Prescott’s Memoirs – “scared” Blair reneged on Brown

By keeptonyblairforpm

Comment at end

11th May, 2008 – updated

PRESCOTT CAN TELL TALES TOO! SO THERE, CHERIE (& Lord Levy)!

John Prescott, Sunday Times:

‘When Blair became party leader in 1994, Brown was “really pissed off, I should think. I’m sure he believed Tony had stolen it from him”.’

‘ [Prescott] cornered Blair on a train. “He plonked himself down, all smiles and charm, and I started on him. ‘Listen you little shit, I’ve got a question to ask and you’d better be clear and truthful about the answer. Did you take all that lot down to this secret country meeting and discuss policy?’ ”

‘On one occasion Gordon wouldn’t let Tony see what was in his preparatory budget proposals. He even banned the Treasury from telling him. That was totally against tradition. The prime minister is always told in advance.’

‘He adds: “I also think Tony was scared of Gordon. He didn’t want to take him on. Gordon is a very tough negotiator, doesn’t let things drop, keeps at something till he forces you into his point of view. That’s not Tony’s style.’

MAIN HIGHLIGHTS, according to Prescott:

  • Blair reneged not once but several times on promises to make way for Brown at No 10.
  • Prescott urged Blair to sack Brown.
  • Prescott urged Brown to resign from cabinet and fight Blair from the backbenches.
  • Prescott brokered “hundreds” of reconciliation meetings and telephone calls between them.
  • Brown was “frustrating, annoying, bewildering and prickly”. He sulked so often during meetings that they had to be abandoned. On other occasions he could “go off like a bloody volcano”.
  • Blair “doesn’t like the full-frontal approach. It puts him off his tea”.
  • Brown held back government money from Blair’s pet projects so that he would have more to spend when he at last took over as prime minister.
  • Cherie Blair thought the “longer Gordon suffered the better”.
  • Prescott called Blair “a little shit” during an explosive row.
  • Blair was “devastated” and near tears after his son Euan was found drunk in the street.
  • Blair now wants to be president of the European Union or to have a similar “permanent statesman” role.

Oh how harsh and disloyal friends can be when selling books, eh?

Read this report here

Miliband doesn’t recognise Prescott’s description of Brown – more or less.

WHO’S AFRAID OF THE BIG BAD BULLY?

[Pic: Brown & Blair at an event in London on 1st May on Palestinian investment]

We’ve already heard about Brown’s moods, sulks and “character flaws”, but what’s all this about Blair being “scared of Gordon”. Scared in which way? The well-reported bullying? Blair is known to dislike personal confrontation. But we are asked to believe that this prime minister, who had almost been fisticuffed by German chancellor Schroeder and had stand-up rows with French president Chirac, was afraid of a bully? I don’t think so.

Or was he concerned that he might end up as natural fertiliser for the heather in the garden of Number 11? After all, Brown had a few heavies around him, all balls and no brains. So, this prime minister who insisted on wearing no body protection on his visits to Iraq was afraid of THEM?

Blair couldn’t have been all that scared or he wouldn’t have hung on for so long (until 2007), considering that Brown seems to have been angry and “pissed off” from 1994! Not too scary then, Mr GB?

Or might it have been the possibility that if he had sacked or moved against Brown, the latter might have rallied the backbenchers and the naive party members against Blair, thus splitting the party? Before the scales fell from the members’ eyes. More likely, I’d have thought.

BLAIR SHOULD HAVE “RENEGED” ONE MORE TIME!

But if Blair reneged in his handover “agreement” it was one time too few, if the present PM’s success rate is anything to go by.

Given that there is some dispute about the agreement anyway, and Cherie told her husband “not to come home” if he agreed with Brown to hand over after one term, it’s all tittle-tattle. But the tittle-tattle which Brown was happy to propagate in his efforts to garner support from his loyal lieutenants.

But let’s accept for a moment that they did have a pals’ agreement in the Granita or at Cherie’s sister’s pad or somewhere else. It’s the kind of thing people do when looking to make an impact on a long-standing organisation they wish to alter for good. The Labour party in 1994, after the death of John Smith, was an organisation going nowhere fast. It had let down its own members and the country for years.

