Posts Tagged ‘Gordon Brown’

Has Gordon Brown lost his mojo?

Tuesday, March 8th, 2011

These days Gordon Brown’s Westminster presence appears to be limited to the submission of a couple of written questions to the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions about the number of people in the Fife local authority area currently in receipt of housing benefit. Yawn.

No wonder, then, that he’s longingly eyeing up the position of managing director of the International Monetary Fund in Washington DC, although – the Daily Mail reports – his chances of jetting off to Capitol Hill are looking rather slim.

Never mind, Gordon. Kirkcaldy and Cowdenbeath may not quite compare to the glamourous US of A, but at least you can curl up on the sofa with a cuppa and a copy of several great books. All about you.

For, it seems, ‘tis the season for reminiscing about Brown’s turbulent period as PM, with Sarah Brown’s Behind the Black Door hitting the shelves last week. This Saturday, Francis Beckett reviewed in The Guardian Anthony Seldon and Guy Lodge’s book – published by yours truly – Brown At 10, writing that ‘anyone seriously interested in modern British political history will want to have it around for reference’. In this rigorous and authoritative account, Seldon and Lodge ‘record in compelling and grisly detail’ examples of Brown’s hubris and downfall. Okay Gordon, perhaps you’d be better off sticking to the missus’ book, but for the rest of you out there: what are you waiting for? Brown At 10 is available here, priced just £20. Bargain.

The Great British Bard

Wednesday, January 26th, 2011

Demand me nothing, what you know, you know
From this time forth I never will speak a word.

It would offer this blog up to a raft of criticism if we were to say that these words define Shakespeare’s Iago, the evil catalyst for the events of Othello. However, Iago’s final words are significant to the audience’s perception of his character, as, rather than expose the inner workings of his mind, Iago retains the ambiguity of his character until the end.

There have been many famously mysterious or ambiguous characters in literature, from Estella to Gatsby, and we at Biteback may even venture to say that the fascination with these figures stems from the inability to fully understand them. David Laws seems fascinated enough by one figure in his book, 22 Days in May, to dedicate a whole page to studying them:

“…For years, he crushed his Conservative opponents, and his Budgets won plaudits from across the political spectrum. This was a man who was probably right to keep Britain out of the euro, a man whose interest in and influence over economic and social policy was probably unmatched by any previous Chancellor, and someone who seemed to care deeply about delivering a better deal for some of the poorest people in the world – in sub-Saharan Africa and elsewhere.

How was it possible that this was also the person who was regarded as one of the most brutal and aggressive political operators of his age, a man who would scythe down opponents and plot against colleagues and indeed his own Prime Minister?”

I did wonder for a second why Laws was asking all these questions, as all great pieces of fiction usually leave the critics to explicitly ask questions, and then I remembered that 22 Days in May is not fiction, and that the complicated figure he was talking about is real.

“Who was the real Gordon Brown: the street-fighting, political thug or the idealistic visionary who wanted to rebuild society at home and abroad in a more caring and Christian image?”

Since Shakespeare had Iago dragged away in the final scene, numerous pieces have been written about the character, studying his words and actions in minute detail to help the audience better understand. However, there is only one piece today which helps to understand the most enigmatic politician of our time, equally as mysterious and frequently-debated as Iago, but without all the evil intentions.

Brown At 10 is a comprehensive study of the ex-PM’s time at Downing Street. Using unrivalled access to many of those at the centre of Brown’s government and hundreds of hours of interviews, Anthony Seldon and Guy Lodge create the most complete picture of Gordon Brown to date.

We all watched Brown perform as Prime Minister, whether we were sitting on a cushion or standing in the dust, and now is the opportunity to see behind the scenes.

Brown At 10 by Anthony Seldon and Guy Lodge is available here for £20
22 Days in May by David Laws is available here for £9.99

The rise of the ‘true’ Red Ed

Friday, January 21st, 2011

Brown at 10 made Philip Collins’ column in today’s Times. The subject: yesterday’s rise of the ‘true’ Red Ed.

