Posts Tagged ‘Inside Out’

The gladiatorial arena of politics

Monday, November 8th, 2010

In January Biteback published Peter Watt’s insider account of the dark days of the last Labour government, Inside Out.

Now, with the controversy about Phil Woolas filling the stands, Biteback author and ex-General Secretary of the Labour Party – Peter Watt gives Labour Uncut an analysis of the bloody battles fought in modern-day politics.

Read Peter Watt’s article ‘Hung out to dry by Labour: I know how Woolas feels’, here.

For a full account of Peter’s own experiences, Inside Out: my story of betrayal and cowardice at the heart of New Labour is available now for £16.99

Inside Out – question raised in PMQs.

Thursday, February 4th, 2010

From the Guardian. Wednesday 3 February

The Tories today sought to step up pressure on Gordon Brown over claims that he had a secret fund to advance his Labour leadership ambitions before he became prime minister.

The Conservative party chairman, Eric Pickles, accused Brown of treating people “like fools” by denying any knowledge of the allegations at his weekly Commons question time. A complaint has been lodged with the parliamentary commissioner, John Lyon, about the prime minister’s failure to make the relevant declaration in the register of members’ interests.

The apparent existence of a special, £50,000-a-year fund was disclosed last month by Labour’s former general secretary, Peter Watt. In his memoirs, the ex-official said Brown, then chancellor, had his “own personal pot of cash” while Tony Blair was Labour leader and prime minister.

Watt wrote: “This was money we could not dip into since it was set aside for the chancellor’s own projects.”

He added: “All we at HQ knew was that it was for Gordon’s private polling. I never asked for more detail, so I don’t know if that polling was to inform budget decisions, or for his long campaign to become party leader.”

Tory MP David Evennett raised the issue at prime minister’s questions today, saying: “All our constituents are rightly concerned about transparency, expenses and cleaning up politics.

“With that in mind, now that it is clear that there was a £50,000 fund solely for the prime minister’s use at his headquarters, will he explain why he did not declare this in the members’ register of interests?”

The prime minister replied simply: “I know nothing about what he’s talking about.”

Pickles wrote to the prime minister today, insisting that Brown’s remark “simply cannot be true”.

“It is clear from Peter Watt, the Labour party’s former general secretary, that you were the beneficiary of a secret fund held by the Labour party,” he said.

Referring to Brown’s speech yesterday about restoring trust in politics, Pickles went on: “If you wish to restore trust in politics, you should stop treating people like fools by claiming that you were unaware of this fund when all the evidence points to the contrary.

“I therefore urge you to admit to this fund’s existence, apologise for misleading the house and cooperate with any inquiries that John Lyon may wish to make.”

Inside Out. Review in The Sunday Times by Rod Liddle

Monday, February 1st, 2010

Inside Out: My Story of Betrayal and Cowardice at the Heart of New Labour by Peter Watt with Isabel Oakeshott
The Sunday Times review by Rod Liddle

Peter Watt was the general secretary of the Labour party — an important post, previously held by the likes of Ramsay McDonald, Arthur Henderson and so on — for the best part of two years, until he was coerced in November 2007 into resigning over financial irregularities regarding Labour party donors. He has now written a very readable book designed to be as damaging to the party to which he owed his allegiance as it is possible to imagine, and especially so for the prime minister, Gordon Brown, who comes across — as he usually does on these occasions — as a psychologically damaged, sulking bully without a policy to his name. And at one point even as “bonkers”.

Watt has delivered himself of this stream of self-serving and vindictive bile because he believes he was hard done by when his Labour party career came to an end. My guess, reading between the lines, is that he was only a little hard done by, although, as a nurse from Dorset who rose without trace within 10 years to the most senior post in the Labour party, he may also have been over promoted in the first place. He would have us believe that he took the bullet and resigned for the good of the party — but the obvious question if that is so, then, is why this, now? And the answer is because the real or imagined iniquities he has suffered far outweigh any loyalty he might have to those he has left behind, even those few he quite liked. That’s the way it is right now, though, with this rapidly decomposing corpse of an administration.

Watt, a Blairite through convenience if not conviction, dishes it out from page one and his particular target is Brown. The prime minister emerges as a man incapable of taking a decision, especially if it is a big decision. Even more damningly, Watt suggests on several occasions that Brown did not have a political thought in his head. Perhaps one reason why there was not a general election in autumn 2007 is because Brown had no idea what he would put in the manifesto: “Everyone around him thought that there was some big plan sitting in a bottom drawer somewhere, just ready to be pulled out when the moment came. In fact, there was nothing,” says Watt. The prime minister was also startlingly inept at personal relations and Watt quotes Douglas Alexander — international development secretary, and nominally a Brownite — as saying that he and his colleagues had been working for this man night and day for 10 years, but that they really didn’t like him. Invited to meet and greet party workers, Brown would circle the room with a glassy stare and spooky rictus grin, often asking the same questions of the same people, in the manner of an aged monarch with Alzheimer’s.

Watt relates the tale of a ghastly dinner party at No 10 that he attended with his wife. Before the guests were seated, Brown was called away to the phone. When he returned the guests had sat around the table and Brown said furiously: “I didn’t sit you all down!” Watt takes up the tale: “Then he swivelled in his chair, so that he almost had his back to everybody and leaned his head on his arm. For the rest of the meal he was monosyllabic, sulking because he had lost control of the seating plan. The plates had not even been cleared when, quite suddenly, without saying anything, he just got up and left. As Sarah had also disappeared by then we all quite literally had to show ourselves out. ‘He’s bonkers,’ Vilma [Watt’s wife] whispered, as we trooped out.”