And, to add to that, the lessons learned as Blair advanced in his premiership showed him that Brown did not have the requisite. So he avoided, for as long as humanly possible, stepping down from his own successful premiership to hand over to someone he considered inadequate. Remember, Blair was the only Labour leader who would go on to win three elections in a row – one in the midst of what had become an unpopular war.

Thank God he didn’t hand over to Brown earlier! It’s just a pity he weakened at the end.

And Mr Prescott? What exactly will he be remembered for?

Hmm …?

Still thinking?

Blair was a great politician surrounded by pygmies.

And I for one can hardly imagine Labour doing as badly today, if Blair were still in place. But then I would say that, wouldn’t I?

//////////


PRESCOTT: “I TOLD TONY BLAIR TO SACK GORDON BROWN”

John Prescott says he urged Tony Blair to sack Gordon Brown at the height of their frequent rows – but the former prime minister was “scared” of his chancellor.

He says he also urged Brown to resign and fight Blair from the back benches, but Brown, then chancellor, shrank from such a bold gamble.

Prescott, who as deputy prime minister for 10 years knew more than anyone about the furious resentment between the two men, reveals the true depth of their tempestuous relationship in his memoirs which are serialised exclusively today in The Sunday Times.

He also discloses that he intended to resign after his affair with Tracey Temple, his diary secretary, was made public, but he was persuaded not to by his wife Pauline. She speaks publicly for the first time about the affair in today’s News Review, saying that “a lot of very bitter women” wrote to her: “What they suggested I should do to John just doesn’t bear repeating.”

She decided to stick with him after considering that “I can go one of two ways. Either I can be bitter and cloud my very existence, or I can move on”.

In the frankest and most rumbustious political memoirs for years, Prescott writes about his shame at failing the 11-plus, his lifelong inferiority complex and “problems with the English language”, and his remarkable rise from trade union firebrand to high office. But it is his role as witness to the raw anger of the Blair-Brown relationship that makes his testimony unique.

The first member of Blair’s cabinet to lift the lid on what really happened, he says that:

— Blair reneged not once but several times on promises to make way for Brown at No 10.

— Prescott brokered “hundreds” of reconciliation meetings and telephone calls between them.

— Brown was “frustrating, annoying, bewildering and prickly”. He sulked so often during meetings that they had to be abandoned. On other occasions he could “go off like a bloody volcano”.

— Blair “doesn’t like the full-frontal approach. It puts him off his tea”.

— Brown held back government money from Blair’s pet projects so that he would have more to spend when he at last took over as prime minister.

— Cherie Blair thought the “longer Gordon suffered the better”.

— Prescott called Blair “a little shit” during an explosive row.

— Blair was “devastated” and near tears after his son Euan was found drunk in the street.

— Blair now wants to be president of the European Union or to have a similar “permanent statesman” role.

Despite his revelations, Prescott declares admiration for both Blair and Brown and reserves much of his venom for the “beautiful people” around them. Among the former advisers who are now key members of the Brown government, he singles out Ed Balls, the education secretary, and David Miliband, the foreign secretary.

Of Balls he writes: “He is clearly highly intelligent. But I can’t say I always agreed with his political judgment. He was part of the Gordon group, running around, spreading stories.” And Miliband was “one of the No 10 Mekons” – alluding to a big-brained alien dictator in the 1950s Eagle comic.

Prescott says that he first met Blair and Brown before they entered parliament in 1983. Brown was “dour”, while Blair was “fluttering around . . . a typical public schoolboy”.

As MPs and close friends, Brown was the “obvious leader of the two”. Blair “looked up to Gordon . . . hung on his every word”. When Blair became party leader in 1994, Brown was “really pissed off, I should think. I’m sure he believed Tony had stolen it from him”.

Prescott denies knowing what really happened at the meeting at the Granita restaurant in London when Brown agreed not to fight Blair for the leadership, but “Tony has a habit of saying things people want to hear. They believe him because they are charmed by his smiles and nods. That’s his way. That’s why I used to call him Bambi when he first appeared on the political scene”.

