Sunday, January 31, 2010

Gordon Brown is a dead duck, Nokiagate, violencegate, too many gates, all horses have bolted




















Dear All

Political journalist Andrew Rawnsley is well known on the political scene frequently appearing in print and on television.

He has a new book coming out, ‘The End Of The Party’ which is about New Labour and features the current Prime Minister Gordon Brown.

And not in a good light either.

On Brown, he paints a 'psychological flawed' Gordon Brown as a man of violence with allegations of hitting a senior adviser, pulling a secretary out of her chair and hurling foul-mouthed abuse at aides.

The claims are fiercely denied by Mr Brown's allies as per usual.

As a political journalist Rawnsley is well connected, with alleged accounts are so detailed say his publishers that readers will think he has 'bugs in the vases at No10'.

Number 10 when contacted came out with an evasive replied to the incidents;

“We do not believe the stories are true.”

This is outright denial but more of an opinion.

In token support of Brown, One female official who worked for him said;

“Gordon does shout when he gets cross and is not easy to work for”.

Another official said some of the stories have the ring of truth, this suggests that support for Brown is paper thin.

I suspect that when Brown and the staffers at Number 10 read the full SP on March 1st, they will immediately start collecting cardboard boxes.

Cameron will want into Number 10 straightaway and it will make the transfer of 'tenant' run smoother.

Everyone hates Gordon Brown.

Yours sincerely

George Laird
The Campaign for Human Rights at Glasgow University

2 comments:

Nikostratos said...

Word reaches me of a story that could really stick it to the SNP as an elected representative is planning to defect to Labour having felt so disillusioned with the Nationalists.

http://www.yousufhamid.com/2010/01/breaking-snp-defection.html

Whats all this about???????

G Laird said...

Dear Mxyzptlk

I read it over at Yousuf too.

I could hazard a guess but if I get it wrong publicly then someone would get upset and have a go at me.

Yours sincerely

George Laird
The Campaign for Human Right at Glasgow University