Monday, December 28, 2009

Labour Party infighting reveals the 'Grubby Five' who want to oust Gordon Brown before General Election



















Dear All

The Labour Party is imploding, five traitors have allegedly banded together to get rid of Gordon Brown.

Leading the charge is of course Jack Straw.

Straw is a Machiavellian character that has one ambition be on the winning side.

The names of the traitors are mostly the usual suspects,

Harriet Harmen who dreams of being Labour’s Thatcher, she would plunge this country in a decade of darkness.

David Miliband, the self styled heir to Blair, not leader material.

Alan Johnson, who believes his union links make him credible.

Alastair Darling, the puppet Chancellor who is rebel at not being allowed to do his job his way, a surprise but when you kick a dog long enough it will bit.

Jack Straw is always the ringleader, positioning himself with whoever will win.

The group has been given a catchy title, the ‘fearless five’ no doubt mimicking the ‘famous five’ of Enid Blyton.

Well this is ‘Five go mad’, Brown won’t go quietly despite his extensive personal unpopularity in Britain and abroad.

How unpopular is Brown?

Ordinary serving soldiers don’t want to shake his hand in theatre of operations and in hospitals; they draw the curtains when he turns up.

And then there is the country, fractured.

The Brown Praetorian Guard numbers just two, Ed Balls and his wife Yvette Cooper.

Mandelson has been pushed to the side by Brown in favour of Balls, who dreams of being Labour Leader.

On Brown’s side is the fact that although he is surrounded by Traitors, none have the courage to openly attack him and let the infighting spill into the public domain.

Ministerial salary is the barrier that holds back the tide, not loyalty, picking careerists serves a purpose in politics.

How out of touch are the Labour Party; one MP said;

“Jack only wants to do the best for Labour and for Gordon”.

Since when is getting kicked in the face the best for someone?

The bright spark added;

“If that means persuading Gordon it would be in everyone’s interest for him to step down before the Election, then so be it. No one wants to see him humiliated.”

It’s too late to step down, defeat is certain; the Labour Party has fractured the country so much that even the BNP is gaining ground.

The General Election may see the election of a BNP MP in the shape of Nick Griffin.

The ‘Fearless Five’ isn’t some kid’s adventure but the realisation that Britain is a corrupt country suffocating under careerists so desperate that fear has driven them mad as they struggle to survive the General Election.

The ‘Grubby Five’ have a bigger problem, staying elected.

Yours sincerely

George Laird
The Campaign for Human Rights at Glasgow University

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Give me Julian, Dick, George and and Timmy any day in preference to that load of disasters.

If they install any of them, there may be a slight bounce, but I can't see why any would actually be better. It would all be about the fact that they are NOT Brown. That said, my mum's cat isn't Brown either... Maybe he has a chance.

Eni said...

You can call anything "Famous" or "Infamous" Five, that is an aspect ranging from kids to politicians. Your mention of Enid Blyton's Famous Five reminds me that i have published a book on Enid Blyton, titled, The Famous Five: A Personal Ancdotage (www.bbotw.com, www.amazon.com).
Stephen Isabirye