As representative of “old Labour”, Prescott was shut out on occasions from their policy discussions in opposition. He saw it as “the college boys’ coterie, the beautiful people excluding the old bruiser”.

After one such slight, when new Labour’s key figures had met in a country house, he cornered Blair on a train. “He plonked himself down, all smiles and charm, and I started on him. ‘Listen you little shit, I’ve got a question to ask and you’d better be clear and truthful about the answer. Did you take all that lot down to this secret country meeting and discuss policy?’ ” Prescott continues: “He asked me to come to his house and we could discuss it privately. I was getting heated and other passengers could hear. But I said no. So for the rest of the journey . . . I sat there, keeping him squirming.”

More serious strains emerged once Labour was in power. “In the first term, for the initial 12 months or so, apart from cabinet meetings, we’d had regular meetings of what we called the big three – Tony, Gordon and me. But there were always tensions in the air. Gordon would get in a sulk and say nothing, leaving all the talking to me, so these meetings petered out.”

After Labour’s second election victory in 2001, the relationship grew even worse. “During that second term, more and more of my time was taken up acting as conciliator. When I consult my notes from that period, I see there must have been hundreds of phone calls, meetings, presummits, summits and dinners on various Blair-Brown issues.”

“We met in Downing Street, at Chequers, Admiralty House, Dorneywood, Edinburgh, Sedgefield, Scotch Corner, even a restaurant beside a Scottish loch. They would row; they would seek my support. I would try to get them to see the other’s point of view and eventually arrange a dinner. Peace would be restored for a while and then something else would flare up.”

He felt the tensions “stemmed from a deep and personal connection they had, with shared analysis and political insights. I remember once being at a meeting with them and Peter Mandelson. What struck me was how those three behaved like robots in a science-fiction movie in which they needed to download from each other”.

Prescott believes Brown had the impression that Blair had promised to leave halfway through the second term. “But as we got nearer the possible time for an announcement, things always seemed to come up to make Tony delay. It was vital to win the next election, then he would announce it. Gordon would complain, refuse to cooperate. Tony would give Gordon charge of our election strategy, on the understanding that he would keep supporting him till after the election. Then, after it, he’d promise to go. Only he didn’t.”

He continues: “As well as giving Gordon power and position to ensure his support, Tony’s other technique was to persuade him to back him on certain matters about which Gordon might have his own opinions – Europe, academies, foundation hospitals and future manifestos – and in return Tony would come out with the same old promise. He was definitely going in, er, six months, perhaps a year, certainly before the next election. When it never happened, Gordon was furious – and the whole cycle began again.

“Each of them tried to get me on his side, complaining about the other. Tony would say that Gordon wasn’t cooperating with him at all. Gordon would say he’d been cheated again. On one occasion Gordon wouldn’t let Tony see what was in his preparatory budget proposals. He even banned the Treasury from telling him. That was totally against tradition. The prime minister is always told in advance.”

Prescott says that once, when Brown “was even more furious than usual with Tony, I said to him, ‘If this is how you feel, that you’ve been misled once again, resign’. I think he thought about it, but it never came to that. He was aware of the possible consequences.

“With Tony, when he was moaning on about Gordon’s behaviour, I’d say, ‘Sack him. Find a new chancellor, if that’s how you really feel’. But neither could take the final step. They were caught in their own trap. Tony knew that sacking Gordon would tear the party apart.”

He adds: “I also think Tony was scared of Gordon. He didn’t want to take him on. Gordon is a very tough negotiator, doesn’t let things drop, keeps at something till he forces you into his point of view. That’s not Tony’s style. Gordon is a difficult character, but sometimes Tony exaggerated how difficult he had been, just to get sympathy.”

Prescott says: “I have no doubt that Tony was most to blame. He broke his agreement with Gordon, not once but several times. However, in Tony’s defence, most of his promises were ambiguous and on condition anyway.”

He argues that Blair “was not helped” by his wife, Cherie. “I think she saw Gordon as causing trouble and making Tony unhappy which, of course, she could witness at first hand. She probably had him moaning about Gordon all the time. Perhaps she personally didn’t want Tony to go anyway – but as the Blair-Brown relationship got worse, she certainly didn’t want Gordon to be the one to benefit.”