Now that Ed Balls is Shadow Chancellor, Collins makes the point that “Mr Miliband’s leadership will be blighted by the same blindness that afflicted Gordon Brown’s.” He continues “only one person is painted in less flattering colours in Anthony Seldon and Guy Lodge’s Brown at 10 than the Prime Minister himself, and that is his brutal consigliere, Ed Balls.”

By the same token, Collins doesn’t shy away from praise of Ed Balls – claiming he’s succeeded in polarising the economic debate thanks to a pretty convincing speech he gave during the Labour leadership election last year – indeed, Collins paints a picture of the most economically astute character the Labour Party has to offer.

The point is, and safe to say most people know it, Ed Balls is a very mixed bag. If he’s right on the economy – that a longer term, less swingeing, strategy to cutting public spending would have proven the best form of damage limitation – then he’ll prove himself to be exactly what the party needs. But if he’s wrong, well, it’s going to get messy.

A quote from Brown at 10 – as yet not picked up on in the media, but which proves Philip Collins’ point perfectly – comes from an adviser who worked with him: “The most important thing to remember about Ed is that he never ever – ever – wanted to lose any argument. If threatened, he would attack”.

Get your copy of the book that has the thinkers thinking: Brown at 10 now for £20. Also available now in ebook format, priced £9.19.

Answering the Big Questions on a Friday afternoon

Friday, January 7th, 2011

At Biteback we frequently come across Big Questions. Does politics naturally progress towards a more liberal viewpoint? Why did Gordon Brown fail to lead Labour to their fourth consecutive election victory? Which is better for dunking a chocolate digestive in, tea or coffee? These are the questions that take more than five minutes to draw solid conclusions about and which can be dramatically detrimental to a hard working day.

In her new programme for Radio 4 called ‘Follow The LeaderCaroline Quinn sets out to explore the psychology of leadership and answer one Big Question that generates millions of pounds in books and courses each year; what makes a leader? In this vein, we have also tasked ourselves with finally answering one of the Big Questions of our time… How many books can you mention in one blog?

Caroline Quinn introduces the programme by discussing the way many national institutions are built on leadership, from schools and the military to politics and sport. It might sound rather arrogant (apparently a trait of leaders), but we believe that we know a fair amount about these particular subjects, and a little more about football after reading John Nicholson’s We Ate All The Pies.

However, while you can know everything about these subjects, it doesn’t necessarily make you a leader, which can be a much more elusive concept. In order to answer the question of leadership Quinn decides to ask Deborah Mattinson (author of Talking to a Brick Wall) about the troubled premiership of Gordon Brown, one of the most fascinating and curious subjects in modern political history (incidentally covered in Anthony Seldon and Guy Lodge’s comprehensive Brown At 10).

Where did he perceptively go wrong in his leadership?
“Leadership isn’t just about being clever; leadership is about setting out a direction you want to go in and persuading other people that they want to go with you. That’s what he struggled to do.”

Some people say that it comes from a natural ability to speak, as the public arena is what will define you, particularly as a politician. The power of speeches is explored by John Shosky in his book Speaking to Lead, in which he shows how vital public speaking can be to being a leader. If by no one else, the evidence for this is exhibited by Margaret Thatcher, who was known for her stirring speeches and the way she represented herself in interviews (the best of which can be found in Biteback’s Margaret Thatcher: In Her Own Words).

In the Radio 4 programme though, Mark Steel stated his firm belief that:

“It isn’t just that someone is a great leader and is able through the force of their oratory to command the support of large numbers of people, the circumstances are right for people to be able to do that and then, within those circumstances, someone emerges who is able to articulate what people are thinking and then they are hailed as a teacher.”

Ok, so… the circumstances are right, we are on the Biteback blog, and we believe we can articulate what you think, so let’s see if you’ll follow our leadership and do what we tell you…

Buy all the books below. The leader has spoken.

