Posts Tagged ‘Mail on Sunday’

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.

Biteback Publishing seizes the weekend’s political agenda

Monday, November 15th, 2010

This weekend, Biteback Publishing hit the front pages of both the Guardian and the Mail on Sunday. The publication of 5 Days to Power set the precedent for the weekend’s political news agenda when the story broke in the Guardian on Saturday that a leaked document showed key Lib Dems thought the Liberal Democrat election plegde to scrap tuition fees within six years was untenable were a hung parliament to arise. “The Lib Dem document is disclosed in a new book on the coalition negotiations by Rob Wilson, Conservative MP for Reading East” the Guardian duly noted.

The story then took to the airwaves with Channel 4 News’ Krishnan Guru-Murthy chiming: “Senior Liberal Democrats drew up plans to abandon the party’s pledge to scrap student tuition fees two months before the General Election”.

The exclusive serial revealed in the Mail on Sunday that David Cameron and Nick Clegg helped to prop up Gordon Brown in the days following the General Election and made him believe he still had a chance of clinging to power – full knowing that he didn’t – for fear that Brown would up-sticks and leave without a Government in place.

David Laws’ book 22 Days in May was credited by the MoS as “the first blow-by-blow insider’s account of the high-octane and often acrimonious exchanges between the party leaders and rival negotiating teams.”

Rob Wilson’s book 5 Days to Power is available today for just £9.99 and David Laws’s book 22 Days in May will be available from next Monday.

Both books will be available from Monday 22 November as e-books, priced £5.

Paul Flynn MP – The Unusual Suspect

Monday, February 22nd, 2010

9781849540179

On March 1st, we are very proud to be publishing The Unusual Suspect, the memoirs of one of Parliament’s most outspoken backbench MPs. This book currently features in a major 2-part serialisation in the Mail on Sunday.

Paul Flynn is one of Westminster’s wittiest and most irreverent bloggers, commentators and campaigners. Funny, fresh and revealing, in The Unusual Suspect Labour’s long-serving MP for Newport West (and current Welsh MP of the Year), tells the whole truth of the vanities, triumphs and excesses of the political shark pool.

From hiding Rhodri Morgan’s underwear at Cardiff train station, to his unlikely alliance with rap group Goldie Lookin’ Chain, Flynn has long been an unorthodox but influential presence at Westminster. Never one to fit in to suit political convenience, his tenure in office has been characterised by a campaigning zeal which has seen him become a giant-killing enemy of vested interests. The stupidity of drugs laws, the deceptions of the pharmaceutical industry, the shame of politicians on the make and Labour’s misconceived foreign adventures in Afghanistan and Iraq have been just a few of the issues that have aroused his indignation. His passions have often kept him off message too, and The Unusual Suspect describes his profound dissillusion with New Labour and its betrayal of the party’s socialist principles.

In this hilarious, yet deeply personal book, Paul Flynn describes with his customary panache the joys and tragedies of his life, all intertwined with political hope and chicanery. A quarter of a century of Flynn’s work with the icons and knaves of parliament has renewed his idealism and conviction that ‘the best has yet to be’.

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.