Having initially been so nervous that she held Pauline Prescott’s hand “for moral support” in public, Cherie began to “enjoy being the first lady” and would not have objected to another year in No 10, Prescott believes.

“But, more importantly, I think she disliked Gordon, so she probably felt the longer he suffered the better – and Tony’s staying on might lessen his chances of a smooth takeover.”

He says she was also “unkind” to Brown’s wife, Sarah, snubbing her at the victory celebrations after the 2005 election.

Publishing sources say that Cherie has watered down her attacks on Brown in her own book, also due out this month.

//////////

BBC – Prescott’s memoirs

BBC precis of the Sunday Times reportFree Hit Counter


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11 Responses to “Prescott’s Memoirs – “scared” Blair reneged on Brown”

  1. Lord Levy: Blair said - “Liar (Brown) … can’t beat Cameron” « Tony Blair Says:

    [...] same question. And coming on top of Cherie Blair’s surprise early release of her book, and John Prescott’s (Deputy PM) disparaging of Brown as “frustrating, annoying, bewildering and prickly”, [...]

  2. shaz Says:

    Hi

    I feel it is going to take a miracle of sort for Gordon Brown to stay on as Prime Minister, especially if Labour loses out on the By-election due to take place soon. Question is though who could replace him? that is the question if they do get rid of Brown, who would be able to get back the public’s confidence and push up against the Tories.

    Over the weekend I have been reading the articles written by Cherie Blair, John Prescott and Lord Levy on the goings on at Downing street under Tony Blair. It has been quite an interesting read all and all an insight of what was happening behind the scenes. I thought at first why were they publishing all these articles with things being so tense right now over Gordon as PM, a lot of it being quite damming of him. I thought at first that maybe they should be a bit careful and perhaps hold off until things calm down a bit, not rock the boat as it were, but I fear that things have got so bad with Gordon Brown even among the Brown supporters that they feel they need to shock him into action, or shock the Labour party into action or meet with defeat at the next General election. I believe that it has become as bad as that. Tony Blair must be smiling to himself when Gordon has to ring him up and get his advice, who would ever of thought it would have come to that !!. Tony being Tony of course thinking only of the Labour party and wanting to make sure that the Tories don’t get in naturally obliges him. I do think though that unless Gordon Brown can pull something out of the hat, really fast then things are going to go downhill pretty soon, especially if the Media get wind of a take over bid , they will smell blood and it will be curtains for Brown no matter what he does.

    Apart from the fact that Brown just isn’t statemanlike like our Tony there are a lot of pressing problems right now, which I think are only going to get worse. For instance Public service workers aren’t happy, with teachers having already done one lot of strikes there could be more in the pipeline if offers don’t improve. But teachers aren’t the only public servants who might get to cause trouble for Brown, the Local Goverment workers are also awaiting to hear results of a ballot paper recently done, if it shows a support for strike action this would involve a lot of services, the strike action would be really felt by the public and Brown would really be in the hot seat.

    So, even if Brown looks more like a Prime Minister , learns a bit of charisma and explains things properly not like he is reading out next years budget things could still be very, very sticky for him if strike action amongst public sevants come to pass along with all the other troubles food, fuel , utility bills, Mortgages, house reposessions etc..

    The way things look to me now unless things really, really change then we are looking at a Tory Goverment at the next General election, that is of course providing David Cameron doesn’t make a big mistake of some sort, which he might if he becomes over confident.

    I hope truly hope that things can be turned around, but it is a hope that is based on a lot of factors as listed above going reasonably right, it is I’m afraid in the lap of the gods.

    If only they he/they hadn’t kicked out Tony, having said that even Tony would have found current Global events difficult i.e food prices, fuel etc but he would come over better and I am sure that most of the public would feel more reassured.

    From Shaz

  3. keeptonyblairforpm Says:

    Spot on.

    What else can I say, shaz?

  4. Karen Mckenzie Says:

    All these memoirs coming out settling scores it does leave a nasty in the mouth. I understand Cherie wanting to set the record straight but she just comes across as nasty vindictive and money grabbing. It’s Tony i feel sorry for i think we all who wears the trousers in that relationship. i think she needs a good p.r. Also i think Tony will wait until after a general election before he publishes.
    P.S.always thought gordon brown would be out of his depth as p.m. proved right eh?

