Feature: How media glare dazzles Labour

Cabinet members respond to Gordon Brown speechCabinet members respond to Gordon Brown speech

Reddit

Stumble

 

Opinion Formers

Electoral Reform Society

The Electoral Reform Society is a voluntary organisation that campaigns for a better democracy, particularly through changes to our electoral system.

Find more Opinion Formers in this category:

 
 

Related Analysis

Brown speech: Reactions

Leading members of Gordon Brown's government give politics.co.uk their response to his speech to the 2009 Labour conference.

Cabinet members respond to Gordon Brown speech

Wednesday, 30, Sep 2009 12:00

On a day when the media's influence in politics is the number one topic of conversation, politics.co.uk reviews what the papers have been saying about Gordon Brown's leader's speech.

By Alex Stevenson

The Sun

In one of the most decisive moments in the tabloid's history, reflecting its repudiation of Neil Kinnock before the 1992 election and its 'The Sun Wot Won It' five years later, the Sun has abandoned the Labour government.

"Labour's driving ambition has not been to improve Britain. It has been to retain power at all costs - with no lie judged too great in its ruthless and relentless self-promotion.

"They promised a referendum on Europe. They claimed they had ended "boom and bust". They tried to con the public with promises of endless investment, when they knew they would have to cut.

"At the 2005 election, we and our readers believed Labour had many failings but gave them one last chance over a lacklustre Tory party.

"They have had that chance and failed."

The Times

Another News International newspaper with its own entirely critical stance on the prime minister, the Times' leader writers went for Brown with abandon. They suggested the speech would make no difference to the country. Judging by their attacks on it, they may be making what would have been a neutral impact into a negative one.

"Mr Brown appeared to have involved about 25 people in the writing of the speech and none of them, with the exception o the person who penned that opening segment, appears to have been by vocation a speechwriter. Such stylistic shortcomings could have been overlooked, might even have been endearing, if they had been flaws in a speech of substance. But they were not. The three big challenges that Mr Brown needed to tackle - the country's dire fiscal position, the collapse of confidence in the political system and the difficulties faced by Afghanistan - were left, by the end of the speech, untackled.

"We began the week arguing that Labour would not make political progress under its current leader. This speech changed nothing."

The Guardian

In a balanced assessment of the prime minister's speech, the Guardian's editorial pointed out that Brown had done more than enough to make him a viable candidate to fight the next election. But it also showed the fundamental weakness at the heart of Labour's project for a fourth term - it's the voters who matter. Ultimately, that's not good news for No 10.

"Labour's solidly successful week in Brighton will have given its supporters heart, but there has been nothing to suggest that it is likely to win a majority next spring. 'Never stop believing,' he said, and he did enough yesterday to keep belief alive within his party.

"That was a success, given Mr Brown's troubles. But it is the country he needs to persuade if he is ever to return to a Labour conference as party leader and prime minister."

The Independent

The Indy's editorial offered an in-depth analysis of the headline proposals on offer. It expressed doubts about many of them, but also acknowledged in some areas there does appear real progress. The assessment was the same as the Guardian's; this was not a game-changing speech, but it certainly wasn't a game-losing one either.

"Where Gordon Brown's speech to the Labour conference in Manchester last year was personal, this year's address in Brighton was pugnacious. The attacks on the Conservatives came thick and fast, particularly on their supposed lack of economic competence. And, in fairness, the prime minister did have a strong case to make about the hesitant and confused manner in which the Tories reacted to last year's global financial meltdown.

"In other ways, however, the speech served to emphasise the now familiar flaws in the prime minister's own character. He failed to convey any acceptance of glaring past mistakes of his own, from the light touch policy on bank supervision to allowing the public finances to become excessively reliant on the revenues from financial services. And he offered no detail on where Labour would cut spending to back up his assertion that Labour would be more humane when it came to tackling the yawning budget deficit."

What do you think?

Name 

Location 

Email 

Comment 

Enter the text shown to the right

Election Video Manifestos

politics.co.uk's Opinion Formers set out to present their manifesto "wish lists" to the next generation of MPs and ministers ahead of the General Election in 2010.

politics.co.uk Blog channel

Political blogs are likely to play a crucial role in the battle between the political parties in the upcoming general election. So we at politics.co.uk decided to give our readers a guide to those blogs that we think are worth a read. Check out the new politics.co.uk blogs channel and explore the hundreds of UK political blogs we have featured here.

politics.co.uk blog

Read the latest blog posts from the editorial team at politics.co.uk

UK's No.1

We are the UK's leading dedicated political news website. Find out how you can get your message across to our audience of opinion leaders and policy makers.

Newsletters

Stay up to date with the goings on both in UK politics and on politics.co.uk by signing up to our daily newsletter, public affairs newsletter and jobs bulletin.

Public Affairs Jobs

Check out politics.co.uk's new jobs section, for government, public sector and public affairs roles

Current Vacancies:

Featured Services

NewsManager

Offering Communications Professionals a solution to managing the systems required to undertake their work, NewsManager brings all of the components into one service.

DirectNews

DirectNews provides tailored news feeds for digital media and specialises in news content driven, sales and marketing solutions.

Search our services directory ...

Latest Headlines

New campaign targets expenses MPs

MPs deemed to have committed "crimes against democracy" will be targeted by a new third-party pressure group at the general election.

Tony McNulty is first MP to be targeted