Prior to occupying No 10, Brown is revealed as a shadowy and divisive presence, commandeering his own sums of money from Labour party funds for private polling and what have you, wreathed in suspicion and bitterness, trusting nobody.

Mind you, not many people come out of this book terribly well — except, in common with almost all of these rat-on-your-party memoirs we’ve seen in the past couple of years, John Prescott, whom everybody seems to like. Prescott emerges as humane and principled and kindly towards party workers. However, Watt cannot abide Harriet Harman and her constant “dog whistling to the left”, and has even less time for her husband, Jack Dromey, considering him duplicitous and self-indulgent. The national executive committee of the party was, as a whole, an annoying and disruptive influence. But then an awful lot of this book consists of Watt bemoaning the thoughtlessness of others for doing stuff that made his job more onerous. The most telling sentence of Inside Out comes on page 125: “Dad became terminally ill at what was already a hugely difficult time for me.”

Watt left his post a year or so ago when it seemed that he might face criminal charges for having allowed a wealthy donor to funnel funds to the party through a number of third parties. Undoubtedly it was a horrible, frightening time for the young man and he did not receive much in the way of support. But it was nonetheless his responsibility, in the end, a notion that does not seem to have occurred to him.

Inside Out by Peter Watt with Isabel Oakeshott
Biteback £16.99 pp210

Peter Watt on the Andrew Marr Show

Monday, January 18th, 2010

Peter Watt on his first live TV interview for Inside Out

Monday, January 18th, 2010

I had never done a live TV interview before – and on Sunday I had to do two. To say I was nervous when I went to bed on Monday evening is an understatement. To be honest I didn’t sleep very well and getting up really wasn’t a problem. Vilma was brilliant at trying to keep me calm but the house was so busy this weekend that I couldn’t wait to leave.

I got to the Andrew Marr show and waited in the Green Room and I began to feel calmer. I knew what I wanted to say and this was my first chance to say it in person. The only slight glitch was that I think that I overdid the coffee and I was getting caffeine rushes. Sat waiting for the opening shots I managed to have a conversation with Nick Clegg – we spoke about the joys of early mornings with the kids.

The interview with Andrew Marr was over in a flash buy I think it went ok. Carol Vorderman, who was reviewing the papers, told me she thought it went well and asked for a signed copy of the book. And then on to Sky for a session with Adam Boulton and Steve Pound MP.

The Green Room was busy as Ken Livingstone and Edwina Currie were preparing for their paper review. It was good to see Steve, I’ve always liked him and we spent some time catching up. And then we were on. Steve had a bit of a go at me, I had a bit of a go back – but it was all pretty friendly. It was over pretty quickly.

In the car on the way home Vilma texted me to say well done, she said that I only looked nervous right at the start of the Marr show. I was pleased as well; I had a chance to again explain why I have written Inside Out and why now. I had a chance to acknowledge that some Labour activists are understandably cross with me. And I was able to show that I stand by and am proud of my book.

INSIDE OUT My story of betrayal and cowardice at the heart of New Labour, by Peter Watt. Published 25th January

Sunday, January 10th, 2010

Inside Out: My story of betrayal and cowardice at the heart of New Labour

Isabel Oakeshott, top political journalist who worked on Inside Out, writes about Peter Watt and the book

Sunday, January 10th, 2010

Isabel Oakeshott

LAST night was extraordinary, and this morning it just gets better. Everyone is talking about Peter Watt’s sensational memoirs, which I ghost wrote for him – and I’m not surprised.

When I first met Peter nine months ago, I knew I had hit journalistic gold. Here was a man who had enjoyed the highest level of access inside the Labour government, who had worked closely with Tony Blair, Gordon Brown, and other towering figures in the Labour party on a daily basis – and crucially, he was ready to reveal what really went on behind the scenes.

It didn’t matter that Peter wasn’t a household name. It was not about who he was, but what he knew. Yes, there have been books about the Labour regime by famous insiders like Alastair Campbell and John Prescott. But they were never prepared to risk the consequences, political and personal, of telling us the embarrassing and often ugly truth about life behind closed doors at Labour HQ and in no10.

Watt was treated appallingly by Brown, and had no such reservations. He knew where the bodies were buried, and he was prepared to show us. After being publicly condemned by Brown despite his years of loyalty, then forced into silence by a police investigation, it was finally time for him to have his say.
Crucially, Peter understood what I needed to make his story really fly: colourful and irreverent anecdotes like his ghastly account of a dinner party he and his wife attended at no10. He was funny and self deprecating, and I knew we had to write this book.

A number of publishers shied away from the project. After all, the received wisdom is that political books don’t sell – or do they? Iain Dale at Biteback understood the massive potential. In the end, the book was the subject of a bitter bidding war. Biteback’s faith in this book is paying off.

Isabel Oakeshott is Deputy Politcal Editor of The Sunday Times

Inside Out. The most explosive political book for a decade

Sunday, January 10th, 2010

Inside Out is a book that we have not previously been able to trumpet, due to it’s serialisation, beginning today, in the Mail on Sunday. Excerpts from this extraordinary book will appear in the MoS over the next three weeks. The book is quite extraordinary and is published on 25th January. As I write this, Michael White is on Sky News, where it is top story, calling the book a serious indictment of Gordon Brown and commenting, “Revenge is a dish best eaten cold”.

Inside Out is the ultimate insider exposé: a no-holds-barred account of the spectacular decline of the most effective party political machine of modern times and an intimate viewpoint onto the personalities at the heart of government, including the country’s two most recent Prime Ministers. Watt is the first insider to break ranks since Brown entered No. 10 and his revelations will send shockwaves through Westminster.