  5. keeptonyblairforpm Says:

    Karen, sadly, I agree with you there. Not sure what Cherie was thinking of, but I can imagine more than a few harsh words have passed between the two of them recently.

    I must admit to donning my amateur psychologist’s hat trying to work this one out!

    He was still a great prime minister though. Even the Brownites can now see that.

    What a pity they didn’t listen to the “disinterested” viewpoint when they went for his throat in the first place.

  6. shaz Says:

    Hi

    I have been reading more of Cherie Blair’s writings and have been astonished at what she has written. It is one thing to write about the rift etc that was going on with Brown and her husband , but quite another to bring to light all those other things, too much info we all really don’t need to know. No doubt Tony isn’t too pleased about their personal details for all to see either, no doubt there has been a few harsh words between them over what she has written concerning their private life.

    More importantly right now is if Labour can come through the by-election without too much damage and gain a bit of dignity, but it really needs to win. Looking at the recent polls it would appear that Cameron is doing too well, well that is what the polls say and you can’t rely on them !! things is though it is the perception that counts and at the moment the public perception of Brown and the Labour party isn’t good, hopefully things will start to turn around soon otherwise things are going to get very uncomfortable.

    From Shaz

  7. Stan Says:

    Shaz, you’re right. The natives are getting very restless, as they did in the 1979 “Winter of Discontent” which paved the way for an 18 year winter of Tory rule. As the poet said “Mankind cannot stand too much reality” especially with a media that plays up every downside.

    In these circumstances it is essential that Labour supporters stick together and support this goverment despite our reservations about Brown. At least we should go down fighting. I have said more about this in my latest blog at http://theprogressive.typepad.com/the_progressive/2008/05/now-is-the-time.html .

  8. keeptonyblairforpm Says:

    Shaz – Stan’s article at the above site is worth reading. As a “non (any) party member” it’s going to be interesting to see what the responses are. The one I saw earlier was an unwelcome indication that the Left is rising – or meaning to. These are the people who have never accepted the market economy. Having said that, they will undoubtedly have borrowed against the rising values of their houses over recent years – so using the market. Very few of them are REAL Clause 4 socialists, imho. But they have this mistaken idea that New Labour abandoned all in order to appeal to the centre. A DREADFUL sin!

    Yet, ALL parties must appeal to the centre. It’s as clear as day. The guy replying to Stan gets his numbers the wrong way round too. The 95% are in the centre – the 5% on the extremes.

    And now the 5% think their day has come – they will help bury the Labour party at the next election with their nonsense.

    So that’s Brown’s task – to show that he is on the side of the ordinary man and woman.

    How he’s going to do it, heaven knows.

    Events seem still to be in charge of him.

  9. Shaz Says:

    Hi Stan and KTBFPM

    I agree with both of you Brown badly needs to get the Labour party back to the centre, something Tony was Master at as we know. Tony also had trouble with the Left trying to rise and stop him on several subjects, but somehow he managed to pacify them enough, just enough, whereas Brown either doesn’t see what is happening or thinks by magic the Left will follow him to the centre because he is PM and that alone should suffice.

    Anyway got my fingers, toes crossed for Thursday but won’t hold my breath !! not looking good at the moment, time will tell what the stakes are for Labour and also for Gordon Brown very soon.

    From Shaz

  10. Karen Mckenzie Says:

    I just think the goverment are in it for the long haul 2 years before the election not looking good i think the most people want a change at the top been in too long it breeds contempt Gordon Brown not up to task. bring back Tony Blair anyone?.

  11. keeptonyblairforpm Says:

    Yes, me! Why do you think this site’s still going ;0)

    Sadly, unless he becomes a Lord, and he says he doesn’t want that, he can’t take up the PM’s post again in the short term.

    So, looks like the Lilliputians who crept up on Blair and pinned him down – have won.

    And now they’re about to lose.

    Clever, eh?

    Thursday at Crewe and Nantwich is unlikely to be a winner for Brown, I’m afraid.

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