We Ate All The Pies by John Nicholson for £9.99
Talking to a Brick Wall: How New Labour stopped listening to the voter and why we need a New Politics by Deborah Mattinson for £17.99
Brown At 10 by Anthony Seldon and Guy Lodge for £20
Speaking to Lead: How to Make Speeches That Make a Difference by John Shosky for £14.99
And
Margaret Thatcher: In Her Own Words edited by Iain Dale for £12.99

(and the answer to our Big Question… How many books can you mention in one blog? Five.)

The fine art of being geeky but awesome at the same time

Wednesday, December 15th, 2010

The paper you read says a lot about you. In a way, it means people can read you. In the same way, I’m sure that coming home at about 1 o’clock in the morning and going onto the Guardian website to look up an article related to your day at work also says a lot about you. Even knowing that this makes us massive geeks, we still did it anyway.

The Biteback office is a hub of political discussion, frequently debating the key issues swirling and turning in the air around us, but very little of it gets written about (except on this blog, of course). However, at the weekend, we did happen upon (read: actively went searching for) Big Cheese himself entering into a debate on one of most talked-about events in the news today, the Wikileaks disclosures and the arrest of founding member Julian Assange.

If you would like to read the article go here or e-mail us and we’ll photocopy and send off the original article from Saturday’s Guardian, which we happened upon in a café (read: bought with our own money) on the day in question. Dammit, we really are geeks. I think the point though, trying to make this professional and not just about seeing someone we know in the paper (which is always cool), is that, just as Big Cheese himself is an authority to be listened to on all manners political, so is his company.

With the help of Big Cheese, of course, Biteback are constantly growing and releasing some of the biggest political titles of the year, including David Laws’s account of the early days of the coalition, 22 Days In May, Rob Wilson’s comprehensive study of the meetings that led to the forming of our current government, 5 Days to Power, and Brown At 10, Anthony Seldon and Guy Lodge’s look at the troubled premiership of one of Britain’s most enigmatic political leaders.

We also do sports books (see here and here).

Also, with the recent news that Iain will be giving up on his blogging, we would like to wish him the very best of luck! However, ‘with every door’ and all that jazz, it does mean we get to spend more time with the BC than before and hopefully some of his great bloggishness will rub off on us and marginalise the geekiness that we display on a daily basis.

Popularity or publicity contest? Either way, Gordon Brown would lose

Tuesday, December 7th, 2010

Where were you when JFK was shot? That’s a classic, but I wasn’t born then, so tragically I can’t answer. Where were you when the World Trade Centre was attacked? Another classic, and I can tell you I was in Geography, fifth period. Where were you the day Tony Blair’s book, A Journey, was released? Not such an essential one, but I remember being in a car discussing the potential revelations of the book, as well as how he donated his substantial advance to a charity for ex-soldiers (we also played I Spy to make our journey a bit more fun). Where were you when Gordon Brown released Beyond the Crash – his defence of his economic decisions as Prime Minister and his predictions for the future – breaking his seven-month silence after renouncing the position? Well, wherever you are now, but it’s unlikely you’ll remember it.

We at Biteback haven’t read Gordon Brown’s Beyond the Crash: Overcoming the First Crisis of Globalisation (to give the book its full title) and are thus unable to comment directly on the text itself. However, having preferred the human, and less statistical, aspects of Geography and having read the edited extract in the Guardian yesterday, we can tell you that it’s probably not our kind of book anyway. Herein, we feel, lies the problem.

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Gordon would have been better off had he not surrounded himself with “angry, reactive, tribal people”

Monday, December 6th, 2010

The Daily Politics was today graced by two Biteback authors Deborah Mattinson, author of Talking to a Brick Wall: How New Labour stopped listening to the voter and why we need a new politics and biographer Anthony Seldon, author of the recently published book Brown at 10.

Here’s what they had to say about Gordon Brown’s premiership:

Buy your copy of Brown at 10 now for £20 in hardback and in ebook format, priced £4.60.

Talking to a Brick Wall
is available now, priced £17.99.

