Help Sitemap Home Skip Navigation Contact Us Disability Statement


Brown finds a career life raft in financial storms

Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image

Published Date: 13 October 2008
IT WOULD be wrong to say that Gordon Brown is revelling in the current financial crisis. He is much too serious for that. But there can be no doubt that he finds himself at ease in a financial world of myriad complications and permutations beyond the comprehension of most voters and savers.
But just as this self-confessed private man's obvious discomfort at having to reveal himself to viewers of GMTV was plain for all to see, so too is his command of the world economic crisis. Here at last is a political challenge worthy of his formidab
le intellect, and a chance to prove that the fearsome reputation he built in a decade as Chancellor was not some tabloid construction.

The signs had been there for months. First there was his call for action on Zimbabwe. Then was his slap-down of Tory leader David Cameron, and his rivals within Labour, as "novices". And last week was a dramatic Cabinet reshuffle and the £500 billion rescue package for UK banks, which the Financial Times declared to be the "most ambitious and comprehensive plan" by any world leader. By playing to his strengths, Mr Brown has portrayed himself as the strong leader his admirers always believed he could be.

The opinion polls agree. Yesterday, a survey found that Mr Brown and Chancellor Alistair Darling were more trusted to run the economy than their opposite numbers, Mr Cameron and George Osborne, by a clear margin of 33 per cent to 27 per cent. Mr Brown's personal approval rating has also improved – as has that of his party.



Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 13 October 2008 1:03 AM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Labour Party , Credit Crunch
 
1

Vivas,

Edinburgh 13/10/2008 00:18:14
Seems there was a UK-wide collective 12-month long mass hallucination that Brown was a dithering control-freaking Thatcher-worshipping loser who had been complict in turning boom into bust after presiding over 10 years of unregulated financial markets and easy credit debt for the masses.

Thank god that fair-minded media organs such as this exist to snap us out of that hallucination, and to wake up to this mans incredible planet-saving talents.

2

subrosa,

13/10/2008 01:03:34
The man has no credibility. As the man in charge of the UK's purse strings for the past 11 years, he has been a major player in this fiasco.

He can strut around as much as he likes with his fixed smile and verbose comments about his leadership ability but surely it's only the uninformed and unwise who would vote for such a man and his party.
3

S'me,

Edinburgh 13/10/2008 06:39:39
There is no other person in the UK right now I would rather be in charge than Gordon.
4

Guga II,

Rockall 13/10/2008 07:48:56
#1.

There was no mass hallucination. Maggie Broon IS a dithering control-freaking Thatcher-worshipping loser who had been complict in turning boom into bust after presiding over 10 years of unregulated financial markets and easy credit debt for the masses.

This is also the man who was in charge of this abuse of finances, who made a lot of lying promises, and who should have known what was happening. He, therefore, deserves to take a major share of the blame for this fiasco.

Maggie Broon has nothing to recommend him. This is the man who, like Vidkun Quisling, is a son of the manse, but who is a lying, deceitful charlatan who has, among other things, sold out Scotland and the Scottish people to achieve his Stalinist, totalitarian, control freak aims.

I wouldn't trust him in charge of a kindergarten lolly jar.

5

Richard Lionheart,

13/10/2008 09:34:41
I believe that Nick Clegg said “when a ship is sinking you do not run round finding someone to blame….”,

but neither do you find the captain looking for a life raft!
6

Raymond Thomas Brooke,

Leven England 13/10/2008 13:49:10
This man along with Tony Blair was instrumental i n much of the root cause of this present financial situation and as such should resign immediately,as have the leaders of certain banks.To try to seek some glorification from inputting our taxes shows the integrity of the man
7

Nelson Mandela,

paisley 13/10/2008 17:18:44
#5
I don't think it is only Britain that is sinking - so why have you made Gordon Brown captain of the World. He is taking the lead in sorting out the problem though.
#6
The person instrumental in creating this mess was Margaret Thatcher who deregulated the markets allowing them to follow greedy short term policies for personal gain. Browns praise of her made his popularity fall a few months back and Cameron followed suite at the Conservative Conference and is now reaping the benefit.

Good to see that people are at last wakening up to the fact that Gordon Brown is not to blame for everything (including your bad hair day) and that reverting to the spawn of Thatcher is not an alternative.

 

Comment on this Story

 

In order to post comments you must Register or Sign In

 
 
 
  

 
 


Sister Newspapers:
Press Complaints Commission

This website and its associated newspaper adheres to the Press Complaints Commission’s Code of Practice. If you have a complaint about editorial content which relates to inaccuracy or intrusion, then contact the Editor by clicking here.

If you remain dissatisfied with the response provided then you can contact the PCC by clicking here.