more Scots in employment than ever before, says the publication.
"Scotland is a country advancing towards full employment instead of a country weighed down by high unemployment and its social consequences."
The authors say the SNP's politics of "grudge and grievance" refuse to recognise these economic realities.
Not only is Scotland linked economically with England, but the countries' populations are linked by migration. A million Scots live south of the border and more than three quarters of a million English people live in Scotland.
The Union gives Scotland - and Britain - a powerful international voice, at a time when many political challenges are international, not local.
Issues such as climate change, international terrorism and poverty need collective not individual action, say the authors.