Tales of the Unexpected

Monday, November 29th, 2010

The world changes, but history repeats itself. No, we’re not talking about how, despite having far less money than before, we at Biteback continue to see the weekend as giving us more time to shop, we’re actually talking about a trend that’s evolved across the face of political history. When our Managing Editor told us that there was a bit in this book about Nicolas Sarkozy and Gordon Brown coming to verbal blows over who to support for the positions at the European Commission we were shocked. What? You mean there’s been a disagreement between the English and the French? That’s unusual.

This particular part of Brown At 10 not only caught the eye of our staff, but also the Mail on Sunday, who yesterday included sections from the book in an article entitled ‘!*x@ the Brits! They want the top job for Blair, but they won’t get it’. In their new book, Anthony Seldon and Guy Lodge discover – thanks to unrivalled access to many of those at the centre of Brown’s government – what went on behind the scenes of smiling faces and well shaken hands.

As the Mail on Sunday reports:

Mr Sarkozy agreed to support Mr Blair’s candidacy [for President], but in return wanted Mr Brown to agree that the post of EU Commissioner for Internal Markets and City Affairs should go to France. Mr Brown bluntly refused… Dr Seldon says that Mr Brown became ‘obsessed’ with getting the trade post for the UK to stop it going to France, while using Mr Blair’s candidacy as a bargaining chip. By dithering, he got neither.

Well, there you go Tony, blame Gordon.

Order the revelatory Brown At 10 here for £20.

Every Little Helps (in no way affiliated with Tesco)

Thursday, November 25th, 2010

Whether it’s five days, three men or one document, the 2010 general election showed that even the smallest things can change the face of history. Remember the film The Butterfly Effect? Well, it’s like that, but with more politics, less Ashton Kutcher and, you know, actually interesting.

In his new book 5 Days To Power, Rob Wilson studies the negotiations that led to the political earthquake of a Conservative and Liberal Democrat coalition government, collating information from key figures in all three political parties who were involved in the discussions and crafting the most comprehensive account of the talks that shaped our current political climate. And he comes to the conclusion that the most important figure of those tumultuous days in May was… the guy from the civil service.

No really, Rob says it in this article on ConservativeHome.

Now, we don’t know if it’s just because he’s a great writer (shameless PR), but the theory, which says that without a chapter in the Cabinet Manual entitled ‘Elections and Government Formation’ our history could have been dramatically different, does make sense. Alright, so without Gordon Brown or David Cameron or Nick Clegg or David Laws (another person who we have a book with, another moment of shameless PR) or any of the major negotiators, then we wouldn’t have our current situation. But we at Biteback like Rob Wilson for celebrating the men behind the scenes, because the men on stage get all the press these days.

You can now buy Rob Wilson’s full account of the five days (and butterflies) that changed the country forever, 5 Days To Power in paperback and e-book format for £9.99 and £4.60, respectively.

Dinner with David

Tuesday, November 23rd, 2010

We love it when you buy the exclusive insider story of one of the most exciting moments in modern political history and the author, as well as producing his fascinating report of the birth of the coalition government, cares enough to add flavour to the already delicious menu of events.

David Laws, speaking last night on BBC Somerset, was asked by political reporter Ruth Bradley why he included so much detail, even down to times and locations of meetings, to which he replied that it adds to the “richness of the tapestry”. Yes David! We’re literature people, and we love that. Ruth herself even seemed to agree, noting that the mood came across effectively.

22 Days in May is the unique account of the days that formed our current coalition government, including some quite startling revelations about the negotiations of the Liberal Democrats with the two lobbying parties. Bradley wasted no time in getting to these “juicy bits” (her words, not ours, although they look great on this blog and work with this extended metaphor about food).

When asked whether Labour took the talks seriously, the author said that “Gordon Brown was quite serious about seeing if he could stay in power… as was Lord Adonis”. However, whilst the Conservatives were making “all sorts of concessions”, not only were various select members of the Labour camp “difficult to deal with” but Laws says he felt there were “a number of comments meant to sabotage the negotiations”. He even claims that Ed Balls directly stated “there are many Labour MPs who won’t like these ideas”, planting the notion that the Party would not be behind any form of coalition in its entirety.

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